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John Emigh is a theatre director and performer who has written on the masked theatre and rituals of New Guinea, Bali, and India, as well as on Western theatrical practices. Works include Masked Performance: The Play of Self and Other in Ritual and Theatre, and a film on the life of a Rajasthani street performer. Current research involves linking the concerns of those who make and study performances with findings in neuro-science, and studying how performances function during times of crisis.
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John Emigh is a professor in the Theatre, Speech and Dance and English Departments at Brown University, where he has been teaching and directing since 1967. He has directed more than 70 plays in universities and in the professional theatre. In 1974-75, he traveled in New Guinea, South Asia, and Indonesia, where he studied Balinese "topeng" masked dance with I Nyoman Kakul. Since then, he has made several other research trips to Asia, investigating the street jesters and court fools of Rajasthan, the use of masks in Eastern India, and the changing dynamics of performance in Bali. He has written extensively on the masked drama of New Guinea, Bali, and India as well as on contemporary theatre practice in the West and has made a film on the life of Hajari Bhand, a Rajasthani street performer and recently prepared a museum exhibit and international conference on the mask and concepts of person for the Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts in New Delhi. His book, "Masked Performance: The Play of Self and Other in Ritual and Theatre", has recently been published by the University of Pennsylvania Press, and he is currently working on a book length study of the "Prahlada Nataka" - a devotional form of theatre in Orissa, India. Other current projects include investigating links between the traditional concerns of theatre and recent findings in the field of neuro-science and conducting research on the carnival and Christmas traditions of masked performance in Alpine Europe and Mexico. Articles currently in press deal with performing traditions, cultural models, and the killings that racked Bali in the mid-1960s, a recent Balinese adaptation of Macbeth in the style of Gambuh theatre, and the relation of Yankee gunmaker Samuel Colt's life to Bernard Shaw's "Major Barbara."
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