Click the title to display the script and download it to your reader.
Mrs Warren’s Profession
by George Bernard Shaw
Click the title to display the script and download it to your reader.
by George Bernard Shaw
The following titles link to translations published on the MIT
Agamemnon
The Choephori
Eumenides
The Persians
Prometheus Bound
The Seven Against Thebes
The Suppliants
Ajax
Antigone
Electra
Oedipus at Colonus
Oedipus the King
Philoctetes
The Trachiniae
Alcestis
Andromache
The Bacchantes
The Cyclops
Electra
Hecuba
Helen
The Heracleidae
Heracles
Hippolytus
Ion
Iphigenia At Aulis
Iphigenia in Tauris
Medea
Orestes
The Phoenissae
Rhesus
The Suppliants
The Trojan Women
The Acharnians
The Birds
The Clouds
The Ecclesiazusae
The Frogs
The Knights
Peace
Plutus
The Thesmophoriazusae
The Wasps
There are many very good reasons people go to the theatre, and as may very bad ones why they don’t.
The best reason to go is to be drawn into another world from the opening line to the final curtain and walk out gratified, if not transformed, a better person. This sometimes happens when a good play is well-produced.
Good reasons not to go: it costs too much, and too often the plays are trite or trash (or trashy) or (more often still) poorly played, misinterpreted. At best we’re amused. Continue reading To Go or Not to Go
FREE WEEK IN THE MOUNTAINS
July 19-24
Sandra and I will be reading a play a day at my brother’s vacation home in Seven Devils, and we’d love to have the company of as many friends (and friends of friends) as the house will sleep (fifteen beds, I think).
Drive up (bring a friend), spend a night or three, socialize, enjoy the mountain air, see the sights, and read a play.
(Sorry it’s mid-week, but that’s when it’s free. Maybe, if this works, we can do a weekend in the fall.)
IF YOU’RE COMING
Please JOIN on Facebook or Meetup, and add a comment indicating which night(s) you plan to stay, so we can plan.
Everybody gathers for the daily read (Monday evening, Tuesday-Thursday brunchtime). Otherwise, there’s no commitment; we’re all on our own to come and go, do as we will.
Everyone feeds themselves; we share the kitchen. It’s a ways down the mountain to the convenience store and the Grandview Restaurant. If we’re more than eight or ten (not likely) we’ll fight for hot water.
Be aware that fellow readers may be strangers from other walks of life. If that makes you nervous, bring a friend.
The plays are:
Dancing at Lughnasa, by Brian Friel
Not About Nightingales, by Tennessee Williams
Tartuffe,by Miliere
Major Barbara, by G B Shaw
Download them here:
Click the title to display the script and download it to your reader.
by George Bernard Shaw