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Figaro Trilogy #2

Le Mariage de Figaro

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Forcé de parcourir la route où je suis entré sans le savoir, comme j'en sortirai sans le vouloir, je l'ai jonchée d'autant de fleurs que ma gaieté me l'a permis ; encore je dis ma gaieté, sans savoir si elle est à moi plus que le reste, ni même quel est ce Moi dont je m'occupe : un assemblage informe de parties inconnues ; puis un chétif être imbécile ; un petit animal folâtre ; un jeune homme ardent au plaisir, ayant tous les goûts pour jouir, faisant tous les métiers pour vivre ; maître ici, valet là, selon qu'il plait à la fortune ! ambitieux par vanité, laborieux par nécessité ; mais paresseux... avec délices ! orateur selon le danger ; poète par délassement ; musicien par occasion ; amoureux par folles bouffées ; j'ai tout vu, tout fait, tout usé.

258 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 1778

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About the author

Pierre de Beaumarchais

538 books91 followers
Le Barbier de Séville (1775) and Le Mariage de Figaro (1784), the comic plays, best-known works of French writer Pierre Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais, inspired Gioacchino Antonio Rossini and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart to operas.

Pierre-Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais, a musician, diplomat, horticulturalist, satirist, and American revolutionary, made watches, invented, inventor, fled, spied, published, dealt arms, and financed.

Born a son to a provincial watchmaker , Beaumarchais rose in society as an influential inventor and music teacher in the court of Louis XV. He made a number of important business and social contacts in various roles as a diplomat and spy,and earned a considerable fortune before a series of costly court battles jeopardized his reputation.

An early supporter of American independence, Beaumarchais lobbied the government on behalf of the rebels during the war of independence. From the Spanish government, Beaumarchais oversaw covert aid to supply arms and financial assistance to the rebels in the years before formal entry of into the war in 1778. He personally invested money in the scheme but later struggled to recover it . Beaumarchais also participated in the early stages of the revolution. People probably remember especially his three theatrical pieces.

Jean-Pierre de Beaumarchais, a contemporary female, linearly descended.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 245 reviews
Profile Image for Lisa.
1,108 reviews3,290 followers
June 28, 2018
“Mon cavalier, répondrez-vous à mes questions?”

At the culmination of this brilliant play, written just a few years before the beginning of the French Revolution, the all-powerful Comte de Almaviva challenges Figaro to answer his questions. Figaro, superbly, retorts:

“Eh! Qui pourrait m’en exempter, Monseigneur? Vous commandez à tout ici, hors à vous-même.”

That is the perfect definition of a tyrant: being in command of everything, except for himself. The play, which celebrates esprit and cunning intrigues to out-manoeuvre the abuse of privilege and power, is probably more well-known in its opera adaptation by Mozart. But the original by Beaumarchais is well worth reading in its own right, displaying a more acid political focus, which has proven to be relevant as a societal mirror over time, - leading to its being forbidden by the Vichy régime in the 1940s for example. A late honour - chapeau Beaumarchais!

I remember the first time I read it in a literature class at university. My professor had a predilection for humorous enlightenment thinkers, and Figaro was a character he loved to quote.

"Noblesse, fortune, un rang, des places, tout cela rend si fier! Qu'avez-vous fait pour tant de biens? Vous vous êtes donné la peine de naître, et rien de plus.”

When he read those famous lines from Figaro’s soliloquy, they stuck in students’ minds. All the arrogance and ridicule of a privileged position were highlighted in the hilarious idea of “Vous vous êtes donné la peine de naître, et rien de plus”.

Reading the play again, with a different focus now, the character of Figaro is still fascinating, but his companion, the intelligent young woman Suzanne, is even more striking. She is threatened by the institutionalised rape culture of the privileged class, fearing the Comte de Almaviva’s “droit de seigneur”, which “allows” him to claim the first night with the bride, should she marry Figaro. Not willing to submit to that cruel tradition, the plot develops around the various steps to be taken in order to outwit the power of the Comte. Add some confusion over identities, parental relationships, adultery and tricks, and you have the perfect 18th century play in a nutshell.

Just like Leontes in The Winter's Tale, Almaviva is rehabilitated in the end, reconciled with his wife, not opposing Figaro and Suzanne anymore:

“J’ai voulu ruser avec eux; ils m’ont traité comme un enfant!”

