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] as Chaplain, Josephine Welcome as Kattrin, Margaret Robertson as Mother Courage, in '']'' by Bertolt Brecht, Internationalist Theatre]] | ] as Chaplain, Josephine Welcome as Kattrin, Margaret Robertson as Mother Courage, in '']'' by Bertolt Brecht, Internationalist Theatre]] | ||
'''Internationalist Theatre''' is a London theatre company founded by South African Greek actress ] in September 1980.<ref name=conway>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BjFaAAAAMAAJ&q=%22Internationalist+Theatre%22 |title=British Alternative Theatre Directory|author=Robert Conway|publisher=J. Offord |date= 1988|pages=27–28 |isbn= 9780903931380}}</ref> The company was originally named New Internationalist Theatre,<ref> {{cite web|url= https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=lzkOAQAAMAAJ&q=%22Angelique+Rockas%22&dq=%22Angelique+Rockas%22&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjg0LLdmPjXAhVjI8AKHYyIAyoQ6AEIQzAG/|title=British Theatre directory Internationalist Theatre Entry|author=British Theatre Directory editor|date=1990|work=British Theatre Directory page 336 |via=books.google.co.uk}}</ref><ref>https://archiv.adk.de/objekt/2583471</ref> with an intention to pursue an ] approach in its choice of plays as well as "a multi-racial drama policy, with an even mix of performers drawn from different cultural groups". |
'''Internationalist Theatre''' is a London theatre company founded by South African Greek actress ]<ref >{{cite book |url=https://www.google.com/search?tbm=bks&ei=NnhYXPmrCY_CUujPrIgD&q=South+African+Digest++Internationalist+Theatre+South+African+actress+Angelique+Rockas+all+races+and+nationalities+Genet+The+Balcony+mother+courage&oq=South+African+Digest++Internationalist+Theatre+South+African+actress+Angelique+Rockas+all+races+and+nationalities+Genet+The+Balcony+mother+courage&gs_l=psy-ab.12...19940.46010.0.47929.59.43.0.0.0.0.0.0..0.0....0...1c.1.64.psy-ab..59.0.0....0.ufflBu-1sXU| title=Angelique Rockas founded Internationalst Theatre all races and nationalities |author=Dirk de Villiers|newspaper=The Star |date=July 1983|pages=66|via=google.com}}</ref> in September 1980.<ref name=conway>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BjFaAAAAMAAJ&q=%22Internationalist+Theatre%22 |title=British Alternative Theatre Directory|author=Robert Conway|publisher=J. Offord |date= 1988|pages=27–28 |isbn= 9780903931380}}</ref> The company was originally named New Internationalist Theatre,<ref> {{cite web|url= https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=lzkOAQAAMAAJ&q=%22Angelique+Rockas%22&dq=%22Angelique+Rockas%22&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjg0LLdmPjXAhVjI8AKHYyIAyoQ6AEIQzAG/|title=British Theatre directory Internationalist Theatre Entry|author=British Theatre Directory editor|date=1990|work=British Theatre Directory page 336 |via=books.google.co.uk}}</ref><ref>https://archiv.adk.de/objekt/2583471</ref> with an intention to pursue an ]<ref> Archived Michelene Wandor preview of The Camp, issue 583, p.90, , '']'', 23 October 1981. Retrieved on 2019-02-07 </ref> approach in its choice of plays as well as "a multi-racial drama policy, with an even mix of performers drawn from different cultural groups".<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/search/results?basicsearch=second%20show%20by%20genet%20the%20stage%20april%201981&retrievecountrycounts=false |title=The Stage Second show by Genet multi-racial|website=British Newspaper Archive|date=1981-04-09|access-date=2019-02-07}}</ref> | ||
⚫ | The theatre has received coverage from stage papers around the world.<ref> Archived Dimitris Gionis Eleftherotypia Arts page 1and 2 , ,, "]", 5 August 1992 </ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://archive.org/details/VogueMexcoCoverJuly1992 |title=Vogue Mexico Interview Angelique Rockas Multi Faceted Actress Spanish and English |author=Luis Carlos Emmerich|date=July 1992|work=Vogue Mexico|via=Internet Archive}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://archive.fo/20160606160808/http://www.thesouthafrican.com/angelique-rockas-bold-theatre-pioneer/|title=Angelique Rockas: bold theatre pioneer|author=|date=10 August 2011|work=The South African}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hellenism.net/interview_angelique-rockas.html|title=Angelique Rockas|author=Evangelos Kordakis|date=|work=hellenism.net}}</ref>. | ||
