
Click
on author's photo for biography |
Brian Friel's affinity with the work of certain nineteenth-century Russian writers is manifest
in his own fiction and drama and in acclaimed adaptations of works by Chekhov
and Turgenev.
This marvellously inventive new play is based on a theme in 'The Lady with the Lapdog',
a story Chekhov wrote in 1899. At an end-of-season resort on the shore of
the Black Sea, a pair of strangers play 'The Yalta game': divining
the lives of other holiday-makers or investing the lives of others with
an imagined life.
These companions in adventure seek an end to their loneliness by throwing
themselves into the game and by almost convincing each other
that 'disappointments are only the postponement of the complete happiness
which has to come'.
Brian Friel has unravelled a thread of Chekhov's original and woven it
afresh into a startling tapestry of deep longings and flawed resolutions.
|
 |