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Arms and the Man

Arms and the Man is a comedy by George Bernard Shaw, whose title comes from the opening words of Virgil's Aeneid, in Latin: Arma virumque cano ("Of arms and the man I sing").[5]

Arms and the Man
Shaw at the time of the production of Arms and the Man
Written byGeorge Bernard Shaw
CharactersRaina Petkoff
Sergius Saranoff
Captain Bluntschli
Catherine Petkoff
Major Paul Petkoff
Louka
Nicola[1][2]
Date premiered21 April 1894 (1894-04-21)
Place premieredAvenue Theatre
SubjectLove and war[3][4]

The play was first produced on 21 April 1894 at the Avenue Theatre and published in 1898 as part of Shaw's Plays Pleasant volume, which also included Candida, You Never Can Tell, and The Man of Destiny. Arms and the Man was one of Shaw's first commercial successes. He was called on to stage after the curtain, where he received enthusiastic applause. Amidst the cheers, one audience member booed. Shaw replied, in characteristic fashion, "My dear fellow, I quite agree with you, but what are we two against so many?"[6]

Arms and the Man is a humorous play that shows the futility of war and deals comedically with the hypocrisies of human nature.

Plot summary edit

 
Production photograph of Florence Farr portraying Louka in Arms and the Man, 1894
 
Actors of the Smith College Club of St. Louis are sketched rehearsing for an all-woman amateur benefit performance of George Bernard Shaw's "Arms and the Man" in December 1908. No men were allowed in the rehearsals or at the performance. The illustration is by Marguerite Martyn of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.[7]

The play takes place during the 1885 Serbo-Bulgarian War. Its heroine, Raina Petkoff, is a young Bulgarian woman engaged to Sergius Saranoff, one of the heroes of that war, whom she idolizes. On the night after the Battle of Slivnitza, a Swiss mercenary soldier in the Serbian army, Captain Bluntschli, climbs in through her bedroom balcony window and threatens to shoot Raina if she gives the alarm. When Russian and Bulgarian troops burst in to search the house for him, Raina hides him so that he won't be killed. He asks her to remember that "nine soldiers out of ten are born fools." In a conversation after the soldiers have left, Bluntschli's pragmatic and cynical attitude towards war and soldiering shocks the idealistic Raina, especially after he admits that he uses his ammunition pouches to carry chocolates rather than cartridges for his pistol. When the search dies down, Raina and her mother Catherine sneak Bluntschli out of the house, disguised in one of Raina's father's old coats.

The war ends, and the Bulgarians and Serbians sign a peace treaty. Raina's father (Major Paul Petkoff) and Sergius both return home. Raina begins to find Sergius both foolhardy and tiresome, but she hides it. Sergius also finds Raina's romantic ideals tiresome, and flirts with Raina's insolent servant girl Louka (a soubrette role), who is engaged to Nicola, the Petkoffs' manservant. Bluntschli unexpectedly returns so that he can give back the old coat, but also so that he can see Raina. Raina and Catherine are shocked, especially when Major Petkoff and Sergius reveal that they have met Bluntschli before and invite him to stay for lunch (and to help them figure out how to send the troops home).

Left alone with Bluntschli, Raina realizes that he sees through her romantic posturing, but that he respects her as a woman, as Sergius does not. She reveals that she left a photograph of herself in the pocket of the coat, inscribed "To my chocolate-cream soldier", but Bluntschli says that he didn't find it and that it must still be in the coat pocket. Bluntschli gets a telegram informing him of his father's death: he must now take over the family business, several luxury hotels in Switzerland.

Louka tells Sergius that Raina protected Bluntschli when he burst into her room and that Raina is really in love with him. Sergius challenges Bluntschli to a duel, but Bluntschli avoids fighting and Sergius and Raina break off their engagement, with some relief on both sides. Major Petkoff discovers the photograph in the pocket of his old coat; Raina and Bluntschli try to remove it before he finds it again, but Petkoff is determined to learn the truth and claims that the "chocolate-cream soldier" is Sergius. After Bluntschli reveals the whole story to Major Petkoff, Sergius proposes marriage to Louka (to Major Petkoff and Catherine's horror); Nicola quietly and gallantly lets Sergius have her, and Bluntschli, recognising Nicola's dedication and ability, offers him a job as hotel manager.

