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Uncle Vanya

Uncle Vanya (Russian: Дя́дя Ва́ня, tr. Dyádya Ványa, IPA: [ˈdʲædʲə ˈvanʲə]) is a play by the Russian playwright Anton Chekhov. It was first published in 1898, and was first produced in 1899 by the Moscow Art Theatre under the direction of Konstantin Stanislavski.

Uncle Vanya
Konstantin Stanislavski as Astrov
in the Moscow Art Theatre production in 1899.
Written byAnton Chekhov
Original languageRussian
SettingGarden of the Serebryakov family estate

The play portrays the visit of an elderly professor and his glamorous, much younger second wife, Yelena, to the rural estate that supports their urban lifestyle. Two friends—Vanya, brother of the professor's late first wife, who has long managed the estate, and Astrov, the local doctor—both fall under Yelena's spell, while bemoaning the ennui of their provincial existence. Sonya, the professor's daughter by his first wife, who has worked with Vanya to keep the estate going, suffers from her unrequited feelings for Astrov. Matters are brought to a crisis when the professor announces his intention to sell the estate, Vanya and Sonya's home, with a view to investing the proceeds to achieve a higher income for himself and his wife.

Background

Uncle Vanya is unique among Chekhov's major plays because it is essentially an extensive reworking of his own play published a decade earlier, The Wood Demon.[1] By elucidating the specific changes Chekhov made during the revision process—these include reducing the cast from almost two dozen down to nine, changing the climactic suicide of The Wood Demon into the famous failed homicide of Uncle Vanya, and altering the original happy ending into a more ambiguous, less final resolution—critics such as Donald Rayfield, Richard Gilman, and Eric Bentley have sought to chart the development of Chekhov's dramaturgical method through the 1890s.

Rayfield cites recent scholarship suggesting Chekhov revised The Wood Demon during his trip to the island of Sakhalin, a prison colony in Eastern Russia, in 1891.

Characters

  • Aleksandr Vladimirovich Serebryakov (Алекса́ндр Влади́мирович Серебряко́в): a retired university professor, who has lived for years in the city on the earnings of his late first wife's rural estate, managed for him by Vanya and Sonya.
  • Helena Andreyevna Serebryakova (Yelena) (Еле́на Андре́евна Серебряко́ва): Serebryakov's young and beautiful second wife. She is 27 years old.
  • Sofia Alexandrovna Serebryakova (Sonya) (Со́фья Алекса́ндровна Серебряко́ва): Serebryakov's daughter from his first marriage. She is of a marriageable age, but is considered plain.
  • Maria Vasilyevna Voynitskaya (Мари́я Васи́льевна Войни́цкая): the widow of a privy councilor and mother of Vanya (and of Vanya's late sister, Serebryakov's first wife).
  • Ivan Petrovich Voynitsky ("Uncle Vanya") (Ива́н Петро́вич Войни́цкий): Maria's son and Sonya's uncle, the title character of the play. He is 47 years old.
  • Mikhail Lvovich Astrov (Михаи́л Льво́вич А́стров): a middle-aged country doctor. His preoccupation with the destruction of forests is one of the first discussions of ecological problems in world literature.
  • Ilya Ilych Telegin (Илья́ Ильи́ч Теле́гин; nicknamed "Waffles" for his pockmarked skin): an impoverished landowner, who now lives on the estate as a dependent of the family.
  • Marina Timofeevna (Мари́на Тимофе́евна): an old nurse.
  • A Workman

Plot

Act I

A garden on Serebryakov's country estate. Astrov and Marina discuss how old Astrov has grown and his boredom with his life as a country doctor. Vanya enters and complains of the disruption caused by the visit of the professor and his wife Yelena. As they're talking, Serebryakov, Yelena, Sonya, and Telegin return from a walk. Out of earshot of the professor, Vanya calls him "a learned old dried mackerel", criticizes his pomposity, and belittles his achievements. Vanya's mother, Maria Vasilyevna, who idolises Serebryakov, objects to her son's comments. Vanya also praises Yelena's youth and beauty, arguing that faithfulness to an old man like Serebryakov is an immoral waste of vitality. Astrov is forced to depart to attend a patient, but not before delivering a speech on the preservation of the forests, a subject he is very passionate about. Vanya declares his love to an exasperated Yelena.

