Difference between revisions of "Apareceu a Margarida"
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Written in Portuguese in 1973, it is a play is set in what looks like a school classroom. The play's cast typically consists of only two people: Miss Margarida, a school teacher, and a male student. This "student" often sits among the audience members, whom the "teacher" addresses and treats as if they were real school children. | Written in Portuguese in 1973, it is a play is set in what looks like a school classroom. The play's cast typically consists of only two people: Miss Margarida, a school teacher, and a male student. This "student" often sits among the audience members, whom the "teacher" addresses and treats as if they were real school children. | ||
+ | Banned, then censored in Brazil (the playwright's homeland). | ||
==Translations and adaptations== | ==Translations and adaptations== |
Revision as of 10:58, 10 June 2023
Apareceu a Margarida is a satirical Brazilian play by Roberto Athayde (born 1949) [1].
Contents
The original text
Written in Portuguese in 1973, it is a play is set in what looks like a school classroom. The play's cast typically consists of only two people: Miss Margarida, a school teacher, and a male student. This "student" often sits among the audience members, whom the "teacher" addresses and treats as if they were real school children. Banned, then censored in Brazil (the playwright's homeland).
Translations and adaptations
Translated onto English as Miss Margarida's Way and was first performed in the United States at the American Contemporary Theatre in San Francisco on 4 March 1975 and published by Avon Books in 1979.
The play was translated into Afrikaans by Wim Vorster, title unknown.
Performance history in South Africa
THe English text performed as a Baxter Theatre production in 1981, directed by Robin Sanders, with Michelle du Toit as Miss Margarida and André Samuels as one of her students. Opened at the People's Space on 26 February 1981. Designer Jenny Gillis, stage manager Kathy Batho
Sources
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miss_Margarida%27s_Way
Miss Magrida's Way. A Tragicomic Monologue for an Impetuous Woman, Google Books [2]
Miss Margarida's Way theatre programme, 1981.
Barrow, Brian & Williams-Short, Yvonne (eds.). 1988. Theatre Alive! The Baxter Story 1977-1987.
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