
Seven Classic Plays
فرمت کتاب
audiobook
تاریخ انتشار
2006
Reading Level
11-12
نویسنده
Various Authorsشابک
9781483089164
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی

These titles are part of a series of seven classic plays produced by Yuri Rasovsky in 1985 but never before released commercially. In these two cases, it was worth the wait. In Ibsen's AN ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE a doctor discovers that his town's baths are contaminated and suffers the wrath of those with vested interests, including his own brother. Though it was written in 1882, its attack on the worthlessness of public opinion has surprising resonance 120 years later. Rasovsky's own translation is excellent--the text is more informal and idiomatic than some older renderings--and the minor editing is effective. While the small cast keeps the production easy to follow, there are a few crowd scenes with awkward, improbable dialogue and at least one instance of poor casting--the actor portraying Aslasken, who should be an orator of some power, is far too whiny for the role. CAMILLE, Dumas's dramatization of his own novel THE LADY OF THE CAMELLIAS, has an operatic quality to it. Marguerite Gautier is a courtesan with consumption (is there a more stereotypical heroine in Romantic opera?) in love with a young man, but forbidden by her lover's father to continue the affair. Lois Nettleton handles the role admirably by not shrinking from the melodrama--it is, after all, part of the appeal of art from this period. John Glover as Duval, Marguerite's lover, is somewhat less effective--like others in the production, he seems in a hurry to deliver his lines. D.B. (c) AudioFile 2002, Portland, Maine

Chekhov favored the realism of small moments and seemingly undramatic situations in which his characters find themselves musing and revealing their humanity. In UNCLE VANYA we discover a tangle of unrequited love, frustration, fear, nobility, and pettiness in nearly every character residing at a country estate. Director Yuri Rasovsky and his cast convey with sensitivity the many dimensions of these people in this reissue of a 1985 audio production. Brian Murray, for example, resists the urge to stereotype Doctor Astrov. We see the doctor as a full human being: his romantic longing for Elena, his indifference to Sonya, his compassionate idealism, his silly pontificating, his embarrassing drinking. Mary Lou Rosato similarly captures the complexity of Elena. A beautifully paced performance. G.H. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award (c) AudioFile 2002, Portland, Maine
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