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قراءة كتاب He Who Gets Slapped: A Play in Four Acts

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He Who Gets Slapped: A Play in Four Acts

He Who Gets Slapped: A Play in Four Acts

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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He Who Gets Slapped

A PLAY IN FOUR ACTS

BY LEONID ANDREYEV

TRANSLATED FROM THE RUSSIAN
WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY


GREGORY ZILBOORG

colophon

NEW YORK
BRENTANO'S
Publishers



Copyright, 1922, by
BRENTANO'S
———
Copyright, 1921, by
THE DIAL PUBLISHING COMPANY
———
All rights reserved

Printed in the United States of America



INTRODUCTION, ACT I, ACT II, ACT III, ACT IV



The first regular production of HE in English was by The Theatre Guild on January 9, 1922,
at the Garrick Theatre, New York. The original cast was as follows:
Tilly }   Musical Clowns { Philip Leigh
Polly   Edgar Stehli
Briquet, Manager of the Circus   Ernest Cossart
Mancini, Consuelo's Father Frank Reicher
Zinida, a Lion Tamer Helen Westley
Angelica }   Trapeze Performers { Martha Bryan Allen
Estelle   Helen Sheridan
Francois   Edwin R. Wolfe
HE Richard Bennett
Jackson, a Clown Henry Travers
Consuelo, the Equestrian Tango Queen Margalo Gillmore
Alfred Bezano, a Bareback Rider John Rutherford
Baron Regnard Louis Calvert
A Gentleman John Blair
Wardrobe Lady Kathryn Wilson
Usher Charles Cheltenham
Conductor Edwin R. Wolfe
Pierre Philip Loeb
A Sword Dancer Renee Wilde
Ballet Master Oliver Grymes
Ballet Girls   { Vera Tompkins
Anne Tonnetti
Marguerite Wernimont
Frances Ryan
Actresses in Circus Pantomime   { Adele St. Maur
Sara Enright
Thomas, a Strong Man   Dante Voltaire
A Snake Charmer Joan Clement
A Contortionist Richard Coolidge
A Riding Master Kenneth Lawton
A Juggler Francis G. Sadtler
Acrobats   { Sears Taylor
Luigi Belastro
Stage Manager, Philip Loeb Ass't Stage Manager, Oliver Grymes
Produced under the direction of ROBERT MILTON
Settings and Costumes by LEE SIMONSON



"Stage, screen, and amateur rights for the translation and the original play in all English-speaking countries are owned and controlled by The Theatre Guild, 65 West 35th St., New York City. No public readings or performances may be given without their written consent."

INTRODUCTION

LEONID ANDREYEV as a literary figure was born in the gloomy atmosphere of depression of the 'nineties. He thus appeared upon the literary stage at a period when the old and splendid generation of Turgenev and Dostoevsky had already passed away and when Chekhov had begun to demonstrate before the reader the gloom and colourlessness of Russia life.

This was a period when the social forces of Russia were half destroyed by the reaction under Alexander III, and when the young generation was trying to rest and to get away from the strain of social hopes and despair. This period, briefly speaking, was a period of melancholy, of commonplace, every-day preoccupations, and of dull terre à terre philosophy.

It must be borne in mind that literature was the only outlet for the moral and intellectual forces of Russia. Political reaction, censorship, complete absence of civil liberties, and the cult of popular ignorance upon which Czardom based its power, all these made the written artistic word almost the sole expression of Russian social longings and idealistic expectations.

It is therefore only natural that Russian literature in its general development is closely interwoven with the political and social conditions of Russia at the given moment. The 'nineties were a period of depression. After the assassination of Alexander II (1881) and the subsequent tightening of the chain of reaction, combined with a general débâcle in progressive and radical circles, the Russian intellectual fell into a state of pessimism. His faith in an early liberation was shattered, his hope of recovery was broken. Chekhov is the most characteristic representative of that period; he himself called his heroes "the dull-grey people."

Maxim Gorki and Leonid Andreyev appeared almost simultaneously at that time. The former brought the message of a rebel spirit which forecast a new moral upheaval, a new social protest; the latter appeared clad in the gloom of his time, which he strangely combined with a spirit of almost anarchistic revolt. From the point of view of historical completeness Leonid Andreyev is more representative of the epoch, demonstrating at once two contradictory elements of the

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