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Six Characters in Search of an Author

Six Characters in Search of an Author (Italian: Sei personaggi in cerca d'autore [ˈsɛi persoˈnaddʒi in ˈtʃerka dauˈtoːre]) is an Italian play by Luigi Pirandello, written and first performed in 1921. An absurdist metatheatric play about the relationship among authors, their characters, and theatre practitioners, it premiered at the Teatro Valle in Rome to a mixed reception, with shouts from the audience of "Manicomio!" ("Madhouse!") and "Incommensurabile!" ("Off the scale!"), a reaction to the play's illogical progression. Reception improved at subsequent performances, especially after Pirandello provided for the play's third edition, published in 1925, a foreword clarifying its structure and ideas.

Six Characters in Search of an Author
Written byLuigi Pirandello
Characters
  • Director/Manager
  • Actors
  • Stage technicians
  • Father
  • Mother
  • Stepdaughter
  • Son
  • Boy
  • Child
Date premiered1921 (1921)
Place premieredTeatro Valle, Rome
Original languageItalian
GenreAbsurdism, metatheatre
SettingA theatre

The play was given in an English translation in the West End of London in February 1922, and had its American premiere in October of that year at the Princess Theatre, New York.

Characters edit

The characters are:[1]

  • The Father
  • The Mother
  • The Stepdaughter
  • The Son
  • The Boy
  • The Child
  • Madame Pace
  • The Manager/Director
  • Leading Lady
  • Leading Man
  • Second Lady
  • L'ingénue
  • Juvenile Lead
  • Other Actors and Actresses
  • Property Man
  • Prompter
  • Machinist
  • Manager's Secretary
  • Door-Keeper
  • Scene-Shifters

Synopsis edit

 
Performance by the Pirandello Theatre of Art, Rome, given in London in 1925: the Manager/Director with the family

An acting company prepares to rehearse the play The Rules of the Game by Luigi Pirandello. As the rehearsal is about to begin, they are unexpectedly interrupted by the arrival of six strange people. The Director of the play, furious at the interruption, demands an explanation. The Father explains that they are unfinished characters in search of an author to finish their story. The Director initially believes them to be mad, but as they begin to argue among themselves and reveal details of their story, he begins to listen. The Father and The Mother had one child together (The Son), but they have separated and Mother has had three children by another man – The Stepdaughter, The Boy and The Child (a girl). The Father attempted to buy sex from The Stepdaughter, claiming he did not recognize her after so many years, but The Stepdaughter is convinced he knew who she was the entire time. The Mother walked in on The Father and The Stepdaughter shortly after The Father's proposal and informs The Stepdaughter that he is her ex-husband; they both express their disgust and outrage. While The Director is not an author, he agrees to stage their story despite disbelief among the jeering actors.

After a 20-minute break, The Characters and The Company return to the stage to perform some of the story so far. They begin to perform the scene between The Stepdaughter and The Father in Madame Pace's shop, which the Director decides to call Scene I. The Characters are very particular about the setting, wanting everything to be as realistic as possible. The Director asks The Actors to observe the scene because he intends for them to perform it later. This sparks the first argument between The Director and The Characters over the acting of the play because The Characters had assumed that they would be performing it, seeing as they are The Characters already. The Director continues the play, but The Stepdaughter has more problems with the accuracy of the setting, saying she doesn't recognize the scene. Just as The Director is about to begin the scene once more, he realizes that Madame Pace is not with them. The Actors watch in disbelief as The Father lures her to the stage by hanging their coats and hats on racks, and Madame Pace follows, "attracted by the very articles of her trade".

 
The Manager, The Stepdaughter and The Father, played by Egisto Olivieri, Marta Abba and Lamberto Picasso, 1925

The scene begins between Madame Pace and The Stepdaughter, with Madame Pace exhorting The Stepdaughter, telling her she must work as a prostitute to save The Mother's job. The Mother protests at having to watch the scene, but she is restrained. After The Father and The Stepdaughter act half of the scene, The Director stops them so that The Actors may perform what they have just done. The Characters break into laughter as The Actors try to imitate them. The Actors continue but The Stepdaughter cannot contain her laughter as The Actors use the wrong tones of voice and gestures. The Father begins another argument with The Director over the realism of The Actors compared to The Characters themselves. The Director allows The Characters to perform the rest of the scene and decides to have the rehearsals later.

