100 episodes

Performance is an ephemeral thing, so how do we rediscover its history, and what can that teach us about theatre today? The Theatre History Podcast explores these questions through interviews with scholars and artists who are studying theatre's past in order to help shape its future.

The Theatre History Podcast Michael Lueger

    • Arts
    • 4.3 • 12 Ratings

Performance is an ephemeral thing, so how do we rediscover its history, and what can that teach us about theatre today? The Theatre History Podcast explores these questions through interviews with scholars and artists who are studying theatre's past in order to help shape its future.

    Episode 105: The Archive of Performances of Greek and Roman Drama with Professor Fiona Macintosh

    Episode 105: The Archive of Performances of Greek and Roman Drama with Professor Fiona Macintosh

    Ancient Greek and Roman drama has influenced theatre for millennia, and playwrights and other artists from around the world continue to draw inspiration from these works. Professor Fiona Macintosh joins us to talk about the Archive of Performances of Greek and Roman Drama at Oxford University and how it's been a resource for those who want to learn more about how these works have been - and continue to be - performed.

    • 50 min
    Episode 104: Elise Harris Helps Us Look Into "Sidney Brustein’s Window"

    Episode 104: Elise Harris Helps Us Look Into "Sidney Brustein’s Window"

    Lorraine Hansberry's play "The Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window" is often forgotten, or dismissed as an inferior play that fell victim to the playwright's declining health at the end of her life. But as our guest, Elise Harris, tells us, it's a fascinating work in its own right, and one with a rich and complicated history.

    • 55 min
    Episode 103: Special Guest Episode! Peter Schmitz and Adventures in Theater History: Philadelphia present "Jasper Deeter and the Hedgerow Theatre"

    Episode 103: Special Guest Episode! Peter Schmitz and Adventures in Theater History: Philadelphia present "Jasper Deeter and the Hedgerow Theatre"

    It's a special guest episode, featuring Peter Schmitz and his podcast "Adventures in Theatre History: Philadelphia." Peter tells the story of Jasper Deeter, whose pioneering work had an impact on not only Philadelphia theatre, but the American stage as a whole.

    • 1 hr
    Episode 102: Celebrity Pregnancy on the 18th-century London Stage with Dr. Chelsea Phillips

    Episode 102: Celebrity Pregnancy on the 18th-century London Stage with Dr. Chelsea Phillips

    The eighteenth century was obsessed with celebrities, and, like our own time, the fans of the 1700s were fascinated by famous actress' pregnancies. Dr. Chelsea Phillips joins us to talk about how she explores the emergence of this aspect of 18th-century fan culture in her new book, Carrying All Before Her: Celebrity Pregnancy and the London Stage, 1689-1800.

    • 1 hr 32 min
    Episode 101: Visiting the Museum of Broadway with Ben West

    Episode 101: Visiting the Museum of Broadway with Ben West

    Broadway has a long and complex history, and in November of 2022 a new museum is opening that will allow visitors to explore that history. Curator Ben West joins us to introduce the Museum of Broadway and explain how it's bringing the theatrical past to life.

    • 35 min
    Episode 100: Examining Robert E. Sherwood's "There Shall Be No Night" with Dr. Thomas F. Connolly

    Episode 100: Examining Robert E. Sherwood's "There Shall Be No Night" with Dr. Thomas F. Connolly

    For anyone who's been following the news in 2022, a play about an Eastern European country's heroic resistance in the face of Russian invasion might sound timely. But as Dr. Thomas F. Connolly shows in this week's discussion of Robert E. Sherwood's "There Shall Be No Night," timeliness can be a tricky subject, perhaps especially in the context of live theatre.

    • 27 min

Customer Reviews

4.3 out of 5
12 Ratings

12 Ratings

Ncholas C. ,

Great Show!

Mike hosts fascinating conversations and learned history of theatre!

shoeseller65 ,

Great history!

So far the content is great. This is the kind of history I love. I can use this info during my camps. Your guests say uh and um far too many times. One episode was so bad I couldn’t listen. So much for knowing how to speak.

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