Review
"intriguing...usefully illustrated with visual images of costumes and settings drawn from contemporary engravings, paintings, sketches, and photographs. ...descriptions of individual costumes are detailed without being tedious and the illustrating plates in this section are particularly well-chosen. ...provides insight into the recasting of set design as a legitimate art, and shows its early practitioners as visionaries on a quest for historical truth and scenic beauty"--Victorian Studies
Product Description
Though Romantic elements in stage design are often thought to have ended with the advent of the Victorian era, they in fact persisted into the second half of the nineteenth century. Romantic stages were used in the productions of many of the most prominent actor-managers of the period, including Madame Vestris, Charles Kean, Wilson Barrett, Henry Irving and Herbert Beerbohm Tree. This work shows how the emphasis placed on the visual elements of Victorian productions-the spectacular romantic settings and historically accurate costumes-revolutionized the position that stage designers held. They emerged from anonymity, becoming recognized and highly-praised collaborators in the creative process.

