Difference between revisions of "Hello from Bertha"

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A play about Bertha, a prostitute on the verge of being evicted from a low-class bordello. In a series of delusions she revisits her past loves while slipping toward disease and death.
 
A play about Bertha, a prostitute on the verge of being evicted from a low-class bordello. In a series of delusions she revisits her past loves while slipping toward disease and death.
  
Text included in the collection ''27 Wagons Full of Cotton And Other One-Act Plays''.
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The play premiered on television on the PBS program "Play of the Week: Four Plays by Tennessee" in 1961.
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The text is included in the collection of thirteen one-act plays by Williams in the volume called ''27 Wagons Full of Cotton And Other One-Act Plays'' (1966).
  
 
==Translations and adaptations==
 
==Translations and adaptations==

Revision as of 19:59, 19 November 2022

Hello from Bertha is a one-act play by Tennessee Williams (1946 and 1953).

The original text

A play about Bertha, a prostitute on the verge of being evicted from a low-class bordello. In a series of delusions she revisits her past loves while slipping toward disease and death.

The play premiered on television on the PBS program "Play of the Week: Four Plays by Tennessee" in 1961.

The text is included in the collection of thirteen one-act plays by Williams in the volume called 27 Wagons Full of Cotton And Other One-Act Plays (1966).

Translations and adaptations

Performance history in South Africa

1971: Staged by the Libertas Theatre Club in 1971, directed by Marie van Heerden, with Brenda von Memerty (Goldie), Jean McDonald (Bertha), Annette Muller (Lena) and Laetitia Roos (Girl).

Sources

https://www.concordtheatricals.com/s/7523/hello-from-bertha

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