Act II

The dining room, several days later, late at night. Before going to bed, Serebryakov complains of pain and old age. Astrov arrives, having been sent for by Sonya, but the professor refuses to see him. After Serebryakov falls asleep, Yelena and Vanya talk. She speaks of the discord in the house, and Vanya speaks of dashed hopes. He feels he's misspent his youth and he associates his unrequited love for Yelena with the disappointment of his life. Yelena refuses to listen. Alone, Vanya wonders why he did not fall in love with Yelena when he first met her ten years earlier, when it would have been possible for the two of them to marry and have a happy life together. At that time, Vanya believed in Serebryakov's greatness and was happy that his efforts supported Serebryakov's work; he has since become disillusioned with the professor and his life feels empty. As Vanya agonises over his past, Astrov returns, somewhat drunk, and the two talk. Sonya chides Vanya for his drinking, and responds pragmatically to his reflections on the futility of a wasted life, pointing out that only work is truly fulfilling.

Outside, a storm is gathering and Astrov talks with Sonya about the house's suffocating atmosphere; he says Serebryakov is difficult, Vanya is a hypochondriac, and Yelena is charming but idle. He laments how long it has been since he loved anyone. Sonya begs Astrov to stop drinking, telling him it is unworthy of him to destroy himself. They discuss love, and it becomes clear that Sonya is in love with him and that he is unaware of her feelings.

When Astrov leaves, Yelena enters and makes peace with Sonya, after an apparently long period of mutual antagonism. Trying to resolve their difficulties, Yelena reassures Sonya that she had strong feelings for her father when she married him, though that love has proved illusory. The two converse at cross purposes. Yelena confesses her unhappiness and Sonya gushes about Astrov. In a happy mood, Sonya leaves to ask the professor if Yelena may play the piano. Sonya returns with his negative answer, which quickly dampens the mood.

Act III

 
Uncle Vanya at the Moscow Art Theatre (1899), Act III

Vanya, Sonya, and Yelena are in the living room, having been called there by Serebryakov. Vanya calls Yelena a water nymph and urges her, once again, to break free. Sonya complains to Yelena that she has loved Astrov for six years but that, because she is not beautiful, he doesn't notice her. Yelena volunteers to question Astrov and find out if he's in love with Sonya. Sonya is pleased, but before agreeing she wonders whether uncertainty is better than knowledge, because then, at least, there is hope.

When Yelena asks Astrov about his feelings for Sonya, he says he has none and concludes that Yelena has brought up the subject of love to encourage him to confess his own feelings for her. Astrov kisses Yelena, and Vanya witnesses the embrace. Upset, Yelena begs Vanya to use his influence to allow her and the professor to leave immediately. Before Serebryakov can make his announcement, Yelena tells Sonya that Astrov doesn't love her.

Serebryakov proposes to solve the family's financial problems by selling the estate and investing the proceeds in a bond which will bring in a significantly higher income (and, he hopes, leave enough over to buy a villa for himself and Yelena in Finland). Angrily, Vanya asks where he, Sonya, and his mother would live, protests that the estate rightly belongs to Sonya, and that Serebryakov has never appreciated his self-sacrifice in managing the property. As Vanya's anger mounts, he begins to rage against the professor, blaming him for the failure of his life, wildly claiming that, without Serebryakov to hold him back, he could have been a second Schopenhauer or Dostoevsky. In despair, he cries out to his mother, but instead of comforting her son, Maria insists that Vanya listen to the professor. Serebryakov insults Vanya, who storms out of the room. Yelena begs to be taken away from the country and Sonya pleads with her father on Vanya's behalf. Serebryakov exits to confront Vanya further. A shot is heard from offstage and Serebryakov returns, being chased by Vanya, wielding a loaded pistol. He fires the pistol again at the professor but misses. He throws the gun down in disgust and sinks into a chair.

Act IV

As the final act opens, a few hours later, Marina and Telegin wind wool and discuss the planned departure of Serebryakov and Yelena. When Vanya and Astrov enter, Astrov says that in this district only he and Vanya were "decent, cultured men" and that ten years of "narrow-minded life" have made them vulgar. Vanya has stolen a vial of Astrov's morphine, presumably to commit suicide; Sonya and Astrov beg him to return the narcotic, which he eventually does.

