Hunger and Thirst explained

Hunger and Thirst
Premiere:February 28, 1966[1]
Place:Comédie-Française
Orig Lang:French

Hunger and Thirst (French original title La Soif et la faim[2]) is one of Eugène Ionesco's late plays,[3] [4] premiering in Paris at Comédie-Française on February 28, 1966.[5]

The play has one act divided into four periods. In the play, Ionesco depicts religion as an expression of conformism and of the alienation of idealism to the establishment. It was first produced in an English translation in the United States in April, 1967, by the Yale Dramatic Association.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Nancy Lane. Understanding Eugène Ionesco. 1994. University of South Carolina Press. 978-0-87249-981-2. Page 151
  2. Book: Réalités . 1967 . Société d'études et publications économiques . Google Books. Issues 200-205 - Page 119
  3. News: 'Hunger' offers a bite of Ionesco . . 27 April 2006 . 15 June 2017.
  4. News: 11 March 2013 . Arthur Storch, Stage Director, Dies at 87 . . 15 June 2017.
  5. Book: Contemporary Authors: New revision series . 1997 . Gale . 978-0-7876-1058-6 . 239 . Google Books.