Difference between revisions of "La voix humaine"
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Translated into English as ''[[The Human Voice]]'' | Translated into English as ''[[The Human Voice]]'' | ||
− | Translated into [[Dutch]] as De Menselijke Stem | + | Translated into [[Dutch]] as ''[[De Menselijke Stem]]'' |
Translated into [[Afrikaans]] as ''[[Die Stem van die Mens]]'' | Translated into [[Afrikaans]] as ''[[Die Stem van die Mens]]'' |
Revision as of 12:03, 18 November 2024
La voix humaine ("The Human Voice") is a French monodrama by Jean Cocteau (1889-1963)[1]
BEING WRITTEN
Contents
The original text
Written in 1928, it was first staged at the Comédie-Française in 1930.
Set in Paris, it is a play about a woman who is on the phone with her lover of the last five years. He is to marry another woman the next day, which causes her to despair. The monologue triggers the woman's crippling depression.
Translations and adaptations
Translated into English as The Human Voice
Translated into Dutch as De Menselijke Stem
Translated into Afrikaans as Die Stem van die Mens
Performance history in South Africa
1976 Ruth Oppenheim appeared in The Human Voice at the Pieter Roos Teater.
Sources
Go to ESAT Bibliography
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