Mother Courage and Her Children
{{short description|1939 play by Bertolt Brecht}}
{{about||the 2010 album by Duke Special|Mother Courage and Her Children (album)}}
{{Refimprove|date=December 2023}}{{Italic title}}
File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-T0927-019, Berliner Ensemble, Probe Mutter Courage.jpg and Gisela May during rehearsals of Mother Courage and Her Children (1978)]]
Mother Courage and Her Children ({{langx|de|Mutter Courage und ihre Kinder|links=yes}}) is a play written in 1939 by the German dramatist and poet Bertolt Brecht (1898–1956), with significant contributions from Margarete Steffin.Brecht Chronik, Werner Hecht, editor. (Suhrkamp Verlag, 1998), p. 566. Four theatrical productions were produced in Switzerland and Germany from 1941 to 1952, the last three supervised or directed by Brecht, who had returned to East Germany from the United States.
Several years after Brecht's death in 1956, the play was adapted as a German film, Mutter Courage und ihre Kinder (1961), starring Helene Weigel, Brecht's widow and a leading actress.
Mother Courage is considered by Oskar Eustis to be the greatest play of the 20th century, and perhaps also the greatest anti-war play of all time.Oskar Eustis, "Program Note" for the New York Shakespeare Festival production of Mother Courage and Her Children, starring Meryl Streep, August 2006. Critic Brett D. Johnson points out, "Although numerous theatrical artists and scholars may share artistic director Oskar Eustis's opinion that Brecht's masterpiece is the greatest play of the twentieth century, productions of Mother Courage remain a rarity in contemporary American theatre."Brett D. Johnson, "Review of Mother Courage and Her Children," Theatre Journal, Volume 59, Number 2, May 2007, pp. 281–282.
Synopsis
The play is set in the 17th century in Europe during the Thirty Years' War. The Recruiting Officer and Sergeant are introduced, both complaining about the difficulty of recruiting soldiers to the war. Anna Fierling (Mother Courage) enters pulling a cart containing provisions for sale to soldiers, and introduces her children Eilif, Kattrin, and Schweizerkas ("Swiss Cheese"). The sergeant negotiates a deal with Mother Courage while Eilif is conscripted by the Recruiting Officer.
Two years thereafter, Mother Courage argues with a Protestant General's cook over a capon, and Eilif is congratulated by the General for killing peasants and slaughtering their cattle. Eilif and his mother sing "The Fishwife and the Soldier". Mother Courage scolds her son for endangering himself.
Three years later, Swiss Cheese works as an army paymaster. The camp prostitute, Yvette Pottier, sings "The Fraternization Song". Mother Courage uses this song to warn Kattrin against involving herself with soldiers. Before the Catholic troops arrive, the Cook and Chaplain bring a message from Eilif. Swiss Cheese hides the regiment's paybox from invading soldiers, and Mother Courage and companions change their insignia from Protestant to Catholic. Swiss Cheese is captured and tortured by the Catholics, having hidden the paybox by the river. Mother Courage attempts bribery to free him, planning to pawn the wagon first and redeem it with the regiment money. When Swiss Cheese claims that he has thrown the box in the river, Mother Courage backtracks on the price, and Swiss Cheese is killed. Fearing to be shot as an accomplice, Mother Courage does not acknowledge his body, and it is discarded.
Later, Mother Courage waits outside the General's tent to register a complaint and sings the "Song of Great Capitulation" to a young soldier anxious to complain of inadequate pay. The song persuades both to withdraw their complaints.
Mother Courage grows desperate to protect her business, so much so that she refuses to give fabric to treat wounded civilians. The Chaplain takes her supplies anyway.
When Catholic General Tilly's funeral approaches, the Chaplain tells Mother Courage that the war will still continue, and she is persuaded to pile up stocks. The Chaplain then suggests to Mother Courage that she marry him, but she rejects his proposal. Mother Courage curses the war because she finds Kattrin disfigured after being raped by a drunken soldier. Thereafter Mother Courage is again following the Protestant army.
While two peasants are trying to sell merchandise to her, they hear news of peace with the death of the Swedish king. The Cook appears and causes an argument between Mother Courage and the Chaplain. Mother Courage is off to the market while Eilif enters, dragged in by soldiers. Eilif is executed for killing a peasant while stealing livestock, trying to repeat the same act for which he was praised as hero in wartime, but Mother Courage never hears thereof. When she finds out the war continues, the Cook and Mother Courage move on with the wagon.
