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  1. Theatre-fiction refers to novels and stories that focus on theatre - its people, practices and industries. Characters often include actors, playwrights, directors, prompters, understudies, set designers, critics, or casting agents.

  2. Theatre-fiction refers to novels and stories that focus on theatre. Characters often include actors, playwrights, directors, prompters, understudies, set designers, critics, or casting agents.

  3. Theatrical Novel ( Notes of a Dead Man ), translated as Black Snow and A Dead Man's Memoir ( Russian: Театральный роман (Записки покойника), romanized : Teatralnyy roman (Zapiski pokoynika) is an unfinished novel by Mikhail Bulgakov.

  4. Theatre-fiction refers to novels and short-stories that focus on theatre. Characters often include actors, playwrights, directors, prompters, understudies, set designers, critics, or casting agents. Common settings may include theatre auditoriums, dressing rooms, rehearsal spaces, or other places in which theatre is created and performed.

  5. Theatre-fiction refers to novels and short-stories that focus on theatre. Characters often include actors, playwrights, directors, prompters, understudies, set designers, critics, or casting agents. Common settings may include theatre auditoriums, dressing rooms, rehearsal spaces, or other places in which theatre is created and performed.

  6. This volume posits and explores an intermedial genre called theatre-fiction, understood in its broadest sense as referring to novels and stories that engage in concrete and sustained ways with theatre.

  7. 27 de oct. de 2009 · Theatre blog Theatre. This article is more than 14 years old. Stage to page: the best novels about theatre. Fiction has long been a rich source for drama – but why aren't there more great...