GRANVILLE-BARKER, HARLEY


Meaning of GRANVILLE-BARKER, HARLEY in English

born Nov. 25, 1877, London, Eng. died Aug. 31, 1946, Paris, France English dramatist, producer, and critic whose naturalistic stagings in an era of theatrical artificiality profoundly influenced the 20th-century theatre. Barker began his stage training at 13 years of age and first appeared on the London stage two years later. He preferred work with William Poel's Elizabethan Stage Society and Ben Greet's Shakespeare repertory company to a West End career, and in 1900 he joined the experimental Stage Society. In 1904 he became manager of the Court Theatre with J.E. Vedrenne and introduced the public to the plays of Henrik Ibsen, Maurice Maeterlinck, John Galsworthy, John Masefield, and Gilbert Murray's translations from Greek. His original productions of the early plays of George Bernard Shaw were especially important. His wife, Lillah McCarthy, played leading roles in many of the plays he produced. Among new plays produced at the Court Theatre were several of his own: The Voysey Inheritance (1905), the most famous, showing Shaw's influence; Prunella (1906), a charming fantasy written with Laurence Housman; Waste (1907); and The Madras House (1910). Also revolutionary was his treatment of Shakespeare. Instead of traditional scenic decor and declamatory elocution, Barker successfully introduced, in the Savoy productions (1912-14) of The Winter's Tale and Twelfth Night, continuous action on an open stage and rapid, lightly stressed speech. He was active in promoting a national theatre and by 1914 had every prospect of a brilliant career. After World War I, however, during which he served with the Red Cross, he found the mood of the postwar theatre alien and contented himself with work behind the scenes, including presidency of the British Drama League. He settled in Paris with his second wife, an American, collaborating with her in translating Spanish plays and writing his five series of Prefaces to Shakespeare (1927-48), a contribution to Shakespearean criticism that analyzed the plays from the point of view of a practical playwright with firsthand stage experience. In 1937 Barker became director of the British Institute of the University of Paris. He fled to Spain in 1940 and then went to the United States, where he worked for British Information Services and lectured at Harvard University. He returned to Paris in 1946. Additional reading Biographies and critical analyses of his stagings include C.B. Purdom, Harley Granville Barker (1955, reissued 1971); Elmer Salenius, Harley Granville Barker (1982); Eric Salmon, Granville Barker (1983); Dennis Kennedy, Granville Barker and the Dream of Theatre (1985); and Christine Dymkowski, Harley Granville Barker: A Preface to Modern Shakespeare (1986).

Britannica English vocabulary.      Английский словарь Британика.