The Art of the Theatre
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Narrated by:
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Kitty Hendrix
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By:
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Sarah Bernhardt
About this listen
" I have not written this book to attract young people to the dramatic art but to give them friendly advice and guide them by my experience." Thus begins a master class taught by Sarah Bernhardt, arguably the greatest actress ever to grace a stage.
Timeless and surprisingly current, The Art of the Theatre, published after her death at age 78, is the final and most in-depth record of the great actress' views on acting and the theatre. Here "The Divine Sarah" shares advice on everything from speech, movement, role preparation, vocal warmups, and make-up tips to why she preferred to play Hamlet instead of Ophelia. Filled with lively stories and gleeful gossip, The Art of the Theatre shows the intuitive and often humorous observations that were Sarah Bernhardt. She describes her successes, her failures, and the times she lived in with unflinching honesty and an approach to the arts that leaves no doubt as to why she is still considered today to be one of the greatest artists ever to have lived. Out of print and unavailable for decades, this rare book is only available in this audio format.
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In Episodes, lifelong best friends Kat and Mara take listeners on an unfiltered journey through friendship, mental illness, and survival. Kat, a successful professional, is preparing for marriage and motherhood. On her fourth round of IVF, it happened—a frantic call to Mara. Mara comes over to find Kat, her friend of 25 years—the one who'd always been levelheaded, hilarious, and over-the-top thoughtful—trying to jump through a window.
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Just listen!
- By AJ on 11-17-24
By: Mara Altman, and others
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Heroes Behind Headlines
- Only the Brave
- By: Ralph Pezzullo
- Narrated by: Ralph Pezzullo
- Length: 6 hrs and 33 mins
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How did DEA agents orchestrate the capture of one of the world’s most wanted weapons dealers? How does an all-female, unarmed group of rangers stop poachers from killing South Africa’s most majestic wild animals? And how did a scrappy crew of soldiers help desperate Afghans escape Kabul during the Taliban’s rapid takeover? Welcome to Heroes Behind Headlines: Only the Brave, where host Ralph Pezzullo takes you on deep dives into extraordinary true stories, told to you by the experts and the brave men and women who lived them.
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Great interview format
- By Ronald Gauvin on 11-21-24
By: Ralph Pezzullo
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Evil Has a Name
- The Untold Story of the Golden State Killer Investigation
- By: Paul Holes, Jim Clemente, Peter McDonnell
- Narrated by: Paul Holes, Jim Clemente
- Length: 6 hrs and 13 mins
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For his victims, for their families and for the investigators tasked with finding him, the senselessness and brutality of the Golden State Killer's acts were matched only by the powerlessness they felt at failing to uncover his identity. Then, on April 24, 2018, authorities arrested 72-year-old Joseph James DeAngelo at his home in Citrus Heights, Calif., based on DNA evidence linked to the crimes. Amazingly, it seemed, evil finally had a name. Please note: This work contains descriptions of violent crime and sexual assault and may not be suitable for all listeners.
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Audible Raises The Bar On True Crime Genre
- By R. Squyres on 11-16-18
By: Paul Holes, and others
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The Last Days of Cabrini-Green
- By: Ben Austen, Harrison David Rivers
- Narrated by: Ben Austen, Patina Miller, Harry Lennix, and others
- Length: 3 hrs and 32 mins
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In 1992, the deadliest year in Chicago’s history, seven-year-old Dantrell Davis was shot and killed in front of his elementary school inside the public housing complex Cabrini-Green. What happened to Dantrell led to a truce among Chicago’s gangs, but it also ignited a national panic about poverty and violence in America’s cities. Dantrell’s name would soon be used to demolish all of Chicago’s high-rise public housing, displacing tens of thousands of low-income families.
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Chicago Housibg
- By Ruby on 11-21-24
By: Ben Austen, and others
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The Demon Next Door
- By: Bryan Burrough
- Narrated by: Steve White
- Length: 2 hrs and 45 mins
- Unabridged
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Best-selling author Bryan Burrough recently made a shocking discovery: The small town of Temple, Texas, where he had grown up, had harbored a dark secret. One of his high school classmates, Danny Corwin, was a vicious serial killer. In this chilling tale, Burrough raises important questions of whether serial killers can be recognized before they kill or rehabilitated after they do. It is also a story of Texas politics and power that led the good citizens of the town of Temple to enable a demon who was their worst nightmare.
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Odd narration choice
- By Amanda Fredericks on 03-08-19
By: Bryan Burrough
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Dear Cousin: The Stalking of Susan Fensten
- By: Ventureland
- Narrated by: Susan Fensten
- Length: 4 hrs and 24 mins
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Dear Cousin: The Stalking of Susan Fensten is the gripping true story of one woman's quest for long lost family. After the deaths of her sister and estranged father, Susan searches for relatives on an early online genealogy forum. When she meets cousins from her grandfather's other family, they're everything she'd hoped for—until it all goes to hell.
