The Satin Slipper Explained

The Satin Slipper (Le Soulier de satin) is a long play by the French dramatist and poet Paul Claudel, written in 1929. It was first performed on stage in 1943 (abridged), in a production by Claudel and Jean-Louis Barrault.[1] Its full running time is roughly eleven hours.

Plot summary

The scene is set during the Renaissance at the time of the conquistadors. The play is a love story dominated by the ideas of sin and redemption and the various characters, some divine and some comic, frequently engage in a dialogue as though between Heaven and Earth.

Productions

Nowadays it is rarely staged, because of its extreme length and its challenging production requirements. Full-length productions were staged in Paris, and the Avignon Festival in 1987, and by Olivier Py at the Théâtre de l'Odéon in Paris in 2009.

It was made into a seven-hour film in 1985 by the Portuguese director Manoel de Oliveira.

In May 2021 an opera version by Marc-André Dalbavie received its premiere at the Paris Opera, with a libretto by Raphaèle Fleury.[2]

See also

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: France . Peter . The New Oxford Companion to Literature in French . 1995 . Clarendon Press . 978-0-19-866125-2 . 177 . en.
  2. Blanmont, Nicolas. Report from Paris. Opera, September 2021, Vol.72 No.9, p1138-40.