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Seán O'Casey

    30. březen 1880 – 18. září 1964

    Sean O'Casey byl irský dramatik a pamětník, který se proslavil svým zobrazením dublinských dělnických tříd. Vyrůstal v těžkých podmínkách a sám se vzdělával, což se odrazilo v jeho dílech. Jeho hry, často tragi-komické, vynikají plamenností a všestranností, zachycujíce obrovský rozmach mysli. O'Casey byl oddaný socialista a jeho tvorba dodnes rezonuje životem, který tak dobře znal.

    Seán O'Casey
    Juno and the Paycock
    Three plays. Juno and the Paycock. The Shadow of a Gunman. The Plough and the Stars.
    The Playboy of the Western World and Two Other Irish Plays
    The Silver Tassie
    Three more plays : The Silver Tassie ; Purple Dust ; Red Roses for Me
    Tluču na dveře
    • 1998

      Sean O'Casey

      Plays 1

      • 448 stránek
      • 16 hodin čtení

      In his early forties, while continuing to support himself as a laborer, we wrote, in quick succession three realistic plays about the slums of Dublin, known as the Dublin Trilogy." Juno and the Paycock," the second installment of the trilogy, was performed in the Abbey Theatre in 1924--the Abbey theatre produced the first installment of the trilogy, "The Shadow of a Gunman" (not included in this volume) in 1923." Juno and the Paycock "deals with the unpleasantness of war and the misery of the victims during the the Irish struggle for indepenence. It was awarded the Hawthornden Prize. As his career progressed, O'Casey experiemented with expressionism and symbolism, which resulted in "Within the Gates;" "Red Roses for Me," a semiautobiographical work; and "Cock-a-Doodle Dandy," Due to an increase of nationalism during the Civil War and Irish Independence movement, his plays were received well, although, at times, with protest and restriction.

      Sean O'Casey
    • 1994

      Three Plays

      Juno and the Paycock, Shadow of a Gunman and Plough and the Stars

      • 224 stránek
      • 8 hodin čtení
      Three Plays
    • 1992
    • 1987

      A murderer becomes the toast of the village as his charm negates his crime. A young countess saves her tenants from starvation, but only by selling her soul to the Devil. The sleepy parish of Nyadnanave sees a vision of a cockerel that dares the inhabitants to break the shackles of Church and State. All these plays were met with moral outrage and rioting in their native Ireland.Yeats's 'The Countess Cathleen' (1892), J. M. Synge's 'The Playboy of the Western World' (1907) and O'Casey's 'Cock-a-doodle Dandy' (1949) emerged from a period of traumatic change for Ireland. While the plays bear witness to the immmense social upheavals of the turn of the twentieth century, they also represent a new age of Irish drama that rose from the turmoil, and their lessons ring true to this day.

      The Playboy of the Western World and Two Other Irish Plays
    • 1980
    • 1980