Yelena and Serebryakov bid everyone farewell. When Yelena says goodbye to Astrov, she admits to having been carried away by him, embraces him, and takes one of his pencils as a souvenir. Serebryakov and Vanya make their peace, agreeing all will be as it was before. Once the outsiders have departed, Sonya and Vanya pay bills, Maria reads a pamphlet, and Marina knits. Vanya complains of the heaviness of his heart, and Sonya, in response, speaks of living, working, and the rewards of the afterlife: "We shall hear the angels, we shall see the whole sky all diamonds, we shall see how all earthly evil, all our sufferings, are drowned in the mercy that will fill the whole world. And our life will grow peaceful, tender, sweet as a caress…. You've had no joy in your life; but wait, Uncle Vanya, wait…. We shall rest."

Productions

 
Scene from Act I, Moscow Art Theatre, 1899

Although the play had previous small runs in provincial theatres in 1898, its metropolitan première took place on 7 November [O.S. 26 October] 1899 at the Moscow Art Theatre. Constantin Stanislavski played the role of Astrov while Chekhov's future wife Olga Knipper played Yelena. The initial reviews were favorable but pointed to defects in both the play and the acting. As the staging and the acting improved over successive performances, however, and as "the public understood better its inner meaning and nuances of feeling", the reviews improved.[2] Uncle Vanya became a permanent fixture in the Moscow Art Theatre.

Other actors who have appeared in notable stage productions of Uncle Vanya include Michael Redgrave, Paul Scofield, Peter O'Toole, Albert Finney, Franchot Tone, Cate Blanchett, Peter Dinklage, Jacki Weaver, Antony Sher, Ian McKellen, Richard Armitage, Simon Russell Beale, William Hurt, George C. Scott, Donald Sinden, Derek Jacobi, Michael Gambon, Tom Courtenay, Trevor Eve and Laurence Olivier.

The play was also adapted as the new stage-play Dear Uncle by the British playwright Alan Ayckbourn, who reset it in the 1930s Lake District. This adaptation premiered from July to September 2011 at the Stephen Joseph Theatre.[3]

In January 2014 24/6: A Jewish Theater Company performed TuBishVanya, a modern adaption that incorporated Jewish and environmental themes.[citation needed]

Parodies

  • The Fifth Elephant, a 1999 novel by Terry Pratchett, includes a pastiche of Chekhov plays in which "the gloomy and purposeless trousers of Uncle Vanya" are loaned to Captain Vimes.[4]
  • Life Sucks: Or the Present Ridiculous, a 2015 stage adaptation by Aaron Posner, premiered at Theater J in Washington, DC.[5]

"Are you Uncle Vanya?"
"I am."
[Gunshot sounds]
"Ouch!"

  • Uncle Vanya and Zombies, a 2012 post-apocalyptic stage adaptation by Markus Wessendorf, premiered at Kennedy Theatre in Honolulu.[7][8]

Other adaptations

Over the years, Uncle Vanya has been adapted for film several times.

Awards and nominations

Awards
  • 2003 Laurence Olivier Award for Best Revival
Nominations
  • 1992 Laurence Olivier Award for Best Revival
  • 2000 Drama Desk Award Outstanding Revival of a Play

See also

References

  1. ^ Ryan McKittrick (2008). . American Repertory Theatre. Archived from the original on 2008-06-19. Retrieved 2008-10-13.
  2. ^ Simmons, Ernest (1962). Chekhov, A Biography. Boston: Little, Brown and Company. p. 486.
  3. ^ Alfred Hickling (2011-07-14). "Dear Uncle – review | Stage". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2011-11-25.
  4. ^ "The Fifth Elephant". terrypratchettbooks.com. Retrieved 16 January 2022.
  5. ^ John Stoltenberg, "Review: Life Sucks at Theater J", DC Metro Theater Arts, 20 January 2015
  6. ^ "Uncle Vanya (Abridged)". Unveiling Vanya. Middlebury College Russian Department. 16 April 2011. Retrieved 16 January 2022.
  7. ^ "On the Mainstage at Kennedy Theatre – the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa". www.hawaii.edu. Retrieved 2 July 2017.
  8. ^ Ryan Senaga (2012-11-10). "Review: 'Uncle Vanya' an unexpected charmer". Honolulu Pulse. Retrieved 2013-05-01.
  9. ^ Quotes taken from the VHS recording issued by Arthur Cantor Films, New York.
  10. ^ "Home- Wiener Festwochen". www.festwochen.at.
  11. ^ "Filmed recording of West End Uncle Vanya with Richard Armitage and Toby Jones to be released in cinemas and broadcast on BBC". www.whatsonstage.com. 4 September 2020. Retrieved 26 November 2020.
  12. ^ "Morbror Vanja - Åbo Svenska Teater". abosvenskateater.fi. Retrieved 2021-09-20.
  13. ^ Laman, Douglas (23 December 2021). "How 'Drive My Car' Uses a Classic Play to Illuminate Its Characters' Inner Lives". Collider. Retrieved 16 January 2022.
  14. ^ Brzeski, Patrick (9 July 2021). "Japan's Ryusuke Hamaguchi on Adapting Murakami for 'Drive My Car' and Vehicles as Confession Booths". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 17 January 2022.