This time, The Stepdaughter explains the rest of the scene during an argument with The Director over the truth on stage. The scene culminates in an embrace between The Father and The Stepdaughter, which is realistically interrupted by the distressed Mother. The line between reality and acting is blurred as the scene closes with The Director pleased with the first act.

The final act of the play begins in the garden. It is revealed that there was much arguing among the family members as The Father sent for The Mother, The Stepdaughter, The Child, The Boy, and The Son to come back and stay with him. The Son reveals that he hates the family for sending him away and does not consider The Stepdaughter or the others a part of his family. The scene ends with The Child drowning in a fountain, The Boy committing suicide with a revolver, and The Stepdaughter running out of the theater, leaving The Son, The Mother, and The Father on stage. The play ends with The Director confused over whether it was real or not, concluding that in either case he lost a whole day over it.

Productions edit

Première edit

The play was staged in 1921 by the Compagnia di Dario Niccodemi at the Valle Theatre in Rome to mixed results. The public split into supporters and adversaries. The author, who was present at the presentation with his daughter Lietta, was forced to leave the theatre through a side exit in order to avoid the crowd of opponents. However, the play was a great success when presented in Milan.

West End production, 1922 edit

The first production in English was given at the Kingsway Theatre, London on 26 February 1922, directed by Theodore Komisarjevsky, with the following cast:[2]

  • The Father – Franklin Dyall
  • The Mother – Lilian Moubrey
  • The Stepdaughter – Muriel Pratt
  • The Son – William Armstrong
  • The Boy – Frederick Peisley
  • The Little Girl – Sylvia Spagnoletti
  • Madame Pace – Margaret Yarde
  • The Manager and Leading Comedian – Alfred Clark
  • The Leading Man – George Hayes
  • The Leading Lady – Sylvia Young
  • The Juvenile Man – Maurice Colbourne
  • The Juvenile Lady – Elizabeth Arkell
  • The Heavy Lady – Muriel Hope
  • The Third Actor – Hugh Owen
  • The Fourth Actor – D. A. Clarke-Smith
  • The Stage Manager – Matthew Forsyth
  • The Prompter – J. Leslie Frith
  • The Stage Doorkeeper – Gilbert Davis

Broadway and off-Broadway productions edit

Other edit

  • 1931: Tyrone Guthrie directed the play at the Westminster Theatre in London[8]
  • 1948: Ngaio Marsh directed the play with the Canterbury Student Players at the Little Theatre, Christchurch, New Zealand, as a special performance for The Old Vic touring company featuring Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh.[9]
  • 1949: Ngaio Marsh directed the play on a 140 performance tour for 25,000 people with the Canterbury Student Players to Sydney, Canberra and Melbourne, Australia.[10]
  • 1996: Robert Brustein adapted the play for the American Repertory Theater in Cambridge, Massachusetts
  • 2000: Part of the Shaw Festival season (Niagara-on-the-Lake) at the Court House Theatre, directed by Tadeusz Bradecki and translated by Domenico Pietropaolo. Revived in 2001.
  • 2008: A production in the Minerva Theatre, Chichester, adapted by Ben Power and Rupert Goold and directed by Goold, transferred to the Gielgud Theatre, London, for a limited run
  • 2011: Produced by the Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts at Hong Kong, adapted and directed by Wingo Lee
  • 2012: Produced by The Hypocrites at the Chopin Theatre in Chicago; adapted by Steve Moulds and directed by Artistic Director Halena Kays
  • 2013, 2–14 April: Produced by WOH Productions at the Rose Theatre, Bankside in London; adapted by Anthony Khaseria and Manuela Ruggiero, directed by Manuela Ruggiero
  • 2014: Adapted in Urdu language, produced by National Academy of Performing Arts, Karachi (Pakistan)[citation needed]
  • 2014: Adapted by the Sydney University Dramatic Society featuring student actors playing themselves[11]
  • 2014: A production by Théâtre de la Ville-Paris, translated and adopted in French by François Regnault, and directed by Emmanuel Demarcy-Mota, toured the United States[12]
  • 2016: Adapted by New England Youth Theater in Brattleboro Vermont, adapted and directed by Rebecca Waxman, with students cross-cast with characters and actors exchanging parts in alternating performances[citation needed]
  • 2022: Adapted by Crane Creations Theatre Company in Canada in a play date event. This play reading is meant to spread awareness and increase appreciation of playwrights and playwriting from around the world and to global audiences.

