Corneille: Three Masterpieces: The Liar; The Illusion; Le Cid
By (Author) Pierre Corneille
Translated by Ranjit Bolt
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Oberon Books Ltd
1st January 1991
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
842.4
Paperback
192
Width 130mm, Height 210mm, Spine 10mm
Includes the plays The Liar, The Illusion, Le Cid Pierre Corneille (160684), the great seventeenth-century neoclassical dramatist, wrote over thirty plays during his long and varied career. Triumphant in both comedy and tragedy, his plays remain at the core of the repertory. When the young Molire saw The Liar (Le Menteur), a delightful chronicle of a pathological liars adventures in love, he decided to become a playwright. The Illusion (LIllusion Comique) is a fascinating and mysterious tragi-comedy, one of the first plays to explore consciously the relationship between theatre and the real world. Le Cid, Corneilles best known play, was controversial in its day, and led to a resurgence in French drama. Ranjit Bolts version of The Liar finds a way of rendering rhyming couplets which no one else from the history of translating for the theatre has ever donewith some style and without sacrificing the sense of gallantry that is so essential to the original text. (BBC Radio3s Critics Forum.) Both The Liar and The Illusion recently enjoyed critical and box office success at the Old Vic, reaffirming Ranjit Bolt as one of the worlds foremost translators of drama.
Pierre Corneille (1608-1684) was one of the dominant figures of seventeenth-century French drama. He began by writing comedies, but it is as a masterly and influential tragedian that he is mostly remembered today.