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Dramaturgie

Catalogue / Culture / Art / Littérature / Dramaturgie
Catalogue / Culture / Art / Arts du spectacle / Théâtre / Dramaturgie
A  À B C Ç D E É Ê È Ë F G H I Ï Î J K L M N O Ô Œ P Q R S T U Û Ù V W X Y Ÿ Z #

Addison, Joseph (1672-1719)  [13]

Goldoni, Carlo (1707-1793)  [9]

Sachs, Hans (1494-1576)  [7]

Aristophanes (c. 448-385 B.C.)  [76]

Gozzi, Carlo (1720-1806)  [0]

Schiller, Johann Christoph Friedrich von (1759-1805)  [34]

Brecht, Bertolt (1898–1956)  [29]

Griboedov, Alexander (1795 -1829)  [6]

Scribe, Augustin Eugиne (1791–1861)  [4]

Calderon de la Barca y Henao, Pedro (1600-1681)  [19]

Hugo, Victor (1802-1885)  [21]

Shaffer, Peter (1926- )  [6]

Chapman, George (1559-1634)  [9]

Ibsen, Henrik (1828-1906)  [14]

Shakespeare, William (1564-1616)  [50]

Chekhov, Anton (1860-1904)  [16]

Jonson, Ben (1572-1637)  [15]

Shaw, George Bernard (1856-1950)  [23]

Congreve, William (1670-1729)  [5]

Kalidasa  [3]

Sheridan, Richard Brinsley (1751–1816)  [12]

Corneille, Pierre (1606-1684)  [12]

Lessing, Gotthold Ephraim (1729-1781)  [14]

Sophocles (c. 497-406 B.C.)  [11]

Dryden, John (1631-1700)  [24]

Lorca, Federico Garcia (1898-1936)  [20]

Stoppard, Tom (1937- )  [6]

Eliot, Thomas Sterns (1888-1965)  [25]

Marlowe, Cristofer (1564-1593)  [16]

Synge, John Millington (1871–1909)  [13]

Eschyle (c. 525-456 B.C.)  [62]

Moliиre (Poquelin), Jean-Baptiste (1622-1673)  [13]

Terence (c. 190-158 B.C.)  [5]

Euripides (c. 485-406 B.C.)  [53]

Molina, Tirso de (1571-1648)  [8]

Toller, Ernst (1893-1939)  [7]

Filippo, Eduardo de (1900–1984)  [7]

Osborne, John  [5]

Vega Carpio, Lope Felix de (1562–1635)  [21]

Galsworthy, John (1867-1933)  [21]

Ostrovsky, Alexander (1823-1886)  [5]

Williams, Tennessee (1911–1983)  [5]

Giraudoux, Jean (1882-1944)  [10]

Plautus, Titus Maccius (c. 254-184 B.C.)  [9]

  

Goethe, Johann Wolfgang (1749-1832)  [22]

Racine, Jean (1639-1699)  [16]

  

