Misplaced Pages

Carlos Arniches

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Carlos Arniches y Barrera) Spanish playwright
Carlos Arniches
Carlos Arniches
Born(1866-10-11)11 October 1866
Alicante, Spain
Died16 April 1943(1943-04-16) (aged 76)
Madrid, Spain
NationalitySpanish
Occupationplaywright
In this Spanish name, the first or paternal surname is Arniches and the second or maternal family name is Barreda.
El tío de Alcalá (zarzuela, 1906).
El tío de Alcalá (zarzuela, 1906).

Carlos Arniches Barreda (11 October 1866 – 16 April 1943) was a Spanish playwright, born in Alicante. His prolific work, drawing on the traditions of the género chico, the zarzuela and the grotesque, came to dominate the Spanish comic theatre in the early twentieth century.

After starting his career as a novelist and journalist, Arniches turned to theatre in 1888 with the publication of his first play, Casa editorial. Much of his work is set in lower-class Madrid and uses colloquial language, song, dance and music.

Arniches was complimented in a 1935 interview by Federico García Lorca, often a scathing critic of contemporary Spanish theatre, as 'more of a poet than almost any of those who are writing theatre in verse at the moment'.

Following the end of the Spanish Civil War, the social dramas of Carlos Arniches were among the relatively non-controversial plays allowed by the new government.

Notes

  1. "Arniches (y Barrera), Carlos" in The New Encyclopædia Britannica. Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica Inc., 15th edn., 1992, Vol. 1, p. 577.
  2. Dowling 2011, para. 1 of 3
  3. Dowling 2011, para. 3 of 3
  4. "Federico García Lorca y el teatro de hoy", interview with Nicolás González Deleito, in García Lorca 1997, p. 564
  5. Vilches de Frutos 1999, p. 513

References

Further reading

  • Falska, Maria. El universo dramático de Carlos Arniches: Aproximación a una lectura estructural del texto, UMCS, 2006, ISBN 8322724934.


Stub icon

This article about a Spanish dramatist or playwright is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: