Home
Chekhov Shorts
Barnes and Noble
Chekhov Shorts
Current price: $26.95
Barnes and Noble
Chekhov Shorts
Current price: $26.95
Size: Paperback
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
This collection features Chekhov’s best-known short plays in brand new translations: three farces, two comic duologues and a monologue, all of them referred to by Chekhov as vaudevilles’ and all written in the late 1880s before any of his great full-length plays. I don’t much care for theatre,’ he wrote at the time, but I do enjoy vaudevilles.’
The Bear
,
The Proposal
and
The Wedding
are all farces on the preposterous business of courtship and marriage.
A Tragic Figure
Swansong
are comic duologues: one about a civil servant sweltering in Moscow coping with the incessant demands of his family from their summer dacha, the other about a melancholy old actor perked up by memories of past glories.
On the Evils of Tobacco
is a bittersweet monologue in which a scientific lecture is hijacked by thoughts of domestic misery.
These accurate and actable translations by Chekhov expert Stephen Mulrine reveal a dramatist reveling in the broad comedy of human behavior, a comedy which was refined in his later masterpieces.
Highly entertaining, these comic shorts offer a fascinating insight into Chekhov’s development as a dramatist, and will provide actors at any level student, amateur or professional with an ideal showcase.
This edition also includes an introduction, a chronology of key dates, and a pronunciation guide.
The Bear
,
The Proposal
and
The Wedding
are all farces on the preposterous business of courtship and marriage.
A Tragic Figure
Swansong
are comic duologues: one about a civil servant sweltering in Moscow coping with the incessant demands of his family from their summer dacha, the other about a melancholy old actor perked up by memories of past glories.
On the Evils of Tobacco
is a bittersweet monologue in which a scientific lecture is hijacked by thoughts of domestic misery.
These accurate and actable translations by Chekhov expert Stephen Mulrine reveal a dramatist reveling in the broad comedy of human behavior, a comedy which was refined in his later masterpieces.
Highly entertaining, these comic shorts offer a fascinating insight into Chekhov’s development as a dramatist, and will provide actors at any level student, amateur or professional with an ideal showcase.
This edition also includes an introduction, a chronology of key dates, and a pronunciation guide.