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Sixteen famous European plays / comp. by Bennett A. Cerf and Van H. Cartmell, with an introd. by John Anderson.
LIBRA - Special PN6112 .C copy 2
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LIBRA - Special PN6112 .C
Available in person
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- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Cerf, Bennett, 1898-1971, compiler.
- Series:
- Modern library of the world's best books
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Drama--Collections.
- Drama.
- Genre:
- Collections.
- Autobiographies.
- Penn Provenance:
- Gotham Book Mart (former owner) (Gotham Book Mart Collection copies 1 & 2)
- Physical Description:
- xxv, 1052 pages ; 21 cm.
- Edition:
- [First Modern library giant edition].
- Place of Publication:
- New York : Modern Library, [1947]
- Summary:
- From the Introduction: These sixteen plays are part of a European testament, already inherited and richly enjoyed, as proven by the enormous popularity they attained not only in the countries of origin, but, in the benediction of handclaps across the sea, in our own theatre and in spite of the fact that they have often suffered sadly in translation. Quite by accident in selection they fall into two nearly equal groups: nine of them belong to the pre-World War I, Cherry-Orchard-Heartbreak-House Europe, and seven belong to that ominously quiet but superficially frantic period between 1918 and 1937, the intermezzo of our false security. By a tragic irony, undetected at the time, the last of them carried a French-comedy salute to classical Greek legend at the moment Austria found itself Anschlussed out of existence. In viewpoint and technique they range from the realistic social theme of The Wild Duck to the subjective discussion of illusion and reality in Six Characters in Search of an Author; from the bitter comedy of The Playboy to the lyric, but static, beauty of The Cradle Song, from the cynical sex pattern of Anatol to the ecstatic love song of The Dybbuk. To suggest that there is a close and detailed relationship among all these plays, out of such diverse countries and of such widely different treatment, is to embark upon a critical trapeze act which would make the Flying Codonas seem mere ground moles. Yet most of them are linked in one way or another to the mainsprings of European thought, to the mid-nineteenth-century revolution of ideas, and finally to the free theatre movement which carried the ideas into the playhouses. The theatre responded not only with new drama, but with a new stagecraft, wrought in its image and designed to emphasize the change.
- Contents:
- Introduction / John Anderson
- Pioneers In The Modern European Drama:
- Wild duck / Henrik Ibsen (1884)
- Weavers / Gerhart Hauptmann (1893)
- Russian Plays:
- Sea gull / Anton Tchekov (1896)
- Lower depths / Maxim Gorky (1902)
- Dybbuk / S Ansky (1926)
- French Plays:
- Cyrano de Bergerac / Edmond Rostand (1897)
- Tovarich / Jacques Deval (1937)
- Amphitryon 38 / Jean Giraudoux (1938)
- Italian And Spanish Plays:
- Cradle song / G Martinez Sierra (1911)
- Six characters in search of an author / Luigi Pirandello (1922)
- Middle-European Plays:
- Anatol / Arthur Schnitzler (1907)
- R U R / Karel Capek (1923)
- Liliom / Ferenc Molnar (1930)
- Grand Hotel / Vicki Baum (1930)
- Irish Plays:
- Playboy of the Western world / John M Synge (1907)
- Shadow and substance / Paul Vincent Carroll (1937).
- Local Notes:
- Gotham Book Mart Collection copy 2 has dustjacket retained.
- Other Format:
- Online version: Cerf, Bennett, 1898-1971. Sixteen famous European plays.
- OCLC:
- 403877
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