A Florentine Tragedy and La Sainte Courtisane
Oscar Wilde
Read by LibriVox Volunteers
Two short fragments: an unfinished and a lost play. A Florentine Tragedy, left in a taxi (not a handbag), is Wilde’s most successful attempt at tragedy – intense and domestic, with surprising depth of characterisation. It was adapted into an opera by the Austrian composer Alexander Zemlinsky in 1917. La Sainte Courtisane, or The Woman Covered in Jewels explores one of Wilde’s great idées fixes: the paradox of religious hedonism, pagan piety. Both plays, Wildean to their core, revel in the profound sadness that is the fruit of the conflict between fidelity and forbidden love. Written towards the end of his tragic life, these fragments give us a glimpse of a genius at his best: visceral, passionate, personal, poetic. (Summary by Simon Larois)
A Florentine Tragedy - cast:
Narrator: TriciaG
GUIDO BARDI, A Florentine prince: mb
SIMONE, a merchant: Simon Larois
BIANNA, his wife: Ruth Golding
La Sainte Courtisane - cast:
Narrator: Ruth Golding
First man: mb
Myrrhina: Philippa
Second man: L.French
Honorius: woggy298
Edited by Ruth Golding (0 hr 56 min)
Chapters
0 - Preface to the Collected Plays of Oscar Wilde | 15:29 | Read by Silence |
1 - A Florentine Tragedy, a Fragment | 25:48 | Read by LibriVox Volunteers |
2 - La Sainte Courtisane, a Fragment | 14:43 | Read by LibriVox Volunteers |
Reviews
A LibriVox Listener
Nicely read. The story was interesting as well.