Book description
Anton Chekhov's play Uncle Vanya in a new version by Christopher
Hampton. This version will be first staged at the Vaudeville Theatre,
London, on 25 October 2012 and run until 16 February 2013. 'It's often
said that the best of the Chekhov plays is the one you've seen most
recently. Uncle Vanya doesn't have a suicide, like The Seagull, or an
adulterous couple and a duel more or less indistinguishable from
murder, like Three Sisters; nor does it seem to announce the end of an
era, like The Cherry Orchard: all it has is a series of ludicrously
bungled attempts at murder and suicide and adultery. Perhaps these
failures are what makes it feel the saddest and most truthful of these
great tragi-comedies, in which, possibly unique to all drama, not a
single word seems redundant or out of place.' - From the author's introduction.
Anton Chekhov, Russian dramatist and short-story writer, was
born in 1860, the son of a grocer and the grandson of a serf. After
graduating in medicine from Moscow University in 1884, he began to
make his name in the theatre with the one-act comedies The Bear, The
Proposal and The Wedding. His earliest full-length plays, Ivanov
(1887) and The Wood Demon (1889), were not successful, and The
Seagull, produced in 1896, was a failure until a triumphant revival by
the Moscow Art Theatre in 1898. This was followed by Uncle Vanya
(1899), Three Sisters (1901) and The Cherry Orchard (1904), shortly
after the production of which Chekhov died. The first English
translations of his plays were performed within five years of his death.