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The Good Doctor: A New Comedy with Music

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good*

*Best Available: (missing dust jacket)

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Book Overview

Comedy / Casting: 2m, 3f / Scenery: Var. settings This Broadway hit is a composite of Neil Simon and Anton Chekhov. In one sketch a harridan storms a bank and upbraids the manager for his gout and... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Just hilarious.

Last year my high school put on this show and I had the duty of playing both the general and the banker at the end. This was by far the funnest show I was a part of. I think this is probably among the funniest neil simon show up there with the odd couple and rumors which I also was able to perform in as Lenny Ganz. If you are looking for something fun to perform look no farther because you found it right here.

"A world gone mad."

Neil Simon molds the stories of Anton Chekhov into exquisitely timed, often hilarious theatre, dramatizing seven stories which incorporate a wide variety of characters--a governess, a lady of the night, a blustering general, a wild woman with a nervous disorder, a roué flirting with a new bride, a man who earns money by "drowning," and an actress. The stories, adapted for the stage, are filled with dry humor, surprise endings, and clever common people in confrontations with "superiors," ending in absurdities. "The Writer," obviously Chekhov, who himself was a "good doctor," acts as narrator and serves to connect the various scenes. The short stories/plays, all filled with irony, include "The Sneezer," who cannot apologize enough to a general for splattering a sneeze on his head. In "The Governess," an employer tricks a subservient governess out of her pay. "The Seduction" shows a man-about-town using a husband as the conduit for his attempted seduction of the man's new bride. "The Drowned Man" claims to be in the "maritime entertainment business" and will drown himself for a small fee. "The Defenseless Creature," a particularly hilarious scene, features a clever wife suffering from a "nervous disorder," who tries to extort money from a banker. In "The Arrangement" a father takes his shy, 19-year-old son to a house of ill repute. The most challenging scene for an actor is "The Audition." An actress who has walked for four days from another city in order to try out for a play, arrives with a temperature of 103, then insists on doing the audition. Playing the parts of all three sisters from Chekhov's The Three Sisters, the actress begins as a sensitive sister, then bursts into tears on cue as the second sister, and ultimately becomes rational, composed, and straightforward as the third, the changes of mood requiring split second timing. Throughout the play, a running joke revolves around Chekhov's reputation as a less "beloved" writer than Tolstoy and Turgenev. Often dealing with suffering characters, the scenes show that there is a kind of absurd humor underlying even the most tragic of circumstances. Though "Some of us are indeed trapped," and many are suffering, the world itself, according to Chekhov, has "gone mad." If one can see the humor in this mad world, life becomes bearable. Mary Whipple

Wonderful!

A few friends and myself did "The Defenseless Creature" for a drama/large group speech contest. I was Pochatikin, so had very little to do other than keep myself from breaking out laughing during the performance! Needless to say, we did VERY WELL at contest recieving a perfect score!

A WONDERFUL PLAY ABOUT LIFE

An absolutely enchanting play from Neil Simon based on works of Chekov. The stories here are humorous, touching, sad, but most of all, real. The Writer is a character to remember as are others presented by him. If not this incarnation, find some way to attain a copy of The Good Doctor. It is a play to be cherished.

A fine thing but Turgenevs "fathers and Sons " was better.

As performers in a theatre production group we have thoroughly enjoy the opportunity to read such a masterful and insightful work as Simon"s " The Good Doctor". It is a rare blend of the writers riotous humour and a dry incisive socially poignant commentary worthy only of Chekov.
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