In the seventeenth year of the war, there is no food and no supplies. The Cook inherits an inn in Utrecht and suggests to Mother Courage that she operate it with him – but he refuses to harbour Kattrin because he fears that her disfigurement will repel potential customers. Thereafter Mother Courage and Kattrin pull the wagon by themselves.
When Mother Courage is trading in the Protestant city of Halle, Kattrin is left with a peasant family in the countryside overnight. As Catholic soldiers force the peasants to guide the army to the city for a sneak attack, Kattrin fetches a drum from the cart and beats it, waking the townspeople, but is herself shot. Early in the morning, Mother Courage sings a lullaby to her daughter's corpse, has the peasants bury it, and hitches herself to the cart.
The main character, Mutter Courage, is inspired by the main character, Courasche, from a book by Hans Jacob Grimmelshausen, published in 1670. This woman also travelled with the troups in the thirty-year war. However, unlike Brecht's Mutter Courage, Courasche did not have any children.
Context
Mother Courage is one of nine plays that Brecht wrote in resistance to the rise of Fascism and Nazism. In response to the invasion of Poland by the German armies of Adolf Hitler in 1939, Brecht wrote Mother Courage in what writers call a "white heat"—in a little over a month.Klaus Volker. Brecht Chronicle. (Seabury Press, 1975). P. 92. As the preface to the Ralph Manheim/John Willett Collected Plays puts it: {{blockquote|Mother Courage, with its theme of the devastating effects of a European war and the blindness of anyone hoping to profit by it, is said to have been written in a month; judging by the almost complete absence of drafts or any other evidence of preliminary studies, it must have been an exceptionally direct piece of inspiration."Introduction", Bertolt Brecht: Collected Plays, vol. 5. (Vintage Books, 1972), p. xi}}
Following Brecht's own principles for political drama, the play is not set in modern times but during the Thirty Years' War of 1618–1648, which involved all the German states, France and Sweden. It follows the fortunes of Anna Fierling, nicknamed Mother Courage, a wily canteen woman with the Swedish Army, who is determined to make her living from the war. Over the course of the play, she loses all three of her children, Schweizerkas, Eilif, and Kattrin, to the very war from which she tried to profit.
Overview
The name of the central character, Mother Courage, is drawn from the picaresque writings of the 17th-century German writer Grimmelshausen. His central character in the early short novel, The Runagate Courage,{{cite web|url=http://gutenberg.spiegel.de/grimmels/courasch/Druckversion_courasch.htm|title=Die Lebensbeschreibung der Erzbetrügerin und Landstörzerin Courasche|author=Hans Jakob Christoffel von Grimmelshausen|website=gutenberg.spiegel.de}} also struggles and connives her way through the Thirty Years' War in Germany and Poland. Otherwise the story is mostly Brecht's, in collaboration with Steffin.
The action of the play takes place over the course of 12 years (1624 to 1636), represented in 12 scenes. Some give a sense of Courage's career, but do not provide time for viewers to develop sentimental feelings and empathize with any of the characters. Meanwhile, Mother Courage is not depicted as a noble character. The Brechtian epic theatre distinguished itself from the ancient Greek tragedies, in which the heroes are far above the average. Neither does Brecht's ending of his play inspire any desire to imitate the main character, Mother Courage.
Mother Courage is among Brecht's most famous plays. Some directors consider it to be the greatest play of the 20th century.Oscar Eustis (Artistic Director of the New York Shakespeare Festival), Program Note for N.Y.S.F. production of Mother Courage and Her Children with Meryl Streep, August 2006. Brecht expresses the dreadfulness of war and the idea that virtues are not rewarded in corrupt times. He used an epic structure to force the audience to focus on the issues rather than getting involved with the characters and their emotions. Epic plays are a distinct genre typical of Brecht. Some critics believe that he created the form.Bertolt Brecht. Brecht on Theatre, Edited by John Willett. p. 121.
=As epic theatre=
Mother Courage is an example of Brecht's concepts of epic theatre and Verfremdungseffekt, or "V" effect; preferably "alienation" or "estrangement effect" Verfremdungseffekt is achieved through the use of placards which reveal the events of each scene, juxtaposition, actors changing characters and costume on stage, the use of narration, simple props and scenery. For instance, a single tree would be used to convey a whole forest, and the stage is usually flooded with bright white light, whether the scene depicted is a winter's night or a summer's day. Several songs, interspersed throughout the play, are used to underscore the themes of the play. They also require the audience to think about what the playwright is saying.
