Difference between revisions of "Kabale und Liebe"

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== Performance history in South Africa ==
 
== Performance history in South Africa ==
  
1853: Performed in Cape Town on Monday 31 October 1853 by the [[Garrison Players|Amateur Company]] in the [[Garrison Theatre]], alongside ''[[Box and Cox]]'' (J.M. Morton) and ''[[Circumstantial Evidence]]'' (Carew).
+
1853: Performed in English as ''[[Power and Principle]]'' in Cape Town on Monday 31 October 1853 by the [[Garrison Players|Amateur Company]] in the [[Garrison Theatre]], alongside ''[[Box and Cox]]'' (J.M. Morton) and ''[[Circumstantial Evidence]]'' (Carew).
  
 
1977-1979(?): Done in German by [[SWAPAC]] in 1977-79?*.
 
1977-1979(?): Done in German by [[SWAPAC]] in 1977-79?*.

Revision as of 05:27, 24 June 2015

A German play by Friedrich Schiller[1] (1759–1805).

Originally written under the working title Luise Millerin, but changed to Kabale und Liebe for its first performance on 13 April 1784 at the Schauspiel Frankfurt in Frankfurt, and on 15 April 1784 in the National Theatre in Mannheim.

Translations and adaptations

Titles for English translations vary greatly, according to the translator: these include Intrigue and Love, Love and Intrigue, Love and Politics, and Luise Miller.

Adapted by Morris Barnett in 1850 under the title Power and Principle

Performance history in South Africa

1853: Performed in English as Power and Principle in Cape Town on Monday 31 October 1853 by the Amateur Company in the Garrison Theatre, alongside Box and Cox (J.M. Morton) and Circumstantial Evidence (Carew).

1977-1979(?): Done in German by SWAPAC in 1977-79?*.

Sources

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

https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Friedrich_Schiller

F.C.L. Bosman, 1928[2]: pp.405

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