Translations into English edit

  • Edward Storer (E. P. Dutton & Co., 1922)
  • Frederick May (1954)
  • Eric Bentley (1964)
  • Paul Avila Mayer (1967)
  • John Linstrum (1979)
  • Felicity Firth (1988)
  • Mark Musa (Penguin, 1996)
  • Anthony Mortimer (Oxford, 2014)

Adaptations edit

In popular culture edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Pirandello 1923, p. 2.
  2. ^ Parker 1925, p. xxv.
  3. ^ "Six Characters in Search of an Author (1922)". IBDB.com. Internet Broadway Database.
  4. ^ ​Six Characters in Search of an Author (1924) at the Internet Off-Broadway Database
  5. ^ "Six Characters in Search of an Author (1931)". IBDB.com. Internet Broadway Database.
  6. ^ "Six Characters in Search of an Author (1955)". IBDB.com. Internet Broadway Database.
  7. ^ "Six Characters in Search of an Author (1963)". IOBDB.com. Internet Off-Broadway Database.
  8. ^ Lewis 1991, p. 52.
  9. ^ Lewis 1991, pp. 116–117.
  10. ^ Lewis 1991, pp. 118, 121.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 7 April 2014. Retrieved 4 April 2014.
  12. ^ "Layout 1" (PDF). Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  13. ^ Globe Theatre: Six Characters in Search of an Author – BBC – Radio Times
  14. ^ "David Gordon" 10 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine on the Joyce Soho website
  15. ^ "Eight Characters in Search of a Sitcom". IMDb.com. Internet Movie Database.
  16. ^ Wilson, Ann (7 November 2013). "Drama". University of Toronto Quarterly. 82 (3): 430–452. doi:10.3138/utq.82.3.4. ISSN 1712-5278.
  17. ^ Boyd, Andrew. "12 Characters in Search of an Apocalypse". I Want a Better Catastrophe. Retrieved 22 January 2019.
  18. ^ Stewart, Jason (2 January 2020). "On the Road with 12 Characters in Search of an Apocalypse". Dark Mountain Project. Retrieved 6 January 2020.
  19. ^ Hawksley, Rupert (10 June 2020). "Staged, BBC One, review: David Tennant and Michael Sheen's Zoom comedy is better than The Trip". i. Retrieved 2 November 2020.
  20. ^ Walsh, Liam Francis. "Six Characters In Search of an Outlet". Retrieved 3 January 2023 – via cartoonstock.com.

Sources edit

  • Lewis, Margaret (1991). Ngaio Marsh: A Life. London: Chatto & Windus. ISBN 978-0-7011-3389-4.
  • Parker, John, ed. (1925). Who's Who in the Theatre (fifth ed.). London: Sir Isaac Pitman and Sons. OCLC 10013159.
  • Pirandello, Luigi (1923). Three Plays. London and Toronto: Dent. OCLC 859419774.

External links edit

  • Six Characters in Search of an Author at Standard Ebooks
  • Sei personaggi in cerca d'autore at Project Gutenberg (In original Italian; Pirandello's revised version)
  • Pirandello, Luigi. "Pirandello Confesses . . .: Why and How He Wrote 'Six Characters in Search of an Author'", Virginia Quarterly Review, Spring 1925.
  •   Six Characters in Search of an Author public domain audiobook at LibriVox
  • ​Six Characters in Search of an Author​ at the Internet Broadway Database  

