A Servant To Two Masters (Modern Plays)

A Servant To Two Masters (Modern Plays)

by Carlo Goldoni & Lee Hall (Author)

Synopsis

A Christmas pantomime with an Italian accent from the Royal Shakespeare Company and the Young Vic Company "Two wages. Two men's meals. Am I mad? Not half." Carlo Goldoni's 18th century comedy about a wily servant who gets the best of his masters by hook and crook is one of the great classic commedia dell'arte scripts of world drama. In this new, rapid fire adaptation by award winning dramatist Lee Hall, the language has been updated to now in order to give the action the fast-paced feeling of a Christmas pantomime.A cracker of a version certain to please all and fill the theatres.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 128
Publisher: Methuen Drama
Published: 09 Dec 1999

ISBN 10: 0413748502
ISBN 13: 9780413748508

Media Reviews

The Servant of Two Masters , written in 1743, is expert farce. - The New York Times


The Servant of Two Masters , written in 1743, is expert farce. -- The New York Times


The Servant of Two Masters, written in 1743, is expert farce. -- The New York Times


The Servant of Two Masters, written in 1743, is expert farce. The New York Times
The Servant of Two Masters, written in 1743, is expert farce. --The New York Times
Author Bio
Carlo Goldoni (1707-93) was an Italian dramatist born in Venice who wrote over 200 comedies, tragedies and tragicomedies in his lifetime. His many popular comedies include A Servant to Two Masters (1746), The Respectable Woman (1749) and The Mistress of the Inn (1753). In 1762 Goldoni moved to Paris where he directed the Italian theatre and continued to write more plays, including The Fan (1764). After his acclaimed play Spoonface Steinberg (1997), Lee Hall was appointed Writer in Residence at the RSC 1999/2000 under the Pearson Playwrights Scheme Award. Other plays include Cooking with Elvis (2000, Edinburgh Festival and West End) and an adaptation of Goldoni's The Servant with Two Masters (RSC 1999). He also wrote the screenplay to the film Billy Elliot (1999), receiving an Oscar nomination for Best Original Screenplay. His most recent play, The Pitmen Painters premiered at the Live Theatre, Newcastle-upon-Tyne in 2007 before transferring to the National Theatre 2008.