Anouilh: Plays One

Anouilh: Plays One

Paperback (10 Dec 1987)

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Publisher's Synopsis

A selection of the most enduring work of one of this century's best-known French playwrights



Jean Anouilh (1910-87) along with Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus, was at the forefront of the post-war generation of playwrights in Paris. In England his plays were championed by Peter Brook. Antigone is a response to the German occupation of France and established his popularity in 1944 (the Germans ironically, thought that it was a pro-Nazi in its portrayal of King Creon and thus allowed its production); Poor Bitos, Anouilh's angriest play explores the act of judicial murder and The Lark is a version of the Joan of Arc story. All three plays show his fondness for reworking myth, history and legend. Meanwhile Leocadia, about an opera singer who dies after a three day love affair with a prince and The Waltz of the Toreadors, about a general whose mistress attempts to prove his wife's infidelity, represent another talent - for ironic, modern comedy.

"Anouilh is a poet but not a poet of words, he is a poet of words-acted, of scenes-set, of players-performing." (Peter Brook)


Book information

ISBN: 9780413140302
Publisher: A&C Black
Imprint: Bloomsbury Methuen Drama
Pub date:
DEWEY: 842.912
DEWEY edition: 21
Language: English
Number of pages: 464
Weight: 494g
Height: 133mm
Width: 202mm
Spine width: 35mm