“You can train yourself to read plays so that they
will give you keen enjoyment. The directions are few. First, you must give the
play a fair chance; it is not a novel, and it should not be read in scraps; try
to complete it in an evening. Second, always read it in a theatrical
frame-work; it was written for the stage, and you must, to the best of your
ability, visualize it as a stage production. This takes some doing, for you may
not have a strong theatrical imagination. When a play is well performed in the
theater a crowd of experts have all worked to give you pleasure; you will not
at first trial provide in your mind a director, a designer, and a cast of
talented actors. Do not be disappointed if your early attempts seem a little
heavy. If you persist, the art will come, in a sufficient measure, for it is a
law of the imagination that the more you want, the more it will provide.
Persist, and the reading of plays can become a splendid private indulgence.”—Canadian
man of letters Robertson Davies (1913-1995), “Making the Best of Second Best,”
in A Voice From the Attic: Essays on the Art of Reading (1960)
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