While Raina is now unattached, Bluntschli protests that—being 34 and believing she is 17—he is too old for her. On learning that she is actually 23, he immediately proposes marriage and proves his wealth and position by listing his inheritance from the telegram. Raina, realizing the hollowness of her romantic ideals, protests that she would prefer her poor "chocolate-cream soldier" to this wealthy businessman. Bluntschli says that he is still the same person, and the play ends with Raina proclaiming her love for him and Bluntschli, with Swiss precision, both clears up the major's troop movement problems and informs everyone that he will return to be married to Raina exactly two weeks from that day.

Critical reception edit

George Orwell said that Arms and the Man was written when Shaw was at the height of his powers as a dramatist. "It is probably the wittiest play he ever wrote, the most flawless technically, and in spite of being a very light comedy, the most telling."[8] His other plays of the period, equally well written, are about issues no longer controversial. For example, the theme of Mrs. Warren's Profession, which so shocked audiences at the time, was that the causes of prostitution are mainly economic, today a common opinion, and the play Widowers' Houses was an attack on slum landlords, who to many are now held in such low esteem that the matter is hardly controversial.[9]

Subsequent productions edit

 
Flyer for Birmingham Open Air Theatre, 1941, with plays including Arms and the Man performed in municipal parks during World War II.

Adaptations edit

 
The scene in The Chocolate Soldier in which Bumerli (the equivalent of Bluntschli) enters the bedroom of Nadina (the equivalent of Raina), in a 1910 London production
  • When Shaw gave Leopold Jacobson [de] the rights to adapt the play into what became the operetta The Chocolate Soldier (1908) with music by Oscar Straus, he provided three conditions: none of Shaw's dialogue nor any of his character's names could be used, the libretto must be advertised as a parody of Shaw's work, and Shaw would accept no monetary compensation. Nonetheless, Shaw's original plot, and with it the central message of the play, remained more or less untouched.[21] Shaw despised the result, calling it "a putrid opéra bouffe in the worst taste of 1860", but grew to regret not accepting payment when, despite his opinion of the work, it became a lucrative international success.[21]
  • When Shaw heard, in 1921, that Franz Lehár wanted to set his play Pygmalion to music, he sent word to Vienna that Lehár be instructed that he could not touch Pygmalion without infringing Shaw's copyright and that Shaw had "no intention of allowing the history of The Chocolate Soldier to be repeated."[21] Only after Shaw's death was Pygmalion eventually adapted by Lerner and Loewe as My Fair Lady (1956).
  • A 1932 British film adaptation (now believed lost) was directed by Cecil Lewis. It starred Barry Jones as Bluntschli and Anne Grey as Raina.
  • A filmed version of Arms and the Man in German entitled Helden (Heroes) starring O. W. Fischer and Liselotte Pulver was runner up for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 1958.
  • An audio version was produced by the BBC in 1975 starring Ralph Richardson as Captain Bluntschli, John Gielgud as Major Sergius Saranoff, Vanessa Redgrave as Raina and Judi Dench as Louka.
  • A second BBC radio production was produced in 1984 and broadcast on BBC Radio 7 in February 2009 starring Andrew Sachs as Captain Bluntschli, Jackie Smith-Wood as Raina and Gary Bond as Major Saranoff.
  • A third BBC Radio production was broadcast on BBC Radio 3 on 21 March 2010 starring Rory Kinnear as Captain Bluntschli, Lydia Leonard as Raina and Tom Mison as Major Saranoff. This production was produced by Nicolas Soames and directed by David Timson.
  • An audio version was produced in 1999 by the CBC starring Simon Bradbury as Captain Bluntschli, Elizabeth Brown as Raina and Andrew Gillies as Major Saranoff.
  • Another audio version was produced in 2006 by the L.A. Theatre Works starring Jeremy Sisto as Captain Bluntschli, Anne Heche as Raina and Teri Garr as Catherine.
  • A musical by Udo Jürgens, Helden, Helden, also based on Shaw's play, premiered at the Theater an der Wien, Vienna, Austria in 1973.

