“Faith is an aptitude of the spirit. It is, in fact, a talent: you must be born with it.”
Anton Chekhov, “On the Road” (trans. Constance Garnett)
Terry Teachout on the arts in New York City
“Faith is an aptitude of the spirit. It is, in fact, a talent: you must be born with it.”
Anton Chekhov, “On the Road” (trans. Constance Garnett)
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One of the few welcome surprises of 2020 was the announcement by New York’s Mint Theater that it had spent the preceding seven years taping broadcast-ready three-camera archival videos of its off-Broadway productions, and that in lieu of live performances during the pandemic, it would stream these videos for free. As regular readers of this column know, the Mint specializes in small-house revivals of unjustly forgotten 20th-century plays. I have been reviewing one or two of its shows most seasons for the past decade and a half, and each one I’ve seen has been well chosen and flawlessly acted and staged. No other theater company in America has a more consistently high record of artistic quality.
“Days to Come,” the second of 10 plays by Lillian Hellman to open on Broadway in her lifetime, is one of the most significant of the Mint’s recent revivals, for the original production closed in 1936 after just seven performances and disappeared almost without a trace (prior to the Mint’s 2018 staging, which I saw and reviewed, it appears to have had only one revival anywhere). Most flops close for self-evident reasons, but there is no obvious reason why “Days to Come” did so: It is an extremely strong piece of work….
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Read the whole thing here.John Milton, Paradise Lost
“A Mob’s a Monster; Heads enough, but no Brains.”
Benjamin Franklin, Poor Richard’s Almanack
A scene from Hitler: The Last Ten Days, directed by Ennio De Concini and starring Alec Guinness as Adolf Hitler:
(This is the latest in a series of arts- and history-related videos that appear in this space each Monday, Wednesday, and Friday)
“Power is never stable when it is boundless.”
Tacitus, History
From 2011:
Read the whole thing here.Directing is mainly listening. The director’s first job is to ensure that the actor speaks the text in such a way as to make it intelligible to members of the audience who have not already seen it on the printed page.
When you’re talking, you’re not listening….
“It is the prerogative of great men to have great defects.”
Rouchefoucauld, Maxims
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