Charles Dullin: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Cleanup|date=January 2009}} |
{{Cleanup|date=January 2009}} |
||
'''Charles Dullin''' ([[ |
'''Charles Dullin''' ([[8 May]] [[1885]] [[Yenne]], [[Pays de Savoie|Savoie]] - [[11 December]] [[1949]], [[Paris]]) was a [[France|French]] [[actor]], theater manager and [[film director|director]]. |
||
He was a student of [[Jacques Copeau]]. He was also a major theater teacher. He trained a whole generation of French actors. |
He was a student of [[Jacques Copeau]]. He was also a major theater teacher. He trained a whole generation of French actors. |
Revision as of 10:46, 24 January 2009
Charles Dullin (8 May 1885 Yenne, Savoie - 11 December 1949, Paris) was a French actor, theater manager and director.
He was a student of Jacques Copeau. He was also a major theater teacher. He trained a whole generation of French actors. Before Copeau returned to Paris in June 1920, Charles Dullin had already taken on students and was giving acting lessons at the Théâtre Antoine under the tutelage of Firmin Gémier, the actor who originated the role of Ubu in Alfred Jarry's Ubu roi. The small of group of students, among them Antonin Artaud, developed into the "Atelier", Dullin's workshop for young actors that would prove to have a lasting effect. With this small group of actors he eventually settled in the Théâtre Montmartre, renamed the Théâtre de l’Atelier where he would remain until the beginning of World War II.
In the tradition of Copeau, Dullin preached and practiced respect for the text, a simplified stage décor and favored a poetic rather than a spectacular perspective on the mise-en-scène, placing the actor at the center of the theatrical endeavor. Dullin also played many roles on the screen, especially when he needed money to continue to support his theater. He was one of the major French actors both on the stage and the screen during the 1930s.
Students of Charles Dullin have included Antonin Artaud, Jean-Louis Barrault, Étienne Decroux, Juran Hisao and Marcel Marceau[1]
Notable Productions
- Ben Jonson's Volpone
- Molière's L’Avare
- Sophocles’s Antigone in the Jean Cocteau adaptation with music by Arthur Honegger
- Pirandello's The Pleasure of Honesty
- Shakespeare's Richard III.
References
External links