Popular Music Theatre under Socialism | Operettas and Musicals in the Eastern European States 1945 to 1990 | ISBN 9783830942481

Popular Music Theatre under Socialism

Operettas and Musicals in the Eastern European States 1945 to 1990

herausgegeben von Wolfgang Jansen
Mitwirkende
Beiträge vonPavel Bár
Beiträge vonPéter Bozó
Beiträge vonRoland Dippel
Beiträge vonGyöngyi Heltai
Beiträge vonMagdolna Jákfalvi
Beiträge vonWolfgang Jansen
Beiträge vonGabriella Kiss
Beiträge vonZsofia Lelkes
Beiträge vonSwetlana Lukanitschewa
Beiträge vonJacek Mikolajczyk
Beiträge vonDaniel Molnár
Beiträge vonValentina Sandu-Dediu
Beiträge vonKatrin Stöck
Beiträge vonAleksandra Zajac-Kiedysz
Herausgegeben vonWolfgang Jansen
Buchcover Popular Music Theatre under Socialism  | EAN 9783830942481 | ISBN 3-8309-4248-6 | ISBN 978-3-8309-4248-1

Popular Music Theatre under Socialism

Operettas and Musicals in the Eastern European States 1945 to 1990

herausgegeben von Wolfgang Jansen
Mitwirkende
Beiträge vonPavel Bár
Beiträge vonPéter Bozó
Beiträge vonRoland Dippel
Beiträge vonGyöngyi Heltai
Beiträge vonMagdolna Jákfalvi
Beiträge vonWolfgang Jansen
Beiträge vonGabriella Kiss
Beiträge vonZsofia Lelkes
Beiträge vonSwetlana Lukanitschewa
Beiträge vonJacek Mikolajczyk
Beiträge vonDaniel Molnár
Beiträge vonValentina Sandu-Dediu
Beiträge vonKatrin Stöck
Beiträge vonAleksandra Zajac-Kiedysz
Herausgegeben vonWolfgang Jansen
Theatre scholars and musicologists from Russia, Poland, Hungary, Romania, the Czech Republic, Austria and Germany came together in spring 2017 at the Center for Popular Culture and Music for a symposium, where they discussed for the first time the topic “Popular Music Theatre under Socialism: Operettas and Musicals in the Eastern European States 1945 to 1990”. This involved general questions such as: Did the uniform (prescribed) worldview lead to identical plays, or are there – in spite of a transnational ideology – national specific differences? And what did these differences possibly look like? The authors of this volume describe the phases of development, the national Productions went through, and what influence the import of plays from abroad had on it, whether from the “fraternal socialist countries” or the “capitalistic West”. They examine the government guidelines for authors and composers over the decades. Who were the most important authors and composers? Was there any “socialist operetta”, any “socialist musical”? And what political, social and ideological topics were negotiated on stage? The volume demonstrates the importance of a topic that has so far received little attention in research on European theatre and music history.