Edited by Judith Rudakoff, 264 pp. Chicago: Intellect Reviewed by Don Rubin[1] (Canada) The genius of real theatrical masters like Peter Brook and Richard Schechner is that even though they might spout nonsense from time to time, when it comes
Intolerable: A Memoir of Extremes
By Kamal Al-Solaylee, 205 pp. Toronto: HarperCollins Reviewed by Don Rubin[1] (Canada) This is not a book about theatre but rather a book about a theatre critic, a Canadian theatre critic born in Yemen, a theatre critic who survived a
Exorcism
A play in one-act by Eugene O’Neill with a Foreword by Edward Albee and an Introduction by Louise Bernard 85 pp. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-18131-9. Reviewed by Temple Hauptfleisch[1] (South Africa) I must admit that I have
Strindberg: A Life
By Sue Prideaux. 371 pp. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-13693-7 Reviewed by Patricia Keeney[1] (Canada) This new biography of Swedish playwright August Strindberg by Sue Prideaux—an Anglo-Norwegian writer whose many previous books include an award-winning biography of Edvard