The Waltz of the Toreadors
by Jean Anouilh
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The story is told on two levels: one comic and one bitter. The blustery sex farce concerns a general who fancies himself to be a toreador with the ladies, but he is disgusted with himself and the hollowness of his triumphs. Among the author's most psychologically compelling works, the New York premiere featured Ralph Richardson and Mildred Natwick.Tags
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The Waltz of the Toreadors is filled with situational comedy. The play takes place in the house of the General ("Leon") and his wife Sain Pe where their two girls Estelle and Sidonia are trying on dresses. Leon has hired a new dashing young secretary by the name of Gaston. He compares his marriage to Saint Pe to stamp collecting. His lover, Ghislaine presents him with evidence that his wife has been cheating on him with his old friend, Dr. Bufonte. Her ruse, however does not have the intended affect. Instead of committing at long last to his mistress, he becomes jealous of Dr. Bufante and in the next scene, he challenges Dr. Bufonte to a duel. Ghislaine, determined to win the General's affections, threatens to take her own life and show more jumps out of the window. She lands on the dashing young secretary, giving the plot yet another twist. Mistaking the secretary for Leon, she kisses him, thereafter refusing to be touched by anyone else even the real general, who enters with his unconscious wife. She too mistakes the secretary for her husband and kisses him.
In the second act, the daughters reveal their affections for the secretary whom they heard had kissed another woman and fall into a jealous quarrel. Ghislaine never recovers from her stupor and continues to behave as though the secretary is her Leon. In a roucus scene between the married couple, Saint Pe confesses that she was often unfaithful to the general, and she knew all along of his unfaithfulness to her, but he's HERS! The general tries to kill her.
In the final act, Father Ambrose reveals that the secretary was, all along, the Generals abandoned son. The play ends with the general's arm around the waist of the new maid they hired. show less
In the second act, the daughters reveal their affections for the secretary whom they heard had kissed another woman and fall into a jealous quarrel. Ghislaine never recovers from her stupor and continues to behave as though the secretary is her Leon. In a roucus scene between the married couple, Saint Pe confesses that she was often unfaithful to the general, and she knew all along of his unfaithfulness to her, but he's HERS! The general tries to kill her.
In the final act, Father Ambrose reveals that the secretary was, all along, the Generals abandoned son. The play ends with the general's arm around the waist of the new maid they hired. show less
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Author Information

Jean Anouilh was born on June 23, 1910, in France. Anouilh studied law as a teenager and worked briefly in advertising. He soon became aware of his strong attraction to the theatre and became one of France's foremost playwrights and screenwriters. Anouilh's works are noted for their theatrical conventions. His plays, many of which are bleak show more dramas, feature characters facing highly moral dilemmas. He uses such conventions as flashbacks, role reversals, and play-within-a-play to achieve dramatic effects. Anouilh received a New York Drama Critics Circle Award for his play Waltz of the Toreadors and a Tony award for Thieves Carnival. Other well-known works include Antigone, Eurydice and the film Pattes Blanches. Anouilh suffered a heart attack and died in 1987. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Common Knowledge
- Canonical title*
- La valse des toréadors
- Original title
- La valse des toréadors
- Alternate titles*
- Farce en cinq actes
- Original publication date
- 1953
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.
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- Languages
- English, French
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- Paper
- ISBNs
- 7
- ASINs
- 8




























































