Tuesday, April 23, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

Samuel Taylor Coleridge

« All quotes from this author
 

The myriad-minded man, our, and all men's, Shakespeare, has in this piece presented us with a legitimate farce in exactest consonance with the philosophical principles and character of farce, as distinguished from comedy and from entertainments. A proper farce is mainly distinguished from comedy by the licence allowed, and even required, in the fable, in order to produce strange and laughable situations. The story need not be probable, it is enough that it is possible.
--
On The Comedy of Errors, in Ch. XV

 
Samuel Taylor Coleridge

» Samuel Taylor Coleridge - all quotes »



Tags: Samuel Taylor Coleridge Quotes, Authors starting by C


Similar quotes

 

Farce may often border on tragedy; indeed, farce is nearer tragedy in its essence than comedy is.

 
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
 

"Foolish: It's all foolish. Life is a farce— a stupid, sickening farce played out by fools."

 
David Gemmell
 

The major difference between Astaire and Kelly is a difference, not of talent or technique, but of levels of sophistication. On the face of it, Kelly looks the more sophisticated. Where Kelly has ideas, Astaire has dance steps. Where Kelly has smartly tailored, dramatically apt Comden and Green scripts, Astaire in the Thirties made do with formulas derived from nineteenth-century French Farce. But the Kelly film is no longer a dance film. It's a story film with dances, as distinguished from a dance film with a story. When Fred and Ginger go into their dance, you see it as a distinct formal entity, even if it's been elaborately built up to in the script. In a Kelly film, the plot action and the musical set pieces preserve a smooth community of high spirits, so that the pressure in a dance number will often seem too low, the dance itself plebeian or folksy in order to "match up" with the rest of the picture.

 
Fred Astaire
 

La vie est la farce ? mener par tous.

 
Arthur Rimbaud
 

Over the past thirty years, Ionesco has been called a “tragic clown,” the “Shakespeare of the Absurd,” the “Enfant Terrible of the Avant-Garde,” and the “Inventor of the Metaphysical Farce” — epithets that point to his evolution from a young playwright at a tiny Left Bank theater to an esteemed member of the Académie Française.

 
Eugene Ionesco
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact