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[ecrea] CFP: Theatre and Television conference
Mon Jan 19 00:38:23 GMT 2015
Theatre and Television:
Adaptation, Production, Performance
a University of Westminster conference, marking the end of the
AHRC-funded research project ‘Screen Plays: Theatre Plays on British
Television’,
Alexandra Palace, Thursday 19 and Friday 20 February 2015
This conference is the culminating event of the AHRC-funded research
project ‘Screen Plays: Theatre Plays on British Television’. It will be
held at Alexandra Palace on Thursday 19 and Friday 20 February 2015.
The programme is packed with a rich variety of talks from leading
scholars in the field, including a keynote lecture from Professor
Stephen Lacey of the University of South Wales and a special event in
which Greg Doran, Artistic Director of the Royal Shakespeare Company,
talks about Shakespearean productions on television and the cinema
screen. In addition, the public version of the Screen Plays database
will be launched and a walking tour of Alexandra Palace as the
birthplace of television will enable the topic to be grounded in its
earliest production contexts.
The £40 conference fee includes all refreshments, a wine reception and
lunch on the second day of the conference. Prompt booking is advised:
numbers are strictly limited to 50 seats; there are currently 15 places
left. To register, please contact Dr Amanda Wrigley on
(a.wrigley /at/ westminster.ac.uk).
Further information will be posted on the conference website at
http://screenplaystv.wordpress.com/conference-2015.
Provisional programme
Thursday 19 February 2015
The conference opens at 1pm (with coffee, registration and welcome) and
runs to 7pm, followed by an informal dinner (not covered by the
conference fee).
Keynote lecture + discussion
Stephen Lacey, Emeritus Professor, the Centre for the Study of Media and
Culture in Small Nations, University of South Wales
‘ “All drama which owes its form or substance to theatre plays is OUT”
(Troy Kennedy Martin): conflicting ideas about “theatricality” in UK
television drama’
Panel 1. Early television and intermediality
Charles Barr, Professorial Research Fellow, St Mary’s University
‘Stages of theatricality: some connections between early cinema, early
sound cinema, and early television’
John Wyver, Senior Research Fellow, University of Westminster; Producer,
Illuminations
‘ “A play a day”: the riches and intermedial relationships of theatre
plays and other drama on pre-war television’
Lez Cooke, Senior Research Officer, Royal Holloway, University of London
‘Anastasia (BBC, 1953): a phoenix rises from the ashes’
Panel 2. Early drama on the small screen
Amanda Wrigley, Research Fellow, University of Westminster
‘Mystery plays on television’
Susanne Greenhalgh, Principal Lecturer, University of Roehampton
‘Women dipped in blood: televising sex and violence in Middleton’s
tragedies’
Varsha Panjwani, Lecturer, Boston University (London); Research
Associate, University of York
‘Co-authorship in theatre and television: The Changeling as a case-study’
Special event + wine reception
Greg Doran, Artistic Director, Royal Shakespeare Company
‘Theatricality in Shakespeare productions on television and the cinema
screen’
Interviewed by John Wyver, University of Westminster
Friday 20 February 2015
Day 2 opens at 8.30am with coffee. The first panel begins at 9am. The
conference closes at 5.30pm.
Panel 3. Politics
Sos Eltis, Fellow and Tutor in English, Brasenose College and the
University of Oxford
‘How did television adaptations of plays by Wilde and Shaw reflect or
stand aside from the political, critical and technical developments of
the 1980s?’
David Warren, Visiting Professor at the University of Sheffield and De
Montfort University
‘How did theatre plays on British television between 1946 and the early
1980s reflect the political and social environment of the British
theatre of that period?’
Sally Shaw, PhD candidate, University of Portsmouth
‘From radical black theatre production to television adaptation: Black
Feet in the Snow (1974, BBC)’
Launch of the Screen Plays database
Panel 4. British plays from stage to screen
Billy Smart, Research Officer, Royal Holloway, University of London
‘Three television reconfigurations of John Osborne’
James Charlton, Director of Programmes, Media Arts, Middlesex University
‘If a thing's worth doing, it's worth doing on public television – Joe
Orton’s plays on television’
Kate Iles, Lecturer in Screenwriting and Production, University of
Roehampton
‘My Boy Jack, adapted from stage to screen’
Lunch
Alexandra Palace as the birthplace of television: a walking tour
Panel 5. Broader contexts I
Jonathan Bignell, Professor of Television and Film, University of Reading
‘Rights, performance and adaptation’
Leah Panos, Postdoctoral Researcher, University of Reading
‘Televising theatre plays on Full House (1972-73)’
Panel 6. Broader contexts II
Laurence Raw, Department of English, Baskent University, Ankara
‘Shakespeare as national icon: King Lear on British and Turkish television’
Tom Cantrell, Acting Head of Theatre, University of York, & Christopher
Hogg, Senior Lecturer in Media and Communication, Sheffield Hallam
University
‘Siân Phillips: theatre on television – an actor’s perspective’
End of conference and end of project reflections
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