Enough Stupidity in Every Wise Man | |
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Stanislavski (left) and Kachalov (right) in the Moscow Art Theatre production in 1910. |
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Written by | Aleksandr Ostrovsky |
Date premiered | 13 November [O.S. 1 November] 1868 |
Original language | Russian |
Genre | Comedy |
Enough Stupidity in Every Wise Man (Russian: На всякого мудреца довольно простоты; translit. Na vsyakogo mudretsa dovolno prostoty) is a five-act comedy by Aleksandr Ostrovsky.[1] The play offers a satirical treatment of bigotry and charts the rise of a double-dealer who manipulates other people's vanities.[2] It is Ostrovsky's best-known comedy in the West.[3]
1868 - Alexandrinsky Theatre, Saint Petersburg.
1868 - Maly Theatre, Moscow.
1885 - Korsh Theatre, Moscow.
The seminal Russian theatre director Konstantin Stanislavsky directed the play with his Moscow Art Theatre.[4] The production opened on 23 March [O.S. 11 March] 1910.[4] Stanislavski played General Krutitsky[4] and Kachalov played Glumov.
A production of the play was the most significant of the early theatre work of the Russian Soviet film director Sergei Eisenstein.[5] The playwright Sergei Tretyakov transformed Ostrovsky's text into a revue (what Eisenstein called a "montage of attractions"), which was entitled Wiseman (Mudrets).[6] Eisenstein and Tretyakov's approach was part of the Russian avant-garde Futurist movement known as "Eccentricism," which sought the "circusisation" of the theatre.[7] In celebration of the centennial of Ostrovsky's birth, the production opened in April 1923.[8] It was staged by the First Workers' Theatre of the Prolekult in its theatre in an ornate mansion on Vozdvizhenka Street, with a cast that included Maxim Shtraukh, Ivan Pyryev, and Grigori Aleksandrov.[9] Eisenstein drew on popular theatre techniques from farce and the commedia dell'arte in his staging, which sought to make every metaphor concrete and physical; he wrote:[10]
“ | A gesture turns into gymnastics, rage is expressed through a somersault, exaltation through a salto-mortale, lyricism by a run along a tightrope. The grotesque of this style permitted leaps from one type of expression to another, as well as unexpected intertwinings of the two expressions.[11] | ” |
A screening of Eisenstein's first film, entitled Glumov's Diary, concluded the performance.[5] Writing in 1928, Eisenstein explained that he had aimed "to achieve a revolutionary modernization of Ostrovsky, i.e., a social reevalution of his characters, seeing them as they might appear today."[12]
Boris Nirenburg and A. Remizova directed an adaptation of the play for television in 1971.[13]