Oh, the luxury of a dictator who is able to detect his own childlike foolishness! The cheerful ending does not weaken the serious arguments raised in the play, however, as they are repeated in a final song, sung by different characters taking turns. The ideas of injustice and power abuse are accentuated and discussed, reflecting on the topics in the preceding action. Beaumarchais’ Suzanne sings out loudly what Shakespeare’s women hinted at implicitly:

“Qu’un mari sa foi trahisse;
Il s’en vante et chacun rit:
Que sa femme ait un caprice,
S’il l’accuse on la punit.
De cette absurde injustice
Faut-il dire le pourquoi?
Les plus forts ont fait la loi.”

The inequality between men and women plainly called “cette absurde injustice”, Figaro’s monologue denouncing the privileges of the nobility, a side discourse on the role of the child born out of wedlock: all these themes show the groundbreaking modernity of Beaumarchais’ political vision put on stage for wide reception. In pre-social media times, the theatre held an important role in spreading ideas. With Figaro praising wit (“l’esprit”) as the way to change an unjust, unequal society, he sets the task for centuries to come:

“Par le sort de la naissance,
L’un est roi, l’autre est berger:
Le hasard fit leur distance;
L’esprit seul peut tout changer.
De vingt rois que l’en encense,
Le trépas brise l’autel,
Et Voltaire est immortel.”

As Figaro closes with Voltaire, I will join him with the philosopher’s famous quote against intolerance:

“Écrasez l’infâme!”

Celebrating l’esprit of 18th century Enlightenment thinkers, light spreads! Fiat lux!
Profile Image for Kalliope.
738 reviews22 followers
July 31, 2022


There are three works to consider under this title. There is Beaumarchais play (1778), which I read several times in the past since it was a set text when I was a student. Then there is the Mozart opera which I have watched recently in the Teatro Real. And there is also the Libretto to the opera, by Lorenzo da Ponte, which deserves to be considered on its own.

Pierre-Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais, (1732-1799)

The life of Beaumarchais deserves several volumes, with his marriages, his involvement in the American revolution and his diplomatic role in Spain. It was the latter that led him to write his Figaro trilogy, from 1775 with the Le Barbier de Séville ou La Précaution Inutile (based on Tirso de Molina’s El burlador de Sevilla, from 1620), followed by Mariage three years later, until the weakest of La mère coupable in 1792.

The Mariage was not performed in public, though, until April 1884, and after sixty performances it was forbidden. These were dangerous times in Paris, and the five-act play was loaded with political references, with the famous Figaro ‘tirade’ in Act 5, and the many references (critiques) to the judicial system in place. Of the three plays, this is probably the most provocative, and the most powerful in its dramatic qualities. The story takes place just a few years after the Barbier, at the end of which the Count marries Rosine. Most productions make the mistake of, now that Rosine has become the Countess and the Count goes back to his philandering, of showing her ‘of a certain age’. A striking aspect of Mariage is that of the couple Figaro-Suzanne, it is the latter who pulls the action, in spite of the action and of the crucial role that Figaro played in The Barbier.

Lorenzo da Ponte (1749-1838)

Da Ponte deserves a rich biography, and the one I read in the past The Librettist of Venice: The Remarkable Life of Lorenzo Da Ponte--Mozart's Poet, Casanova's Friend, and Italian Opera's Impre, is one I am planning to reread.

In the opera world of the 18th century, the librettist Pietro Metastasio (1698-1782) had been the dominant figure, and indeed one of the shapers of the genre ‘opera seria’, dominance that he exerted from his seat in Vienna. His demise offered space to Salieri, who in his turn backed Da Ponte once he had to leave Venice and settled in Vienna in 1781 – just after the death of Metastasio. At the time, the liberal Joseph II (1741/65-1790), eldest brother of Marie Antoinette, was the Habsburg Emperor. This is important because among other reforms he considerably neutralized censorship and allowed civil marriages without the consent of the parents. Da Ponte succeeded in gaining Joseph’s attention.