Roles
{{div col}}
- Mother Courage (also known as "Canteen Anna")
- Kattrin (Catherine), her mute daughter
- Eilif, her older son
- Schweizerkas ("Swiss Cheese", also mentioned as Feyos), her younger son
- Recruiting Officer
- Sergeant
- Cook
- Swedish Commander
- Chaplain
- Ordinance Officer
- Yvette Pottier
- Man with the Bandage
- Another Sergeant
- Old Colonel
- Clerk
- Young Soldier
- Older Soldier
- Peasant
- Peasant Woman
- Young Man
- Old Woman
- Another Peasant
- Another Peasant Woman
- Young Peasant
- Lieutenant
- Voice
{{div col end}}
Performances
= In German =
The play was originally produced at the Schauspielhaus Zürich, produced by Leopold Lindtberg in 1941. Most of the score consisted of original compositions by the Swiss composer Paul Burkhard; the rest had been arranged by him. The musicians were placed in view of the audience so that they could be seen, one of Brecht's many techniques in epic theatre. Therese Giehse, a well-known actress at the time, took the title role. Teo Otto designed the stage.{{Citation |last=White |first=Alfred D. |title=Mother Courage and her Children |date=1978 |work=Bertolt Brecht’s Great Plays |pages=85–112 |editor-last=White |editor-first=Alfred D. |url=https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-03278-5_5 |access-date=2024-07-15 |place=London |publisher=Macmillan Education UK |language=en |doi=10.1007/978-1-349-03278-5_5 |isbn=978-1-349-03278-5}}{{Cite journal |last=Hasche |first=Christa |date=1999-06-22 |title=Through the Minefield of Ideologies: Brecht and the Staging of Mutter Courage und ihre Kinder. |url=https://go.gale.com/ps/i.do?p=LitRC&sw=w&issn=00267694&v=2.1&it=r&id=GALE%7CA58575764&sid=googleScholar&linkaccess=abs |journal=Modern Drama |language=English |volume=42 |issue=2 |pages=185–197|doi=10.3138/md.42.2.185 }}
The second production of Mother Courage took place in then East Berlin in 1949, with Brecht's (second) wife Helene Weigel, his main actress and later also director, as Mother Courage. Paul Dessau supplied a new score, composed in close collaboration with Brecht himself. This production would highly influence the formation of Brecht's company, the Berliner Ensemble, which would provide him a venue to direct many of his plays. (Brecht died directing Galileo for the Ensemble.) Brecht revised the play for this production in reaction to the reviews of the Zürich production, which empathized with the "heart-rending vitality of all maternal creatures". Even so, he wrote that the Berlin audience failed to see Mother Courage's crimes and participation in the war and focused on her suffering instead.For information in English on the revisions to the play, see John Willet and Ralph Manheim, eds. Brecht, Collected Plays: Five (Life of Galileo, Mother Courage and Her Children), Metheuen, 1980: 271, 324–5.
The next production (and second production in Germany) was directed by Brecht at the Munich Kammerspiele in 1950, with the original Mother Courage, Therese Giehse, and with a set designed by Teo Otto (see photo, above.)
= In English =
- 1955 – London première at the Theatre Workshop, with Joan Littlewood in the title role.{{Cite news |last=Thomas |first=June |date=2006-05-10 |title=Joan Littlewood's Revelations |url=https://slate.com/human-interest/2006/05/joan-littlewood-s-revelations.html |access-date=2024-07-15 |work=Slate |language=en-US |issn=1091-2339}}
- 1958 – American première at the Cleveland Play House, starring Harriet Brazier as Mother Courage, directed by Benno Frank, with set design by Paul Rodgers.{{Cite web |title='Mother Courage' at The Cleveland Play House |url=https://clevelandmemory.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/press/id/5401/rec/1 |access-date=2024-07-16 |website=The Cleveland Memory Project}}
- 1959 – BBC television broadcast, adapted by Eric Crozier from Eric Bentley's English translation, produced by Rudolph Cartier, featuring Flora Robson as Mother Courage.{{Cite web |title=Mother Courage and Her Children · British Universities Film & Video Council |url=http://bufvc.ac.uk/screenplays/index.php/prog/860 |access-date=2024-07-15 |website=bufvc.ac.uk}}
- 1961 – Second British production at Stratford-upon-Avon Amateur Players. Directed by American Keith Fowler and presented on the floor of the Stratford Hippodrome, it drew high acclaim."Shout it from the Rooftops", Stratford-upon-Avon Herald, April 1961. The title role was played by Elizabeth "Libby" Cutts, with Digby Day as Swiss Cheese.
