Resultado de búsqueda
Max Reinhardt ( German: [maks ˈʁaɪnhaʁt]; born Maximilian Goldmann; 9 September 1873 – 30 October 1943) was an Austrian-born theatre and film director, intendant, and theatrical producer. With his radically innovative and avante garde stage productions, Reinhardt is regarded as one of the most prominent stage directors of the ...
Max Reinhardt (born September 9, 1873, Baden, near Vienna, Austria—died October 31, 1943, New York, NewYork, U.S.) one of the first theatrical directors to achieve widespread recognition as a major creative artist, working in Berlin, Salzburg, New York City, and Hollywood. He helped found the annual Salzburg Festival.
The influence of. Reinhardt. The director who was best placed to utilize the freedom afforded by the study of theatre history and the new mechanization was Max Reinhardt. Reinhardt began as an actor at the Deutsches Theater in Berlin, as part of the Naturalist Freie Bühne company, in 1893.
The œuvre of the great stage director, Max Reinhardt (1873-1943), exempli-fies one of the main tasks of the theatre: to interpret literature in the spirit of the present. Two cultures determine his work: he moved from the great Baroque center, Vienna, to dynamic Berlin. As early as 1902, Reinhardt was amazingly conscious of his mission and his ...
As a child in Vienna, Max Reinhardt cites the Burgtheater as the place where he “first glimpsed the light of the stage.” Later in his life, following his return to Austria in 1920s, the then-director of the Burgtheater’s theater company, Albert Heine, tried unsuccessfully to recruit Reinhardt and his company to work at the theater.
Getty Images Archive. Austrian film and theater director Max Reinhardt (b. 1873; d. 1943) revolutionized the foundations of traditional dramaturgy, seeking the audience’s emotional impact by enhancing elements like the set design, music, and expressiveness of the interpretors’ faces.
Max Reinhardt (nacido Maximilian Goldman, Baden, Austria, 9 de septiembre de 1873-Nueva York, 31 de octubre de 1943) fue un productor cinematográfico, y director de teatro y cine que tuvo una importancia vital en la renovación del teatro moderno.