Pejorative military use of the term "chocolate soldier" edit

The chocolate-cream soldier of the play has inspired a pejorative military use of the term.[citation needed] In Israel, soldiers use the term "chocolate soldier" (Hayal Shel Shokolad, חייל של שוקולד) to describe a soft soldier who is unable to fight well.[22] Similarly, members of the Australian Citizens Military Force were derided by the regular army as "chokos" or chocolate soldiers, the implication being that they were not real soldiers.[23][24]

References edit

  1. ^ "E-NOTES". Retrieved 20 November 2013.
  2. ^ "Cliff Notes". Retrieved 20 November 2013.
  3. ^ Bernard Shaw (1990). Arms and the Man. Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-26476-9.
  4. ^ "Encyclopædia Britannica". Retrieved 20 November 2013.
  5. ^ Shaw, Bernard (1898). "Arms and the Man". Plays: Pleasant and Unpleasant. Vol. The Second Volume, Containing the Four Pleasant Plays. London: Grant Richards. pp. 1–76 – via Internet Archive.
  6. ^ Frezza, Daniel. "About the Playwright: George Bernard Shaw" 19 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine, "Utah Shakespearean Festival," 2007. Accessed 12 February 2008. Shaw's contemporary, William Butler Yeats, was present for the performance, and rendered this quotation differently in his autobiography: "I assure the gentleman in the gallery that he and I are of exactly the same opinion, but what can we do against a whole house who are of the contrary opinion?" (Yeats, The Trembling of the Veil, book 4: The Tragic Generation, from Autobiographies, in The Collected Works of W. B. Yeats, vol. 3, ed. William H. O’Donell and Douglas N. Archibald (New York: Scribner, 1999), 221).
  7. ^ Martyn, Marguerite (13 December 1908). "College Girls Swear Real Swears in "Arms and Man". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. p. Part 6, Page 1.
  8. ^ "Arms and the Man | Western Washington University". cfpa.wwu.edu. Retrieved 8 July 2023.
  9. ^ George Orwell,George Bernard Shaw, Chapter 8 in George Orwell, The Lost Writings, Edited by W. J. West, Arbor House, New York, 1985.This also appears as Chapter 8 in Orwell, The War Broadcasts, Edited by W. J .West, The British Broadcasting Corporation, and The Old Piano Factory, London, 1985.
  10. ^ London Stage in the 20th Century, by Robert Tanitch, Haus (2007) ISBN 978-1-904950-74-5
  11. ^ Variety staff (8 July 1953). "Brando Picks Barn Trek (At Nominal $125 Wage) to Give Jobs to Friends". Variety. pp. 1, 14. Retrieved 21 November 2021.
  12. ^ Dias (15 July 1953). Legitimate – Straw Hat Reviews: Arms and the Man. Variety . p. 58. Retrieved 21 November 2021.
  13. ^ "Players to Give Drama by Shaw". The Minneapolis Star. 3 May 1954.
  14. ^ Studio Arena (1 January 1984). "Playbill for Arms and the Man". Studio Arena Programs.
  15. ^ "IMDB BBC production Arms and the man (1983)". IMDb.
  16. ^ . Bbcamericashop.com. Archived from the original on 11 March 2012. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
  17. ^ "odysseytheatre.ca". odysseytheatre.ca. 9 December 2013. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
  18. ^ "Odyssey Theatre / Theatre Under the Stars".
  19. ^ "History", Shaw Festival, accessed 5 January 2016
  20. ^ Keddy, Genevieve Rafter. "Photos: ARMS AND THE MAN Cast and Creative Meets The Press". BroadwayWorld.com. Retrieved 25 September 2023.
  21. ^ a b c Ellwood Annaheim (February 2002). "Shaw's Folly – Straus' Fortune". Archived from the original on 20 June 2005. .
  22. ^ Rosenthal, Ruvik. Maariv, 11 September 2007
  23. ^ "Australian Soldier – Kokoda Track 1942" 2 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine, livinghistory.com, accessed 22 September 2010
  24. ^ "Kokoda Trail I" 25 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine, Battle For Australia, accessed 22 September 2010

