Picture of author.

Stanislawa Przybyszewska (1901–1935)

Autor(a) de The Danton Case and Thermidor: Two Plays

3 Works 23 Membros 1 Review

About the Author

Includes the name: Stanisława Przybyszewska

Disambiguation Notice:

(eng) This author photo is wrong! Stanisława Przybyszewska was a woman.

Image credit: Wikimedia Commons

Obras por Stanislawa Przybyszewska

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Data de nascimento
1901
Data de falecimento
1935
Sexo
female
Nacionalidade
Poland
Local de nascimento
Krakow, Poland
Local de falecimento
Danzig (now Gdansk, Poland)
Ocupações
Playwright

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Stanisława Przybyszewska was a Polish playwright who wrote almost exclusively about the French Revolution. Her play The Danton Case (1929), which examined the conflict between Maximilien Robespierre and Georges Danton, was adapted and edited by filmmaker Andrzej Wajda for his 1983 film Danton.
In 1921, Stanisława married Jan Panienski, an artist; following his death from a drug overdose in 1924, she drifted into a solitary life of fanatical obsession with the French Revolution, especially with Robespierre. She began dating her letters by the French Republican calendar. Desperately poor and mentally unstable, she spent the last years of her life in a tiny, poorly heated garret apartment that she rarely left. Besides The Danton Case, she wrote another play, Thermidor, which was unfinished at the time of her death in 1935. Hilary Mantel wrote in the London Review of Books in March 2000, "Tuberculosis, morphine and malnutrition were adduced as the causes of death, but she could more truthfully be diagnosed as the woman who died of Robespierre."
See the biography, A Life of Solitude: Stanislawa Przybyszewska, A Biographical Study With Selected Letters by Jadwiga Kosicka and Daniel Gerould (1987).
Nota de desambiguação
This author photo is wrong! Stanisława Przybyszewska was a woman.

Membros

Críticas

Long, talky plays with turgid prose, mostly interesting as a curiosity. These plays need a heavy editing before anyone could possibly consider putting them on a modern stage. They are difficult to even read because of the long speeches, heavy philosophical discussions, and frequent historical references the audience is expected to understand without explanation. While it might have been true during the inter-war years that everyone could be expected to know all relevant dates in the French Revolution, that is a distinctive handicap today. The socialist politics of the author are on prominent display, even as she presents a picture of a people's revolution gone horribly wrong. Mostly interesting as a curiosity - historical plays from Poland during the interwar period.… (mais)
½
 
Assinalado
Devil_llama | Dec 3, 2014 |

Estatísticas

Obras
3
Membros
23
Popularidade
#537,598
Avaliação
3.2
Críticas
1
ISBN
4
Línguas
1