It was through his patron the banker Raimund Wetzlar, who also supported Mozart, that Da Ponte collaborated with the composer. They produced three operas, identified as the Trilogy of Desire (Mariage, Don Giovanni and Così fan tutte), that are all in the current repertoire in the major opera venues. But it was Da Ponte who succeeded in getting the emperor’s approval to produce Mariage, a play that was forbidden. The librettist adroitly pruned the play (the Figaro tirade is completely cut out), synthesized it into a four-act work, simplified its plot and number of characters, and cunningly, when he presented the opera to Joseph II, he included a few extracts of the wonderful music. The emperor could not say no.


Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)

When in 1785 Mozart met Da Ponte, he had already written, with success, a few operas. But he had also moved away from the genre to concentrate on composing for the keyboard. This he then moved somewhat to the side and engaged in opera again, and in string ensembles.

The premiere of this opera in Vienna was just over a year after Beaumarchais had has his in Paris. It may help to understand this very daring step when it is realized that after the French was forbidden, about twelve translations into German were published around the still fragmented German lands. But Mozart wanted to produce something that belonged to the opera italiana subgenre, and indeed the opera has an Italian title Le nozze di Figaro.

The first run of Le Nozze in Vienna was a great success – about five to seven numbers were “encored”. When it then moved to Prague, the success was even greater, and this explains that the premiere of Don Giovanni took place there.

Mozart’s musical and dramatic skills he deployed in the way he matched the musical structure to the play. There are symmetries and contrasts, in formats and tonalities, when for example he uses the same tonality for the Duchess and for Susanna when she disguises as the former, and then reserves one particular tonality to be used only in the sections in which there is some simulation.

That this play received the blessing of the emperor also accounts for the survival of the Fandango at the end of Act 3. Ballet was forbidden in opera but what the troupe did when the first performed in front of Joseph II was to mime, in a ridiculous fashion, the section that corresponded to the dance, to the consternation of the emperor. After his inquiry, the fully fledged Fandango was restored to the work.

Although I enjoyed the production at the Teatro Real, it is a wonderful opera and it was well sung, it was nonetheless a disappointment. The Real chose to present an old production, the one from the Salzburg Festival of 2006, which can be found in YouTube, with Anna Netrebko, Ildebrando d’Arcangelo and Dorothea Roschmann among others.
Profile Image for Jesús De la Jara.
817 reviews102 followers
February 4, 2020
LAS BODAS DE FÍGARO O LA LOCA JORNADA, de Beaumarchais

"¡No soy más, esa Rosina que has perseguido tanto! Soy la pobre Condesa Almaviva, la triste mujer abandonada, que tú ya no amas."

Bueno por increíble que parezca el conde de Almaviva que lo vimos en la anterior obra de esta trilogía "El barbero de Sevilla" luego de desposar a Rosina (convertida en condesa de Almaviva) ahora la repudia y ha puesto sus ojos en la bella Susana quien comparte un romance con nuestro personaje principal Fígaro. Ahora que el conde de Almaviva ha formado su residencia Fígaro funge de conserje y ayuda de cámara del castillo del Conde quien así pagó sus servicios. Aunque debo decirlo desde la anterior obra intuía que algo iría mal pues el Conde no parecía realmente buena persona.
En sí nuevamente la personalidad jovial y desenvuelta de Fígaro tratará de resolver los problemas. En principio el de frenar el asedio que el conde de Almaviva ha puesto sobre su enamorada Susana. La condesa misma estará de aliada de la pareja. Pero por otro lado está el tío de Susana, Antonio, quien no está de acuerdo con la pareja que ha elegido su sobrina e incluso Marcelina, quien enamorada de Fígaro desea que él cumpla una antigua "promesa".
El resultado es realmente como dice el título un día de locos y hay un giro por lo menos que no lo vi venir y que resulta bastante sorprendente e hilarante. Me terminó de gustar bastante.
Esta obra fue la inspiración para Mozart para componer su famosa ópera "Le nozze di Figaro".
Profile Image for Camille .
305 reviews187 followers
March 1, 2016
"Par le sort de la naissance,
L'un est roi, l'autre est berger ;
Le hasard fit leur distance ;
L'esprit seul peut tout changer.
De vingt rois que l'on encense,
Le trépas brise l'autel ;
Et Voltaire est immortel..."
- acte V, scène 7

