Synopses & Reviews
The second volume in the series of authoritative Methuen editions of Strindberg's Collected Plays
This volume contains two of Strindberg's best-known plays from the years following his mental breakdown: the expressionist masterpiece A Dream Play (1901), which he described as 'my most beloved play, child of my greatest pain'; and both parts of The Dance of Death (1900), a terrifying analysis of a tormented marriage: 'it leaves an astonishing, an almost unaccountable, impression of genius … as a beggar's cloak full of holes may have a kind of majestic beauty when the wind fills it, so this broken drama, having unmistakably the winds of vision in it, has beauty and dignity and power' (The Times, 1928). Also included is his earlier short play The Stronger (1889), a fascinating study of the power of personality.
"Michael Meyer is the translator most actors turn to when seeking a definitive text" (Sunday Times)
Synopsis
This volume contains two of Strindberg's best-known plays from the prolific years following his mental breakdown. The expressionist masterpiece A Dream Play, which he described as "my most beloved play, child of my greatest pain"; and both parts of The Dance of Death, a terrifying analysis of a tormented marriage). Also included is his earlier short play The Stronger, a fascinating study of the power of personality.
About the Author
August Strindberg (1849-1912) is now seen as a pioneer of twentieth-century theatre and one of the world's great dramatists. During his lifetime, his obsessional treatments of insanity, sexual domination and the psychological warfare between men and women provoked incomprehension and abhorrence; today, his plays have taken on a new relevance and directness.
Table of Contents
The dance of death -- A dream play -- The stronger.