CAMUS Albert (1913-1960). - Lot 89

Lot 89
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CAMUS Albert (1913-1960). - Lot 89
CAMUS Albert (1913-1960). autograph MANUSCRIT, [1944]; 2 pages in-4, with erasures and corrections (binder holes outside text). Presentation of his play Le Malentendu, premiered June 24, 1944 at the Théâtre des Mathurins. "Le Malentendu is a play that apparently offers the director no particular difficulties. Whether consciously or not, the author has observed the three-unit rule. It's a tragic action set in an inn over 24 hours. The author had already given the subject of his play in L'Étranger, published in 1941. [...] From a simple case history (which, it should be noted, actually happened in a small town in Czechoslovakia where the author stayed), Camus seems to have wanted to create a tragedy of exile and separation. [...] The author wanted to create what might be called a "tragedy in a jacket". The modern world has a tragedy of its own. [Le Malentendu attempts to include in a contemporary setting the great themes of a tragedy with which we are all familiar. The big problem is tone, because "characters in jackets need to remain natural". To achieve this, Camus chose "a tone that is haughty enough, written enough to remain tragic and at the same time natural enough"; he introduced "remoteness, no longer in the action but in the character of the characters", and he graduated the effects "so that the tone and the characters, natural at the beginning, rise from act to act to reach the height of myth". These problems were solved thanks to "a perfect and friendly collaboration between the performers and the author"... Camus adds that "the apparent pessimism of the play is not only not definitive, but also covers a deeper optimism: that by which man, freed from his illusions and his gods, can recover in action and revolt the only freedom that is bearable to him"...
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