Maryša

Maryša (English: Marysha) is a Czech stage drama from 1894, written by brothers Alois Mrštík and Vilém Mrštík. It is set in a village in Moravia and focuses on the marriage of the eponymous character and its consequences.

Plot

A young woman, Maryša, is promised by her father to Vávra, whose previous wife has died. This not only affects Maryša, but also Francek, the young man who loves her, who decides to leave the village to go to war rather than remain to see Maryša marry Vávra. The play also examines how the marriage affects the family dynamics, such as her grandmother's weakness and inability to help her granddaughter.

Characters

  • Maryša
  • Francek
  • Lízal
  • Lízalová
  • Vávra
  • Rosara
  • Grandma
  • Recruiter Krištofl
  • Strouhlka
  • Hillman
  • Franěk
  • Buček
  • Neighbour
  • Girls, Recruiters, Taverners

Productions

The play was adapted into a film of the same name by Josef Rovenský in 1935.[1]

A production of the play directed by Michal Lang opened on 21 January 2006 at the Antonín Dvořák Theatre, Ostrava, starring Gabriela Mikulková in the title role. A production of the play directed by Alena Pešková opened on 14 March 2009 at the J. K. Tyl Theatre in Plzeň. Zuzana Hradilová and Ivona Jeličová starred in the leading role during its run.

gollark: Or possibly some other SDRs.
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gollark: If they were using some bizarre exotic encoding but not actually encrypting it it would still be *possible*, if *very hard*, to decode it without the actual docs.
gollark: Presumably the encoding pagers use is well-known/documented enough that someone implemented a software decoder.
gollark: That's an example of it, I guess? You turn... what is it again... 3 bits into 7 bits and can convert it back even if it's scrambled a bit.

References

  1. "Maryša". Česko-Slovenská filmová databáze. Retrieved 24 October 2012.

Media related to Maryša at Wikimedia Commons

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