The company received charity status in 1986.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://archive.org/details/InternationalistTheatreCharityRegistrationAngeliqueRockas1986|title=Internationalist Theatre granted Charity status|author=Charity Commission|date=1986|work=|via=Internet Archive}}</ref> | |||
⚫ | The theatre has received coverage from stage papers around the world.<ref> |
||
== Performances and reception == | == Performances and reception == | ||
The Internationalist Theatre has put on plays by, among others, ] ('']''),<ref name=":0">{{cite web|url=https://archive.org/details/FirstPageOfBBCFrenchLanguageReview|title=Why An International Theatre|date=30 June 1981|work=BBC French|via=Internet Archive}}</ref> ] ('']''), ] ('']''),<ref>{{cite web|url=https://archive.org/details/PdfInternationalistLiolaMultiRacialAndMultiNationalJuly1982|title=Deceit in a Sicilian village|author=Harold Atkins|date=28 July 1982|work=The Daily Telegraph|via=Internet Archive}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=LIOLA |author=Nicolas de Jongh |date= 28 July 1982|work=The Guardian }}</ref> ] ('']''),<ref name=":1">{{cite web|url=https://www.flickr.com/photos/internationalist_theatre_rockas/6459501423/in/album-72157627979736863/|title=In the Bar of a Tokyo Hotel|author=Lindsay Anderson|date=5 May 1983|via=flickr.com}}</ref> ] ('']'')<ref>{{cite web|url=https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=iMC5o-iJq-YC&pg=PA933&dq=%22Angelique+Rockas%22&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwibzKr-mvjXAhWoI8AKHbs4DiYQ6AEIJzAA#v=onepage&q=%22Angelique%20Rockas%22&f=false|title=An International Annotated Bibliography of Strindberg Studies section 12 1378|author=Michael Robinson|date=2008|via=books.google.co.uk}}</ref> and ] ('']).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.doollee.com/Main%20Pages/theatreRecordPlaysIndex.pdf|title=Theatre Record Play index 05/p.0261 'Enemies ' 74/1207|author=Theatre Record|date=March 1985|work=Theatre Record|via=.doollee.com}}</ref>'' Their critical reception was generally favourable,<ref name=":0" /><ref>{{cite web|url=https://archive.org/details/Liola_review_corriere_della_serra_20_july_1982_Internationalist_theatre|title=piace a Londra ''Liolà'' in teatro|author=|date=20 July 1982|work=Corriere della Serra|via=Internet Archive}}</ref><ref name=":1" /><ref>{{cite web|url=https://archive.org/details/TheStageMissJulieOriginal|title=Review of Miss Julie|author=RB Marriott|date=2 February 1984|work=The Stage|via=Internet Archive}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://archive.org/details/MorningStarOrigianlEnemies|title=Review of ''Enemies''|author=Tom Vaughan|date=26 March 1985|work=The Morning Star|via=Internet Archive}}</ref> although not universally; '']'' magazine disliked ''Mother Courage,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://archive.org/details/TimeOutMalcolmHay13May1982|title=Full Review of ''Mother Courage''|author=Malcolm Hay|date=13 May 1982|work=Time Out magazine|via=Internet Archive}}</ref>'' and the '']'' found '']''{{'}}s multi-national casting problematic.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://archive.org/details/LiolaFTReviewInternationalistTheatreCommittedToInternationalCastingJuly1982|title=Liola!/Bloomsbury Theatre|date=28 July 1982|work=Financial Times|via=Internet Archive}}</ref> | |||
*1981 ] ('']''),"production uses Theatre Space to its limits, Characters are not restricted to just the stage area; they leap out of the wall, appear from the audience so that there is no separation between the players and spectators , We are all voyeurs participating in Genet`s games. The surroundings of Theatre Space conspire to enhance the atmosphere of sleaze , a quality that eluded the last London production by the RSC (])." <ref>{{cite news|title=The Balcony|date=10 July 1981|author=Michael Darvell|work=What`s On}}</ref>."L`atmosphere louche et malsaine est tres bien recreee par le New Internatlionalist theatre., Et s`ils sont aussi vivants et revelateurs les jeunes talents que on ne peut que s`en rejouir.. ] est pleine d`autorite dans le role de Madame Irma.".. <ref>Archived Madeleine Jay BBC French Service(now BBC World Service) The Balcony review, , 30 June 1981</ref><ref> Archived Madeleine Jay BBC French Service The Balcony review, , 30 June 1981</ref> | |||
