Documentary and Verbatim Theatre

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A01=Stuart Young
actor audience relationship
Author_Stuart Young
Category=ATD
dance
Documentary theatre
dramaturgical strategies
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ethical representation
headphone verbatim
interdisciplinary performance
methodologies in contemporary theatre practice
performance ethnography
physical theatre
Theatre studies
tribunal plays analysis
twentieth century theatre
Verbatim theatre

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032029535
  • Weight: 610g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Dec 2025
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Documentary and Verbatim Theatre surveys the emergence and rise of work based on real life in contemporary theatre, exploring the artists, methodologies, plays, and central themes that have characterised its enduring popularity.

After charting the recent history of modern documentary theatre in the twentieth century and the debates that have surrounded it in the past thirty years, each chapter examines in depth key practices - such as headphone verbatim and extreme verbatim, and practitioners - from Anna Deavere Smith and David Hare to The Civilians and DV8 Physical Theatre. Practitioners’ chosen topics, playwriting process, and engagement with sometimes fraught debates in the field are brought to the fore. Focusing on the various dramaturgical and theatrical strategies used to create and stage documentary theatre, this book provides a practice-centric understanding of some of the principal issues related to the form, including the tensions between fidelity to the documentary or verbatim record and the exercise of artistic licence; the ethical issues entailed in representing living people; the implications for actors and our understanding of acting; and our assumptions about aesthetic distancing.

This is an essential introduction to documentary and verbatim theatre for theatre studies students, teachers, and scholars, as well as theatre practitioners.

Stuart Young is Emeritus Professor of Theatre Studies at the University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand. He has published on various aspects of Theatre of the Real, and his Performance-as-Research projects on verbatim theatre have resulted in the creation of several works.

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