Further reading

  • Chekhov, Anton (1916) [1899]. Uncle Vanya: Scenes from Country Life. Marian Fell (trans.) (Tenth ed.). Salt Lake City: Project Gutenberg. Retrieved 2008-10-13.

External links

  •   Uncle Vanya public domain audiobook at LibriVox
  • ​Uncle Vanya​ at the Internet Broadway Database
  • Productions in Theatre Archive, University of Bristol
  • Full text of Uncle Vanya (in Russian)
  • Uncle Vanya program note from 1957 San Francisco International Film Festival
  • Full English translation via the Gutenberg Project

uncle, vanya, other, uses, disambiguation, russian, Дя, дя, Ва, ня, dyádya, ványa, ˈdʲædʲə, ˈvanʲə, play, russian, playwright, anton, chekhov, first, published, 1898, first, produced, 1899, moscow, theatre, under, direction, konstantin, stanislavski, konstanti. For other uses see Uncle Vanya disambiguation Uncle Vanya Russian Dya dya Va nya tr Dyadya Vanya IPA ˈdʲaedʲe ˈvanʲe is a play by the Russian playwright Anton Chekhov It was first published in 1898 and was first produced in 1899 by the Moscow Art Theatre under the direction of Konstantin Stanislavski Uncle VanyaKonstantin Stanislavski as Astrovin the Moscow Art Theatre production in 1899 Written byAnton ChekhovOriginal languageRussianSettingGarden of the Serebryakov family estateThe play portrays the visit of an elderly professor and his glamorous much younger second wife Yelena to the rural estate that supports their urban lifestyle Two friends Vanya brother of the professor s late first wife who has long managed the estate and Astrov the local doctor both fall under Yelena s spell while bemoaning the ennui of their provincial existence Sonya the professor s daughter by his first wife who has worked with Vanya to keep the estate going suffers from her unrequited feelings for Astrov Matters are brought to a crisis when the professor announces his intention to sell the estate Vanya and Sonya s home with a view to investing the proceeds to achieve a higher income for himself and his wife Contents 1 Background 2 Characters 3 Plot 3 1 Act I 3 2 Act II 3 3 Act III 3 4 Act IV 4 Productions 4 1 Parodies 5 Other adaptations 6 Awards and nominations 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksBackground EditUncle Vanya is unique among Chekhov s major plays because it is essentially an extensive reworking of his own play published a decade earlier The Wood Demon 1 By elucidating the specific changes Chekhov made during the revision process these include reducing the cast from almost two dozen down to nine changing the climactic suicide of The Wood Demon into the famous failed homicide of Uncle Vanya and altering the original happy ending into a more ambiguous less final resolution critics such as Donald Rayfield Richard Gilman and Eric Bentley have sought to chart the development of Chekhov s dramaturgical method through the 1890s Rayfield cites recent scholarship suggesting Chekhov revised The Wood Demon during his trip to the island of Sakhalin a prison colony in Eastern Russia in 1891 Characters EditAleksandr Vladimirovich Serebryakov Aleksa ndr Vladi mirovich Serebryako v a retired university professor who has lived for years in the city on the earnings of his late first wife s rural estate managed for him by Vanya and Sonya Helena Andreyevna Serebryakova Yelena Ele na Andre evna Serebryako va Serebryakov s young and beautiful second wife She is 27 years old Sofia Alexandrovna Serebryakova Sonya So fya Aleksa ndrovna Serebryako va Serebryakov s daughter from his first marriage She is of a marriageable age but is considered plain Maria Vasilyevna Voynitskaya Mari ya Vasi levna Vojni ckaya the widow of a privy councilor and mother of Vanya and of Vanya s late sister Serebryakov s first wife Ivan Petrovich Voynitsky Uncle Vanya Iva n Petro vich Vojni ckij Maria s son and Sonya s uncle the title character of the play He is 47 years old Mikhail Lvovich Astrov Mihai l Lvo vich A strov a middle aged country doctor His preoccupation with the destruction of forests is one of the first discussions of ecological problems in world literature Ilya Ilych Telegin Ilya Ili ch Tele gin nicknamed Waffles for his pockmarked skin an impoverished landowner who now lives on the estate as a dependent of the family Marina Timofeevna Mari na Timofe evna an old nurse A WorkmanPlot EditAct I Edit A garden on Serebryakov s country estate Astrov and Marina discuss how old Astrov has grown and his boredom with his life as a country doctor Vanya enters and