Performing Arts - a genre of audiobooks on the website knigi-audio.com/en/. Page - 2
The Art of Story-Telling, with nearly half a hundred stories - Julia Darrow COWLES


The Art of Story-Telling, with nearly half a hundred stories - Julia Darrow COWLES
- Author: Julia Darrow COWLES
- Genre: Anthologies / Performing Arts
In preparing this book the author has sought to awaken a keener perception and a higher appreciation of the artistic and ethical value of story-telling; to simplify some of its problems; to emphasize the true delight which the story-teller may share...
My Actor-Husband - Anonymous


My Actor-Husband - Anonymous
- Author: Anonymous
- Genre: Biography & Autobiography / Performing Arts
In presenting this autobiography to the public, the author feels it incumbent upon herself to impress upon her readers the fidelity and strict adherence to the truth, relative to the conditions which surround the player. In no instance has there...
The Birth of Tragedy; or, Hellenism and Pessimism (Version 2) - Friedrich Nietzsche


The Birth of Tragedy; or, Hellenism and Pessimism (Version 2) - Friedrich Nietzsche
- Author: Friedrich Nietzsche
- Genre: Performing Arts / Philosophy / Social Science (Culture & Anthropology)
This is one of Nietzsche's early academic writings - a scholarly theory about Ancient Greek theatre, specifically tragedies. In a nutshell, this work theorizes about why (Greek) spectators enjoy watching actors in a long series of scenes that depict...
Studies in Stagecraft - Clayton Hamilton


Studies in Stagecraft - Clayton Hamilton
- Author: Clayton Hamilton
- Genre: Essays & Short Works / Performing Arts
A companion piece to Hamilton's earlier work, The Theory of the Theatre. Where that volume dealt with the criticism of dramatic art in general, this volume focuses more specifically on the contemporary drama of the era in which it was written. -...
The Seven Lively Arts - Gilbert Seldes


The Seven Lively Arts - Gilbert Seldes
- Author: Gilbert Seldes
- Genre: Music / Performing Arts
“... But, beside those great men, there is a certain number of artists who have a distinct faculty of their own by which they convey to us a peculiar quality of pleasure which we cannot get elsewhere; and these, too, have their place in general...