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Harrowing Case, Excellent Production
- By C Lopez on 07-12-24
By: Ventureland
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The Autobiography of Malcolm X
- As Told to Alex Haley
- By: Malcolm X, Alex Haley
- Narrated by: Laurence Fishburne
- Length: 16 hrs and 52 mins
- Unabridged
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Experience a bold take on this classic autobiography as it’s performed by Oscar-nominated Laurence Fishburne. In this searing classic autobiography, originally published in 1965, Malcolm X, the Muslim leader, firebrand, and Black empowerment activist, tells the extraordinary story of his life and the growth of the Human Rights movement. His fascinating perspective on the lies and limitations of the American dream and the inherent racism in a society that denies its non-White citizens the opportunity to dream, gives extraordinary insight into the most urgent issues of our own time.
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it's Nearly perfect
- By Kerry on 09-16-20
By: Malcolm X, and others
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Elvis and Me
- By: Priscilla Beaulieu Presley
- Narrated by: Priscilla Beaulieu Presley
- Length: 7 hrs and 30 mins
- Unabridged
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The inspiration for the major motion picture Priscilla directed by Sofia Coppola, this New York Times best seller reveals the intimate story of Elvis Presley and Priscilla Presley, told by the woman who lived it.
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What a story!
- By Pen Name on 08-28-22
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How I Get It Done
- By: Shereen Marisol Meraji
- Narrated by: Shereen Marisol Meraji
- Length: 9 hrs and 53 mins
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In a series of deeply moving and inspiring conversations, host Shereen Marisol Meraji connects with successful women from all walks of life to reveal how they manage their careers and every aspect of their lives. Based on the long-running column from The Cut and New York Magazine.
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Relatable, helpful, and beautifully produced.
- By Anonymous User on 09-07-24
What listeners say about The Art of the Theatre
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- Tracet
- 07-23-15
The Divine Sarah
This audiobook was provided by the author, narrator, or publisher at no cost in exchange for an unbiased review courtesy of AudiobookBlast dot com: thank you.
I was quite interested to see Sarah Bernhardt’s Art of the Theatre in an email from AudiobookBlast. I’ve known bits and pieces about The Divine Sarah, it seems by osmosis, from the art of Alphonse Mucha to legends of her Hamlet and so forth. I was looking forward to learning about her. I hoped it would be some cross between memoir and art instruction; I was looking forward to learning more about the actress and her experience of theatre in the nineteenth century.
There was some of that. I had a glimpse into the life of Miss Bernhardt, but just a glimpse; I had a taste of what it was like to become a thespian, to work as a thespian, in Europe over a hundred years ago – but just a taste. I would have loved more about her education at the Conservatoire; it was delightful to hear about the deportment classes, like a ridiculous version of Kabuki. I would have loved more about her performances – more along the lines of the fact that she had horrific stage fright unless in front of a hostile audience (like in Germany, where she made some bad choices for her performance). I loved her discussion of the almost schizophrenic-sounding ability to split off the character she was set to portray from her own personality: “I would dismiss Sarah Bernhardt to a corner and leave her to be a spectator of my new me.” She felt that she literally left her self behind in the dressing room.
I perked up when the “three Hamlets” came up, but either Mlle Bernhardt assumed whoever was reading her book knew what she meant or… no, that’s probably what it was. (They are, for the record, to perhaps save someone the Google: the black Hamlet of Shakespeare, L’Aiglon, the white Hamlet of Rostand, and Lorenzaccio, the Florentine Hamlet of Alfred de Musset.) She mused a brief while on the role, but I had hoped for more. I do love the comment that Hamlets are generally too well-fed and comfortable … although, really, it’s not like a wealthy, privileged young man whose troubles are pretty recent would have had the chance to wither away too much...
The tales of her career are made a bit less than enthralling by heavy reference to people – actors, authors, playwrights, artists – who were huge in her day and in France, but are at best obscure here and now. Name-dropping is less impressive when nobody knows what you’re talking about.
It was a bit difficult to get past prejudices the lady built up within her time period and her experience. Stout women waddle. You can’t be an actor if your proportions aren’t right. God help you if you’re ugly. “If the sacred fire burns in you, you will succeed” – unless your arms aren’t long enough.
