
Overview
Synopsis
In this comic drama, a lively young student arrives at the study of a learned professor. She is trying to earn an educational certificate called the “total doctorate,” and she needs to master both mathematics and philology (the study of the history of languages) in order to do so. The Professor’s maid urges him to remain calm as the lesson progresses from addition and subtraction, to multiplication, and later to Spanish pronunciation. All the while, the timid and polite Professor is growing more forceful, domineering and lascivious, as the power of his lectures renders his pupil helpless. The Professor’s lesson culminates in the Pupil’s brutal murder - the fortieth student that the Professor has killed in his study. Luckily for him, his loyal maid knows how to get the forty bodies out without arousing suspicion: he simply needs to wear an armband and practice “good politics.”
The Lesson is a scathing commentary on totalitarianism, indoctrination, and the power of propaganda to suffocate and enslave. Now considered to be one of the foundational texts of the Theatre of the Absurd, this well-loved play has been translated into dozens of languages, and its message is no less relevant today than when it was first performed in the aftermath of the second world war.
Show Information
- Book
- Eugène Ionesco
- Category
- Play
- Age Guidance
- Thirteen Plus (PG-13)
- Number of Acts
- 1
- First Produced
- 1951
- Genres
- Dark Comedy, Drama
- Settings
- Contemporary
- Time & Place
- An apartment in France
- Cast Size
- small
- Orchestra Size
- None
- Dancing
- None
- Licensor
- Concord Theatricals
- Ideal For
- College/University, Professional Theatre, Small Cast, Regional Theatre, Mostly Female Cast, Includes Mature Adult, Young Adult Characters
Context
Plot
Characters
Name | Part Size | Gender | Vocal Part |
---|---|---|---|
Lead |
Male |
Non-singer |
|
Lead |
Female |
Non-singer |
|
Supporting |
Female |
Non-singer |
Songs
A song with an asterisk (*) before the title indicates a dance number; a character listed in a song with an asterisk (*) by the character's name indicates that the character exclusively serves as a dancer in this song, which is sung by other characters.
Monologues
Scenes
Key Terms
A play with only one act. One-act plays may have several scenes and vary in length, from short single scenes to full-length scripts.
Biased or misleading information intended to promote a particular viewpoint or political cause.
Drama which abandons conventional dramatic form to portray the futility of human struggle in a senseless world.
A form of government that attempts to assert total control over the lives of its citizens.
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