J'ai toujours eu tendance à confondre Marivaux et Beaumarchais, mais si j'avais fait l'effort de lire "le Mariage de Figaro" plus tôt, j'aurais certainement pu mieux les distinguer.
Depuis que je me suis lancée dans la biographie de Beaumarchais et la lecture de son cycle de pièces, je vais de surprise en surprise : et ce sont de bonnes surprises ! J'aime la place qui est faite aux femmes dans son œuvre, et particulièrement ici les tirades progressistes à cet égard. J'aime que la place des puissants soit si discutée, non seulement par les mots, mais par les personnages même : quel plaisir de voir en Figaro non pas un traditionnel valet de comédie, mais un personnage sensible et intelligent, qui se joue de son maître pour lui apprendre. L'héritage voltairien de Beaumarchais est bien présent dans ses lignes.
L'intrigue est entraînante, les mises en scène très détaillées et osées (le dernier acte, dans l'obscurité, est une belle trouvaille).

Ça n'a pas vraiment de sens de chroniquer un dramaturge classique comme Beaumarchais aujourd'hui, mais pour moi, il est une véritable découverte.
Profile Image for Cemre.
724 reviews563 followers
September 30, 2019
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8OZCy...

Seville Berberi veya Nafile Tedbir'i bundan birkaç ay önce okumuş ve çok beğenmiştim. Figaro'nun Düğünü veya Çılgın Gün'ü de yayımlanır yayımlanmaz alıp okumak istedim. Tıpkı Seville Berberi gibi Figaro'nun Düğünü de son derece eğlenceli bir oyundu. Büyük bir keyifle okudum. Sadece biraz daha kısa olabilirmiş diye düşündüm.

Figaro'nun Düğünü, Seville Berberi'nden hatırladığımız karakterler üzerinden ilerliyor. Seville Berberi'nin çaresiz âşıkları Kont Almaviva ve Rosina'yı -namıdiğer Kontes Almaviva- bu sefer evli olarak okuyoruz. Oyunun diğer ana karakterleri ile Seville Berberi'nden hatırlayacağımız üzere Figaro ve hikâyeye Kontes Almaviva'nın hizmetçisi olarak dâhil olan Susanna. Hikâye, Figaro ve Susanna'nın evlenmeye çalışması üzerine kurulu. Evlenmeye çalışması diyorum; çünkü bir önceki oyunca Rosina için ölüp biten Kont, evlilik hayatının durağanlığından ötürü "yeni hazlar" peşinde ve bu yolda Susanna'yı baştan çıkarmayı kafasına koymuş olarak karşımıza çıkıyor. Bu durumun farkında olan Kontes de tabii ki boş durmuyor. Bu süreçte yine pek çok eğlenceli entrika, yanlış anlaşılma okuyoruz.
Profile Image for Nada Elshabrawy.
Author 4 books9,345 followers
March 5, 2024
المرة الثانية. قرأتها وسمعت انتاج الاذاعة المصرية للمسرحية. جميلة جدًا.
المرة الأولى قرأتها بعد مشاهدتها في لاسكالا :]
Profile Image for Marc Lamot.
3,462 reviews1,973 followers
March 18, 2021
This is a crazy and sparkling comedy, a form of absurd theatre (in a way a precursor of Beckett and Pirandello). Figaro is the master schemer here, but he's not master of the plot at all: all his plans and tricks fail. He has more the allure of Sancho Pancha, Don Quichote's loyal servant. I was struck by the remarkable role of the female characters; they take over the intrigue. The moral of the story has a distinct social flavour: money will replace birth as the foundation of power. No wonder this was written in the 18th century, the time of the upcoming bourgeoisie. (rating 3.5 stars)
Profile Image for monica.
20 reviews2 followers
October 6, 2024
3.5
mientras leía las bodas de fígaro de manera ininterrumpida he puesto de fondo la ópera de mozart. tarde de domingo bastante divertida
Profile Image for Laura.
7,132 reviews606 followers
March 19, 2016
Le Mariage de Figaro est une comédie qui pousse les thèmes du Barbier de Séville jusqu'au ridicule. L'intrigue se fonde sur une histoire d'amour contrariée autour de laquelle viennent se greffer tout plein d'autres intrigues. Figaro veut se marier avec Suzanne, mais il est jaloux du Comte qui réclame "le droit de cuissage".

Free download available at Project Gutenberg.

The original French text is available at Wikisource.

