The intimacy and eroticism of the actor’s relationship with the audience is captured in the ecstatic revelation of the actor “being in the moment.” Drawing on the theories of Freud and Sartre and twenty years of performance praxis, this paper explores the exchange of erotic discourse between stage and spectator that not only heightens the experience of the liveness of theatre, but creates a symbiosis that is silently negotiated, agreed upon and sensuously performed during the suspended timeframe of the theatrical event. The actor draws the audience into the erotic transaction through various dramatic devices: the seduction of the soliloquy, the somatic and verbal discourses, the sensuality of light and costuming. The audience responds with ...
This article emerges from ongoing critical reflection on the practice of dance performance. Written ...
The liminal, intermedial space where cinema and theatre come together is still comparatively new ter...
The objective of this article is to envisage the body in relation to the notion of theatricality, un...
Theatre as Voyeurism usefully (re)defines the notion of voyeurism as an 'exchange' between performer...
The distance between an actor and their audience can have considerable impact on the audience’s emot...
David Greig’s Outlying Islands can be read as a study of how people watch each other, and the implic...
The cultural industries often privilege the use of sight and sound as our main areas of experience. ...
Acting on stage is a mode of performing an action, in the context of which the bodily aspects implic...
ASPAH conference 2021Addressing Intimacy on stage and on set in actor training.Intimacy direction, a...
This paper explores the acting in an interdisciplinary way, linking the insights that come from theo...
In Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality Freud has identified scopophilia as the pleasure of looki...
This chapter investigates the experience of being moved by a theater or dance performance. It explor...
This thesis researches and explores the phenomenon of intimacy in sensory-corporeal-based encounters...
From Plato’s erotic symposium, through sex and death on Early Modern British stages, to Freud’s vent...
International audienceThe creation of a theatre play rests classically on a rather strict distributi...
This article emerges from ongoing critical reflection on the practice of dance performance. Written ...
The liminal, intermedial space where cinema and theatre come together is still comparatively new ter...
The objective of this article is to envisage the body in relation to the notion of theatricality, un...
Theatre as Voyeurism usefully (re)defines the notion of voyeurism as an 'exchange' between performer...
The distance between an actor and their audience can have considerable impact on the audience’s emot...
David Greig’s Outlying Islands can be read as a study of how people watch each other, and the implic...
The cultural industries often privilege the use of sight and sound as our main areas of experience. ...
Acting on stage is a mode of performing an action, in the context of which the bodily aspects implic...
ASPAH conference 2021Addressing Intimacy on stage and on set in actor training.Intimacy direction, a...
This paper explores the acting in an interdisciplinary way, linking the insights that come from theo...
In Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality Freud has identified scopophilia as the pleasure of looki...
This chapter investigates the experience of being moved by a theater or dance performance. It explor...
This thesis researches and explores the phenomenon of intimacy in sensory-corporeal-based encounters...
From Plato’s erotic symposium, through sex and death on Early Modern British stages, to Freud’s vent...
International audienceThe creation of a theatre play rests classically on a rather strict distributi...
This article emerges from ongoing critical reflection on the practice of dance performance. Written ...
The liminal, intermedial space where cinema and theatre come together is still comparatively new ter...
The objective of this article is to envisage the body in relation to the notion of theatricality, un...