The Devils
by John Robert Whiting, John Whiting, Aldous Huxley

The Devils Book Cover
The Devils Cover

What readers are saying

Readers have mixed feelings about the play. While some appreciate its thought-provoking nature and the potential for powerful staging, others find it lacking in excitement and relevance. The adaptation of Huxley's work seems to divide opinions, with some calling it uninteresting and outdated. Overall, the play evokes strong themes but may not fully engage its audience.

Thought-provoking themesPotential for powerful stagingSharp and concise writingLacks passion and tensionConsidered outdated and uninteresting

Synopsis

The nuns of St Ursula's Convent, led by the Prioress, Sister Jeanne, accused Urbain Grandier, Vicar of Loudon, of sorcery.

He was tried, tortured and burned.

On this baldly terrible foundation, Whiting has built a powerful, complex play, interweaving the personal dilemmas of Jeanne and Grandier with the political necessities of the time.

Although it is set between 1623-34, essentially it is no more a period play than Miller's The Crucible.6 women, 13 men

Publication

Year1961
BindingPaperback
Pages88
PlaceLondon
LanguageEnglish
ISBN-139780573011016
ISBN-10057301101X

The Devils is a British play written by John Robert Whiting and published by University of California in London (1961).

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3.3

55 ratings·23 reviews

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