Episode notes
THE RADICALS & AVANT-GARDE 1920–1970
Picture an empty stage – just a bare space. Now imagine someone walks across that space while someone else watches. “That is all that is needed for an act of theatre to be engaged,” wrote Peter Brook . This simple yet radical idea guided Brook, one of the 20th century’s great directors. He sought the essence of theatre beyond all ornament. Brook famously declared: “I can take any empty space and call it a bare stage” . For him, theatre was a living encounter that could happen anywhere, unhindered by convention or clutter.
Brook’s 1968 book The Empty Space defined four modes of theatre – the Deadly, the Holy, the Rough, and the Immediate . Deadly Theatre was what he rebelled against: boring, conventional productions done out of habit for comfortable audiences . This was theatre as a lifeless mus ...