La Dispute

This is for the Marivaux play, for the band, see La Dispute (band).
La Dispute

Front page of 1744 Edition of La Dispute

Front page of 1744 Edition of La Dispute
Written by Pierre de Marivaux
Characters Hermianne
Prince
Mesrou
Carise
Egle
Azor
Adine
Mesrin
Meslis
Dina
Following the Prince
Date premiered October 19, 1744
Place premiered Hôtel de Bourgogne, Paris, France
Original language French
Genre Comedy

La Dispute is a prose comedy written by Pierre de Marivaux, shown for the first time on October 19, 1744, by the Théâtre-Italien in the Hôtel de Bourgogne. The story involves four orphans (two boys and two girls) that have been raised in isolation, from the world and from each other. An aristocrat releases four human guinea pigs into a sinister Garden of Eden to cause them to consider the question of whether man or woman is more faithful.[1][2][3]

One of Marivaux's last pieces, La Dispute was received as a huge failure. It is a funny, erotic and cruel masterpiece.

Adaptations have been created from 1972 and onward in various forms.

Reception

For the 2013 adaptation, editor for The New York Times Sylviane Gold wrote: "La Dispute opens with Prince and Hermiane, as a pair of exquisitely bewigged, bejeweled aristocrats, discussing with typical Marivaux finesse a lover’s question, one that would appear to have no answer. Who committed the first infidelity, mankind or womankind? But since we’re in Enlightenment France, there’s an app for that: the Prince tells his lady that when the same debate arose in his father’s court nearly 20 years earlier, a scientific experiment was devised to provide incontrovertible evidence as to who started the war between the sexes.

In a variation on one of the 18th century’s favorite themes, that of “The Wild Child,” two newborn boys, Azor and Mesrin, and two newborn girls, Églé and Adine, were removed to a distant, custom-built, high-walled enclosure. There, each was raised, and taught French, naturally, in total isolation by two faithful old servants, Mesrou and Carise. Today, the arrival of the aristocrats signals the culmination of the experiment. They will observe unseen as the now adolescent children, simply dressed in pure white, are released into one another’s company for the very first time, blank slates who will discover, or perhaps invent, love, sex and jealousy for themselves. And for the sake of science."[1]

References

  1. 1 2 Gold, Sylviane. "A Review of 'La Dispute,' at Hartford Stage". New York Times. Retrieved 1 December 2013.
  2. "ISSUU - La Dispute and Macbeth by Hartford Stage". issuu. Retrieved 1 December 2013.
  3. "La Dispute". The A.R.T. American Repertory Theater. Retrieved 1 December 2013.


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