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Molière or the League of Hypocrites
From 04/12/2009 to 11/12/2009 at 23:59
Until 19th December
by Mikhail Bulgakov in the world premiere of a translation by Michael Glenny
Directed by Blanche McIntyre.
Designed by Alex Marker.
Lighting by Jon Winn.
Costume Design by Penn O’Gara.
Music by Plaster of Paris.
Sound by Gemma Harrison.
Cast: Justin Avoth. Paul Brendan. Tom Davey. Mark Desebrock. Emma Jerrold. Antonia Kinlay. Elizabeth Moynihan. Gyuri Sarossy. Kett Turton. Ben Warwick.
Jean-Baptiste Poquelin (Molière) is on top of the world - at the centre of Louis XIV's court, author of countless popular hits, and in love with a woman half his age. But what the audiences see as sparkling satire, the authorities see as dangerous and subversive. As soon as he takes a wrong step, his fall from grace is assured.
Assailed by rumours and tracked by the secret police, Molière's private life starts to fall apart. In this world of whispers and distortions, everyone is vulnerable. But not everyone has a theatre to run.
Inspired by real-life events and written under the shadow of Stalin, Molière is about a man's fight to keep his integrity under a repressive regime.
Playwright and novelist Mikhail Bulgakov (1891-1940) was the most original writer of the Stalinist era, turning out outspoken, satirical works, even as his contemporaries were arrested and killed. He is probably best known for The Master And Margarita, published 26 years after his death and now the favourite book of four out of five Russians. He also wrote the plays The White Guard (which Stalin saw seventeen times) and Black Snow, a savage spoof of Stanislavsky and his Method which was inspired by Bulgakov's difficulties in getting Molière staged. Productions of Bulgakov's work in the UK have included Black Snow and Flight at the National Theatre, The Master and Margarita at Chichester Festival Theatre, and The White Guard for the Royal Shakespeare Company. Molière was last seen in London in 1983, at the Barbican's Pit Theatre, in a Royal Shakespeare Company production starring Antony Sher.
Translator Michael Glenny (1927-1990) was one of the most prolific and highly respected translators of Russian works in the 20th century. He was professor of Russian studies at the Universities of Birmingham, Southern Illinois and Bristol. Glenny translated ten works by Bulgakov, including Black Snow, The White Guard and The Master and Margarita. His other translations include works by Solzhenitsyn, Nabokov, Eisenstein, Gogol, Dostoevsky, Gorky and the first volume of Boris Yeltsin's memoirs.
Director Blanche McIntyre is the first recipient of the Leverhulme Directors' Bursary, and is currently Director in Residence at the National Theatre Studio and the Finborough Theatre. Directing includes Bulgakov's The Master And Margarita (Greenwich Playhouse), Three Hours After Marriage (Union Theatre), Wuthering Heights (National Tour), The Revenger's Tragedy (BAC), Birds (Southwark Playhouse), Doctor Faustus, The Devil Is An Ass, The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll And Mr Hyde As Told To An Inmate Of Broadmoor Asylum (White Bear Theatre), and Lost Hearts, The Invention of Love and Cressida (Edinburgh Festival).
Ticket Price: £9 to £13
Event's details
- Where: Finborough Theatre

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