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Cartas de amor a Stalin (c.1998), Juan Mayorga Ruano

Titles
English title: Love Letters to Stalin
Date written: c. 1998
First publication date: 1999
First production date: September 1999
Keywords: art, art > theatre, history, identity, ideology, ideology > politics, power > inter-personal/game play, power, power > use and abuse
Genre and type: magic realism, tragedy
Pitch

On 18 April 1930, the Russian writer Mikhail Bulgakov received a personal phone call from Stalin. The two men talked about the censorship of Bulgakov’s work, but ultimately nothing was resolved. Cartas de amor a Stalin (Love Letters to Stalin) imagines the devastating effects of that phone call on the writer, as it explores the complex relationship between power and art.

Synopsis

In a small apartment in Moscow, the playwright Bulgakov spends his time writing letters to Stalin. Bulgakov’s work has been censored, and he is desperate to convince Stalin either to al... (Read more...)

Sources

Mikhail Bulgakov (1891-1940)

Mikhail Bulgakov was a novelist and playwright whose work was censored repeatedly under Stalin’s regime. Theatres refused to stage his plays and he was for... (Read more...)

Critical response

Cartas de amor a Stalin (Love Letters to Stalin) is an award-winning play. It opened the prestigious Centro Dramático Nacional’s 1999 season in Madrid, and was very well received. The p... (Read more...)

Editions
  • Mayorga, Juan. 1999. Cartas de amor a Stalin, Primer acto, 280, 65-88

  • Mayorga, Juan. 2000. Cartas de amor a Stalin, Signa: Revista de la Asociación Española de Semiótica, 9, 211-55

  • May... (Read more...)

Useful readings and websites
  • Bulgakov, Mikhail. 2004. The Master and Margarita, trans. Michael Glenny. London, Random House Vintage

  • Curtis. J. A. E. 1991. Manuscripts Don’t Burn: Mikhail Bulgakov. A Life in Letters and Diaries. Woodstock, New York, The Overlook Press

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Entry written by Gwynneth Dowling. Last updated on 1 April 2011.

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