Passion Play: a dramatic fragment: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
==Plot== |
==Plot== |
||
The first act is set in Nazareth, where Jesus is a young man in his twenties, unhappy at his recent rejection by a local beauty named Rahab. Joseph is portrayed as a drunkard and a poor workman, and his relationship with Mary difficult and often violent. A passing traveller, a prospective customer called Judas, arrives and he |
The first act is set in Nazareth, where Jesus is a young man in his twenties, unhappy at his recent rejection by a local beauty named Rahab. Joseph is portrayed as a drunkard and a poor workman, and his relationship with Mary difficult and often violent. A passing traveller, a prospective customer called Judas, arrives and he and Jesus form a friendship. |
||
The second act is set in Jerusalem some years later, after some marvels attributed to Jesus have happened. Barabbas appears as a thief preying on traders in the Temple, Mary Magdalene is Pilate's mistress, and there is a dispute between Peter and John over who best observes their master's doctrines, but the play breaks off before a resolution. |
The second act is set in Jerusalem some years later, after some marvels attributed to Jesus have happened. Barabbas appears as a thief preying on traders in the Temple, Mary Magdalene is Pilate's mistress, and there is a dispute between Peter and John over who best observes their master's doctrines, but the play breaks off before a resolution. |
||
==Constraints on performance== |
==Constraints on performance== |
Revision as of 07:51, 1 September 2007
Passion Play: a dramatic fragment is an early and uncompleted play in blank verse by George Bernard Shaw. It was written in 1878, shortly after his arrival in London at the age of 21. The play seems to be conceived as a sceptical retelling of the Gospel story in two acts.
Plot
The first act is set in Nazareth, where Jesus is a young man in his twenties, unhappy at his recent rejection by a local beauty named Rahab. Joseph is portrayed as a drunkard and a poor workman, and his relationship with Mary difficult and often violent. A passing traveller, a prospective customer called Judas, arrives and he and Jesus form a friendship.
The second act is set in Jerusalem some years later, after some marvels attributed to Jesus have happened. Barabbas appears as a thief preying on traders in the Temple, Mary Magdalene is Pilate's mistress, and there is a dispute between Peter and John over who best observes their master's doctrines, but the play breaks off before a resolution.
Constraints on performance
The play was not performable in London at the time it was written because of censorship restrictions then in place on the portrayal of Christ, but Shaw may have had hopes of getting it put on in Dublin where such constraints did not exist.
Publication
It was not published until 1971, when the Windhover Press, University of Iowa, put it into print. It was later republished in volume 7 of Complete Plays with their prefaces in 1974[1].
References and footnotes
- ^ see essay on this play by Stanley Weintraub in the Times Literary Supplement, 20 July 2007 pp 13-15.