External links edit

  • Arms and the Man at Standard Ebooks
  • The script of Arms and the Man at Project Gutenberg
  •   Arms and the Man public domain audiobook at LibriVox
  • ​Arms and the Man​ at the Internet Broadway Database
  • Internet Movie Database entry for Arms and the Man
  • McNabb, Jim. "Arms and the Man by George Bernard Shaw : Study Guide" (PDF). Ottawa: National Arts Centre. Retrieved 12 April 2011.
  • Smith, Nicole. . Archived from the original on 7 July 2011. Retrieved 12 April 2011.

arms, this, article, about, play, george, bernard, shaw, other, uses, disambiguation, comedy, george, bernard, shaw, whose, title, comes, from, opening, words, virgil, aeneid, latin, arma, virumque, cano, arms, sing, shaw, time, production, written, bygeorge, . This article is about the play by George Bernard Shaw For other uses see Arms and the Man disambiguation Arms and the Man is a comedy by George Bernard Shaw whose title comes from the opening words of Virgil s Aeneid in Latin Arma virumque cano Of arms and the man I sing 5 Arms and the ManShaw at the time of the production of Arms and the ManWritten byGeorge Bernard ShawCharactersRaina Petkoff Sergius Saranoff Captain Bluntschli Catherine Petkoff Major Paul Petkoff Louka Nicola 1 2 Date premiered21 April 1894 1894 04 21 Place premieredAvenue TheatreSubjectLove and war 3 4 The play was first produced on 21 April 1894 at the Avenue Theatre and published in 1898 as part of Shaw s Plays Pleasant volume which also included Candida You Never Can Tell and The Man of Destiny Arms and the Man was one of Shaw s first commercial successes He was called on to stage after the curtain where he received enthusiastic applause Amidst the cheers one audience member booed Shaw replied in characteristic fashion My dear fellow I quite agree with you but what are we two against so many 6 Arms and the Man is a humorous play that shows the futility of war and deals comedically with the hypocrisies of human nature Contents 1 Plot summary 2 Critical reception 3 Subsequent productions 4 Adaptations 5 Pejorative military use of the term chocolate soldier 6 References 7 External linksPlot summary edit nbsp Production photograph of Florence Farr portraying Louka in Arms and the Man 1894 nbsp Actors of the Smith College Club of St Louis are sketched rehearsing for an all woman amateur benefit performance of George Bernard Shaw s Arms and the Man in December 1908 No men were allowed in the rehearsals or at the performance The illustration is by Marguerite Martyn of the St Louis Post Dispatch 7 The play takes place during the 1885 Serbo Bulgarian War Its heroine Raina Petkoff is a young Bulgarian woman engaged to Sergius Saranoff one of the heroes of that war whom she idolizes On the night after the Battle of Slivnitza a Swiss mercenary soldier in the Serbian army Captain Bluntschli climbs in through her bedroom balcony window and threatens to shoot Raina if she gives the alarm When Russian and Bulgarian troops burst in to search the house for him Raina hides him so that he won t be killed He asks her to remember that nine soldiers out of ten are born fools In a conversation after the soldiers have left Bluntschli s pragmatic and cynical attitude towards war and soldiering shocks the idealistic Raina especially after he admits that he uses his ammunition pouches to carry chocolates rather than cartridges for his pistol When the search dies down Raina and her mother Catherine sneak Bluntschli out of the house disguised in one of Raina s father s old coats The war ends and the Bulgarians and Serbians sign a peace treaty Raina s father Major Paul Petkoff and Sergius both return home Raina begins to find Sergius both foolhardy and tiresome but she hides it Sergius also finds Raina s romantic ideals tiresome and flirts with Raina s insolent servant girl Louka a soubrette role who is engaged to Nicola the Petkoffs manservant Bluntschli unexpectedly returns so that he can give back the old coat but also so that he can see Raina Raina and Catherine are shocked especially when Major Petkoff and Sergius reveal that they have met Bluntschli before and invite him to stay for lunch and to help them figure out how to send the troops home Left alone with Bluntschli Raina realizes that he sees through her romantic posturing but that he respects her