characters, search, author, 1959, opera, adaptation, opera, italian, personaggi, cerca, autore, ˈsɛi, persoˈnaddʒi, ˈtʃerka, dauˈtoːre, italian, play, luigi, pirandello, written, first, performed, 1921, absurdist, metatheatric, play, about, relationship, among. For the 1959 opera adaptation see Six Characters in Search of an Author opera Six Characters in Search of an Author Italian Sei personaggi in cerca d autore ˈsɛi persoˈnaddʒi in ˈtʃerka dauˈtoːre is an Italian play by Luigi Pirandello written and first performed in 1921 An absurdist metatheatric play about the relationship among authors their characters and theatre practitioners it premiered at the Teatro Valle in Rome to a mixed reception with shouts from the audience of Manicomio Madhouse and Incommensurabile Off the scale a reaction to the play s illogical progression Reception improved at subsequent performances especially after Pirandello provided for the play s third edition published in 1925 a foreword clarifying its structure and ideas Six Characters in Search of an AuthorWritten byLuigi PirandelloCharactersDirector Manager Actors Stage technicians Father Mother Stepdaughter Son Boy ChildDate premiered1921 1921 Place premieredTeatro Valle RomeOriginal languageItalianGenreAbsurdism metatheatreSettingA theatreThe play was given in an English translation in the West End of London in February 1922 and had its American premiere in October of that year at the Princess Theatre New York Contents 1 Characters 2 Synopsis 3 Productions 3 1 Premiere 3 2 West End production 1922 3 3 Broadway and off Broadway productions 3 4 Other 4 Translations into English 5 Adaptations 6 In popular culture 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Sources 9 External linksCharacters editThe characters are 1 The Father The Mother The Stepdaughter The Son The Boy The Child Madame Pace The Manager Director Leading Lady Leading Man Second Lady L ingenue Juvenile Lead Other Actors and Actresses Property Man Prompter Machinist Manager s Secretary Door Keeper Scene ShiftersSynopsis edit nbsp Performance by the Pirandello Theatre of Art Rome given in London in 1925 the Manager Director with the familyAn acting company prepares to rehearse the play The Rules of the Game by Luigi Pirandello As the rehearsal is about to begin they are unexpectedly interrupted by the arrival of six strange people The Director of the play furious at the interruption demands an explanation The Father explains that they are unfinished characters in search of an author to finish their story The Director initially believes them to be mad but as they begin to argue among themselves and reveal details of their story he begins to listen The Father and The Mother had one child together The Son but they have separated and Mother has had three children by another man The Stepdaughter The Boy and The Child a girl The Father attempted to buy sex from The Stepdaughter claiming he did not recognize her after so many years but The Stepdaughter is convinced he knew who she was the entire time The Mother walked in on The Father and The Stepdaughter shortly after The Father s proposal and informs The Stepdaughter that he is her ex husband they both express their disgust and outrage While The Director is not an author he agrees to stage their story despite disbelief among the jeering actors After a 20 minute break The Characters and The Company return to the stage to perform some of the story so far They begin to perform the scene between The Stepdaughter and The Father in Madame Pace s shop which the Director decides to call Scene I The Characters are very particular about the setting wanting everything to be as realistic as possible The Director asks The Actors to observe the scene because he intends for them to perform it later This sparks the first argument between The Director and The Characters over the acting of the play because The Characters had assumed that they would be performing it seeing as they are The Characters already The Director continues the play but The Stepdaughter has more problems with the accuracy of the setting saying she doesn t recognize the scene Just as The Director is about to begin the scene once more he realizes that Madame Pace is not with them The Actors watch in disbelief as The Father lures her to the stage by hanging their coats and hats on racks and Madame Pace follows attracted by the very articles of her trade nbsp The Manager The Stepdaughter and The Father played by Egisto Olivieri Marta Abba and Lamberto Picasso 1925The scene begins between Madame Pace and The Stepdaughter with Madame Pace exhorting The Stepdaughter telling her she must work as a prostitute to save The Mother s job The Mother protests at having to watch the scene but she is restrained After The Father and The Stepdaughter act half of the scene The Director stops them so that The Actors may perform what they have just done The Characters break into laughter as The Actors try to imitate them The Actors continue but The Stepdaughter cannot contain her laughter as The Actors use the wrong tones of voice and gestures The Father begins another argument with The Director