Difference between revisions of "Zoé"

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==Translations and adaptations==
 
==Translations and adaptations==
  
Translated into [[Dutch]] by Philip Hendrik Lijnslager as ''Zoé, tooneelspel'' and published in Amsterdam by Pieter Johannes Uylenbroek, 1785. The translation dedicated to the theatrical society "Kunstmin spaart geen vlijt".  
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Translated into [[Dutch]] by Philip Hendrik Lijnslager as ''[[Zoé]]'' and published in Amsterdam by Pieter Johannes Uylenbroek, 1785. The translation dedicated to the theatrical society "Kunstmin spaart geen vlijt".
 
 
  
 
== Performance history in South Africa ==
 
== Performance history in South Africa ==

Revision as of 05:24, 18 March 2017

Zoé is a French play in three acts by Louis Sébastien Mercier (1740-1814)

The original text

Published under the French title: Zoé, drame en trois actes Neuchatel:Impr. de la société typographique,1782.

Translations and adaptations

Translated into Dutch by Philip Hendrik Lijnslager as Zoé and published in Amsterdam by Pieter Johannes Uylenbroek, 1785. The translation dedicated to the theatrical society "Kunstmin spaart geen vlijt".

Performance history in South Africa

1849: Performed by Tot Oefening en Vermaak in the Hope Street Theatre, Cape Town in the Dutch translation on 8 June, under the title Zoë, of De Zegepraal eener Standvastige Liefde (possibly a misspelling for Zoé, of De Zegepraal eener Standvastige Liefde), with De Hoefsmid (Quétant), and some comic songs as "divertissement" (Oude Meisjes van drie en vyftig Jaren and Die het Schoentje past, die trekt ze aan).

1849: Repeated by the company on 30 October 1849 with De Logen om Best Wil (Garrick), and as "divertissement", an original sentimental song (Geene Bandieten) by an unnamed South African, and a "comic dance".

Sources

Text on Antiqbook website[1]

Louis Sébastien Mercier entry, Wikipedia[http://search.ugent.be/meercat/x/bkt01?q=900000072310 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis-S%C3%A9bastien_Mercier]

F.C.L. Bosman, 1928: pp. 453, 455

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