Jacobo Langsner: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary |
|||
Line 48: | Line 48: | ||
[[Category:21st-century male writers]] |
[[Category:21st-century male writers]] |
||
[[Category:21st-century dramatists and playwrights]] |
[[Category:21st-century dramatists and playwrights]] |
||
[[Category:Jewish dramatists and playwrights]] |
|||
[[Category:Jewish Romanian writers]] |
|||
[[Category:Jewish <!-- Uruguayan -->writers]] |
|||
Revision as of 03:22, 23 August 2020
Jacobo Langsner (23 June 1927 – 10 August 2020)[1] was a Uruguayan playwright who had a strong presence in the Uruguayan theatre from 1950 onwards. His work is a showcase of middle-class hypocrisy.
Langsner was born in Romuli, Kingdom of Romania in a Jewish famiy,[2] and died, aged 93, in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
One of his most highly regarded works is Waiting for the Hearse. It was adapted into film in Argentina, another country where he was very successful.
Works
- 1938: Los elegidos, simultaneously in Buenos Aires and Montevideo.[3]
- 1951: El hombre incompleto, Sala Verdi (Montevideo).
- 1953: El juego de Ifigenia, Solís Theatre (Montevideo).
- 1953: Los artistas, Sala Verdi (Montevideo), directed by José Estruch, Club de Teatro.
- 1962: Esperando la carroza, Comedia Nacional (Montevideo).
- 1971: Ocho espías al champagne, Sala Verdi (Montevideo).[4]
- 1973: El tobogán, Teatro Odeón (Montevideo), directed by Omar Grasso, with China Zorrilla[5]
- 1973: Una corona para Benito, by the China Zorrilla Company. Teatro Odeón (Montevideo).
- El terremoto, by the Virginia Lago Company (Buenos Aires).
- La gotita, by the Brandoni-Bianchi Company (Buenos Aires).
- 1981: La planta, Comedia Nacional (Montevideo).
- 1984: Una margarita llamada Mercedes, by the China Zorrilla company.[6]
- 1992: De mis amores con Douglas Fairbanks, El Galpón Theatre (Montevideo)
- Locos de contento, by the company Oscar Martínez-Mercedes Morán.
- Otros paraísos, with Norman Briski and Cristina Banegas, Teatro Municipal General San Martín (Buenos Aires) and Comedia Nacional (Montevideo).
- 2004: Damas y caballeros.[7]
References
- ^ Nuestros autores (in Spanish)
- ^ ""Todo empezó con el miedo"". Clarín (in Spanish). 29 October 2003. Retrieved 23 August 2020.
- ^ Los ridículos
- ^ Waiting for the Hearse
- ^ El tobogán
- ^ "Copia archivada". Archived from the original on 16 July 2012. Retrieved 16 July 2012.
- ^ «Damas y caballeros», at the website Libroos.
Categories:
- 1927 births
- 2020 deaths
- People from Bistrița-Năsăud County
- Romanian Jews
- Transylvanian Jews
- Romanian emigrants to Uruguay
- Naturalized citizens of Uruguay
- Uruguayan Jews
- Uruguayan people of Romanian-Jewish descent
- Uruguayan dramatists and playwrights
- Male dramatists and playwrights
- 20th-century Uruguayan male writers
- 20th-century Uruguayan writers
- 20th-century dramatists and playwrights
- 21st-century Uruguayan writers
- 21st-century male writers
- 21st-century dramatists and playwrights
- Jewish dramatists and playwrights
- Jewish Romanian writers
- Jewish writers
- Uruguayan writer stubs