Molière: A Playwright and His Audience

Front Cover
CUP Archive, 1982 - Drama - 325 pages
Up until the last century there was a tendency, among directors in the theatre and academic critics alike, to stress the philosophical and satirical content of Molière's comedy and to overlook the fact that he was a professional man of the theatre. More recently, certain influential critics have tended to go to the other extreme and to emphasise the theatrical and aesthetic qualities of his plays at the expense of what they may have to offer as plays of ideas. This study seeks to reconcile the two approaches: while exploring the evolution of Molière's comedy as a vehicle for his own talents as an actor and for the resources of his company, the author also seeks to define the composition of the original audiences, both in the public theatre and at Court, and to assess the taste and attitudes of the spectators for whom the plays were written.

From inside the book

Contents

The formation of an actor
9
A playwright and his audience
33
Les Vierges sages
35
Comic drama before Molière
77
The legacy of farce
87
Laughter and le rire dans lâme
125
From satire to comedy of ideas
168
Comedy and ballet
213
Molières comic vision
244
33
252
Translation of French passages quoted
259
40
265
Appendices
305
Analysis of performances by Molières company
311
47
312
51
321

The playwright as poet
227
986
238

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Bibliographic information