Peaches and Plums in the Spring Wind
桃李春风 | |
---|---|
Written by | Lao She |
Date premiered | 1943 |
Place premiered | Beijing |
Original language | Chinese |
Peaches and Plums in the Spring Wind (Chinese《桃李春风》) is a 1943 play by Lao She, co-written with Zhao Qingge (赵清阁). It was one of the most successful works of Lao She's 1940s attempts at play-writing; however, despite a cash prize from the government for the play, Lao She then returned to novel writing soon after.[1] The play was written to commemorate the Teacher's Day of 1943, as well as to promote national unity and patriotism.[2]
References
- ^ Ranbir Vohra Lao She and the Chinese Revolution 1974 0674510755- Page 138 "The writers were awarded a cash prize by the government for this play, which was written in 1943 and was Lao She's last venture into playwriting during this period."
- ^ "老舍--文化--人民网". culture.people.com.cn. Retrieved 2017-01-11.
- v
- t
- e
Lao She
- Lao Zhang's Philosophy (1926)
- Zhao Ziyue (1927)
- Mr Ma and Son (1929)
- Cat Country (1933)
- Divorce (1933)
- Rickshaw Boy (1936)
- This Life of Mine (1937)
- Four Generations Under One Roof (1943)
- Peaches and Plums in the Spring Wind (1943)
- Longxugou (1951)
- Teahouse (1957)
- This Life of Mine (1950)
- Rickshaw Boy (1982)
- Mr. No Problem (2016)
- Hu Jieqing
This article on a play from the 1940s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e