as a woman as Sergius does not She reveals that she left a photograph of herself in the pocket of the coat inscribed To my chocolate cream soldier but Bluntschli says that he didn t find it and that it must still be in the coat pocket Bluntschli gets a telegram informing him of his father s death he must now take over the family business several luxury hotels in Switzerland Louka tells Sergius that Raina protected Bluntschli when he burst into her room and that Raina is really in love with him Sergius challenges Bluntschli to a duel but Bluntschli avoids fighting and Sergius and Raina break off their engagement with some relief on both sides Major Petkoff discovers the photograph in the pocket of his old coat Raina and Bluntschli try to remove it before he finds it again but Petkoff is determined to learn the truth and claims that the chocolate cream soldier is Sergius After Bluntschli reveals the whole story to Major Petkoff Sergius proposes marriage to Louka to Major Petkoff and Catherine s horror Nicola quietly and gallantly lets Sergius have her and Bluntschli recognising Nicola s dedication and ability offers him a job as hotel manager While Raina is now unattached Bluntschli protests that being 34 and believing she is 17 he is too old for her On learning that she is actually 23 he immediately proposes marriage and proves his wealth and position by listing his inheritance from the telegram Raina realizing the hollowness of her romantic ideals protests that she would prefer her poor chocolate cream soldier to this wealthy businessman Bluntschli says that he is still the same person and the play ends with Raina proclaiming her love for him and Bluntschli with Swiss precision both clears up the major s troop movement problems and informs everyone that he will return to be married to Raina exactly two weeks from that day Critical reception editGeorge Orwell said that Arms and the Man was written when Shaw was at the height of his powers as a dramatist It is probably the wittiest play he ever wrote the most flawless technically and in spite of being a very light comedy the most telling 8 His other plays of the period equally well written are about issues no longer controversial For example the theme of Mrs Warren s Profession which so shocked audiences at the time was that the causes of prostitution are mainly economic today a common opinion and the play Widowers Houses was an attack on slum landlords who to many are now held in such low esteem that the matter is hardly controversial 9 Subsequent productions edit nbsp Flyer for Birmingham Open Air Theatre 1941 with plays including Arms and the Man performed in municipal parks during World War II The first Broadway production opened on 17 September 1894 at New York City s Herald Square Theatre Since then there have been six Broadway revivals two of which are listed below The most prestigious London revival was directed by John Burrell for The Old Vic Company at the New Theatre which opened on 5 September 1944 starring Ralph Richardson Bluntschli Margaret Leighton Raina Petkoff Joyce Redman Louka and Laurence Olivier Major Sergius Saranoff Olivier thought Sergius a humbug a buffoon a blackguard a coward a bloody awful part until Tyrone Guthrie said he would never succeed in the role until he learned to love Sergius Olivier spurred and moustachioed was high camp Robert Tanitch 10 A revival production ran at New York City s Arena Theatre from 19 October 1950 to 21 January 1951 for a total of 108 performances The cast included Lee Grant as Raina Francis Lederer as Bluntschli and Sam Wanamaker as Sergius Marlon Brando s final stage appearance was in Arms and the Man in 1953 He gathered friends who were fellow actors into a company for a summer stock production He chose to play Sergius while William Redfield starred as Bluntschli 11 12 The show was produced on the college circuit as well in the 1950s 13 Carroll Baker following her enormous success in Baby Doll toured in the play in the summer of 1957 The play was produced in 1982 at the Stratford Shakespeare Festival with Brian Bedford as Bluntschli and Len Cariou as Sergius The Studio Arena Theater in Buffalo New York put on a production of Arms and the Man in 1983 with Kelsey Grammer as Sergius 14 A Channel 4 television production in 1983 15 starring Richard Briers