The concept of "humour" was discussed and analyzed in this book by the author Paul Staper in Molière et Shakespeare.
Profile Image for Yann.
1,412 reviews396 followers
July 21, 2011
A Séville, Figaro, le valet du comte Almaviva prépare ses noces avec la jeune Suzanne, mais il doit affronter un dangereux rival dans la personne de son maître, dont la flamme pour son épouse décroit. Les futurs mariés auront besoin de toute les ressources de leur prudence et de leur astuce pour triompher de la passion du comte. Mais leurs machinations vont être perturbés par l'intempestif et aimable Chérubin, qui brûle pour la comtesse délaissée. Je m'étais régalé plus d'une fois avec la version de Mozart et de Da Ponte, mais je n'avais toujours pas lu la pièce originale de Beaumarchais, qui ne m'a pas déçue.
Profile Image for Arms.
58 reviews20 followers
November 20, 2021
I had to read this book for my European Humanities class ,and I'm so glad my professor assigned it. This book was hilarious. I wondered why my professor assigned the class the second book in the series but the book was easily understandable. It was easy to find out what happened in the previous book. The story is like a Twelfth Nights mixed with Midsummer Nights Dream. It was very entertaining.

The only reason why I gave it 4 stars is because it felt a little rush at the end and I didn't really like the connection they made between Figaro and Marceline. It felt as if the author took an easy way out, but overall it was still enjoyable.
Profile Image for Anastasia.
1,272 reviews177 followers
April 20, 2018
*Read for class.

Wow, I've actually enjoyed it! The characters were amazing, and this is exactly the type of comedy I love. It actually made me chuckle a couple of times.
Plus, Suzanne was fucking great and had some of the best comebacks! And was a little bit feminist-ish. Sort of. In a way. Figaro was also cunning and funny, so I appreciated him a lot.

Overall, very glad I haven't decided to skip this one.
Profile Image for moi, k.y.a..
2,076 reviews380 followers
April 6, 2023
Figaro’nun maceraları bu sefer kendi düğünü ile devam ediyor! ilk kitap olan Sevilla Berberi veya Nafile Tedbir’de karşımıza çıkan karakter kadrosu bu kitapta da karşımıza çıkıyor, tabii birçok yeni karakterle birlikte.

kitabın tek olumsuz yanı bazen çok çok uzayan replikler... yoksa yine ve yine çok güzel bir oyundu. ama kendi içinde karşılaştırma yaparsam ben ilk kitabı daha çok sevdim. izlemesi de okuması da müthiş keyifliydi.
Profile Image for Dorian Jandreau.
Author 26 books120 followers
March 12, 2017
I was looking for this book in my country very long. I finally found it and ordered immediately, because first time I got known to this story was Russian musical with my favorite singer Philip Kirkorov. He played Count Almaviva. Since that New Year night when I saw that musical, I got obssesed with this story. And I started reading this book in Lithuanian after so many years after that musical's premiere on TV. And I love this book. Drama, intrigues, jokes, passion- everything I love. I so love passionate dramas full of jealousy, love, missing parents and wegginds. It is a story of times when I wish I could live. But, unfortunately, I cannot return back in time. That's how I imagine 18th century, just like in this book.

Count Almaviva of course is my favorite. Just like me: jealous, furious and unfaithful. He is my favorite character in the play. And, of course, because of that Russian musical. My favorite singer played his role perfectly! In fact all these Russian singers and actors made the best show ever created by this book. They played all the characters just like the author showed them in this book.

I feel so happy I read this play finally after so many years. It was so entertaining and it gave me so much feelings and joy.
Profile Image for Pauline Van etc..
92 reviews3 followers
July 16, 2019
I read Beaumarchais’ play since I recently discovered that it was a big hit in 1784 prior to the French Revolution. Louis the XVI hated it and Danton and Napoléon praised it!

The story is about Figaro, a valet who will soon get married to a maid. The Count for which they both work wants to exercice his « Droit du seigneur », a supposed medieval right allowing lords to have sexual relations with subordinate women on their wedding nights. While historians are not sure this « Droit du seigneur » really existed at that time, the entitlement of the lords was real. The play acted as a catalyst for change and freedom from the unfair power of the feudal lords and the monarchy.