Going wider: “Although all new ideas are born in France, they are not readily adopted there.” Because France, of course, is the center and focus of the world. (America (which here includes Toronto)? *delicate shudder* Though I have to say,“despotic enthusiasm” isn’t the worst description I’ve ever heard for this country …) So is theatre the epicenter of everything: “Our art is the finest, the noblest, the most suggestive, for it is the synthesis of all the arts. Sculpture, painting, literature, elocution, architecture, and music are its natural tools.” Pardon me while I go find an actor to kowtow to, in my natural station as subservient former art student.
If she liked you, you were golden, and could do no wrong. If she disliked you, God help you. If she liked you and then was disillusioned … oh dear. The lady held very strong opinions, and was free with them; “There are actors devoid of talent who are very successful.”
I wonder if it’s actually true that “all sports are injurious to the voice, especially sailing”.
It seems possible that autograph-seeking was invented expressly for the Divine Sarah: “One lady had the idea of producing her pocketbook and asking me to write my name. The idea spread like lightning.” Without Sarah Bernhardt, Comic-Con would be but a shadow of what it is.
So, this isn’t quite a memoir, or a book of acting instruction, exactly, though elements of both exist. What it resembled most was pulling up a seat next to an elderly prima donna and trying to follow along as she vented her opinions on her schooling, and kids’ education these days, and people she knew thirty years ago, and that time in Germany… An outpouring of words which outline the shape of Sarah Bernhardt and the space she filled in theatre, without adding color or dimensionality to the outline. The gap I was looking to fill will probably be better served by a biography. I’ll have to look into it one day. This only served as an appetizer.
The narration was quite good, though there were some awkward pronunciations: “Marseillais” became “Marsellay”; “infinite”, “dross”,”physiognomy” were all a bit off, and so on; “A” was always long. I believe one review complained about the narrator not being French, and I admit a genuine French accent might have enhanced the experience (given Miss Bernhardt’s ethnocentrism, especially).
While I couldn’t help raising eyebrows at some bits of the book, and was alternately fascinated and quite frankly bored in places, this quote was wonderful:
[The actor’s] walls are of cardboard and his mountains painted on canvas, his skies have their nights illuminated by a thousand little paper stars, suspended at the end of a thread and stirring with every puff of breath. His impregnable turrets are fashioned of millboard, and the axe which is laid to them and the bullet which pierces them are children’s toys. But the hand which holds these toys is the hand of a man electrified by splendid verse. The heart that rushes to the assault beats a charge as vigorous, as precipitate, as if a real enemy were in question. And for the public that is present, anxious, nervous, and transported, the turret might be of freestone; the sky the black firmament lit by its thousands of golden studs, and it is the faith of the actor holding the torch handed him by the poet that illumines every mind, every soul, and every sensibility.
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- Deedra
- 12-16-15
The Art of the Thaetre
This was a very good behind the scenes look at what goes on and what this actress ,in particular, felt while working in theatre.I enjoyed it a lot having worked behind the scenes at a theatre locally.Ms Bernhardt shares her views on many issues and what is expected in theatre life.
Kitty Hendrix does a wonderful job narrating this fascinating read!
"This audiobook was provided by the author, narrator, or publisher at no cost in exchange for an unbiased review courtesy of Audiobook Blast."
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- Teresa
- 06-07-15
"I FEEL. I FEEL..."
THE ART OF THE THEATRE was a poetic and dramatic narrative of Sarah Bernhardt. She was Chardonnay, a rite of passage, enigmatic, and while being a small woman, an icon of large magnitude. She was a complex woman who embodied art, especially the dramatic art. The theatre. I think she was a woman who carved her place within a man's world. She was sharp, smart, and minced no words. She told it like it was, the good and bad, the truth. When asked why she would rather play Hamlet than Ophelia she countered with the fact that she liked playing male roles for their intelligence. When describing why she preferred playing the role of Hamlet rather than that of Ophila, she stated that his was the most original yet the most simple. He seemed complex but had only one idea which was to avenge his father. She may well have described herself with those very words.
The advice she shares on acting such as stage presence, appearance, tone of voice, pronunciation, enunciation, and physical attributes is honest and timeless. When she discusses the will or willpower, I think she really nails it. "Willpower is the fundamental condition of success." An actor must abandon the whole 'self' and give the character a soul including heart, mind, and body. "A true actor realizes himself through passion and can't be natural unless he has the power to project himself."
I feel that Sarah Bernhardt is timeless and highly revered as an exquisite woman of the arts and taste. She's the saint of all things dramatic. Saint Sarah. I don't know how saintly she was but what I do know is that she knew her craft backwards, forwards and in between. While she was the most famous actress she was also the most beloved as can be shown by large crowds waiting to see her and waiting for her after a performance. I didn't know she'd had a bit of stage fright. This was an insightful narrative/bio of Sarah Bernhardt's notes and musings about what it takes to be an actor. This is a woman I would love to go back in time and meet. This is a fabulous audiobook that I would definitely recommend. It's a matter of style and taste but I loved it and Kitty Hendrix's performance made it all the more wonderful.
