THEATRE QUOTES III

quotations about theatre

Theatre quote

I thought we had outgrown the idea of theatre as a mystic rite born of secret communion between author, director, actors and an empty auditorium.

KENNETH TYNAN

letter to George Devine, March 10, 1964


I long for the simplicity of theatre. I want lessons learned, comeuppances delivered, people sorted out, all before your bladder gets distractingly full. That's what I want. What I know is what we all know, whether we'll admit it or not: every attempt to impose the roundness of a well-made play on reality produces a disaster. Life just isn't so, nor will it be made so.

JOHN M. FORD

Casting Fortune


I think theater ought to be theatrical ... you know, shuffling the pack in different ways so that it's -- there's always some kind of ambush involved in the experience. You're being ambushed by an unexpected word, or by an elephant falling out of the cupboard, whatever it is.

TOM STOPPARD

interview, March 10, 1999

Tags: Tom Stoppard


Life is a theatre set in which there are but few practicable entrances.

VICTOR HUGO

Les Misérables

Tags: Victor Hugo


No theater could sanely flourish until there was an umbilical connection between what was happening on the stage and what was happening in the world.

KENNETH TYNAN

"Critic Kenneth Tynan Has Mellowed But Is Still England's Stingiest Gadfly", New York Times, January 9, 1966


It is a hopeless endeavour to attract people to a theatre unless they can be first brought to believe that they will never get in.

CHARLES DICKENS

Nicholas Nickleby

Tags: Charles Dickens


Theatre is a way of showing us lives far beyond our own experience; but it lets us into those stories by reflecting our own lives.

MARK SHENTON

"Theatre diversity is blossoming, even if there are a few bad apples", The Stage, May 24, 2017


I have never regarded any theater as much more than the conclusion to a dinner or the prelude to a supper.

MAX BEERBOHM

attributed, 20,000 Quips & Quotes

Tags: Max Beerbohm


The history of theatre is the history of first nights.

JOHN LAHR

Prick Up Your Ears: The Biography of Joe Orton


For all its flaws and demands, for all its stupidities, the theater will outlive all the mechanical contraptions schemed to ape it.

TALLULAH BANKHEAD

Tallulah: My Autobiography

Tags: Tallulah Bankhead


A good many inconveniences attend playgoing in any large city, but the greatest of them is usually the play itself.

KENNETH TYNAN

New York Herald Tribune, February 17, 1957


Theatres are curious places, magician's trick-boxes where the golden memories of dramatic triumphs linger like nostalgic ghosts, and where the unexplainable, the fantastic, the tragic, the comic and the absurd are routine occurrences on and off the stage. Murders, mayhem, political intrigue, lucrative business, secret assignations, and of course, dinner.

E. A. BUCCHIANERI

Brushstrokes of a Gadfly


The theater is the only branch of art much cared for by people of wealth; like canasta, it does away with the bother of talk after dinner.

MARY MCCARTHY

Up the Ladder from Charm to Vogue

Tags: Mary McCarthy


Theatre is a collective act of Doublethink: We know those people on stage aren't the people they're saying they are ... yet, at the same time, our hearts are breaking for the people they are pretending to be.

DUNCAN MACMILLAN

"A new vision of Big Brother opens in Adelaide", The Advertiser, May 12, 2017


I personally would like to bring a tortoise onto the stage, turn it into a racehorse, then into a hat, a song, a dragoon and a fountain of water. One can dare anything in the theatre and it is the place where one dares the least.

EUGENE IONESCO

Notes and Counter Notes

Tags: Eugene Ionesco


With a play, when the curtain goes up and people are in garbage cans, I know I may admire the idea cerebrally, but it won't mean as much to me. I've seen Beckett, along with many lesser avant-gardists, and many contemporary plays, and I can say yes, that's clever and deep but I don't really care. But when I watch Chekhov or O'Neill--where it's men and women in human, classic crises--that I like.

WOODY ALLEN

The Paris Review, fall 1995

Tags: Woody Allen


It's one of the tragic ironies of the theatre that only one man in it can count on steady work -- the night watchman.

TALLULAH BANKHEAD

Tallulah: My Autobiography

Tags: Tallulah Bankhead


Given technological developments in virtual reality and communications, it is not clear what, if any, purpose will be served by live theatre in the not-too-distant future. Postmodern theory sees theatre as a quaint and marginalized activity in a wired world, and ... whether live theatre even really exists anymore. Some of you may dream of seeing your name up in lights on a theatre marquee, but if you are really looking for fame and fortune shouldn't you be studying film at least, or television arts, or computers? What is it about theatre that remains compelling for you? Is it just because it's there?

MARK FORTIER

Theory Theatre and Introduction

Tags: Mark Fortier


No, no, no; the theatre is not a house of evil repute, nor are its followers evil doers: the theatre is a temple where the beautiful is always worshipped; it makes a continuous appeal to the higher senses and natural passions. In this temple vice is punished, and virtue rewarded; the great social problems are presented. In this temple instruction is less abstract, and, therefore, more profitable for the crowd. The apostles of this temple are full of faith and courage; they have the souls of missionaries marching always toward the ideal.

SARAH BERNHARDT

The Idol of Paris

Tags: Sarah Bernhardt


Theatre is a concentrate of life as normal. Theatre is a purified version of real life, an extraction, an essence of human behaviour that is stranger and more tragic and more perfect than everything that is ordinary about me and you.

ELEANOR CATTON

The Rehearsal