- 1963 – First Broadway production at the Martin Beck Theatre, directed by Jerome Robbins, starring Anne Bancroft, and featuring Barbara Harris and Gene Wilder. It ran for 52 performances and was nominated for four Tony Awards.{{cite web |title=Mother Courage and Her Children (1963 production) |url=https://www.ibdb.com/broadway-production/mother-courage-and-her-children-2999 |website=IBDB.com |publisher=Internet Broadway Database}} During this production Wilder first met Bancroft's then-boyfriend, Mel Brooks.[http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0205/02/lkl.00.html "Larry King Live – Interview With Gene Wilder."] CNN.com – Transcripts. Retrieved on March 18, 2008
- 1971 – Staging of Brecht's original Berliner Ensemble production for the Melbourne Theatre Company at the Princess Theatre, directed by Joachim Tenschert.{{cite news |last=Robinson |first=Ian |date=2 July 1973 |title=An 'authentic' version of Mother Courage? |work=The National Times |publisher=Fairfax Media |location=Sydney}} Gloria Dawn played Mother Courage.{{cn|date=December 2023}}
- 1980 – New adaptation by Ntozake Shange at The Public Theater, set in the American South during Reconstruction, directed by Wilford Leach,{{cite book |last=Hischak |first=Thomas S. |title=American Theatre: A Chronicle of Comedy and Drama, 1969-2000 |publisher=Oxford University Press p.170 |year=2001 |isbn=978-0-1953-5255-9}} with Gloria Foster as Mother Courage.{{Cite web |title=Mother Courage and Her Children |url=http://www.iobdb.com/production/2366 |access-date=2024-07-15 |website=www.iobdb.com}}
- 1982 – Multi-ethnic production by Internationalist Theatre at London's Theatre Space.{{Cite web |title=easydb.archive |url=https://archiv.adk.de/objekt/2583471 |website=archiv.adk.de}} Its "attack on the practice of war could not—with South Atlantic news (Falklands War) filling the front pages—have been more topical."Drama: The Quarterly Theatre Review, issues 139–154, p. 32, 1982 https://archive.org/details/screenshot20200102at6.25.03pm Margaret Robertson played Mother Courage.{{Cite web |title=Mother Courage review by The Standard, Christopher Hudson |url=https://archive.org/details/standardlettingmothertaketheloades1982may062440000 |via=Internet Archive}} and Angelique Rockas played Yvette. {{Cite web |title=Production of Mother Courage and her Children {{!}} Theatricalia |url=https://theatricalia.com/play/ha/mother-courage-and-her-children/production/wb2 |access-date=2024-07-15 |website=theatricalia.com}}
- 1984 – Royal Shakespeare Company production at the Barbican Theatre in London, translated by Hanif Kureishi, with Judi Dench in the title role.{{Cite news |date=2019-02-01 |title=Mother Courage on the long road to Manchester – in pictures |url=http://www.theguardian.com/stage/gallery/2019/feb/01/mother-courage-julie-hesmondhalgh-manchester-other-actors-on-role-in-pictures |access-date=2024-07-15 |work=the Guardian |language=en-GB |issn=0261-3077}}
- 1995 – Production at London's Royal National Theatre based on David Hare's translation, directed by Jonathan Kent, featuring Diana Rigg, who won an Evening Standard Theatre Award for her performance in the title role.{{cite news |last1=Wolf |first1=Matt |date=27 November 1995 |title=Review: 'Mother Courage and Her Children' |url=https://variety.com/1995/film/reviews/mother-courage-and-her-children-1200443695/ |access-date=23 November 2016 |work=Variety}}{{cite web |date=12 November 2002 |title=Evening Standard theatre awards 1955-2002 |url=https://www.standard.co.uk/news/evening-standard-theatre-awards-1955-2002-7299339.html |website=Evening Standard}}
- 2006 – The Public Theater production in New York City, with a new translation by Tony Kushner, music by Jeanine Tesori, directed by George C. Wolfe, and starring Meryl Streep as Mother Courage.{{Cite news |last=Brantley |first=Ben |date=2006-08-22 |title=Mother, Courage, Grief and Song |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/22/theater/reviews/22moth.html |access-date=2024-07-15 |work=The New York Times |language=en-US |issn=0362-4331}}
- 2009 – Production at Royal National Theatre, directed by Deborah Warner, featuring Fiona Shaw in the title role, with new songs performed live by Duke Special.{{Cite news |last=Billington |first=Michael |date=2009-09-27 |title=Mother Courage and Her Children |url=https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2009/sep/27/mother-courage-and-her-children-review |access-date=2024-07-15 |work=The Guardian |language=en-GB |issn=0261-3077}}
- 2013 – All-indigenous Australian production at the Queensland Performing Arts Centre's Playhouse Theatre directed by Wesley Enoch, with a new translation by Paula Nazarski.[http://www.theaustralian.com.au/arts/review/aboriginal-viewpoint-gives-two-classic-plays-an-intense-colour/story-fn9n8gph-1226643226749 "Aboriginal viewpoint gives two classic plays an intense colour"] by Bridget Cormack, The Australian, 18 May 2013
