Ion Manolescu, Between „Ghost“ and People`s Artist. The Image of the Artist as a Metaphor of His Society Cover Image

Ion Manolescu, între „strigoi“ și Artist al Poporului. Imaginea artistului ca metaforă a societății sale
Ion Manolescu, Between „Ghost“ and People`s Artist. The Image of the Artist as a Metaphor of His Society

Author(s): Maria Manolescu-Borșa
Subject(s): Theatre, Dance, Performing Arts, Cultural history, History of Communism
Published by: UArtPress - Editura Universității de Arte din Tîrgu Mureş - A Marosvásárhelyi Művészeti Egyetem Kiadója
Keywords: Ion Manolescu; People`s Artist; metaphor; “Ghosts” by Henrik Ibsen; socialist realism;

Summary/Abstract: Ion Manolescu, the cousin of my great-grandfather, was one of the most beloved Romanian actors between the two World Wars. Constantly living and working in precarity, he happily accepted what the Romanian communist regime had to offer to him: a new, safe job at the National Theatre, and the best position an actor could have during those years: the title of People`s Artist, imported from URSS. In this article, I use the concept of "metaphor“ as developed in cognitive sciences by George Lakoff and Mark Johnson, to see how the actor that played for the first time in Interwar Romania praised Osvald Alving ("Ghosts“, by Henrik Ibsen), came to play, at the beginning of Romanian communist regime, a sad Gloucester in a sad and compromising production of "King Lear“.

  • Issue Year: XXI/2020
  • Issue No: 2 (39)
  • Page Range: 75-82
  • Page Count: 8
  • Language: Romanian