over the realism of The Actors compared to The Characters themselves The Director allows The Characters to perform the rest of the scene and decides to have the rehearsals later This time The Stepdaughter explains the rest of the scene during an argument with The Director over the truth on stage The scene culminates in an embrace between The Father and The Stepdaughter which is realistically interrupted by the distressed Mother The line between reality and acting is blurred as the scene closes with The Director pleased with the first act The final act of the play begins in the garden It is revealed that there was much arguing among the family members as The Father sent for The Mother The Stepdaughter The Child The Boy and The Son to come back and stay with him The Son reveals that he hates the family for sending him away and does not consider The Stepdaughter or the others a part of his family The scene ends with The Child drowning in a fountain The Boy committing suicide with a revolver and The Stepdaughter running out of the theater leaving The Son The Mother and The Father on stage The play ends with The Director confused over whether it was real or not concluding that in either case he lost a whole day over it Productions editPremiere edit The play was staged in 1921 by the Compagnia di Dario Niccodemi at the Valle Theatre in Rome to mixed results The public split into supporters and adversaries The author who was present at the presentation with his daughter Lietta was forced to leave the theatre through a side exit in order to avoid the crowd of opponents However the play was a great success when presented in Milan West End production 1922 edit The first production in English was given at the Kingsway Theatre London on 26 February 1922 directed by Theodore Komisarjevsky with the following cast 2 The Father Franklin Dyall The Mother Lilian Moubrey The Stepdaughter Muriel Pratt The Son William Armstrong The Boy Frederick Peisley The Little Girl Sylvia Spagnoletti Madame Pace Margaret Yarde The Manager and Leading Comedian Alfred Clark The Leading Man George Hayes The Leading Lady Sylvia Young The Juvenile Man Maurice Colbourne The Juvenile Lady Elizabeth Arkell The Heavy Lady Muriel Hope The Third Actor Hugh Owen The Fourth Actor D A Clarke Smith The Stage Manager Matthew Forsyth The Prompter J Leslie Frith The Stage Doorkeeper Gilbert Davis Broadway and off Broadway productions edit American premiere 30 October 1922 136 performances Princess Theatre directed by Brock Pemberton 3 26 February 1924 17 performances 44th Street Theatre directed by Brock Pemberton 4 15 April 1931 13 performances Bijou Theatre staged by William W Schorr 5 11 December 1955 65 performances Phoenix Theatre adapted by Tyrone Guthrie and Michael Wager based on a translation by Frank Tauritz staged by Tyrone Guthrie 6 8 March 1963 529 performances Martinique Theatre directed by William Ball received Outer Critics Circle Award and three Obie Awards 7 Other edit 1931 Tyrone Guthrie directed the play at the Westminster Theatre in London 8 1948 Ngaio Marsh directed the play with the Canterbury Student Players at the Little Theatre Christchurch New Zealand as a special performance for The Old Vic touring company featuring Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh 9 1949 Ngaio Marsh directed the play on a 140 performance tour for 25 000 people with the Canterbury Student Players to Sydney Canberra and Melbourne Australia 10 1996 Robert Brustein adapted the play for the American Repertory Theater in Cambridge Massachusetts 2000 Part of the Shaw Festival season Niagara on the Lake at the Court House Theatre directed by Tadeusz Bradecki and translated by Domenico Pietropaolo Revived in 2001 2008 A production in the Minerva Theatre Chichester adapted by Ben Power and Rupert Goold and directed by Goold transferred to the Gielgud Theatre London for a limited run 2011 Produced by the Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts at Hong Kong adapted and directed by Wingo Lee 2012 Produced by The Hypocrites at the Chopin Theatre in Chicago adapted by Steve Moulds and directed by Artistic Director Halena Kays 2013 2 14 April Produced by WOH Productions at the Rose Theatre Bankside in London adapted by Anthony Khaseria and Manuela Ruggiero directed by Manuela Ruggiero 2014 Adapted in Urdu language produced by National Academy of Performing Arts Karachi Pakistan citation needed 2014 Adapted by the Sydney University Dramatic Society featuring student actors playing themselves 11 2014 A production by Theatre de la Ville Paris translated and adopted in French by Francois Regnault and directed by Emmanuel Demarcy Mota toured the United States 12 2016 Adapted by New England Youth Theater in Brattleboro Vermont adapted and directed by Rebecca Waxman with students cross cast with characters and actors exchanging parts in alternating performances citation needed 2022 Adapted by Crane Creations Theatre Company in Canada in a play date event This play reading is meant to spread awareness and increase appreciation of playwrights and playwriting from around the world and to global audiences Translations into