Adapting Molière
Liz Lochead, Clare Finburgh-Delijani and Suzanne Jones join Anne McElvoy to look at adaptations and translations of France's great comic dramatist Molière, born in January 1622.
Do we underappreciate comic writing ? Itβs 400 years since the birth of Franceβs great satirical playwright, Jean-Baptiste Pocquelin, better known by his pen-name MoliΓ¨re. Stendhal described him as βthe great painter of man as he isβ and his works have continued to be translated and performed on both the French and British stage with recent adaptations by Christopher Hampton, Anil Gupta and the Scottish poet and playwright, Liz Lochhead. She joins Anne McElvoy to help consider what we make of MoliΓ¨re now and how well his plays work in translation, alongside Clare Finburgh-Delijani, Professor of European Theatre at Goldsmiths, University of London and Suzanne Jones, a Junior Research Fellow in French at St Anneβs College Oxford. Their discussion looks at various adaptations of Tartuffe, Moliereβs play translated as The Hypocrite or The Imposter, which was first performed in 1664.
Listen out for a Words and Music episode that picks out key speeches from plays including The Miser, the Imaginary Invalid, The School for Wives and the Misanthrope. You can hear that on ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 3 at 5.30pm Sunday 16th - followed by a new adaptation of The Miser scripted by Barunka OβShaughnessy.
You can also find out about the court music of Lully in Composer of the Week and there's a special edition of Radio 3's Early Music Show.
Producer: Ruth Watts
Image: poet and playwright Liz Lochhead
Last on
Broadcast
- Tue 11 Jan 2022 22:00ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 3
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