Neha Patil (Editor)

Arlequin Mahomet

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Written by
  
Alain-René Lesage

First performance
  
1714

Setting
  
Basra

Original language
  
French language

Date premiered
  
1714

Playwright
  
Alain-René Lesage

Genre
  
Farce

Arlequin Mahomet

Characters
  
Arlequin Dahi Boubekir The King of Basra A princess A Kam The Prince of Persia A servant

People also search for
  
La Foire de Guibray, Le Tombeau de Nostradamus, Arlequin roi de Serendib

Arlequin Mahomet (English: Arlequin Mohammed) is a one act farce by Alain-René Lesage. It was first performed at the Foire de Saint Laurent in 1714. Arlequin Mahomet was performed as the second play in a series consisting of La Foire de Guibray and Le Tombeau de Nostradamus. Between the three works, Lesage created a comedy in three acts.

Contents

Plot summary

Arlequin is being pursued by his debtors, so his friend Boubekir gives him a flying box so that he can flee the country. As he is flying over Persia, he sees a young man about to kill himself because his true love, the Princess of Basra, is to be married to the Kam of the Tartars (played by Pierrot from La Foire de Guibray). Arlequin agrees to help.

He flies to the princess who does not want to marry the Kam and is praying to Mohammed. When she sees Arlequin in his flying machine, she believes that he is Mohammed. Arlequin tells her that she does not have to marry the Kam and presents her with a portrait of her future husband, the Prince of Persia. The Princess tells her father about this revelation, and the King and the Kam go in search of the "false Arlequin." Meanwhile, Arlequin enters the scene and flies over their heads. Arlequin beats them with his stick until the King and the Kam agree that the princess should marry the Prince. Arlequin brings the Prince to the court in his flying machine so he can marry the princess. Arlequin, in turn, marries the princess' servant.

Characters

  • Arlequin, a false Mohammed
  • Dahi, a merchant, the neighbor of Arlequin
  • Boubekir, traveler and mathematician
  • The King of Baraasa
  • The Princess, his daughter
  • The Kam of the Tartars
  • The Prince of Persia
  • A servant
  • References

    Arlequin Mahomet Wikipedia