What is particularly interesting in « Le Mariage de Figaro » is the rendition of the context of pre-revolutionary France. You can really feel the Enlightenment ideas floating around : « Without the freedom to criticise, there is no true praise » and the insolent and at once brillant wordsmith of Beaumarchais reflecting the desire for political change. It has some good quotes as well about the unfairness against women : « treated as children for our assets, punished as adults for our faults ». A nice and easy play to delve into revolutionary France.
Profile Image for Anna Groover.
222 reviews37 followers
January 23, 2018
Read this for my French lit class about "dangerous women." Not sure I picked up on all the nuances of the play, but I enjoyed it nevertheless. The last act is particularly fun because all of the women basically get together and say "all right, we're tired of this crap" and manipulate the men into doing what they want them to do.
Profile Image for Sarah | The Marsies.
678 reviews252 followers
May 25, 2022
Relecture 05.2022
Rien à dire c’est toujours une de mes pièces préf

———
Toujours 5 étoiles, une de mes comédies préférées
Profile Image for sharon.
22 reviews
April 8, 2023
Je m’attendais à mieux 😒
Profile Image for Mesut Yılmaz.
93 reviews15 followers
May 17, 2022
Muhteşem bir oyun.

Kitap kulübü sayesinde keşfettiğim, güzelce zaman geçirmeme sebep olan bir oyun oldu.

Bir soylunun, kontun, ilk gece hakkını kullanmak üzere niyetini sergilemesi üzerine, Figaro ve sevdiceği Suzanne iç içe geçen oyunlar kurarak kontu durduruyorlar. Kitap ilk seviyede, karakterlerin hak savunusunu dolaylı, zekice ve kıvrak bir zekayla yapması üzerinden bir güldürü sunuyor.

Kitabın diğer seviyelerde gösterdikleri ise, yazarın kimliğinin ve hayatını çokça yansıtan noktalardan oluşan bir zenginlik ortaya koyuyor. Yazarın kendisindeki pek çok özelliği Figaro'da tecessüm ettirdiğini de görüyoruz. Bu haliyle Beaumarchais (ve Figaro) aslında monarşiyi ve soylular erkini kurdukları oyunlarla kırabilecek bir zekaya ve niyete sahip olduklarını da ortaya koyuyor.

Sahne sanatı için ortaya konan bir eserin bu kadar devrimci niyetler sergilemesi mümkün mü noktasında, yazarın karakteri, Fransa ve Amerika devrimlerindeki rolü bu yorumu yapmamı mümkün kılıyor. Fransız ihtilaline ramak kala yazılan bu eser aslında sivri ve şakacı bir dilli soyluluk yaklaşımının geçersizleşmeye başlayan, tahakküm ilişkilerinin zayıfladığını da göstermekte. Mutlakiyetin çoğu zaman mutlak olamadığını, komşularla iyi ilişkiler geliştirme yaklaşımıyla aslında tahakkümden ziyada bürokratik bir olanı koruma ortama dönüştüğünü de ara diyaloglarda ortaya koyuyor.

Kitapta Suzanne, Kontes ve Figaro'nun yaklaşımları, çevik düşünceleri, muzip yapıları çok düşündürücü ve keyif verici. Karakter detaylarına yazarın gösterdiği özen kitabın keyif veren bir eser olmasında çok önemli bir katkı sağlamış.

Çeviri kaynaklı bazı yerlerde dil daha ılımlı hale gelmiş, ancak burada çevirmenin akıcılık anlamında bir müdahalede bulunduğu görülebiliyor. Eserin güldürü ağırlıklı birincil anlamı ağır bastığı, ve ikinci anlamlara dair bakış açısının aslında biraz da niyet okumaya dönebilecek olması sebebiyle, çevirmenin çeviriyi bu şekilde konumlandırmasında doğru bir karar verdiği söylenebilir.
Profile Image for Czarny Pies.
2,829 reviews1 follower
December 24, 2021
Il faut absolument lire cet ouvrage afin de comprendre les attitudes sociales et les conflits intellectuels qui ont existe en France pendant la periode juste avant la Revolution francaise. Les gens de classes moyennes et les aristocrates adoraient leur pays et leur monarchie, mais ils avaient le sentiment il y avait des choses au pays que l'on devait change. La tragedie, c'est qu'une fois sortie de sa bouteille, le genie s'averait incontrolable.

