Rostand, Edmond - Overviews And General Studies

OVERVIEWS AND GENERAL STUDIES

Martin Lamm (essay date 1952)

SOURCE: "The First Symbolists," in Modern Drama, translated by Karin Elliott, Basil Blackwell, 1952, pp. 152-78.

[In the following essay, Lamm appraises Rostand's major plays.]

While Maeterlinck and Claudel had difficulty in gaining stage success with their plays another writer of the same school, but of incomparably lower calibre, Edmond Rostand, succeeded in winning the heart of the great public. Cyrano de Bergerac was the theatrical triumph of the century, quantitatively perhaps the greatest that the history of the theatre has ever known. For some years the young author was universally acclaimed as the king of modern drama. This enthusiasm, however, began to wane even during his lifetime, and in histories of literature Rostand is now dismissed with a lack of appreciation which is as unjustified as the earlier excessive praise.

Rostand was an exact...

[The entire page is 23215 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the: