My Poor Marat
My Poor Marat (also translated into English as The Promise) is a 1963 Russian play by Aleksei Arbuzov. About the lives and loves of three teenagers during the savage 1942 winter siege of Leningrad, as the Russians fight off the Nazi invaders. It was first produced in Russia in 1965, where it was staged in 66 theatres and ran for 1,636 performances.
The first production of The Promise, the English translation by Ariadne Nicolaeff was staged at the Oxford Playhouse in London on 21 November 1966, directed by Frank Hauser, with Judy Dench, Ian McShane and Ian McKellen.
Contents
The original text
Translations and adaptations
Translated into English in 1965 by British translator Ariadne Nicolaeff.
Translated into English in 1993 by American translator Angelina Bulbenko.
Translated into English in 2013 by American translator Oleg Ivanov.
Performance history in South Africa
1967: First produced in South Africa by Pieter Toerien and Basil Rubin at the Brooke Theatre in. It starred English actor Andrew Ray, John Fraser and Olive MacFarlane, directed by Leonard Schach. Decor by Raimond Schoop.
1968: Translated from the Russian by Ariadne Nicolaeff. Produced by Leonard Schach Productions, directed by Leonard Schach, in the Labia Theatre, from 29 May 1968. Cast: Olive McFarland, John Fraser, Andrew Ray.
An Afrikaans version translated from the German by Dawid Engela , entitled Arme Marat, produced in 1968 at the Hofmeyr Theatre, directed by Mavis Taylor for CAPAB starring Katinka Heyns, Pieter Fourie and Cobus Rossouw.
My Arme Marat was presented by PACT in 1972, directed by Truida Louw, starring Marie Koeleman, Jan Engelen and David van der Merwe.
My Arme Marat presented by PACOFS, 1990, with Dorette Nel as Lika. Also starring Cobus de Villiers and James van Helsdingen.
Sources
Teater SA, 1(1), 1968.
PACT Newsletter, July 1972.
Inskip, 1977. p 127.
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