Spectral illusions: Ghostly presence in phantasmagoria shows

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Abstract

Wynants revisits the ghostly presence effects of phantasmagoria shows as historical precursors of immersive theatre. The fantasmagorie was a travelling show in nineteenth-century Europe in which showmen such as the mysterious German Paul Philidor, English lantern lecturer John Henry Pepper, and the Belgian physicist Étienne-Gaspard Robertson performed spectral illusions with terrifying stage effects. With their innovative use of new technologies such as mobile magic lanterns and mirrors and their emphasis on interaction between performers and public, phantasmagoria are a mid-nineteenth-century form of immersion and intermediality in performance. Wynants offers an imaginative, historical genealogy and contextualisation of contemporary notions of intermedial theatre, such as liveness, presence, and interactivity.

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Wynants, N. (2017). Spectral illusions: Ghostly presence in phantasmagoria shows. In Reframing Immersive Theatre: The Politics and Pragmatics of Participatory Performance (pp. 207–220). Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-36604-7_16

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