as Captain Bluntschli Peter Egan as Major Sergius Saranoff Alice Krige as Raina and Anna Nygh as Louka citation needed In 1985 John Malkovich directed a revival production at New York City s Circle in the Square Theatre starring Kevin Kline as Bluntschli later replaced by Malkovich after Kline s departure Glenne Headly as Raina and Raul Julia as Sergius The production ran from 30 May to 1 September 1985 for a total of 109 performances citation needed The BBC produced a second made for TV version 16 in 1989 directed by James Cellan Jones starring Helena Bonham Carter as Raina Pip Torrens as Bluntschli Patrick Ryecart as Sergius and Patsy Kensit as Louka citation needed The 1991 production by Channel Theatre Company opened the Malvern Festival before touring the UK Directed by Philip Dart it featured Sebastian Abineri Steven Pinner Juliette Kaplan Charles Stapley Mary Woodvine Andrew Wheaton Susan Gott and Colin Atkins citation needed In 2011 the play was presented by the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis Minnesota The Seattle Public Theater and the Constellation Theatre Company in Washington D C citation needed In the summer of 2013 Odyssey Theatre 17 in Ottawa Ontario Canada performed a masked performance of this play 18 The Shaw Festival at Niagara on the Lake Ontario has performed the play a number of times in 1967 1976 1986 1994 2006 and 2014 the last directed by Morris Panych 19 The play opened at the American Shakespeare Center s Blackfriars Playhouse in Staunton Virginia on 29 April 2016 and ran until 11 June citation needed In 2023 the play is produced Off Broadway in New York City at Theatre Row by Gingold Theatrical Group and directed by David Staller 20 Adaptations edit nbsp The scene in The Chocolate Soldier in which Bumerli the equivalent of Bluntschli enters the bedroom of Nadina the equivalent of Raina in a 1910 London productionWhen Shaw gave Leopold Jacobson de the rights to adapt the play into what became the operetta The Chocolate Soldier 1908 with music by Oscar Straus he provided three conditions none of Shaw s dialogue nor any of his character s names could be used the libretto must be advertised as a parody of Shaw s work and Shaw would accept no monetary compensation Nonetheless Shaw s original plot and with it the central message of the play remained more or less untouched 21 Shaw despised the result calling it a putrid opera bouffe in the worst taste of 1860 but grew to regret not accepting payment when despite his opinion of the work it became a lucrative international success 21 When Shaw heard in 1921 that Franz Lehar wanted to set his play Pygmalion to music he sent word to Vienna that Lehar be instructed that he could not touch Pygmalion without infringing Shaw s copyright and that Shaw had no intention of allowing the history of The Chocolate Soldier to be repeated 21 Only after Shaw s death was Pygmalion eventually adapted by Lerner and Loewe as My Fair Lady 1956 A 1932 British film adaptation now believed lost was directed by Cecil Lewis It starred Barry Jones as Bluntschli and Anne Grey as Raina A filmed version of Arms and the Man in German entitled Helden Heroes starring O W Fischer and Liselotte Pulver was runner up for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 1958 An audio version was produced by the BBC in 1975 starring Ralph Richardson as Captain Bluntschli John Gielgud as Major Sergius Saranoff Vanessa Redgrave as Raina and Judi Dench as Louka A second BBC radio production was produced in 1984 and broadcast on BBC Radio 7 in February 2009 starring Andrew Sachs as Captain Bluntschli Jackie Smith Wood as Raina and Gary Bond as Major Saranoff A third BBC Radio production was broadcast on BBC Radio 3 on 21 March 2010 starring Rory Kinnear as Captain Bluntschli Lydia Leonard as Raina and Tom Mison as Major Saranoff This production was produced by Nicolas Soames and directed by David Timson An audio version was produced in 1999 by the CBC starring Simon Bradbury as Captain Bluntschli Elizabeth Brown as Raina and Andrew Gillies as Major Saranoff Another audio version was produced in 2006 by the L A Theatre Works starring Jeremy Sisto as Captain Bluntschli Anne Heche as Raina and Teri Garr as Catherine A musical by Udo Jurgens Helden Helden also based on Shaw s play premiered at the Theater an der