[http://www.qpac.com.au/event/Mother_Courage_13.aspx#.VFhsIqxhazY Mother Courage & Her Children] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141104074920/http://www.qpac.com.au/event/Mother_Courage_13.aspx#.VFhsIqxhazY|date=2014-11-04}}, production details, Playhouse, QPAC, May/June 2013 - 2024 - Blue Raincoat Theatre Company production in Sligo, Ireland at The Factory Performance Space.{{cite web |url=https://www.blueraincoat.com/upcoming-events |title=Upcoming Events - BLUE RAINCOAT |accessdate=2024-11-06 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20240828183021/https://www.blueraincoat.com/upcoming-events |archivedate=2024-08-28}}
= In other languages =
In Spanish, the play was first staged in Argentina in 1953 at Teatro IFT in Buenos Aires, with Cipe Lincovsky in the title role.{{Cite web |last=Cruz |first=Alejandro |date=2015-09-01 |title=Cipe Lincovsky: la actriz que marcó una época |url=https://www.lanacion.com.ar/espectaculos/cipe-lincovsky-la-actriz-que-marco-una-epoca-nid1823867/ |access-date=2024-07-19 |website=LA NACION |language=es}} In 1972, Henry Jayasena adapted the play into Sinhalese, under the title Diriya Mawa Saha Agey Daruwo (The Brave Mother and Her Children).{{Cite web |last=Kumar Ediriweera |first=Padma |date=2010-01-13 |title=Artscope {{!}} Online edition of Daily News - Lakehouse Newspapers |url=https://archives.dailynews.lk/2010/01/13/art15.asp |access-date=2024-07-19 |website=archives.dailynews.lk}}
File:Angelique as Yvette (Mother Courage and her children) 1982.jpg as Yvette and Renu Setna as The Chaplain (1982)]]{{clearleft}}
Brecht's reaction
After the 1941 performances in Switzerland, Brecht believed critics had misunderstood the play. While many sympathized with Courage, Brecht's goal was to show that Mother Courage was wrong for not understanding the circumstances she and her children were in. According to Hans Mayer, Brecht changed the play for the 1949 performances in East Berlin to make Courage less sympathetic to the audience.{{cite AV media
| people = Coe, Tony; Bessel, Richard; Willett, Amanda
| title = Brecht on stage
| medium = Television documentary
| publisher = BBC Two and Open University
| date = 1989
| url = https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/152173682 }} However, according to Mayer, these alterations did not significantly change the audience's sympathy for Courage. Katie Baker, in a retrospective article about Mother Courage on its 75th anniversary, notes that "[Brecht's audiences] were missing the point of his Verfremdungseffekt, that breaking of the fourth wall which was supposed to make the masses think, not feel, in order to nudge them in a revolutionary direction." She also quotes Brecht as lamenting: "The (East Berliner) audiences of 1949 did not see Mother Courage's crimes, her participation, her desire to share in the profits of the war business; they saw only her failure, her sufferings."{{cite news|url=https://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/09/10/brecht-s-mercenary-mother-courage-turns-75|title=Brecht's Mercenary Mother Courage Turns 75|first=Katie|last=Baker|newspaper=The Daily Beast|date=10 September 2014|via=www.thedailybeast.com}}
Popular culture
The German feminist newspaper Courage, published from 1976 to 1984, was named after Mother Courage, whom the editors saw as a "self-directed woman ... not a starry-eyed idealist but neither is she satisfied with the status quo".{{cite book|pages=188–190|title=Encyclopedia of Social Movement Media|chapter=Feminist Media, 1960–1990 (Germany)|first=John D. H.|last=Downing|publisher=SAGE Publications|year=2011|isbn=9780761926887|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OSkKAOoaSGIC&pg=PA188}}
Mother Courage was the inspiration for Lynn Nottage's Pulitzer winning play Ruined,{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2010/apr/20/lynn-nottage-ruined|title=Lynn Nottage: a bar, a brothel and Brecht|last=Iqbal|first=Nosheen|date=20 April 2010|work=The Guardian|access-date=26 April 2010}} written after Nottage spent time with Congolese women in Ugandan refugee camps.{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/25/theater/25McGee.html|title=Lynn Nottage's 'Ruined' Adapts Brecht's 'Mother Courage and Her Children'|first=Celia|last=McGee|newspaper=The New York Times|date=17 May 2018}}
English versions
- 1941 – Hoffman Reynolds Hays (1904–1980), translation for New Directions Publishing
- 1955 – Eric Bentley, translation for Doubleday/Garden City
- 1965 – Eric Bentley, translation, and W. H. Auden, songs translation, for the National Theatre, London
- 1972 – Ralph Manheim, translation for Random House/Pantheon Books
- 1980 – John Willett, translation for Methuen Publishing
- 1980 – Ntozake Shange, adaptation for New York Shakespeare Festival New York
- 1984 – Hanif Kureishi, adaptation, and Sue Davies, songs translation, for the Barbican Centre, London (Samuel French Ltd.)
