

The Learned Ladies
Jean-baptiste Moliere
Molière's satire of intellectual snobbery focuses on the women folk of Chrysale's household, who look on all but intellectual pursuits as worthless and spurn love in favour of learning.
The heroine, Chrysale's daughter Henriette, wants to marry Clitandre, but her mother wishes her to marry the poet Trissotin, who is worming his way into the household in order to marry Henriette for her family's fortune.
When his avaricious plot is discovered, he is sent away in disgrace, leaving Henriette to marry Clitandre as she wishes.
The Learned Ladies is a play written by Molière, translated from the French into English by A R Waller, adapted by Steven Pimlott and Colin Chambers and published by Broadway Play Publishing (1997).
No community reviews yet
Plays with similar themes, style, and content.