A Russian version of Don Juan is the focus of Chekhov's first play, a farce in which a newly arrived schoolmaster proves irresistible to the bored women of a provincial community. Platonov's charm lies in his novelty, and his seductions are strictly passive as a libidinous widow, her idealistic stepdaughter, and an earnest student vie for his romantic attentions.
Discovered in 1923, two decades after Chekhov's death, this play was written while the author was still a medical student. Adapted and translated by Alex Szogyi, it offers the trenchant wit and rich characterizations typical of the dramatist's later works. Woven amid the love affairs, suicide attempts, parties, and shootings are the customary themes of Chekhovian theater: the passions and frailties of human nature, the futility of the search for happiness, and the alternating episodes of comedy and tragedy that shape every life.
Reprint of the Coward-McCann, Inc., New York, 1960 edition.
Availability | Instant |
ISBN 10 | 0486814645 |
ISBN 13 | 9780486814643 |
Author/Editor | Anton Chekhov, Alex Szogyi |
Format | eBook |
Page Count | 128 |
Dimensions | 5 x 8 |