Brandes, and laying stress on the fact, with no little vanity, that he has "accomplished the feat of doing without a single monologue, in fact, without a single aside." A bit later he began developing the stage direction; go through his plays and observe... The Quarterly Review - Page 386edited by - 1906Full view - About this book
| Henrik Ibsen - Authors, Norwegian - 1905 - 480 pages
...am very anxious to hear what you have to say about my new work. It is written in prose, which gives it a strong realistic colouring. I have paid particular...single monologue, in fact, without a single " aside." However, all this of course proves nothing ; and therefore I earnestly beseech you, if you have a leisure... | |
| Henrik Ibsen - Authors, Norwegian - 1905 - 476 pages
...am very anxious to hear what you have to say about my new work. It is written in prose, which gives it a strong realistic colouring. I have paid particular...single monologue, in fact, without a single " aside." However, all this of course proves nothing ; and therefore I earnestly beseech you, if you have a leisure... | |
| Literature - 1906 - 858 pages
...;l strong realistic coloring. l have paid particular attention to form, and, among other things, l have accomplished the feat of doing without a single...subject, language, and in everything but the satirical in teutiou which underlies the whole trivial, stupid, and no doubt life-like talk aud action. Two elements... | |
| Costa Rica - 1928 - 500 pages
...plays. 17 To George Brandes Ibsen wrote concerning one of his plays which had just been completed: "I have paid particular attention to form and among...single monologue, in fact, without a single aside." (Laurvik and Morison, Letters, p. 174. This letter is dated Dresden, June 26, 1869.) 18 Ibsen did not... | |
| Archibald Henderson - Drama - 1914 - 358 pages
...Ibsen says of his " new work " : " It is written in prose, which gives it a strong realistic coloring. I have paid particular attention to form, and among...monologue — in fact, without a single aside." The powerful influence of his realistic practice, fortified by intense conviction, effected a revolution... | |
| Archibald Henderson - Drama - 1914 - 364 pages
...Ibsen says of his " new work ": " It is written in prose, which gives it a strong realistic coloring. I have paid particular attention to form, and among...have accomplished the feat of doing without a single monologue—in fact, without a single aside." The powerful influence of his realistic practice, fortified... | |
| Miriam Alice Franc - 1919 - 206 pages
...1869, Ibsen wrote to Georg Brandes, of the "League of Youth" : "I have paid particular attention to the form and among other things I have accomplished the...single monologue — in fact, without a single aside." \VDaring was Ibsen's use of dramatic secrets. It had always been a hard and fast rule that playwrights... | |
| Elisabeth Conrad - Criticism - 1919 - 214 pages
...he wrote of the play under construction: "I have paid particular attention to form and accompliched the feat of doing without a single monologue, in fact without a single aside". Archer says that Ibsen did not shake off this early influence until the third act of "Doll's House";... | |
| Manfred Pfister - Drama - 1988 - 364 pages
...boast that he had never had to resort to the convention of the soliloquy in his play Brand (1866): I have paid particular attention to form, and among...without a single monologue, in fact without a single 'aside'.31 Of course, the rejection of the soliloquy as a dramatic convention did not mean the rejection... | |
| 1907 - 710 pages
...it a strong realistic colouring. I have paid particular attention to the form and among other things have accomplished the feat of doing without a single monologue, in fact, without a single ' aside.' " In "The Pillars of Society," there is a still further advance. Realism has established itself more... | |
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