Wien Vienna Austria in 1973 Pejorative military use of the term chocolate soldier editThe chocolate cream soldier of the play has inspired a pejorative military use of the term citation needed In Israel soldiers use the term chocolate soldier Hayal Shel Shokolad חייל של שוקולד to describe a soft soldier who is unable to fight well 22 Similarly members of the Australian Citizens Military Force were derided by the regular army as chokos or chocolate soldiers the implication being that they were not real soldiers 23 24 References edit E NOTES Retrieved 20 November 2013 Cliff Notes Retrieved 20 November 2013 Bernard Shaw 1990 Arms and the Man Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 26476 9 Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 20 November 2013 Shaw Bernard 1898 Arms and the Man Plays Pleasant and Unpleasant Vol The Second Volume Containing the Four Pleasant Plays London Grant Richards pp 1 76 via Internet Archive Frezza Daniel About the Playwright George Bernard Shaw Archived 19 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine Utah Shakespearean Festival 2007 Accessed 12 February 2008 Shaw s contemporary William Butler Yeats was present for the performance and rendered this quotation differently in his autobiography I assure the gentleman in the gallery that he and I are of exactly the same opinion but what can we do against a whole house who are of the contrary opinion Yeats The Trembling of the Veil book 4 The Tragic Generation from Autobiographies in The Collected Works of W B Yeats vol 3 ed William H O Donell and Douglas N Archibald New York Scribner 1999 221 Martyn Marguerite 13 December 1908 College Girls Swear Real Swears in Arms and Man St Louis Post Dispatch p Part 6 Page 1 Arms and the Man Western Washington University cfpa wwu edu Retrieved 8 July 2023 George Orwell George Bernard Shaw Chapter 8 in George Orwell The Lost Writings Edited by W J West Arbor House New York 1985 This also appears as Chapter 8 in Orwell The War Broadcasts Edited by W J West The British Broadcasting Corporation and The Old Piano Factory London 1985 London Stage in the 20th Century by Robert Tanitch Haus 2007 ISBN 978 1 904950 74 5 Variety staff 8 July 1953 Brando Picks Barn Trek At Nominal 125 Wage to Give Jobs to Friends Variety pp 1 14 Retrieved 21 November 2021 Dias 15 July 1953 Legitimate Straw Hat Reviews Arms and the Man Variety p 58 Retrieved 21 November 2021 Players to Give Drama by Shaw The Minneapolis Star 3 May 1954 Studio Arena 1 January 1984 Playbill for Arms and the Man Studio Arena Programs IMDB BBC production Arms and the man 1983 IMDb Home at BBC Shop Bbcamericashop com Archived from the original on 11 March 2012 Retrieved 21 January 2014 odysseytheatre ca odysseytheatre ca 9 December 2013 Retrieved 21 January 2014 Odyssey Theatre Theatre Under the Stars History Shaw Festival accessed 5 January 2016 Keddy Genevieve Rafter Photos ARMS AND THE MAN Cast and Creative Meets The Press BroadwayWorld com Retrieved 25 September 2023 a b c Ellwood Annaheim February 2002 Shaw s Folly Straus Fortune Archived from the original on 20 June 2005 https web archive org web 20050620092840 http www geocities com musictheater chocolate chocolate html Rosenthal Ruvik Maariv 11 September 2007 Australian Soldier Kokoda Track 1942 Archived 2 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine livinghistory com accessed 22 September 2010 Kokoda Trail I Archived 25 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine Battle For Australia accessed 22 September 2010External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Arms and the Man Arms and the Man at Standard Ebooks The script of Arms and the Man at Project Gutenberg nbsp Arms and the Man public domain audiobook at LibriVox Arms and the Man at the Internet Broadway Database Internet Movie Database entry for Arms and the Man McNabb Jim Arms and the Man by George Bernard Shaw Study Guide PDF Ottawa National Arts Centre Retrieved 12 April 2011 Smith Nicole Arms and the Man by George Bernard Shaw Class and Social Critique in the Play Archived from the original on 7 July 2011 Retrieved 12 April 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arms and the Man amp oldid 1195427844, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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