9780898752618-0898752612-Teahouse: A Play in Three Acts

Teahouse: A Play in Three Acts

ISBN-13: 9780898752618
ISBN-10: 0898752612
Author: Professor Lao She
Publication date: 2001
Publisher: University Press of the Pacific
Format: Paperback 108 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780898752618
ISBN-10: 0898752612
Author: Professor Lao She
Publication date: 2001
Publisher: University Press of the Pacific
Format: Paperback 108 pages

Summary

Teahouse: A Play in Three Acts (ISBN-13: 9780898752618 and ISBN-10: 0898752612), written by authors Professor Lao She, was published by University Press of the Pacific in 2001. With an overall rating of 4.3 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent Teahouse: A Play in Three Acts (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

This volume is set in a typical, old Beijing teahouse. Lao She's drama follows the lives of the owner and his customers through three stages in modern Chinese history. The play spans fifty years and has a cast of over sixty characters drawn from all levels of society. Brought together in Yutai Teahouse, they reflect, through the changes that were taking place in Chinese society.

The strength and appeal of the play lie in part in Lao She's masterful recreation of the characters and language of the streets of old Beijing, but the center of its strength is Lao She's vision, his unerring choice of significant detail, and this familiarity with the old society he is describing, with its strengths, weaknesses, and ironies. It is this which carries Teahouse beyond the borders of social criticism and makes it a complex and living work of art. Written in 1957, Teahouse bids an inspired, lingering farewell to old Beijing and the old society, despite their evils and ills, and extends a passionate welcome to the new society with its promise of freedom and equality of the people.

Standing as it does between old and new China, and deeply rooted in both, Teahouse shimmers with a fine since of ambivalence. True to its writer, to China, and to its time, it is a masterpiece of modern theatre.

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