complains of the disruption caused by the visit of the professor and his wife Yelena As they re talking Serebryakov Yelena Sonya and Telegin return from a walk Out of earshot of the professor Vanya calls him a learned old dried mackerel criticizes his pomposity and belittles his achievements Vanya s mother Maria Vasilyevna who idolises Serebryakov objects to her son s comments Vanya also praises Yelena s youth and beauty arguing that faithfulness to an old man like Serebryakov is an immoral waste of vitality Astrov is forced to depart to attend a patient but not before delivering a speech on the preservation of the forests a subject he is very passionate about Vanya declares his love to an exasperated Yelena Act II Edit The dining room several days later late at night Before going to bed Serebryakov complains of pain and old age Astrov arrives having been sent for by Sonya but the professor refuses to see him After Serebryakov falls asleep Yelena and Vanya talk She speaks of the discord in the house and Vanya speaks of dashed hopes He feels he s misspent his youth and he associates his unrequited love for Yelena with the disappointment of his life Yelena refuses to listen Alone Vanya wonders why he did not fall in love with Yelena when he first met her ten years earlier when it would have been possible for the two of them to marry and have a happy life together At that time Vanya believed in Serebryakov s greatness and was happy that his efforts supported Serebryakov s work he has since become disillusioned with the professor and his life feels empty As Vanya agonises over his past Astrov returns somewhat drunk and the two talk Sonya chides Vanya for his drinking and responds pragmatically to his reflections on the futility of a wasted life pointing out that only work is truly fulfilling Outside a storm is gathering and Astrov talks with Sonya about the house s suffocating atmosphere he says Serebryakov is difficult Vanya is a hypochondriac and Yelena is charming but idle He laments how long it has been since he loved anyone Sonya begs Astrov to stop drinking telling him it is unworthy of him to destroy himself They discuss love and it becomes clear that Sonya is in love with him and that he is unaware of her feelings When Astrov leaves Yelena enters and makes peace with Sonya after an apparently long period of mutual antagonism Trying to resolve their difficulties Yelena reassures Sonya that she had strong feelings for her father when she married him though that love has proved illusory The two converse at cross purposes Yelena confesses her unhappiness and Sonya gushes about Astrov In a happy mood Sonya leaves to ask the professor if Yelena may play the piano Sonya returns with his negative answer which quickly dampens the mood Act III Edit Uncle Vanya at the Moscow Art Theatre 1899 Act III Vanya Sonya and Yelena are in the living room having been called there by Serebryakov Vanya calls Yelena a water nymph and urges her once again to break free Sonya complains to Yelena that she has loved Astrov for six years but that because she is not beautiful he doesn t notice her Yelena volunteers to question Astrov and find out if he s in love with Sonya Sonya is pleased but before agreeing she wonders whether uncertainty is better than knowledge because then at least there is hope When Yelena asks Astrov about his feelings for Sonya he says he has none and concludes that Yelena has brought up the subject of love to encourage him to confess his own feelings for her Astrov kisses Yelena and Vanya witnesses the embrace Upset Yelena begs Vanya to use his influence to allow her and the professor to leave immediately Before Serebryakov can make his announcement Yelena tells Sonya that Astrov doesn t love her Serebryakov proposes to solve the family s financial problems by selling the estate and investing the proceeds in a bond which will bring in a significantly higher income and he hopes leave enough over to buy a villa for himself and Yelena in Finland Angrily Vanya asks where he Sonya and his mother would live protests that the estate rightly belongs to Sonya and that Serebryakov has never appreciated his self sacrifice in managing the property As Vanya s anger mounts he begins to rage against the professor blaming him for the failure of his life wildly claiming that without Serebryakov to hold him back he could have been a second Schopenhauer or Dostoevsky In despair he cries out to his mother but instead of comforting her son