English editEdward Storer E P Dutton amp Co 1922 Frederick May 1954 Eric Bentley 1964 Paul Avila Mayer 1967 John Linstrum 1979 Felicity Firth 1988 Mark Musa Penguin 1996 Anthony Mortimer Oxford 2014 Adaptations editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message 1959 BBC Home Service World Theatre radio translated by Frederick May Monday 27 July 1959 With Noel Johnson the producer Donald Wolfit the father Lydia Sherwood the leading lady Gabriel Woolf the son Produced and adapted by H B Fortuin 1959 an opera by Hugo Weisgall libretto adapted from Pirandello by Denis Johnston 1963 An Australian film adaptation directed by Christopher Muir 1973 Danmarks Radio s public television adaptation Seks roller soger en forfatter 1976 A PBS television adaptation directed by Stacy Keach and starring Andy Griffith John Houseman and Stacy s brother James Keach available on DVD 1986 BBC World Service and BBC Radio 4 21 Sep 1986 A radio adaptation with Charles Gray Yvonne Bryceland Emrys James and Cherie Lunghi 13 1992 A BBC film adaptation directed by Bill Bryden 2012 Director choreographer David Gordon s The Beginning of the End of the a dance theatre piece based on Six Characters as well as other works by Pirandello performs at the Joyce Soho for the month of June 14 In popular culture edit Six Charlies in Search of an Author 1956 episode of The Goon Show Eight Characters in Search of a Sitcom 2003 starring Ed Asner James L Brooks Georgia Engel Valerie Harper and Gavin MacLeod written and directed by Matthew Asner and Matthew Gold 15 Dead White Writer on the Floor 2011 by Drew Hayden Taylor a play borrowing from the Theatre of the Absurd featuring a cast of characters inside a writer s head 16 12 Characters in Search of an Apocalypse On the Road 2017 essay by American author Andrew Boyd 17 that was turned into a travelling conversation performance 18 The BBC drama Staged 2020 features David Tennant and Michael Sheen attempting to rehearse the play via internet video conferencing during a period of COVID 19 lockdown 19 Six Characters In Search of an Outlet 2016 a widely circulated cartoon in The New Yorker by illustrator Liam Francis Walsh 20 The 2022 Italian movie La Stranezza directed by Roberto Ando tells how Pirandello played by Toni Servillo was inspired to create the play following the meeting with a group of amateur performers lead by actors Onofrio Principato and Sebastiano Vella played by comedy duo Ficarra e Picone See also editA Sensation Novel another play of the same genre from the 1870s by W S Gilbert At Swim Two Birds novel by Flann O Brien Stranger than Fiction film starring Will Ferrell with similar themesReferences edit Pirandello 1923 p 2 Parker 1925 p xxv Six Characters in Search of an Author 1922 IBDB com Internet Broadway Database Six Characters in Search of an Author 1924 at the Internet Off Broadway Database Six Characters in Search of an Author 1931 IBDB com Internet Broadway Database Six Characters in Search of an Author 1955 IBDB com Internet Broadway Database Six Characters in Search of an Author 1963 IOBDB com Internet Off Broadway Database Lewis 1991 p 52 Lewis 1991 pp 116 117 Lewis 1991 pp 118 121 6 Characters in Search of an Author Sydney University Dramatic Society Archived from the original on 7 April 2014 Retrieved 4 April 2014 Layout 1 PDF Retrieved 2 June 2018 Globe Theatre Six Characters in Search of an Author BBC Radio Times David Gordon Archived 10 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine on the Joyce Soho website Eight Characters in Search of a Sitcom IMDb com Internet Movie Database Wilson Ann 7 November 2013 Drama University of Toronto Quarterly 82 3 430 452 doi 10 3138 utq 82 3 4 ISSN 1712 5278 Boyd Andrew 12 Characters in Search of an Apocalypse I Want a Better Catastrophe Retrieved 22 January 2019 Stewart Jason 2 January 2020 On the Road with 12 Characters in Search of an Apocalypse Dark Mountain Project Retrieved 6 January 2020 Hawksley Rupert 10 June 2020 Staged BBC One review David Tennant and Michael Sheen s Zoom comedy is better than The Trip i Retrieved 2 November 2020 Walsh Liam Francis Six Characters In Search of an Outlet Retrieved 3 January 2023 via cartoonstock com Sources edit Lewis Margaret 1991 Ngaio Marsh A Life London Chatto amp Windus ISBN 978 0 7011 3389 4 Parker John ed 1925 Who s Who in the Theatre fifth ed London Sir Isaac Pitman and Sons OCLC 10013159 Pirandello Luigi 1923 Three Plays London and Toronto Dent OCLC 859419774 External links editSix Characters in Search of an Author at Standard Ebooks Sei personaggi in cerca d autore at Project Gutenberg In original Italian Pirandello s revised version Pirandello Luigi Pirandello Confesses Why and How He Wrote Six Characters in Search of an Author Virginia Quarterly Review Spring 1925 nbsp Six Characters in Search of an Author public domain audiobook at LibriVox Six Characters in Search of an Author at the Internet Broadway Database nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Six Characters in Search of an Author amp oldid 1169546945, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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