In 2006 Katie Mitchell and her collaborators devised an original work for the National Theatre which transposed the vision of Virginia Woolf's experimental novel The Waves into an entirely new form. The intertwining narrative of six friends - from childhood to maturity and beyond - was rendered into a series of beautiful and poignant images onto a screen by live actors and musicians incorporating techniques taken from the theatre, radio and video production.
This deconstruction of the novel and theatrical method made process and production visible simultaneously and conveyed a uniquely moving and exhilarating experience to the audience. The book combines the text used from Woolf's novel with the corresponding images in order to create a record of the production, and a work of art in its own right. Waves is currently showing at the National Theatre, followed by an international tour.
personal account. CDSO @sfgov, board @publicgoodtech. past @CalCourts @18F @codeforamerica. sometimes #haiku she/her #civictech book: https://t.co/yAuJvN4BLF
hey! my post-college roomie Rachel Dickstein is the sort of person who made a brilliant adaptation of Virginia Woolf's The Waves for a senior project...& hasn't stopped making theater since. this should be very very good & the kickstarter just launched! https://t.co/mToKgWqUCI
Literature, History, Philosophy, Chelsea FC #BLM #Resist #climatechange #animalcare
@christinavenvi1 @vinylsol Try Virginia Woolf 'The Waves' for starters, now there's a novel acclaimed from many perspectives
Mktg Director @UChicagoPress, editor of The Daily Sherlock Holmes & The Getaway Car: A Donald Westlake Nonfiction Miscellany. Board member @uplcchicago. He/Him.
Virginia Woolf, diary, after completing The Waves and letting Leonard, as usual, be its first reader. https://t.co/d7SZt8g3vd