In 1971, together with her husband, playwright John McGrath and other colleagues, actress and writer Elizabeth MacLennan co-founded the left-wing, agit-prop and anti-establishment theatre company 7.84. At a time of political turbulence and optimism inspired by the revolutionary spirit of the late 1960s, the company’s central policy was to bring politically engaged performances to working-class audiences all over Britain. Even after 7:84 broke up, MacLennan continued acting, writing and defending her idea that theatre should reach everyone and everywhere, because she strongly believed it could change society. In 1990 she published The Moon Belongs to Everyone: Making Theatre with 7:84, an account of her own involvement with the company, but not only. It is a major work of theatrical criticism about contemporary popular theatre and its radical, experimental modes of performance, both inside and outside Scotland. In this book, MacLennan reveals the staple ingredients of “popular theatre”: the audience’s direct involvement through the breaking of the fourth wall; anti-conventional methods of acting and performing; preservation of cultural roots; transgression of generic boundaries; amalgam of music and comedy; and political engagement.

Elizabeth MacLennan (1938 –2015) / Angeletti, Gioia. - STAMPA. - (2023), pp. 374-383. [10.4324/9781003006923]

Elizabeth MacLennan (1938 –2015).

gioia angeletti
2023-01-01

Abstract

In 1971, together with her husband, playwright John McGrath and other colleagues, actress and writer Elizabeth MacLennan co-founded the left-wing, agit-prop and anti-establishment theatre company 7.84. At a time of political turbulence and optimism inspired by the revolutionary spirit of the late 1960s, the company’s central policy was to bring politically engaged performances to working-class audiences all over Britain. Even after 7:84 broke up, MacLennan continued acting, writing and defending her idea that theatre should reach everyone and everywhere, because she strongly believed it could change society. In 1990 she published The Moon Belongs to Everyone: Making Theatre with 7:84, an account of her own involvement with the company, but not only. It is a major work of theatrical criticism about contemporary popular theatre and its radical, experimental modes of performance, both inside and outside Scotland. In this book, MacLennan reveals the staple ingredients of “popular theatre”: the audience’s direct involvement through the breaking of the fourth wall; anti-conventional methods of acting and performing; preservation of cultural roots; transgression of generic boundaries; amalgam of music and comedy; and political engagement.
2023
9780367439866
Elizabeth MacLennan (1938 –2015) / Angeletti, Gioia. - STAMPA. - (2023), pp. 374-383. [10.4324/9781003006923]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11381/2871927
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