Leonid Andreyev was once considered one of Russia's greatest dramatists,
but his opposition to the Bolshevik Revolution and the Communist
government's unilateral support of naturalism on the stage conspired to
undermine his career. He was imprisoned, died in poverty, and has become
increasingly obscure. Andreyev is symbolic and romantic. Fate and Chance
are the two dark, unknown, at times brutal forces which dwell ever
before his mind's eye. He sees human beings in the form of ghosts and
ghosts in the form of human beings. Andreyev's best-known play, "He Who
Gets Slapped" tells the story of a famous writer who takes a job as a
circus clown in order to escape his past. In this carnival of human
outcasts, Andreyev fashions a meaningful portrait of an intellectual's
struggle to exist in a world ruled by Fate, Chance, and the almighty
dollar. Also included are two extraordinarily haunting plays adapted
from Andreyev's short stories: "Call of the Revolution" and "The
Serpent's Tale."