The widower Harpagon, so cheap he'd swipe the pennies off a dead man's eyes, rules his roost with a tight, iron fist. His unhappy, rebellious children, Cleante and Elise, are afraid to tell him of their romantic attachments: Cleante has fallen in love with the beautiful but penniless Mariane, who lives with her invalid mother, and Elise has secretly promised to wed Valere, a young charmer of unknown parentage who has flattered his way into being Harpagon's chief steward. When Harpagon reveals...
The widower Harpagon, so cheap he'd swipe the pennies off a dead man's eyes, rules his roost with a tight, iron fist. His unhappy, rebellious children, Cleante and Elise, are afraid to tell him of their romantic attachments: Cleante has fallen in love with the beautiful but penniless Mariane, who lives with her invalid mother, and Elise has secretly promised to wed Valere, a young charmer of unknown parentage who has flattered his way into being Harpagon's chief steward. When Harpagon reveals his own marital designshe will wed Mariane himself and yoke Elise to the wealthy but aged Seigneur Anselmechildren, suitors, disgruntled servants, and the wily Jill-of-all-trades Frosine conspire to foil the miser before the marriages can take place. When Harpagon's treasure, buried in the backyard, is stolen, he rounds up all the suspectsincluding the audienceand threatens torture and imprisonment. Only the last-minute arrival of Seigneur Anselme, bearing secrets of his own, can unite the proper couples and restore Harpagon to his one true love40,000 pounds in gold.Baltimore GuideMagruder has done a wonderful job of tweaking and freshening the 17th-century French farce. It is downright beautiful to behold and marvelous to hear...this [play] is laugh-out-loud funny, and the topical references are fresh, not forced.
\ Baltimore GuideMagruder has done a wonderful job of tweaking and freshening the 17th-century French farce. It is downright beautiful to behold and marvelous to hear...this [play] is laugh-out-loud funny, and the topical references are fresh, not forced.\ \ \ \ \ Lifetimes.com...[THE MISER] is generous in its amorous plotting and slapstick-level humor. It's so fast and silly that no dust could possibly settle on Molière's classic play. Much of that lively spirit is due to a new translation and adaptation by James Magruder...though still presented as a period piece, this translation isn't afraid to speak in today's language...you'll laugh at every scheme and revelation along the way.\ \ \ Sun (Baltimore)...highly accessible new translation...takes bold chances without ever losing sight of Molière's original intent...A MISER in which more is always more—what could be more fitting for a play about greed?\ \ \ \ \ Washington PostThe saucy serving of THE MISER...is for those who like their French fare spicy and au courant. The veteran translator James Magruder provides a burlesque kick to Molière's 336-year-old farce, and the result is a delectable evening of shameless off-color gags and timeless double-entendres.\ \