Fr. 29.90

Chatsky & Miser, Miser! Two Plays by Anthony Burgess

English · Paperback / Softback

Will be released 09.05.2023

Description

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Anthony Burgess was an energetic writer and composer, whose work

for the stage is widely admired. In Two Plays, we see him tackling

major monuments of French and Russian theatre: The Miser by

Molière and Chatsky by Alexander Griboyedov.

Miser, Miser! is a bold reworking of Molière's classic comedy of

1668. Harpagon the miser is hoarding a pile of gold, which he has

buried in his garden. As he tries to sell off his daughter, catch himself

a beautiful young bride and outwit his scheming household of clever

servants, the comedy of errors intensifies.

Although the original French play is written in prose, Burgess

remakes it in a mixture of verse and prose, in the style of his famous

adaptation of Cyrano de Bergerac. This translation, discovered in the

author's archive, is the work of a writer at the height of his powers,

reinventing Molière for modern audiences.

Chatsky, subtitled 'The Importance of Being Stupid' is another verse

comedy. The theme is that of the intellectual hero who rebels

against the smug, philistine society in which he finds himself. First

performed in 1833, Griboyedov's play was so heavily cut by Russian

censors that it was barely recognisable. The play is a virtuoso vehicle

for male actors, and the source of many famous quotations. It is

also notoriously difficult to translate. In Chatsky, Burgess remakes a

classic Russian play in the spirit of Oscar Wilde. It is a great feast of

language and invective.

The complete texts of both plays are published here for the first time.

Two Plays confirms Anthony Burgess's reputation as a gifted writer

for the stage, and as a translator of great wit and sophistication.

MISER, MISER! CASTING: 7 men, 3 women

CHATSKY CASTING: 9 men, 7 women

List of contents

  • Introduction by Andrew Biswell 
  • Foreword to Chatsky by Anthony Burgess 
  • Chatsky 
  • Miser, Miser! 

About the author

Anthony Burgess was born in Manchester in 1917 and educated at Xaverian College and Manchester University. He spent six years in the British Army before becoming an education officer in Malaya and Brunei. After the success of his Malayan Trilogy, he became a full-time writer in 1959. He achieved a worldwide reputation as one of the leading novelists of his day, and one of the most versatile. In addition to 33 novels, he wrote stage plays, criticism, translations, two volumes of autobiography and a Broadway musical. He composed more than 250 musical works, including a piano concerto and a violin concerto for Yehudi Menuhin. His books include The Complete Enderby, Napoleon Symphony, Earthly Powers and A Clockwork Orange. Burgess died in London in 1993, a few months after the first production of Chatsky at the Almeida Theatre.

Summary

Anthony Burgess was an energetic writer and composer, whose work

for the stage is widely admired. In Two Plays, we see him tackling

major monuments of French and Russian theatre: The Miser by

Molière and Chatsky by Alexander Griboyedov.

Miser, Miser! is a bold reworking of Molière’s classic comedy of

1668. Harpagon the miser is hoarding a pile of gold, which he has

buried in his garden. As he tries to sell off his daughter, catch himself

a beautiful young bride and outwit his scheming household of clever

servants, the comedy of errors intensifies.

Although the original French play is written in prose, Burgess

remakes it in a mixture of verse and prose, in the style of his famous

adaptation of Cyrano de Bergerac. This translation, discovered in the

author’s archive, is the work of a writer at the height of his powers,

reinventing Molière for modern audiences.

Chatsky, subtitled ‘The Importance of Being Stupid’ is another verse

comedy. The theme is that of the intellectual hero who rebels

against the smug, philistine society in which he finds himself. First

performed in 1833, Griboyedov’s play was so heavily cut by Russian

censors that it was barely recognisable. The play is a virtuoso vehicle

for male actors, and the source of many famous quotations. It is

also notoriously difficult to translate. In Chatsky, Burgess remakes a

classic Russian play in the spirit of Oscar Wilde. It is a great feast of

language and invective.

The complete texts of both plays are published here for the first time.

Two Plays confirms Anthony Burgess’s reputation as a gifted writer

for the stage, and as a translator of great wit and sophistication.

MISER, MISER! CASTING: 7 men, 3 women

CHATSKY CASTING: 9 men, 7 women

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