* 1981 premiere of ]`s ] <ref>ISNI 0000000463554836 Internationalist Theatre The Camp</ref> an anti-junta protest play which "relentlessly exposes and explores the psychology of fascism ..draws its political paralels by reference to Nazi concentration camps...…it`s incredible theatre: a powerful alternative to the marsh mellow media we usually get fed, ]."<ref >{{cite web | title=The Camp Spare Rib : Viewer | website=JISC Journal Archives | url=https://data.journalarchives.jisc.ac.uk/britishlibrary/sparerib/view?volumeIssue=33313337323334343737%2333383234353738313239$%23313135&journal=33313337323334343737%2333383234353738313239 | access-date=2019-02-05}}</ref>The BBC Latin American Service noted "in El Campo Gambaro expresses her savage outrage at artistic repression via the figure of Emma the artist humiliated and mutilated".<ref> Archived Ann Morey BBC Latin American Service (now BBC Mundo) review pg 1 and 2 ,,, 26 October 1981.</ref> | |||
*1982 Internationalist Theatre`s production of ]`s ('']''), " whose attack on the practice of war could not- with south atlantic news filling the front pages- have been more topical...prompted the questions it should..."<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=16paAAAAMAAJ&q=%22Internationalist+Theatre%22+-wikipedia&dq=%22Internationalist+Theatre%22+-wikipedia&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwj5jcraksDeAhVlAsAKHfeVB_Y4FBDoAQgqMAE|title=Mother Courage and Her Children|issue=139-154|publisher=The Theatre Quarterly|page=32|date=1982|via=google.co.uk}}</ref> and performed in an old disused Charing Cross hospital basement.The ] noted that viewing three hours of Brecht in such an environment "might sound like noble endurance indeed. But the Internationalist Theatre production of Mother Courage at the Theatre Space is not to be so lightly dismissed.. serious straight forward workmanlike performances by actors who are prepared to let the play speak for itself".<ref>{{cite news|title=Letting Mother take the Load| date=6 May 1982|author=Christopher Hudson |work=The Standard}}</ref><ref> Archived Christopher Hudson Mother Courage review, , "]", 6 May 1982.</ref> | |||
*1982 premiere of ] ('']'')" It opened with a satiety of womens` gossip. some of it not very easy to follow with the various accents of the New Internationalist Theatre. But it picked up wonderfully" noted ]." The pleasures of the performance with its occasional songs based on ballads and tarantellas , lay in the village vitality, the lusty folk element. .and the children romped about deliciously. A very good evening of an unusual kind."<ref>{{cite news |title=Deceit in an Italian Village |author=Harold Atkins |date= 28 July 1982 |work=The Daily Telegraph|publisher=Gale Group }]</ref> "Il successo e stato particolarmente vivo e le recensioni della stampa molto positivo", ].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://archive.org/details/Liola_review_corriere_della_serra_20_july_1982_Internationalist_theatre|title=piace a Londra ''Liolà'' in teatro |author=|date=20 July 1982|work=Corriere della Sera|via=Internet Archive}}</ref> | |||
*1983 premiere of ]`s ('']''), "director Alkis Kritikos dug powerfully into the nature of these 4 characters.....]`s designs caught just the right feel of an expensive impersonal hotel".<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/search/results?basicsearch=the%20stage%20battle%20for%20riches%201983%20ann%20nugent&retrievecountrycounts=false|title= British Newspaper Archive The Stage review of In the Bar of a TokyoHotel,The Battle for Riches |author=Ann Nugent |date=November 1983|work=The Stage|via=britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk}}</ref><ref name=":1">{{cite web|url=https://www.flickr.com/photos/internationalist_theatre_rockas/6459501423/in/album-72157627979736863/|title=In the Bar of a Tokyo Hotel|author=Lindsay Anderson|date=5 May 1983|via=flickr.com}}</ref><ref >{{cite books|url=https://www.google.com/search?tbm=bks&q=South+African+digest+Angelique+Rockas+dynamic++film+director+Lindsay+Anderson+Tennessee+Williams+I+thought+you+did+that+harsh+yet++vulnerable+woman+extremely+well| title=SA Actress praised |author=Dirk de Villers|work=The Star |publisher=South African Digest|date=July 1983 |page=66|via=google.com}}</ref> | |||
