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B. P. Rinehart's Reviews > The Seagull

The Seagull by Anton Chekhov
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really liked it
bookshelves: russian-stuff, plays, realism-stuff

I first encountered Chekhov when I read The Portable Chekhov short story collection. As amazing as those stories are, I had been waiting to introduce myself to what has made him one of the great masters of the arts: his plays. This play, like most Russian art of the 19th century is realism and the influence of Leo Tolstoy is obvious. But unlike Tolstoy, whose works always strived to impart greater ideals and truths to his audience, to preach. Chekhov is not a preacher, but a doctor and he goes about his characters diagnosing instead of trying to "save."

This play has the format of any rom-com, but instead of playing it for laughs and reconciliation it is played for drama. The characters are all either artists or connected to arts and letters in some way. My favorite character is Masha, who was too real and close to home for me...I will leave it there. The ensemble cast is filled with characters who want for someone or something unrequited. I read this while still digesting One Hundred Years of Solitude, so I could not help but notice the overlap when it came to the concept of solitude and the realism in-general. If you enjoy Russian literature and want to find that next step, the plays of Chekhov are there waiting for you.

This was the first time I really went about reading a play translated, that was not in ancient Greek. I read this play as a part of The Major Plays
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Quotes B. P. Liked

Anton Chekhov
“How easy it is, Doctor, to be a philosopher on paper, and how difficult in real life!”
Anton Chekhov, The Seagull

Anton Chekhov
“MEDVIEDENKO
Why do you always wear mourning?

MASHA
I dress in black to match my life. I am unhappy.”
Anton Chekhov, The Seagull


Reading Progress

December 28, 2015 – Started Reading
December 28, 2015 – Shelved
December 28, 2015 – Shelved as: russian-stuff
December 28, 2015 – Shelved as: plays
December 29, 2015 – Finished Reading
September 12, 2016 – Shelved as: realism-stuff

Comments Showing 1-6 of 6 (6 new)

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Kenny This is a wonderful review. I liked the romcom analogy. But Chekhov would disagree about this being played for drama. He always proclaimed it a comedy.


B. P. Rinehart He proclaimed it a comedy, but played it a melodrama. Shakespeare said The Merchant of Venice was a comedy....dear God, it is not. The format is comedy, the content is tragedy. You should never blindly trust an artistic creator 100%--it's why folks invented Death of the Author theory.


Kenny Ken wrote: "He proclaimed it a comedy, but played it a melodrama. Shakespeare said The Merchant of Venice was a comedy....dear God, it is not. The format is comedy, the content is tragedy. You sho..."

I've seen THE SEAGULL performed several times, and it is hilarious. Yes, it is melodramatic at times, but really is quite funny.


B. P. Rinehart I guess I got poor taste in humor, alas.


Kenny Ken wrote: "I guess I got poor taste in humor, alas."
Nope, just a different sense of humor, not poor.


B. P. Rinehart I've seen performances of it and it just doesn't strike me as funny. Life affirming, but not funny. I do agree that The Cherry Orchard is both.


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