- 1995 – David Hare, adaptation for the Royal National Theatre, London (A & C Black, 1996)
- 2000 – Lee Hall, adaptation, and Jan-Willem van den Bosch, translation, for Yvonne Arnaud Theatre, England (Methuen Drama, 2003)
- 2006 – Michael Hofmann, adaptation, and John Willett, songs translation, for the English Touring Theatre (A & C Black, 2006)
- 2006 – Tony Kushner, adaptation for The Public Theater, New York City, published in the form used in the 2009 Royal National Theatre production
- 2014 – David Hare, adaptation presented by the Arena Stage, Washington DC with Kathleen Turner as Mother Courage and featuring 13 new songs.{{cite news|last=Merry|first=Stephanie|title=The many moving parts of Mother Courage|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/goingoutguide/the-many-moving-parts-of-mother-courage/2014/01/30/34121a3a-83c5-11e3-9dd4-e7278db80d86_story.html|access-date=3 February 2014|newspaper=The Washington Post|date=30 January 2014}}
- 2014 – Wesley Enoch, adaptation, Queensland Theatre Company
- 2014 – David Edgar, translation for Stratford Festival, directed by Martha Henry
- 2015 – Ed Thomas for National Theatre Wales, site specific production with an all-female cast held at the Merthyr Tydfil Labour Club
- 2015 – Eamon Flack, adaptation, Belvoir St Theatre, Sydney.
- 2017 – Danielle Tarento direction of the Tony Kushner adaptation, Southwark Playhouse, London.
- 2019 – Adaptation by Anna Jordan for the Royal Exchange theatre, Manchester UK. Starring Julie Hesmondhalgh as Mother Courage.
See also
References
{{reflist}}
Sources consulted (English versions list)
- University of Wisconsin Digital Collections, Brecht's Works in English: A Bibliography, [http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/BrechtGuide/ online database] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100609043419/http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/BrechtGuide/ |date=2010-06-09 }}.
- Doollee – The Playwrights Database of Modern Plays: [http://www.doollee.com/PlaywrightsB/brecht-bertolt.html "Adaptations/Translations of Plays by Bertolt Brecht"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070403081717/http://www.doollee.com/PlaywrightsB/brecht-bertolt.html |date=2007-04-03 }}
- Squiers, Anthony (2014). An Introduction to the Social and Political Philosophy of Bertolt Brecht: Revolution and Aesthetics. Amsterdam: Rodopi. 9789042038998.
- The International Brecht Society: [http://www.brechtsociety.org/brecht_english/brecht_english.html "Brecht in English Translation"]
- The Bertolt Brecht Forum: [http://go20ccm.tripod.com/bine03021999.html "Bertolt Brecht in English"], tabular list
External links
{{Commons category-inline|Mutter Courage und ihre Kinder|Mother Courage and Her Children}}
- {{IBDB show}}
{{Brecht plays}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Mother Courage And Her Children}}
Category:Plays by Bertolt Brecht
Category:Compositions by Paul Dessau
Category:Thirty Years' War in popular culture
Category:German plays adapted into films
Category:Adaptations of works by Hans Jakob Christoffel von Grimmelshausen