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The Real Inspector Hound (1976)

by Tom Stoppard

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322682,042 (3.99)16
The Real Inspector Hound is the ultimate country-house whodunit
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» See also 16 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 6 (next | show all)
Special to me. The only play I've read without seeing it as well. Maybe some day.... ( )
  bringbackbooks | Jun 16, 2020 |
Agatha Christie meets P.G.Wodehouse meets Samuel Beckett meets Franz Kafka.

Brilliant! ( )
  Nandakishore_Varma | Sep 28, 2013 |
An amusing send-up of the detective genre, particularly Agatha Christie's locked-room country-house mysteries. I chuckled out loud at some points, notably whenever Mrs. Drudge gave an exposition-heavy speech. The play also does a good job of skewering theatre critics. Overall worth a read if you like absurdist theatre and murder mysteries. ( )
  rabbitprincess | Feb 23, 2011 |
A bouquet of allusions: Tom Stoppard loves multilayered writing and drama, creating comedy or even farce.This play is an allusion to An Inspector Calls. It uses travesties, double or triple identities like Shakespeare in his comedies. It is a direct descendant of Samuel Beckett's absurd drama. It is an allusion to Murder by Death. It is thus a parody of many models and even a parody of a parody. But it is also built with a mirror projecting the audience onto the stage, then projecting this projected audience into the play, and the actors into this projected audience of critics. This is again a multifaceted mirror. Finally no one is true, no one is false, no truth is true, and no truth is false. All theories are purely abstract, absurd and abscond fantasies. The last layer of parody and criticism is directed at the police of course as for the plot of the play, and the critics as for the performance of the play and the play itself. Stoppard is a hard hitting satirist cast loose onto the public, the critics and society. Catch out of it what you can. And nothing if you can't catch anything. Too bad for you. Stoppard will not cry. Dr Jacques COULARDEAU
  iayork | Aug 9, 2009 |
Gotta love this show. I knew someone doing "The Mousetrap" somewhere and was going to tell me about rehearsals but she didn't want to spoil the surprise ending if I'd never seen it. No, I'd never seen "The Mousetrap," but I had been in "The Real Inspector Hound," so I pretty much knew how it all turned out.
Stoppard takes on pre-existing material and turns it on its head. I'd love to actually see this show, see some other Mrs. Drudge answer the phone: "Good morning, the drawing room of Lady Muldoon's country residence one morning in early spring." Derivative? But quite sound. And a sweet revenge on critics. Puckeridge! You cunning bastard!
1 vote marfita | Dec 30, 2006 |
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