Bards of Bromley and Other Plays (e-bog) af Perry Pontac, Pontac
Perry Pontac, Pontac

Bards of Bromley and Other Plays e-bog

91,93 DKK
Foreword by Maureen LipmanHaving produced a new Shakespearean canon in his previous collection of plays Codpieces, Perry Pontac turns his attention to other great names in European culture.The Three Seagulls is a Chekhovian comedy with representative characters drawn from each of Chekhov s major plays, as well as a selection of his plot-lines. The Lunchtime of the Gods is Wagner s Ring recycled i…
Foreword by Maureen LipmanHaving produced a new Shakespearean canon in his previous collection of plays Codpieces, Perry Pontac turns his attention to other great names in European culture.The Three Seagulls is a Chekhovian comedy with representative characters drawn from each of Chekhov s major plays, as well as a selection of his plot-lines. The Lunchtime of the Gods is Wagner s Ring recycled into a thirty-minute play telling the entire story,plus several jokes not in the original. And in The Bards of Bromley,the first meeting of a writers workshop is attended by a group of unusually promising authors: William Wordsworth, George Eliot, August Strindberg, A A Milne and Johan Wolfgang von Goethe.
E-bog 91,93 DKK
Forfattere Perry Pontac, Pontac (forfatter), Maureen Lipman, Lipman (andet)
Forlag Oberon Books
Udgivet 22.10.2015
Længde 96 sider
Genrer Plays, playscripts
Sprog English
Format epub
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9781849437776

Foreword by Maureen LipmanHaving produced a new Shakespearean canon in his previous collection of plays Codpieces, Perry Pontac turns his attention to other great names in European culture.The Three Seagulls is a Chekhovian comedy with representative characters drawn from each of Chekhov s major plays, as well as a selection of his plot-lines. The Lunchtime of the Gods is Wagner s Ring recycled into a thirty-minute play telling the entire story,plus several jokes not in the original. And in The Bards of Bromley,the first meeting of a writers workshop is attended by a group of unusually promising authors: William Wordsworth, George Eliot, August Strindberg, A A Milne and Johan Wolfgang von Goethe.