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Cruz, Ramon de la. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
1731–94, Spanish dramatist. He wrote tragedies and adapted French and Italian plays, but he owes his fame to his sainetes, some 450 masterly one-act comedies that depict the life of the middle and lower classes. His work freed the awakening Spanish drama from foreign influence [eng]
Thomas Kyd (1558-1595)
A biography of the Elizabethan dramatist and author of The Spanish Tragedy. [eng]
Madach, Imre. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
Hungarian poet and dramatist. Madách is best known for his dramatic epic, The Tragedy of Man (1861, tr. 1908), which relates the history of mankind in somber, philosophical terms. Influenced by Goethe’s Faust, it reveals Madách’s profound pessimism. An adapted version is frequently performed in Hungarian theaters. [eng]
Bredero, Gerbrand Adriaenszoon. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
1585–1618, Dutch dramatist and poet. He is considered the major Dutch poet of his generation, particularly for his spontaneous love sonnets. The first Dutch master of comedy, Bredero was an important innovator; he drew upon classical elements as well as Renaissance models. His masterpiece, De Spaansche Brabander (1617, tr. The Spanish Brabanter, 1982), is a realistic comedy of Amsterdam life and reveals the influence of Spanish romanticism. [eng]
John Heywood
English dramatist and epigrammatist, is generally said to have been a native of North Mimms, near St. Albans, Hertfordshire, though Bale says he was born in London. A letter from a John Heywood, who may fairly be identified with him, is dated from Malines in 1575, when he called himself an old man of seventy-eight, which would fix his birth in 1497. [eng]
AllRefer Encyclopedia - Ion Luca Caragiale (Russian And Eastern European Literature, Biographies) - Encyclopedia
Romanian playwright and author. Romania's foremost dramatist, his works sharply satirized Romanian society. His masterpiece, A Lost Letter (1884), describes a provincial government election won by a blackmailer. Other plays include Carnival Adventures (1885) and False Accusation (1889), a tragedy. He also wrote short stories and novels. [eng]
Ilya Cazés
Biografía y curriculum profesional de este dramaturgo mexicano. [spa]
Nordahl Grieg
Norwegian poet, novelist, dramatist, and journalist. In the1930s Grieg was in his country among the foremost young dramatists. His theatrical techniques and stage effects showed the influence of Russian experimental theatre and film. During World War II Grieg's poetry gained a wide audience in the occupied Norway. Gried died in 1943 when his plane was shot down over Berlin. His distant relative was the famous composer Edvard Grieg. [eng]
Alecsandri, Vasile. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
Romanian poet, dramatist, and statesman. He was (1858) provisional foreign minister and subsequently served in various diplomatic posts. Besides writing lyric poetry celebrated for the description of his native landscape, he published a notable collection of Romanian folk songs. His plays include Ovidiu (1890). [eng]
Alecsandri, Vasile
Alecsandri, Vasile: 1821-90, Romanian poet, dramatist, and statesman. He was (1858) provisional foreign minister and subsequently served in various diplomatic posts. Besides writing lyric poetry celebrated for the description of his native landscape, he published a notable collection of Romanian folk songs. His plays include Ovidiu (1890). [eng]
Perú
Biografías y obras de los principales autores dramáticos de Perú. [spa]
Hooft, Pieter Corneliszoon. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
Dutch historian, poet, and dramatist. His great work was a history of the revolt of the Netherlands against Spain, Nederlandsche Historien (1628–47). Hooft was also a lyric poet of the first order and introduced French and Italian Renaissance lyricisms into Dutch poetry. [eng]
Benavente y Martínez, Jacinto
Spanish dramatists of the 20th century, who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1922. He returned drama to reality by way of social criticism: declamatory verse giving way to prose, melodrama to comedy, formula to experience, impulsive action to dialogue and the play of minds. Benavente showed a preoccupation with aesthetics and later with ethics. [eng]
Ñòðàíèöà äðàìàòóðãà ìèðîâîé èçâåñòíîñòè Õðèñòî Áîé÷åâ
Ïèåñû àâòîðà íà ðóññêîì åçèêå, ïîñòîíîâêè â ìèðå, áèîãðàôèÿ [bul]
Caragiale, Ion Luca. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
Romanian playwright and author. Romania’s foremost dramatist, his works sharply satirized Romanian society. His masterpiece, A Lost Letter (1884), describes a provincial government election won by a blackmailer. Other plays include Carnival Adventures (1885) and False Accusation (1889), a tragedy. He also wrote short stories and novels. [eng]
Havel, Vaclav. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
Czech dramatist and essayist, president of Czechoslovakia (1989–92) and the Czech Republic (1993–2003). The most original Czech dramatist to emerge in the 1960s, Havel soon antagonized the political power structure by focusing on the senselessness and absurdity of mechanized, totalitarian society in plays that implicitly criticized the government such as The Garden Party (1963, tr. 1969) and The Memorandum (1965, tr. 1967) and in various essays of the 1960s and 70s. As a leading spokesman for the dissident group Charter 77, he was imprisoned (1979–83) by the Czechoslovak Communist regime, and his plays were banned. [eng]
Dyk, Viktor. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
1877–1931, Czech writer and nationalist. Dyk considered his novels, satires, short stories, plays, and poems as weapons in the struggle to free his country from Austrian rule. A long poem, The Window (1920), describes his experiences in an Austrian prison. As a dramatist he is best known for The Messenger (1907), which concerns the Czech loss of independence, and for the satirical play, Andrew and the Dragon (1920). [eng]
Kyd, Thomas
1558-94, English dramatist, b. London. The son of a scrivener, he evidently followed his father's profession for a few years. In the 1580s he began writing plays. His literary fame rests on The Spanish Tragedy (c.1586), which initiated an important Elizabethan dramatic genre—the revenge tragedy. Popular throughout the 17th cent., The Spanish Tragedy is notable for its exciting action, splendid rhetoric, and complex delineation of character. [eng]
Madach, Imre
Hungarian poet and dramatist. Madách is best known for his dramatic epic, The Tragedy of Man (1861, tr. 1908), which relates the history of mankind in somber, philosophical terms. Influenced by Goethe’s Faust, it reveals Madách’s profound pessimism. An adapted version is frequently performed in Hungarian theaters. [eng]
Ðåêòèôèêàöèÿ ãîðîñêîïà Ôåäåðèêî Ãàðñèà Ëîðêè
Äàííàÿ ðàáîòà ïîñâÿùåíà òåìå ðåêòèôèêàöèè ãîðîñêîïà âåëèêîãî èñïàíñêîãî ïîýòà è äðàìàòóðãà Ôåäåðèêî Ãàðñèà Ëîðêè. [rus]
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