Ubu Roi
- Alternative title
- King Ubu
- Synopsis
- French television version of the play by Alfred Jarry. Pere Ubu is an oafish, barely ranking civil servant persuaded by his shrewish wife to kill the King of Poland and usurp the throne. Ubu is unfit to rule anything, so his eventual ascension is a farce. He becomes a violent and incompetent dictator who kills his subjects, destroys the economy, and makes war arbitrarily. The play offers parodic adaptations of situations and plot-lines from Shakespearean drama, including Macbeth, Hamlet and Richard III. Like Macbeth, Ubu murders the king who has helped him on the urging of his wife, usurps the throne and is in turn defeated and killed by the dead man’s sons; Jarry adapts the ghost of the dead king and Fortinbras’ revolt from Hamlet; Buckingham’s refusal of reward for assisting a usurpation from Richard III; and The Winter’s Tale’s bear.
- Language
- French (Standard)
- Country
- France
- Medium
- Video
- Transmission details
- 21 Sep 1965
- Duration
- 97 mins
- Availability
- No archive copy known (7/2008).
Credits
- Director
- Jean-Christophe Averty
- Cinematographer
- Lucien Billard
- Writer
- Alfred Jarry
- Music
- Claude Terrasse; Jean-Claude Pelletier
- Production Design
- Jean-Jacques Faury
- Cast
David Gafsou Ladislas Henri Virojeux King Wenceslas Hubert Deschamps Captain Bordure Jean Bouise Father Ubu Jocelyn Canoen Jean Sobieski Micha Bayard Queen Rosamund Rosy Varte Mother Ubu
Additional Details
- Production type
- Television and Radio Drama
- Plays
- Macbeth
- Subjects
- Drama
- Keywords
- Jarry, Alfred
Notes
- History
- Ubu Roi premiered in 1896, and is widely acknowledged as a theatrical precursor to the Absurdist, Dada and Surrealist art movements. French production company unknown. Shown on the Austrian television channel ORTF 30 December 1968. French transmission date unknown.
- Textual information
- Ubu Roi is available at Project Gutenberg (www.gutenberg.org) in the original French.
How to cite this record
Shakespeare, "Ubu Roi". https://learningonscreen.ac.uk/shakespeare/search/index.php/title/av71072 (Accessed 26 Nov 2024)