Maria insists that Vanya listen to the professor Serebryakov insults Vanya who storms out of the room Yelena begs to be taken away from the country and Sonya pleads with her father on Vanya s behalf Serebryakov exits to confront Vanya further A shot is heard from offstage and Serebryakov returns being chased by Vanya wielding a loaded pistol He fires the pistol again at the professor but misses He throws the gun down in disgust and sinks into a chair Act IV Edit As the final act opens a few hours later Marina and Telegin wind wool and discuss the planned departure of Serebryakov and Yelena When Vanya and Astrov enter Astrov says that in this district only he and Vanya were decent cultured men and that ten years of narrow minded life have made them vulgar Vanya has stolen a vial of Astrov s morphine presumably to commit suicide Sonya and Astrov beg him to return the narcotic which he eventually does Yelena and Serebryakov bid everyone farewell When Yelena says goodbye to Astrov she admits to having been carried away by him embraces him and takes one of his pencils as a souvenir Serebryakov and Vanya make their peace agreeing all will be as it was before Once the outsiders have departed Sonya and Vanya pay bills Maria reads a pamphlet and Marina knits Vanya complains of the heaviness of his heart and Sonya in response speaks of living working and the rewards of the afterlife We shall hear the angels we shall see the whole sky all diamonds we shall see how all earthly evil all our sufferings are drowned in the mercy that will fill the whole world And our life will grow peaceful tender sweet as a caress You ve had no joy in your life but wait Uncle Vanya wait We shall rest Productions Edit Scene from Act I Moscow Art Theatre 1899 Although the play had previous small runs in provincial theatres in 1898 its metropolitan premiere took place on 7 November O S 26 October 1899 at the Moscow Art Theatre Constantin Stanislavski played the role of Astrov while Chekhov s future wife Olga Knipper played Yelena The initial reviews were favorable but pointed to defects in both the play and the acting As the staging and the acting improved over successive performances however and as the public understood better its inner meaning and nuances of feeling the reviews improved 2 Uncle Vanya became a permanent fixture in the Moscow Art Theatre Other actors who have appeared in notable stage productions of Uncle Vanya include Michael Redgrave Paul Scofield Peter O Toole Albert Finney Franchot Tone Cate Blanchett Peter Dinklage Jacki Weaver Antony Sher Ian McKellen Richard Armitage Simon Russell Beale William Hurt George C Scott Donald Sinden Derek Jacobi Michael Gambon Tom Courtenay Trevor Eve and Laurence Olivier The play was also adapted as the new stage play Dear Uncle by the British playwright Alan Ayckbourn who reset it in the 1930s Lake District This adaptation premiered from July to September 2011 at the Stephen Joseph Theatre 3 In January 2014 24 6 A Jewish Theater Company performed TuBishVanya a modern adaption that incorporated Jewish and environmental themes citation needed Parodies Edit The Fifth Elephant a 1999 novel by Terry Pratchett includes a pastiche of Chekhov plays in which the gloomy and purposeless trousers of Uncle Vanya are loaned to Captain Vimes 4 Life Sucks Or the Present Ridiculous a 2015 stage adaptation by Aaron Posner premiered at Theater J in Washington DC 5 The Reduced Shakespeare Company performed a shortened version of the play on their BBC radio show in 2010 that contained only three lines 6 Are you Uncle Vanya I am Gunshot sounds Ouch Uncle Vanya and Zombies a 2012 post apocalyptic stage adaptation by Markus Wessendorf premiered at Kennedy Theatre in Honolulu 7 8 Other adaptations EditOver the years Uncle Vanya has been adapted for film several times Uncle Vanya a 1957 adaptation of a concurrent Off Broadway production that starred Franchot Tone who co produced and co directed the film Uncle Vanya a version of the star studded 1962 63 Chichester Festival stage production directed for the stage by Laurence Olivier who played Astrov and also starring Michael Redgrave as Vanya Max Adrian as Professor Serebryakov Rosemary Harris as Yelena and Olivier s wife Joan Plowright as Sonya Harold Hobson of The Sunday Times described the Chichester production as the admitted master achievement in British twentieth century theatre while The New Yorker called it probably the best Vanya in English we shall ever see 9 Uncle