ince
1937, audiences have ventured each summer to Manteo, N.C., to see
Paul Green's best-known outdoor drama, The Lost Colony. Yet,
the book itself has been out of print since the mid-1960s.
Copyright disagreements have prevented drama enthusiasts from reading
the play. Until now. Laurence Avery, professor of English who edited
A Paul Green Reader in 1997, has published an updated version
of the play.
Working with the Paul Green Foundation, which has controlled copyrights
on the book since Green's death in 1981, and the Roanoke Historical
Society, which oversees the annual production of The Lost Colony,
Avery brought the nation's first historical outdoor drama back into
print.
He's added stage directions and an introduction. "I tried
to create a version that is true to the spirit of Green's play and
current productions," he says.
The drama's text has been changed many times. Some directors, for
instance, have downplayed the love story between the tenant farmer
and the lady aristocrat. "In the text," Avery says, "they
expressed their feelings, saying things like ‘I love you.' I have
kept the full extent of Green's dialogue."
Avery says the play was originally intended to be a one-time production
to celebrate the 350th anniversary of America's earliest English
colony, but it's become important in that it "forged a new
form of drama and inspired a movement in outdoor theater that is
now nationwide."
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