*1984 ]`s ('']'')<ref>{{cite web|url=https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=iMC5o-iJq-YC&pg=PA933&dq=%22Angelique+Rockas%22&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwibzKr-mvjXAhWoI8AKHbs4DiYQ6AEIJzAA#v=onepage&q=%22Angelique%20Rockas%22&f=false|title=An International Annotated Bibliography of Strindberg Studies section 12 1378|author=Michael Robinson|date=2008|via=books.google.co.uk}}</ref> "I have not seen a better production of Strindberg`s "Miss Julie" than the Internationalist Theatre`s staging....It is wild and raw, steeped in emotion and dramatic drive,like the play itself, and reveals the aristocratic Julie and the servant Jean in all their vivid colouring and depth of corruption..."<ref>{{cite web|title=The Stage Miss Julie pg.16|website=British Newspaper Archive|date=2 February 1984|url=https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/search/results/1950-01-01/1999-12-31?basicsearch=internationalist%20miss%20julie%20the%20stage%2022%20january%201984&somesearch=internationalist%20miss%20julie%20the%20stage%2022%20january%201984&retrievecountrycounts=false&newspapertitle=the%2bstage|access-date=2019-02-07}}</ref> | |||
*1985 ] ('']).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.doollee.com/Main%20Pages/theatreRecordPlaysIndex.pdf|title=Theatre Record Play index 05/p.0261 'Enemies ' 74/1207|author=Theatre Record|date=March 1985|work=Theatre Record|via=doollee.com}}</ref>'' "this is a great revolutionary play, by a great revolutionary writer, performed with elegance and style, great passion and commitment", ].<ref>{{cite news|title=Enemies|date=26 March 1985|author=Tom Vaughan |work=Morning Star}}</ref><ref> Tom Vaughan Morning Star Enemies review 26 March 1985 accessed at Marx Memorial Library London </ref> The ] favoured the use of actors without class accents as it clarified the disastrous results of political fanaticism.<ref> Archived BBC Russia Service Enemies review 30 March 1985</ref> | |||
Internationalist Theatre staged productions by dramatists including Pirandello, Genet, and Tennessee Williams who belong to "the continental, non-realistic, symbolically orientated drama of this century (20th) and...proved most uncongenial to the tunnel visioned repertoire builders" of British theatre of that period,], ].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://search.proquest.com/docview/186334752?accountid=17321 |title= LIOLA review pg.10 |author=Nicolas de Jongh |date=28 July 1982 |work=The Guardian from Proquest Historical library |via=proquest.com}}</ref> | |||
Though their critical reception was generally favourable, but not universally so ; '']'' magazine disliked ''Mother Courage'', not only because "the actors are allowed to play their emotions full blast " but also ".. the casting only inspires a whole host of irreverent questions: what on earth, say, is an American sergeant doing in seventeenth century Europe? And how did a Pakistani chaplain get into the Swedish army?": an example of the resistance to inclusive multi-racial and multi-national casting in a classic<ref>{{cite web|url=https://archive.org/details/TimeOutMalcolmHay13May1982|title=Full Review of ''Mother Courage''|author=Malcolm Hay|date=13 May 1982|work=Time Out magazine|via=Internet Archive}}</ref> ] was the Asian actor who played the chaplain. The '']'' found '']''{{'}}s multi-national casting problematic : " do we really need this peculiar medley of Italian accents for the English premiere? The problem is compounded by the commitment ...to a multi-national cast ....English, German, Sicilian, and Italian actors produce widely differing versions of the Latin lilt"<ref>{{cite web|url=https://archive.org/details/LiolaFTReviewInternationalistTheatreCommittedToInternationalCastingJuly1982|title=Liola!/Bloomsbury Theatre|date=28 July 1982|work=Financial Times|via=Internet Archive}}</ref> | |||
] as Carmen with Okon Jones in Genet's ], Internationalist Theatre]] | ] as Carmen with Okon Jones in Genet's ], Internationalist Theatre]] | ||
Revision as of 14:18, 20 September 2019
Internationalist Theatre is a London theatre company founded by South African Greek actress Angelique Rockas in September 1980. The company was originally named New Internationalist Theatre, with an intention to pursue an internationalist approach in its choice of plays as well as "a multi-racial drama policy, with an even mix of performers drawn from different cultural groups". The theatre has received coverage from stage papers around the world.. The company received charity status in 1986.
