The Old Vic: The Story of a Great Theatre from Kean to Olivier to Spacey

The Old Vic: The Story of a Great Theatre from Kean to Olivier to Spacey

by Kevin Spacey (Introduction), Terry Coleman (Author)

Synopsis

The Old Vic, one of the world's great theatres, opened in 1818 with rowdy melodrama and continued with Edmund Kean in Richard III howled down by the audience. One impresario, among the first of thirteen to go bankrupt there, fled to Milan and ran La Scala. In 1848 a chorus girl tried to murder the leading lady. In 1870 the Vic became a music hall, then a temperance tavern and, from 1912, under Lilian Baylis, both an opera house and the home of Shakespeare. By the 1930s great actors were happy to go there for a pittance - John Gielgud, Charles Laughton, Peggy Ashcroft, and Laurence Olivier. The Vic considered itself a national theatre in all but name. After the second world war the Royal Ballet and the English National Opera both sprang from the Vic, and the National Theatre, at last established in 1963 under Olivier, made its first home there. In 1980 the Vic was saved from becoming a bingo hall by a generous Toronto businessman. Since 2004 Kevin Spacey, Hollywood actor and the winner of two Oscars, has led a new company there, and toured the world.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 288
Edition: Main
Publisher: Faber & Faber
Published: 02 Oct 2014

ISBN 10: 0571311253
ISBN 13: 9780571311255
Book Overview: The Old Vic: The Story of a Great Theatre from Kean to Olivier to Spacey, by Terry Coleman, is the brilliantly researched and thrillingly told history of one of the greatest theatres in the world.

Author Bio
As Arts Correspondent of the Guardian Terry Coleman covered the National Theatre under Olivier and Peter Hall. He then strayed into political journalism, interviewing eight British prime ministers and covering American presidential elections, but in 2005 returned to his old patch and wrote the authorised biography of Laurence Olivier.