Acting Out: How A Prison Theatre Workshop Broke Free
Autor Richard Hoehleren Limba Engleză Hardback – 21 ian 2025
What he could not have anticipated was the beginning of an odyssey that led Hoehler to an incredibly popular series of acting and writing workshops and mounting seven full productions with prison inmates-men whom society has written off and locked away as irredeemable. In this account of his journey working with the men, we witness a rare kind of theatrical magic. Within the incredibly dehumanizing and often arbitrary prison system, participants work to express themselves and connect with dramatic works where anger, compassion, forgiveness and tears pour forth in the safety of the workshop.
It is clear that Hoehler is not a "do-gooder" but simply there to do good work. This is the remarkable story of theatre's ability to change lives even in the most unlikely of settings.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781493085552
ISBN-10: 1493085557
Pagini: 204
Ilustrații: 15 BW Photos
Dimensiuni: 152 x 232 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Applause
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1493085557
Pagini: 204
Ilustrații: 15 BW Photos
Dimensiuni: 152 x 232 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Applause
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
This extraordinary book, written in compellingly straightforward prose, will cast a spell over you by the second page and not let you go till the last. From each monologue and scene, a kind of poetic masculinity takes hold of the reader's heart, leaving it suffused in love, in sorrow, and finally, in greatness. Enormous praise to Richard Hoehler. His big little book is a mighty piece of work.
For theater folk such as myself, we who are in search of a redemptive truth which transcends even great theater art, Richard Hoehler's book, Acting Out: How a Prison Workshop Broke Free, is a veritable holy grail.
A captivating tale of rehabilitation through the art of theater, allowing the actors to be free, be seen, be heard, and ultimately redeemed. A powerful message awaits those willing to listen.
One part memoire, one part theater and a dash of gonzo journalism Acting Out is a journey into becoming more fully human through the transformative power of art.
With humor and humanity, Acting Out, tells us how theatre inspires imprisoned men to reclaim their lives. Author Richard Hoehler is heroic telling how the theatre can be an agent for social change.
Richard Hoehler's long-standing, important role in American theater has offered a great deal for playwrights, cast members, and theater audiences. But, in Acting Out, he tells us that theater is not simply about script and performance. It's a broad insight about all human lives, and it's those lives that are most meaningful and important.
[Hoehler] loves acting, and he loves the underdog, and he understands the power of the theater as safe space. He, too, shows up with doubts and flaws and pain, but with a pay-it-forward sense of how one can be rescued by someone who cares enough to see you and be seen by you. His humility and audacity are key to the connection. And so, through and through, with clarity and courage, Richard tells us a story about love.
For theater folk such as myself, we who are in search of a redemptive truth which transcends even great theater art, Richard Hoehler's book, Acting Out: How a Prison Workshop Broke Free, is a veritable holy grail.
A captivating tale of rehabilitation through the art of theater, allowing the actors to be free, be seen, be heard, and ultimately redeemed. A powerful message awaits those willing to listen.
One part memoire, one part theater and a dash of gonzo journalism Acting Out is a journey into becoming more fully human through the transformative power of art.
With humor and humanity, Acting Out, tells us how theatre inspires imprisoned men to reclaim their lives. Author Richard Hoehler is heroic telling how the theatre can be an agent for social change.
Richard Hoehler's long-standing, important role in American theater has offered a great deal for playwrights, cast members, and theater audiences. But, in Acting Out, he tells us that theater is not simply about script and performance. It's a broad insight about all human lives, and it's those lives that are most meaningful and important.
[Hoehler] loves acting, and he loves the underdog, and he understands the power of the theater as safe space. He, too, shows up with doubts and flaws and pain, but with a pay-it-forward sense of how one can be rescued by someone who cares enough to see you and be seen by you. His humility and audacity are key to the connection. And so, through and through, with clarity and courage, Richard tells us a story about love.