First published in 1981, Michael Patterson's was the first book in any
language to be devoted to the work of Germany's leading theatre
director. Peter Stein's thoughtful and critical approach to a variety of
dramatic texts - from Irish comedy to German classics, where his
reputation largely rests - has resulted in a range of different acting
and formal styles and some major textual adaptations. The rehearsing,
performance and reception of these are thoroughly and vividly recreated
here from interviews and archives and in the first-hand account of the
workings of the theatre Stein made his own, the Schaubühne in West
Berlin. Patterson discusses the apparent contradictions between the
Schaubühne's original ideals as a model of socialist theatre and its
present situation as one of the most highly subsidizes stages in Western
Europe. Many productions are illustrated by photographs and imaginative
reconstructions of particular scenes.