Performances and reception
- 1981 Jean Genet (The Balcony),"production uses Theatre Space to its limits, Characters are not restricted to just the stage area; they leap out of the wall, appear from the audience so that there is no separation between the players and spectators , We are all voyeurs participating in Genet`s games. The surroundings of Theatre Space conspire to enhance the atmosphere of sleaze , a quality that eluded the last London production by the RSC (Royal Shakespeare Company)." ."L`atmosphere louche et malsaine est tres bien recreee par le New Internatlionalist theatre., Et s`ils sont aussi vivants et revelateurs les jeunes talents que on ne peut que s`en rejouir.. Ellen Thomas est pleine d`autorite dans le role de Madame Irma."..
- 1981 premiere of Griselda Gambaro`s The Camp (1967 play) an anti-junta protest play which "relentlessly exposes and explores the psychology of fascism ..draws its political paralels by reference to Nazi concentration camps...…it`s incredible theatre: a powerful alternative to the marsh mellow media we usually get fed, Spare Rib."The BBC Latin American Service noted "in El Campo Gambaro expresses her savage outrage at artistic repression via the figure of Emma the artist humiliated and mutilated".
- 1982 Internationalist Theatre`s production of Brecht`s (Mother Courage and Her Children), " whose attack on the practice of war could not- with south atlantic news filling the front pages- have been more topical...prompted the questions it should..." and performed in an old disused Charing Cross hospital basement.The The Evening Standard noted that viewing three hours of Brecht in such an environment "might sound like noble endurance indeed. But the Internationalist Theatre production of Mother Courage at the Theatre Space is not to be so lightly dismissed.. serious straight forward workmanlike performances by actors who are prepared to let the play speak for itself".
- 1982 premiere of Luigi Pirandello (Liolà)" It opened with a satiety of womens` gossip. some of it not very easy to follow with the various accents of the New Internationalist Theatre. But it picked up wonderfully" noted The Daily Telegraph." The pleasures of the performance with its occasional songs based on ballads and tarantellas , lay in the village vitality, the lusty folk element. .and the children romped about deliciously. A very good evening of an unusual kind." "Il successo e stato particolarmente vivo e le recensioni della stampa molto positivo", Corriere della Sera.
- 1983 premiere of Tennessee Williams`s (In the Bar of a Tokyo Hotel), "director Alkis Kritikos dug powerfully into the nature of these 4 characters.....Stewart Laing`s designs caught just the right feel of an expensive impersonal hotel".
- 1984 Strindberg`s (Miss Julie) "I have not seen a better production of Strindberg`s "Miss Julie" than the Internationalist Theatre`s staging....It is wild and raw, steeped in emotion and dramatic drive,like the play itself, and reveals the aristocratic Julie and the servant Jean in all their vivid colouring and depth of corruption..."
- 1985 Maxim Gorky (Enemies). "this is a great revolutionary play, by a great revolutionary writer, performed with elegance and style, great passion and commitment", Morning Star. The BBC Russian Service favoured the use of actors without class accents as it clarified the disastrous results of political fanaticism.
Internationalist Theatre staged productions by dramatists including Pirandello, Genet, and Tennessee Williams who belong to "the continental, non-realistic, symbolically orientated drama of this century (20th) and...proved most uncongenial to the tunnel visioned repertoire builders" of British theatre of that period,Nicolas de Jongh, The Guardian.
Though their critical reception was generally favourable, but not universally so ; Time Out magazine disliked Mother Courage, not only because "the actors are allowed to play their emotions full blast " but also ".. the casting only inspires a whole host of irreverent questions: what on earth, say, is an American sergeant doing in seventeenth century Europe? And how did a Pakistani chaplain get into the Swedish army?": an example of the resistance to inclusive multi-racial and multi-national casting in a classic Renu Setna was the Asian actor who played the chaplain. The Financial Times found Liolà's multi-national casting problematic : " do we really need this peculiar medley of Italian accents for the English premiere? The problem is compounded by the commitment ...to a multi-national cast ....English, German, Sicilian, and Italian actors produce widely differing versions of the Latin lilt"
See also
References
- Dirk de Villiers (July 1983). Angelique Rockas founded Internationalst Theatre all races and nationalities. p. 66 – via google.com.
