The Ubu Plays: 'Ubu Rex', 'Ubu Cuckolded', 'Ubu Enchained', 'Writings on the Theatre'

The Ubu Plays: 'Ubu Rex', 'Ubu Cuckolded', 'Ubu Enchained', 'Writings on the Theatre'

The Ubu Plays: 'Ubu Rex', 'Ubu Cuckolded', 'Ubu Enchained', 'Writings on the Theatre'

The Ubu Plays: 'Ubu Rex', 'Ubu Cuckolded', 'Ubu Enchained', 'Writings on the Theatre'

The Ubu Plays: 'Ubu Rex', 'Ubu Cuckolded', 'Ubu Enchained', 'Writings on the Theatre'

Overview

A re-issue of three plays that ushered in the great age of absurdist theatre There was a riot at the first performance of Ubu Roi on 10 December 1896, when Firmin Gemier, playing Ubu, strode to the footlights and roared: "Merde!" at the audience, and theatre would never be the same again. Ubu became a force to be reckoned with in literature, art and politics. Jarry wrote more exploits for him and took to acting the role of Ubu himself in his own brief, strange life. This volume contains lively modern translations by Cyril Connolly and Simon Watson Taylor of Ubu Roi, Ubu Cocu and Ubu Enchaine as well as Jarry's writings on theatre.

Authors

Alfred Jarry

Alfred Jarry, considered by some to be the father of the theater of the absurd, was born in Laval, France, on September 8, 1873. His father, Anselme, represented a wool factory as a traveling salesman, and his mother (nee Caroline Quernest) was the daughter of a judge. As a y ...
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