- Harley Granville-Barker
Harley Granville-Barker (
November 25 1877 –August 31 1946 ) was an Englishactor , director, producer,critic andplaywright .Born in
London , Harley Granville Barker (as he was then known) made his first appearance onstage there at the age of 14. His acting work led to increasing discontent with the low standards of the commercial theatre. In 1899, he played the lead role in "Richard II" underWilliam Poel , founder of theElizabethan Stage Society . In 1900 he became a leading member of theStage Society and this led to contacts withGeorge Bernard Shaw ,William Archer ,Elizabeth Robins , andWilliam Poel , among others. His first play, "The Marrying of Ann Leete " was produced by the Stage Society in 1900.After success with the Stage Society, Granville Barker turned his attentions to his own theatre operation and with
J.E. Vedrenne took a lease on theRoyal Court Theatre in London. There he managed three seasons of repertory theatre. Among many of the works he produced were plays by Shaw,Henrik Ibsen ,Maurice Maeterlinck , and newtranslation s ofEuripides . These plays were produced successfully in repertory. In the years 1904-07, Barker also produced, directed, and acted in ten of Bernard Shaw's plays at the Royal Court, establishing Shaw's reputation as one of the foremost playwrights of the modern age. In some cases, the great success of the productions was due in part to Barker's acting performances (for example, as Cusins in "Major Barbara " and Tanner in "Man and Superman ").During his years at the Court, Granville Barker met and married his first wife, actress
Lillah McCarthy . Over the following decade, the two of them would produce and act in a number of plays around London. In 1910, he coached her while she played Jocasta inMax Reinhardt 's production of "Oedipus " at theTheatre Royal, Covent Garden .His productions of Shakespeare's plays at the
Savoy Theatre in 1912 and 1914 were highly influential. In 1912 he directed "The Winter's Tale " and "Twelfth Night "; in 1914 he directed "A Midsummer Night's Dream ". Granville Barker did away with "star" system of acting and instead concentrated on excellence in the entire ensemble. He directed actors to speak Shakespeare's text rapidly, and used mainly curtains to create scenery, thus cutting down on the length of performance. He steered clear of elaborate, historically-"accurate" scenery and opted instead for symbolic patterns and shapes on stage. He extended the stage of the Savoy over the footlights and onto the first few rows of the stalls; thus his actors could play on an open stage, and connect more closely with the audience. In all of these innovations, Barker sought to capture the "spirit" of Shakespeare's plays.As a playwright, Granville Barker experimented with form, and proved an extremely gifted writer of dialogue and architect of ideas. His best known plays are "
The Voysey Inheritance " (1905) (later adapted byDavid Mamet ), "Waste" (1907, not licensed until 1920 [Peter Hall [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4158/is_19970312/ai_n14098895 "The importance of theatrical freedom",] "The Independent", 12 March 1997 as reproduced on the "Find Articles" website. Retrieved on 5 July 2008.] ) and "The Madras House " (1909). His entire body of plays has been produced at theShaw Festival in Canada, and has featured strongly in the work of directorSam Walters at theOrange Tree Theatre inRichmond upon Thames .Late in his career, after marrying for the second time, Barker broke with many of his old theatre friends, including Shaw, and settled in Paris. He then added the more aristocratic hyphen between his middle name and surname while publishing volumes of criticism, his "Prefaces to
Shakespeare ", and translations of Spanish plays.He was Director of the
British Institute in Paris between 1937 and 1939 [http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/241928/Harley-Granville-Barker#tab=active~checked%2Citems~checked&title=Harley%20Granville-Barker%20--%20Britannica%20Online%20Encyclopedia] .He died in
Paris in 1946.References
Bibliography
*Plays by Harley Granville Barker ("The Marrying of Ann Leete", "The Voysey Inheritance" , "The Kyle" and "Waste"), ed Dennis Kennedy, Cambridge University Press (1987) ISBN 0521314070
*"Prefaces to Shakespeare" by Harley Granville Barker, in 12 paperback volumes by Nick Hern Books, originally published by Batsford
*"Granville Barker and the Dream of Theatre" by Dennis Kennedy, Cambridge University Press (1985)
*"The Court Theatre A Commentary and Criticism 1904-1907" byDesmond MacCarthy , Bullen (1907), University of Miami Press (1966)
*"Cambridge Guide to Theatre", 1992 ISBN 0-521-43437-8
*"", 1935External links
* [http://www.imagi-nation.com/moonstruck/clsc70.html Granville-Barker Bio]
* [http://www.theatredatabase.com/20th_century/harley_granville_barker_001.html Theatre Database Bio]
*gutenberg author|id=Harley_Granville_Barker|name=Harley Granville-Barker
* [http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/research/search/ Harley Granville-Barker Collection] at theHarry Ransom Center at theUniversity of Texas at Austin
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