Difference between revisions of "Der Wildfang"

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(lit "A trap for wild animals", can also be used metaphorically to refer to a "tomboy". It is translated as  "The Trapping of Game" by some sources)  
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(lit "A trap for wild animals", can also be used metaphorically to refer to a "tomboy". It is variously translated as  "The Trapping of Game" by some sources, e.g. Encyclopaedia Britannica, and as "The Madcap" by Hunt and Clarke, the translators of Von Kotzbue's own autobiography in 1827)  
  
 
A comedy in three acts by August von Kotzebue (1761-1819).  
 
A comedy in three acts by August von Kotzebue (1761-1819).  

Revision as of 17:30, 5 December 2014

(lit "A trap for wild animals", can also be used metaphorically to refer to a "tomboy". It is variously translated as "The Trapping of Game" by some sources, e.g. Encyclopaedia Britannica, and as "The Madcap" by Hunt and Clarke, the translators of Von Kotzbue's own autobiography in 1827)

A comedy in three acts by August von Kotzebue (1761-1819).

Published in 1798


Translations and adaptations

Translated into English by William Dunlap and adapted as a comic opera in four acts under the title The Wild-Goose Chace (sic on the original printed edition, but listed as The Wild-Goose Chase by later critics and authors.) and performed in New York on 24 January 1800. Published there in 1800 by William Dunlap.


Productions in South Africa

Sources

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/August_von_Kotzebue

http://www.worldcat.org/title/wildfang-ein-lustspiel/oclc/475018414/editions?referer=di&editionsView=true

Der Wildfang. The Wild Goose Chace; a play in four acts and in prose , with songs by Augustus Friedrich Ferdinand von Kotzebue and William Dunlap[1]

DiGaetani and Sirefman, 1994, Opera and the Golden West: The Past, Present, and Future of Opera in the U.S.A.[2]

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