"Ms. Thomas' previous and similar rollicking version of Moliere's Les Femmes Savantes delighted audiences off-Broadway in 1991, in a production starring Jean Stapleton as Philamente, a blossoming literary lady on the verge of coming into her own. It was re-imagined in 1993 at ACT in San Francisco, with many productions throughout the country since then. During the Salon movement of the 17th century, women, thirsty for knowledge and freedom, began to read, discuss and absorb all the learning they could now get their hands on. Frequently, into that mix came sycophants and opportunists, to take advantage of the budding but not fully formed intelligence of the Women's Movement. Enter Trissotin, a mediocre poet with a lot of sex appeal and little literary talent, who all but seduces Philamente, determined to be at the forefront of the movement. Equally determined to marry him off to her younger daughter (who just wants to marry her sweetheart Lycandre and raise children), she bullies her meek husband into tacitly agreeing, and the machinations that follow between family members, visiting poets and maids who refuse to learn proper French are predictably and delightfully Molière. This version strays from a strictly literal translation of the play, often employing anachronisms in the rhymed couplets that may appall purists, but have delighted audiences since its original inception. In this new version, there are 6 women and 4 men, and the familiar "Voice of Reason", present in almost every Moliere play and always a male, is now, for the first time, FEMALE! If you want your audiences to roll with laughter as they recognize their hilarious selves in the midst of a "Feminist culture," this version is for you"--Information provided by publisher.
64-5 ) One of the earliest definitions of the word as used in this context occurs in Dives and Pauper , and is there so similarly phrased as to suggest that the author of Ludus Coventriae was acquainted with it . 48 ' Every craft pat ...
The Links in the Chain: Isolation and Interdependence in Nathaniel Hawthorne's Fictional Characters
The Taming of the Shrew is one of the most famous and controversial of Shakespeare's comedies.
May I ask , if it's not an impertinent question , what message you sent up that could have so aroused Miss Faulkner's desire to come down ? Holmes . Merely that if she wasn't down in five minutes , I'd go up . Larrabee .
Blits, Jan H., 'Manliness and Friendship in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar' Interpretation 9 (1981), 155–67. ... Bristol, Michael D., 'The Two Noble Kinsmen: Shakespeare and the Problem of Authority', in Charles H. Frey, ed., Shakespeare, ...
Thought to be written by amateur playwright John Newdigate III, the play tells the story of friar Albert and his seduction of a Venetian merchant's wife by posing as the God Cupid.
This new addition to the Sourcebooks Shakespeare series includes the play, essays by renowned scholars, a complete glossary, production photos, and an audio CD of famous performances through the years.
... Lord Gordon, Earl of Enzie; Sir Robert Gordon of Lochinvar; Sir George Goring; Sir John Grey; Sir Edward Herbert; Philip Herbert, 1st Earl of Montgomery; Sir William Hervey; Sir John Holles; Sir Gilbert Houghton; Mr Charles Howard; ...
Comedy / 8 m., 5 f., 1 c. / Int./ext.
This is a study guide for A level and GCSE students which should also provide good background information for first year undergraduate students. The guide provides literary criticism of the text together with ideas and questions.