A working note on Bernard Shaw's craft
Beyond the biographical outline (1856 – 1950, Irish), what working theatre artists tend to want to know about Bernard Shaw is structural: how does the playwright build a scene, what is the typical length of a beat, where does the writer place the silences, and how often does an act break do real dramaturgical work. On all of these counts, Bernard Shaw repays close study. Scenes tend to begin with apparently low stakes and end with something irreversible, which is harder to write than it looks. The dialogue is calibrated for actors rather than for the page, so passages that read flatly often play very well indeed. Act breaks land where they need to land — at the moment when the audience's attention would otherwise begin to slip — rather than at the moments dictated by external symmetry.
For students approaching Bernard Shaw for the first time, our recommended order is to begin with whichever play in the archive has the smallest cast, read it twice, and then read a longer work alongside a recording of any decent production. The contrast between page and performance is, with Bernard Shaw as with all serious dramatists, the entire lesson.
Plays in our archive (33)
- Androcles and the Lion — Drama, 16,604 words
- Annajanska, the Bolshevik Empress — One-Act Play, 5,143 words
- Arms and the Man — Drama, 25,241 words
- Augustus Does His Bit: A True-to-Life Farce — Farce, 7,028 words
- Back to Methuselah: A Metabiological Pentateuch — Drama, 112,612 words
- Caesar and Cleopatra — Drama, 36,650 words
- Candida — Drama, 22,579 words
- Captain Brassbound's Conversion — Drama, 28,429 words
- Fanny's First Play — Drama, 26,137 words
- Getting Married — Drama, 58,286 words
- Great Catherine (Whom Glory Still Adores) — Drama, 13,852 words
- Heartbreak House — Drama, 47,708 words
- How He Lied to Her Husband — Drama, 8,545 words
- John Bull's Other Island — Drama, 36,749 words
- Major Barbara — Drama, 32,599 words
- Man and Superman: A Comedy and a Philosophy — Comedy, 68,759 words
- Misalliance — Drama, 32,193 words
- Mrs. Warren's Profession — Drama, 35,485 words
- O'Flaherty V.C.: A Recruiting Pamphlet — Drama, 9,164 words
- Overruled — Drama, 13,356 words
- Press Cuttings — Drama, 12,082 words
- Pygmalion — Drama, 34,784 words
- Saint Joan — Drama, 57,430 words
- The Admirable Bashville; Or, Constancy Unrewarded Being the Novel of Cashel Byron's Profession Done into a Stage Play in Three Acts and in Blank Verse, with a Note on Modern Prize Fighting — Drama, 16,421 words
- The Dark Lady of the Sonnets — Drama, 15,529 words
- The Devil's Disciple — Drama, 28,053 words
- The Doctor's Dilemma — Drama, 32,553 words
- The Inca of Perusalem: An Almost Historical Comedietta — Comedy, 8,247 words
- The Man of Destiny — Drama, 15,930 words
- The Miraculous Revenge — Drama, 8,291 words
- The Philanderer — Drama, 24,904 words
- The Shewing-up of Blanco Posnet — Drama, 36,329 words
- You Never Can Tell — Drama, 34,692 words
Legacy
Bernard Shaw's influence on subsequent stage writing is impossible to overstate without veering into hagiography, so we will keep this short. Working actors learn the rhythm of the language by performing it. Directors learn structure by staging it. Translators learn the limits of their craft by trying to render it in another tongue. Drama students who study Bernard Shaw early in their training tend to find that almost everything they read afterward is, in some measure, a response to what Bernard Shaw did first. Our archive includes the works of Bernard Shaw that are firmly in the public domain; for translations and adaptations made within the last century, you'll need to consult a rights-clearance service or your nearest university library.