Volume 7
Number 1
Winter 1995 |
"Masters
of Our Business": The Shuberts and Lew Fields
L. MARK FIELDS
Disparate Voices: African-American
Theatre Critics of the 1920s
FREDA SCOTT GILES
Creating a New Broadway: The American
Playwrights Theatre Production of The Night Henry
Thoreau Spent in Jail, or,
What is Henry David
Thoreau Doing in Campus Riots and Nixon's Hometown?
FARRY
FINK
Classical Black Theatre: Federal
Theatre's All-Black "Voodoo Macbeth"
JOA.
TANNER
"To Rave Notices": William Faulkner's Requiem for a Nun at the Royal
Court Theatre
CHRIS LALONDE
An Historical Note: Margaret Anglin's
Last Stage Appearance
JOHN LEVAY |
Volume 7
Number 2
Spring 1995 |
Objectivity in the Growth
of a Pulitzer: Edward Albee's Three Tall
Women
JEAN LUERE
"Women, Identity, and Sexuality": An
Interview with Edward Albee
KAMAL BHASIN
The Neigborhood Playhouse's Salut au Monde: A Theatrical
Vision of 1920s America
MELANIE N. BLOOD
From "Madness" to "The Cosmos":
Gay/Lesbian Characters in the Plays of Lanford Wilson
LARRY
FINK
Stevedore in
Seattle: A Case Study in the Politics of Presenting Race on Stage
TINA
REDD
"Torchbearers of the Earth": Women,
Pageantry, and World War I
FANCES DIODATO
BZOWSKI |
Volume 7
Number 3
Fall 1995 |
Glitter, Glitz, and Race:
The Production of Harlem
FREDA SCOTT GILES
American Dramatic Reactions To the
Birth of the Atomic Age
CHARLES A. CARPENTER
"One Finds What One Seeks":
Arthur
Miller's The Crucible as a
Regeneration of the American Myth of Violence
CRISTINA C.
CARUSO
"I Charge Thee Speak": John Barrymore
and His Voice Coach, Margaret Carrington
BARBARA F.
ACKER
"Torchbearers of the Earth": Women and
Pageantry Between the World Wars
FRANCES DIODATO
BZOWSKI
Alan Schneider on Broadway
GERALD
WEALES |
Volume 8
Number 1
Winter 1996 |
Uplifting
the Stage: Hamlin Garland and the Chicago Theater Society
KEITH NEWLIN
Thornton Wilder's Early Work in the
Theatre
MARTIN BLANK
Whose Town Is It, Anyway?: An
Historico-Aesthetic Inquiry into Our
Town
BERT CARDULLO
The Drag: Mae West and the Gay
World
RICHARD HELFER
The Idiosyncratic Theatre of John
Howard Lawson
JOHN D. SHOUT |
Volume 8
Number 2
Spring 1996 |
The Group
Remembered
ARNOLD SUNDGAARD
Experiments on the American Musical
Stage in the Twenties
JULIAN MATES
Buddhism on the Contemporary American
Stage:
Jean-Claude van Itallie's The Tibetan Book
of the Dead
GENE A. PLUNKA
Mamet's Inland Sea
DOROTHY H.
JACOBS
The Holocaust on the Air: The Radio
Plays of the Writers' War Board
ALVIN GOLDFARB
Ecology vs. Economy in Robert
Schenkkan's The Kentucky
Cycle
DOWNING CLESS |
Volume 8
Number 3
Fall 1996 |
Genre, Transgression, and
the Struggle for (Self) Representation in U.S. Ethnic Drama
BRIAN
RICHARDSON
Made in America: Adaptations of British
Gothic Plays for the American Stage: 1790-1820
SUSAN
ANTHONY
Horse vs. Crow: Sam Shepard, Ted
Hughes, and The Tooth of
Crime
D. S. NEFF
Tracers: This
is our Parade
A First Look at an Understudied Vietnam Drama
CINDA
GILLILAN
Reflections in the Mirror: Public Arts
Funding in the United States
STEPHEN NUNNS
Parlor Combat
BRUCE
MCCONACHIE |
Volume 9
Number 1
Winter 1997 |
Susan
Glaspell and The Federal Theatre Revisited
ARNOLD SUNDGAARD
The Pleasures of Brick: Eros and the
Gay Spectator in Cat on a Hot Tin
Roof
ROGER GROSS
Staging Orientalia: Dangerous
''Authenticity'' in David Henry Hwang's M.
Butterfly
HSIEH-CHEN LIN
Fun To Be Free: Intervention Takes the
Stage
ROBERT ROARTY
Lynching, American Theatre, and The
Preservation of a Tradition
JUDITH STEPHENS
Eugene O'Neill and American Race
Relations
THOMAS D. PAWLEY |
Volume 9
Number 2
Spring 1997 |
Anti-Intellectualism and
Representations of 'Commonness' in the
Nineteenth-Century American
Theatre
JOHN W. FRICK
The Myth of Narcissus: Shepard's True West and Mamet's Speed the Plow
KATHERINE H.
BURKMAN
Crossing Cultures and Kinds:
Maria
Irene Fornes and the Performance of a Post-Modern Sublime
SHEILA
RABILLARD
Horton Foote's Politics of
Intimacy
GERALD C. WOOD
Interviews with Wendy
Wasserstein
JAN BALAKIAN |
Volume 9
Number 3
Fall 1997 |
Four Saints in Our Town:
A Comparative Analysis of Works by Gertrude Stein and Thornton
Wilder
DIANE ALMEIDA
Mary Carr Clarke's Dramas of Working
Women, 1815-1833
AMELIA HOWE KRITZER
Pioneering Theatre Managers:
Edna
Kenton and Eleanor Fitzgerald of the Provincetown Players
CHERYL
BLACK
Making the Grave Less Deep:
A
Descriptive Assessment of Sam Shepard's Revisions to Buried Child
JAMES
R.STACY
Tony Kushner and the "Not Yet" of Gay
Existence
RICHARD
DELLAMORA |