Il va sans le dire qu'il faut au moins une fois dans sa vie assister a une representation de l'opera.
88 reviews
January 17, 2025
Comedie assez classique avec quiproquo, cachettes dans les armoires, etc.
L'intrigue est basée sur le "droit de cuissage", heureusement que le monde change... !
Très XVIIIe avec le thème du libertinage très en vogue
Profile Image for Natia Morbedadze.
827 reviews83 followers
April 2, 2023
ფიგაროს ქორწინებასთან დაკავშირებული მხიარული თავგადასავლები ხომ სახალისოა, მაგრამ აქ ბომარშეს კიდევ სხვა, საუკუნის გათვალისწინებით განსაკუთრებით მნიშვნელოვანი, ჩანართი აქვს ფიგაროს მონოლოგის სახით, რომელიც მის წარსულს ეხებდა და, რაც მთავარია, გადამწყვეტია ქალების როლი შეშლილი დღის მშვიდობიანად დასრულებაში. ალბათ ამიტომაა, რომ ასეულობით წლის მერეც კი არ მოძველებულა.
Profile Image for Darkold.
12 reviews
September 7, 2025
4,5 🌟

Un véritable banger, surtout pour son époque !
Profile Image for Maan Kawas.
811 reviews101 followers
August 4, 2014
A very beautiful play by the French playwright Beaumarchais, considered as a sequel to his first play ‘The Barber of Seville’, which has an underlying message! Though the play is filled with funny situations, it indirectly conveys a criticism to the social system, namely, the aristocracy, and its authority (political and military power). We can see Figaro and the Count compete for Suzanne, Figaro wants to marry her, while the Count wants to trifle with her before her wedding. However, the play is light and filled with wittiness, funny plots, misunderstanding and its consequences, different types of love, unexpected coincidences (e.g. Figaro’s real parents), jealousy, and forgiveness. Some of the points the play may address may include the privilege of the aristocratic authority, which Beaumarchais criticizes, the various motives for love, marriage, marital commitment, faithfulness, the power of thinking in finding quick and effective solutions, the importance of virtue and marital fidelity. It is not surprising that, with its underlying message regarding the aristocracy, King Louis XVI was shocked by it and forbade its publication before its revision by Beaumarchais. I enjoyed the play, and I wanted to read it because it was the source for Mozart’s opera “Le Nozze di Figaro”.
Profile Image for Skrivena stranica.
439 reviews86 followers
May 23, 2017
Ne znam kad sam se zadnji put ovako ismijala na neku komediju.
Komedija iz 18. stoljeća koja u sebi nosi toliko poleta, vrckavosti, ali i toliko poruke.
Preko Figarova lika, lika dosjetljivog čovjeka, otkrivamo toliko o ljudskom biću. Cijeli niz poruka nam se donosi kroz smiješne situacije, odnosi spolova su veselo prikazani i nose tračak kritike (ali zavijen upravo onako kako treba, ne napadno, već na simpatičan način), čak se može vidjeti i kritika društva u kojem netko uspije samo zato što je imao sreće da se rodi u obitelji visokog staleža i koliko se mali čovjek treba mučiti da bi se probio do nekog blagostanja. Donosi i pitanje kako biti pošten u nepoštenoj okolini, a i kako se svakoga bez obzira na stalež može naučiti nekoj lekciji jer svi imaju mane. Jednostavno, ljudi su. Progovara se i o stanju pisaca i komediografa toga doba, pa figaro dosjetljivo zaključuje da "štampane gluposti imaju važnost samo ondje gdje im se sprječava promet". Cijeli niz dosjeljivih malih prevara koje su dobroćudne čini ovu komediju izrazito simpatičnom, a svi likovi se povode za svojim željama što im i omugućuje da upadaju u zamke koje postavljaju jedni drugima. Ipak, sve se na kraju završava sretno, a mi se možemo samo smijati dok se kluplo kotrlja i raspliće.
February 2, 2019
Очень смешная история!!!

Оказывается вот у кого учились сценаристы "мыльных опер", у Pierre-Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais. У этого автора очень смешной и наблюдательный юмор, который вызывает не просто улыбку, а именно смех! Мне понравились взгляды Pierre-Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais на жизнь, хотя его жизнь примером для подражания не является. И удивительно, что человек с таким талантом, писателем (ну, или драматургом), в принципе, не являлся, а был, скорее, бизнесменом и литературе много времени не уделял! А жаль, было бы интересно почитать его недраматические произведения.
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