Pirandello's plays are a daring exploration of human actions and the
dark motives lying behind them, and the culmination of the naturalistic
school of theater inaugurated by authors such as Ibsen and
Chekhov.
This selection of plays by Luigi Pirandello contains some of his
best-known works, such as Six Characters in Search of an Author--an
absurdist piece in which the characters, actors and Pirandello himself
interact during the rehearsal of a fictional play within the play--and
Henry IV--a tragicomic tale of a man who falls from a horse and believes
himself to be the eponymous Holy Roman Emperor.
Preoccupied with the nature of truth and delusion, and treading
dangerously on the borderline between sanity and madness, Pirandello's
plays are a daring exploration of human actions and the dark motives
lying behind them, and the culmination of the naturalistic school of
theater inaugurated by authors such as Ibsen and Chekhov.