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Marivaux Plays: Double Inconstancy;False Servant;Game of Love & Chance;Careless Vows;Feigned Inconstancy;1-act plays

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Marivaux Plays: Double Inconstancy;False Servant;Game of Love & Chance;Careless Vows;Feigned Inconstancy;1-act plays

Contributors:

By (Author) Pierre Marivaux
Translated by Donald Watson
Translated by John Bowen
Translated by John Walters
Translated by Michael Sadler
Translated by Nicholas Wright

ISBN:

9780413185600

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Methuen Drama

Publication Date:

1st August 2006

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Dewey:

842.5

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

560

Dimensions:

Width 111mm, Height 178mm, Spine 34mm

Weight:

618g

Description

Marivaux's light-hearted comedies of love and intrigue are enjoying a vigorous revival



One of the most original of French eighteenth century dramatists, Marivaux wrote over thirty comedies of love and intrigue. This, the only major single-volume selection of Marivaux's plays in English, brings together five full-length and five shorter pieces in lively translations by John Bowen, Michael Sadler, John Walters, Donald Watson and Nicholas Wright.



Author Bio

Pierre Carlet de Chamblain de Marivaux (1688-1763) was a French playwright, novelist, and journalist whose work is characterized by an extreme subtlety of language and feeling. This idiosyncratic style was referred to, originally disparagingly though now more respectfully, as Marivaudage. Marie-Nicolas Bouillet writes in her Dictionnaire Universel: "It is this that constitutes Marivaudage - a fastidious affectation in the style, a great subtlety in the feelings, and an immense complication in the plots." Marivaux began his career as a journalist and haunter of fashionable salons. In 1720, however, he lost his fortune and quickly produced three plays, two of which, L'Amour et la Vrit and Arlequin Poli par l'Amour, were performed by the Comdie-Italienne whilst the third, Annibal, was performed by the Comdie-Franaise. Although Marivaux continued to write for both companies, the majority of his plays were written for the Italian troupe, whose productions proved far more successful, perhaps because they better appreciated the refinements of his style. In the 20th century Marivaux's sophisticated plotting, keen sense of psychological nuance, and strong female roles have gained increasing recognition. Recent decades have seen frequent revivals of his plays by the Comdie-Franaise. For many years it was thought that Marivaux's comedies were virtually untranslatable due to the subtlety of the language, but several of his works have been successfully performed in English since the mid 1970s. John Bowen is the author of several acclaimed titles for Conway and was at the helm of the Model Shipwright series from its launch in 1972. Nicholas Wright (b. 1940) opened and ran the Theatre Upstairs at the Royal Court Theatre in 1963, was joint artistic director of the Royal Court and is a former literary manager and associate director of the Royal National Theatre. Wright began acting as a child, and trained at LAMDA. His publications include 99 Plays, a survey of drama from Aeschylus to the present day, and Changing Stages, co-written with Richard Eyre. Both are published by Methuen Drama.

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