{{cite book}}
:|newspaper=
ignored (help) - Robert Conway (1988). British Alternative Theatre Directory. J. Offord. pp. 27–28. ISBN 9780903931380.
- British Theatre Directory editor (1990). "British Theatre directory Internationalist Theatre Entry". British Theatre Directory page 336 – via books.google.co.uk.
{{cite web}}
:|author=
has generic name (help) - https://archiv.adk.de/objekt/2583471
- Archived Michelene Wandor preview of The Camp, issue 583, p.90, "The Camp", Time Out, 23 October 1981. Retrieved on 2019-02-07
- "The Stage Second show by Genet multi-racial". British Newspaper Archive. 1981-04-09. Retrieved 2019-02-07.
- Archived Dimitris Gionis Eleftherotypia Arts page 1and 2 ,"Angeliki Roka" ,, "Eleftherotypia", 5 August 1992
- Luis Carlos Emmerich (July 1992). "Vogue Mexico Interview Angelique Rockas Multi Faceted Actress Spanish and English". Vogue Mexico – via Internet Archive.
- "Angelique Rockas: bold theatre pioneer". The South African. 10 August 2011.
- Evangelos Kordakis. "Angelique Rockas". hellenism.net.
- Charity Commission (1986). "Internationalist Theatre granted Charity status" – via Internet Archive.
- Michael Darvell (10 July 1981). "The Balcony". What`s On.
- Archived Madeleine Jay BBC French Service(now BBC World Service) The Balcony review, , 30 June 1981
- Archived Madeleine Jay BBC French Service The Balcony review, Le Balcon, 30 June 1981
- ISNI 0000000463554836 Internationalist Theatre The Camp
- "The Camp Spare Rib : Viewer". JISC Journal Archives. Retrieved 2019-02-05.
- Archived Ann Morey BBC Latin American Service (now BBC Mundo) review pg 1 and 2 ,,"El Campo", 26 October 1981.
- Mother Courage and Her Children. The Theatre Quarterly. 1982. p. 32 – via google.co.uk.
- Christopher Hudson (6 May 1982). "Letting Mother take the Load". The Standard.
- Archived Christopher Hudson Mother Courage review, "Letting Mother take the load", "Evening Standard", 6 May 1982.
- {{cite news |title=Deceit in an Italian Village |author=Harold Atkins |date= 28 July 1982 |work=The Daily Telegraph|publisher=Gale Group }]
- "piace a Londra Liolà in teatro". Corriere della Sera. 20 July 1982 – via Internet Archive.
- Ann Nugent (November 1983). "British Newspaper Archive The Stage review of In the Bar of a TokyoHotel,The Battle for Riches". The Stage – via britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk.
- Lindsay Anderson (5 May 1983). "In the Bar of a Tokyo Hotel" – via flickr.com.
- Dirk de Villers (July 1983). SA Actress praised. South African Digest. p. 66 – via google.com.
{{cite book}}
:|work=
ignored (help) - Michael Robinson (2008). "An International Annotated Bibliography of Strindberg Studies section 12 1378" – via books.google.co.uk.
- "The Stage Miss Julie pg.16". British Newspaper Archive. 2 February 1984. Retrieved 2019-02-07.
- Theatre Record (March 1985). "Theatre Record Play index 05/p.0261 'Enemies ' 74/1207" (PDF). Theatre Record – via doollee.com.
- Tom Vaughan (26 March 1985). "Enemies". Morning Star.
- Tom Vaughan Morning Star Enemies review 26 March 1985 accessed at Marx Memorial Library London
- Archived BBC Russia Service Enemies review 30 March 1985
- Nicolas de Jongh (28 July 1982). "LIOLA review pg.10". The Guardian from Proquest Historical library – via proquest.com.
- Malcolm Hay (13 May 1982). "Full Review of Mother Courage". Time Out magazine – via Internet Archive.
- "Liola!/Bloomsbury Theatre". Financial Times. 28 July 1982 – via Internet Archive.
External links
- Bertolt-Brecht-Archiv Akademie der Künste Mother Courage and Her Children
- The records of Internationalist Theatre, London, 1983-1985; New Internationalist Theatre, London, 1981-1982 are held by the British Library.
- University College Dublin Index to Pirandello Studies, Vol 3 (1983), Liola p.100-102
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