KITTY HENDRIX is the embodiment of Sarah in this story. Kitty reading Sarah is perfection. She took it to a whole other level of amazing while channeling Sarah herself. Kitty grasped everything this audiobook was about and projected it out into the world just as Sarah would have. This was a dramatic as well as impressive piece of work. She has a rich, even tone that adds sophistication to her work, making her a real stand out as a voice actor.
Audiobook received in exchange for an unbiased review
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- Allan Provost
- 06-05-15
Great actress recounts great actress.It w
Would you say that listening to this book was time well-spent? Why or why not?
It was time well spent. Some of Ms. Bernhardt's stories were fascinating. But I think I already knew too much about her to full appreciate the audio book.
What was your reaction to the ending? (No spoilers please!)
This isn't a book with a climactic ending. I already knew how Sarah's life climaxed.
Which scene was your favorite?
Every scene in which she displayed her brilliant talent and eccentricity. Sorry, no one scene stands out.
What else would you have wanted to know about Sarah Bernhardt’s life?
I'd like to know how she, how so many actresses, managed to remember so many lines in so many roles and could one be a great actress without such a memory. I would also like to know if she was aware that she would be regarded as the greatest actress of her time.
Any additional comments?
Yes, while I was not totally enraptured with the book, having read so much about Sarah, I was wildly impressed with the narrator. Obviously she brought her own considerable acting abilities to making the book even more compelling. She had a wonderful rich voice and great delivery. I might not have finished the book if not for the splendid narration.
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- MolllyT
- 06-11-15
I had no idea that she was a Frenchwoman
Many thanks to the translator, or those of us who do not speak/read French would have been denied this experience. Renowned in her own time and still admired today, Mme Bernhardt intended this volume as added instruction to those who would act upon the stage. There is personal history related throughout, but the principles and cautions promoted remain thoroughly relevant to performers in any venue and time. Advice as to precepts of what we know as 'method acting', and involved memorization, as well as choosing roles in which one may shine rather than plod are no respecters of era or venue. This should be a valued read for high school or college level performers hoping for professional roles.
Further thanks to Ms Hendrix for her facility with French pronunciations. One has reason to believe that she absorbed and utilized the knowledge gained here to give an excellent audio performance which further enhanced the information therein.
This audiobook was provided by the author, narrator, or publisher at no cost in exchange for an unbiased review courtesy of AudiobookBlast
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- turtle
- 06-14-15
A window into a unique mind
I received this audiobook at no cost from the Audiobook Blast in exchange for an unbiased review.
Bernhardt was a unique individual. She was both a product of her time and an author of change. Anyone listening to this book should keep in mind the different world she lived in, and how such a world necessarily affected a different worldview. Her comments on actors' bodies seem uncharacteristic and overly dismissive next to her profound insights into artistry and artists. I enjoyed this book, though I had a very hard time separating the author from the subject matter.
Hendrix's narration fitted said author excellently. She did well with portraying Bernhardt's experiences and attitudes without coming off as overtly apologetic. I recommend this audiobook to anyone interested in the changing experiences of artists, particularly female artists, in the history of theater, and the development of a modern world stage.
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- SQ
- 06-15-15
Interesting person, elegant voice
What did you like best about this story?
Kitty Hendrix' voice transforms Sarah into a vibrant person. Kitty doesn't limit herself to a mere narration, but breathes life into this story. Her voice has attitude, confidence and strength.
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- Edward Renehan
- 06-23-15
A classic of theater literature, vividly rendered
As this book makes clear, Bernhardt had the highest of standards when it came to the art of acting. With this in mind, I think it is safe to say she'd be more than pleased with this audio edition rendered, as it is, so expertly by the very talented Kitty Hendrix. Excellent overall and highly recommended.
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- Paul Woodson
- 07-02-15
Style, class, and a bit of 19th century attitude
What about Kitty Hendrix’s performance did you like?
Everything about her performance channeled Ms. Sarah Bernhardt as I would picture her. Although I didn't know much about the famous actress before listening, I felt that based on her statements, Ms. Hendrix spoke the way Ms. Bernhardt would have– with authority and class.
Any additional comments?
It's great to see this classic text in audio, and delivered by such a worthy professional. I hope to hear more from narrator Kitty Hendrix!
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- Daniel
- 07-06-15
A beautifully done narration of a rich book.
I can not say enough about this audio book.
Not only does the narrator deftly handle the theatricality of the language,....she allows us to become a living part of the amazing force of nature that was Sarah Bernhardt. Hendrix draws us in and holds us tight right until the end. Thank you, Audible.
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