Three Sisters - Anton Chekhov - Grāmatas - Createspace Independent Publishing Platf - 9781537054957 - 2016. gada 13. augusts
Ja vāks un nosaukums nesakrīt, pareizs ir nosaukums

Three Sisters


Saņemt e-pastu, kad prece būs pieejama
Do you have a profile? Pierakstīties
Saņemiet paziņojumus par jauniem Anton Chekhov izdevumiem
Pievienot savam iMusic vēlmju sarakstam

Not rated yet

Pieejams arī kā:

Chekhov's excellent play Three Sisters depicts intense family drama between the trio of sisters and their respective love interests.

First released to the public in 1901 and an immediate success on the theatre, Three Sisters has been translated and performed in many languages. Theatrical runs continue throughout its native Russia, whilst adaptations for the radio and theatre worldwide are numerous.

The play opens by introducing the characters - Olga, the eldest at twenty-eight, Masha, the middle child at twenty three, and Irina, the youngest aged twenty. Each hold different talents and vocations - Olga is a competent schoolteacher who is promptly promoted for headteacher, Masha is a pianist who has undergone classical training, and Irina has dreams of meeting a love true and pure in the great city of Moscow. Andrei is their brother, highly intelligent and set to become a Professor in Moscow - he has his sights set on Natasha, who in the beginning appears a shy, oft-mocked young girl.

Upon introducing the characters, Anton Chekhov quickly moves onto the first event - Irina's twenty-first birthday, which also happens to be the one year anniversary of the sisters' father's death. Thus all the characters unite in celebration, setting the stage for the dramas to follow.

Lauded for its subtlety, emotive depth and sympathetic cast of characters, Three Sisters is to this day rated as one of Chekhov's best plays.

Mediji Grāmatas     Paperback Book   (Grāmata ar mīksto vāku un līmēto muguru)
Izlaists 2016. gada 13. augusts
ISBN13 9781537054957
Izdevēji Createspace Independent Publishing Platf
Lapas 60
Izmēri 152 × 229 × 3 mm   ·   95 g
Valoda Angļu  

Vairāk no Anton Chekhov

Rādīt visu

Vairāk no šīs sērijas