TEMPORARY ORDER DELAYS

We’re currently experiencing temporary disruption to the availability of some titles as we move all of our books to a new warehouse, which means it may take longer than normal for your order to reach you. Click here for more information.

Orchids in the Moonlight
Ebook, 190 pages ISBN: 9781780019536Publication Date:
19 Oct 2017
£8.99 £7.19You save £1.80 (20%)
First Staged:
This version: Teatro Nacional, Havana, Cuba & Richard Demarco Gallery Theatre, Edinburgh, 1992

Orchids in the Moonlight

By Carlos Fuentes Translated by Sebastian Doggart

Ebook £8.99£7.19

Set in Venice the day Orson Welles died, this extraordinary play by a leading Mexican writer stretches the imagination with artistic reveries and supernatural fantasies.

Carlos Fuentes' play Orchids in the Moonlight was written in 1982. This English translation by Sebastian Doggart was first staged by the Southern Development Trust in August 1992 in the Teatro Nacional, Havana, Cuba, and then had its British premiere at the Richard Demarco Gallery Theatre, Edinburgh in August 1992.

Orchids in the Moonlight is also available in the collection Latin American Plays.

Press Quotes

'Rich in language and movement, fantasy and reality, sensuality and cruelty; as iconoclastic as the magic realist boom of the 1960s'

Scotland on Sunday
Ebook,190 pages ISBN: 9781780019536Publication Date:
19 Oct 2017
£8.99 £7.19You save £1.80 (20%)

Also by Sebastian Doggart:

Latin American Plays
Mistress of Desires
Saying Yes
Rappaccini's Daughter
Night of the Assassins

Go to author page...

Similar Titles
An essential introduction to the fascinating but largely unexplored theatre of Latin America, featuring new translati...
A unique collection of five surprising and exciting plays from Mexico, in English translations, selected by the Royal...
A powerful exploration of machismo and sexual desire, by Peru's most acclaimed writer.
A short play by a leading Argentine playwright, telling the shocking story of an everyday trip to the hairdressers.
The only play by leading Mexican poet Octavio Paz, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature.
Three siblings plot to kill their parents in this controversial masterpiece from a major Cuban poet and playwright.