Strider

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Strider is a play by Russian theatre director and dramatist Mark Rozovsky (1937- ).

An acting edition published by Samuel French (date?)

The original text

Adapted from the 1886 story Kholstomer [1] by Russian novelist Leo Tolstoy's (1828–1910) [2] of life seen through the eyes of Strider, a piebald horse. The story has been brilliantly and magically adapted to the stage and it makes Strider seem both equine and thoughtfully human. Despite his maverick coat, Strider is a thoroughbred and a champion. He tells his story to the other horses in the stable; it is one of unexpected triumph and undeserved despair, running much the same as his master's, a dissolute prince. Strider is also an allegory about the indomitability of the pure in spirit- and while inspirational, it is also a valid commentary on the injustices of the world.

Translations and adaptations

The English stage version of Rozovsky's play was created by Robert Kalfin (1933- ) [3] and Steve Brown, based on a translation by Tamara Bering Sunguroff.

Performance history in South Africa

1987: Staged by PACT in the Alexander and at the Grahamstown Festival, directed by Terrence Shank, with Marius Weyers (Strider), Michael Richard (Prince Serpuhovsky), Aletta Bezuidenhout (Viazapurikha), Neil McCarthy (Count Bobrinsky), Dale Cutts (General),



Sources

http://www.samuelfrench.com/p/6749/strider

PACT theatre programme, 1987.

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