Vanya a 1970 Russian film version adapted and directed by Andrei Mikhalkov Konchalovsky Uncle Vanya a 1991 episode of the BBC Performance anthology for TV starring Ian Holm and David Warner Vanya on 42nd Street a 1994 American film version adapted by David Mamet and directed by Louis Malle It stars Wallace Shawn and Julianne Moore Originally a little known studio production it was later adapted for the screen where it garnered wider acclaim Country Life a 1994 Australian adaptation set in the Outback starring Sam Neill as the equivalent of Astrov August a 1996 English film adaptation set in Wales directed by and starring Anthony Hopkins in the Vanya role Hopkins played Astrov in a BBC Play of the Month production in 1970 Sonya s Story an opera adapted by director Sally Burgess composer Neal Thornton and designer Charles Phu portraying events in the play Uncle Vanya from the character Sonya s perspective premiered in 2010 Chekhov Fast amp Furious a multimedia theatric performance project by the Franco Austrian performance collective Superamas which translates the themes of the old theatre into our time Premiered in 2018 at the Vienna Festival in Austria 10 Uncle Vanya a recording of the interrupted 2020 run at London s Harold Pinter Theatre adapted by Conor McPherson starring Aimee Lou Wood Rosalind Eleazar Roger Allam Toby Jones and Richard Armitage Due to the COVID 19 pandemic it was decided to bring the cast back under guidelines and film the play for release in cinemas and later on the BBC 11 Morbror Vanja a Swedish language adaptation of the play was performed at the Abo Svenska Teater Turku Finland in 2021 12 Drive My Car a 2021 film by Ryusuke Hamaguchi includes a production of Uncle Vanya with the characters echoing the emotional turmoil of Chekhov s characters as they reveal their trauma and deeply complicated feelings 13 It is based on a short story collection by Haruki Murakami 14 Awards and nominations EditAwards2003 Laurence Olivier Award for Best RevivalNominations1992 Laurence Olivier Award for Best Revival 2000 Drama Desk Award Outstanding Revival of a PlaySee also EditChekhov s gunReferences Edit Ryan McKittrick 2008 Moscow s First Uncle Vanya Checkhov and the Moscow Art Theatre American Repertory Theatre Archived from the original on 2008 06 19 Retrieved 2008 10 13 Simmons Ernest 1962 Chekhov A Biography Boston Little Brown and Company p 486 Alfred Hickling 2011 07 14 Dear Uncle review Stage The Guardian London Retrieved 2011 11 25 The Fifth Elephant terrypratchettbooks com Retrieved 16 January 2022 John Stoltenberg Review Life Sucks at Theater J DC Metro Theater Arts 20 January 2015 Uncle Vanya Abridged Unveiling Vanya Middlebury College Russian Department 16 April 2011 Retrieved 16 January 2022 On the Mainstage at Kennedy Theatre the University of Hawaiʻi at Manoa www hawaii edu Retrieved 2 July 2017 Ryan Senaga 2012 11 10 Review Uncle Vanya an unexpected charmer Honolulu Pulse Retrieved 2013 05 01 Quotes taken from the VHS recording issued by Arthur Cantor Films New York Home Wiener Festwochen www festwochen at Filmed recording of West End Uncle Vanya with Richard Armitage and Toby Jones to be released in cinemas and broadcast on BBC www whatsonstage com 4 September 2020 Retrieved 26 November 2020 Morbror Vanja Abo Svenska Teater abosvenskateater fi Retrieved 2021 09 20 Laman Douglas 23 December 2021 How Drive My Car Uses a Classic Play to Illuminate Its Characters Inner Lives Collider Retrieved 16 January 2022 Brzeski Patrick 9 July 2021 Japan s Ryusuke Hamaguchi on Adapting Murakami for Drive My Car and Vehicles as Confession Booths The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved 17 January 2022 Further reading EditChekhov Anton 1916 1899 Uncle Vanya Scenes from Country Life Marian Fell trans Tenth ed Salt Lake City Project Gutenberg Retrieved 2008 10 13 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Uncle Vanya Chekhov Wikisource has original text related to this article Uncle Vanya Uncle Vanya public domain audiobook at LibriVox Uncle Vanya at the Internet Broadway Database Productions in Theatre Archive University of Bristol Full text of Uncle Vanya in Russian Uncle Vanya program note from 1957 San Francisco International Film Festival Full English translation via the Gutenberg Project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Uncle Vanya amp oldid 1131918151, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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