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Three Sisters
Three Sisters
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Description
This Student Edition, with an introduction and notes by Oladipo Agboluaje, looks at how Chekhov's original play has been transposed to an African context in which Chekhov's characters are relocated to Nigeria during the Biafran War, the background to the war and how the politics and experience of that are represented in the play.
Oladipo Agboluaje has conducted interviews with some of the actors and creatives involved in the original National Theatre production who have a close connection to the material to find out how they viewed their experience as professional actors of Igbo heritage being refracted through Chekhov.
Table of Contents
Chekhov and Three Sisters - a brief overview
Adaptations & representations of Africa on the British stage (other examples of classic Western plays transposed to Africa)
The Biafran War (its history and long-lasting effects on Nigeria; Biafran War literature)
Chekhov's and Ellams's visions for Three Sisters (characters, language, structure, themes, settings, dramatic devices)
Play in production (staging decisions; Western & Nigerian reviewers; reception theory)
Interviews: how did artists of Igbo heritage connect with the material and find the refraction of this experience through Chekhov?
THREE SISTERS
Notes
Product details
| Published | Oct 30 2025 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (PDF) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Extent | 144 |
| ISBN | 9781350473195 |
| Imprint | Methuen Drama |
| Series | Student Editions |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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A startlingly vivid account of the civil war and a direct assault on British neocolonialism ... Ellams brilliantly uses the context to sharpen specific relationships ... Above all, the play offers a searing attack on British responsibility for the war dating to the time when they created Nigeria out of 250 ethnic groups and languages.
Guardian
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The new setting gives the play a freshness and punch that makes its humane complications and disappointments live and breathe in new air ... It's brave enough to be funny too; the comedy makes the tragedy weigh all the more heavily when it arrives ... Each character is delicately and carefully fitted into this new setting ... A smart and sophisticated rethinking ... provoking new thoughts and old feelings in a very Chekovian way.
Whatsonstage
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Proof that Inua Ellams is one of our most exciting playwrights
Daily Telegraph


















