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Thread: The Cherry Orchard story analysis.

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    Pewter Pots! eyemaker's Avatar
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    The Cherry Orchard story analysis.

    I'm needing your help guys. Anton Chekov's The Cherry Orchard is our main discussion nex week, so I started reading it and yesterday I finished it. The story is nice and I love how Chekov made his theme. I just have one thing to clarify about the story.
    Many of the most important and traumatic events in the play—Grisha's drowning, the sale of the orchard, Ranevsky's suicide attempt—either happen before the play's action or off-stage. Why do you think Chekhov would stage some of the most dramatic events outside the confines of the play itself? What effect does this have on the play?

    thank you in advance





    ---eye

    "The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in mind at the same time and still retain the ability to function. One should, for example, be able to see that things are hopeless and yet be determined to make them otherwise."

    -- F. Scott Fitzgerald

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    hmm i will look into that for you pal, i will see what i can do, for you, adn find you the thing you want.
    shortstoryofthemonth.com

  3. #3
    the beloved: Gladys's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by eyemaker View Post
    Why do you think Chekhov would stage some of the most dramatic events outside the confines of the play itself? What effect does this have on the play?
    Chekhov, writing at the end of Henrik Ibsen's life, benefited from exposure to the Norwegian genius. In Ibsen, plays end with high drama, with explosive shock. But life, for the most part, is rather mundane with only the occasional bombshell. Chekov's plays depict life as it generally is and, surprisingly, reality and the familiar can be equally fascinating.

    In The Cherry Orchard every character's expectations are, more or less, confirmed. And isn't life is usually like that?
    "Love does not alter the beloved, it alters itself"

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