OPEN[PLAY]Don Quixote Part 1 by Thomas D'Urfey - thw

Plays and other dramatic works
Post Reply
redrun
LibriVox Admin Team
Posts: 2930
Joined: August 11th, 2022, 8:32 pm
Contact:

Post by redrun »

adrianstephens wrote: October 2nd, 2022, 11:47 pm Thank you for your kind words. Had a lot of fun with the chant.
I made all the corrections indicated here: https://librivox.org/uploads/toddhw/comicalhistorypart1_sanchopanca_4.mp3
Act 4 spot PL, OK!

Act 5 will be after narrations, within a day or two.
redrun
LibriVox Admin Team
Posts: 2930
Joined: August 11th, 2022, 8:32 pm
Contact:

Post by redrun »

Inkell wrote: October 2nd, 2022, 1:47 pm Thanks for the fast PLing, redrun! I'll work on the changes when I can, here is the rest of the stage directions in the meantime. Also note I wasn't sure if/when people reading stage directions are supposed to do a voice credit so at the end of the last act I say the stage directions were read by me.

3: https://librivox.org/uploads/toddhw/comicalhistorypart1_stagedirections_3.mp3 (4 mins, 41 secs)
4: https://librivox.org/uploads/toddhw/comicalhistorypart1_stagedirections_4.mp3 (6 mins, 43 secs)
5: https://librivox.org/uploads/toddhw/comicalhistorypart1_stagedirections_5.mp3 (4 mins, 44 secs)
Act 3, one note, thanks to that cleaner scan:
@0:56, page 45, I hear "Is going, and he -slaps- her". That "o" sure looks like how I'd write an 'a', but I think the word is "stops". Both scans seem to have a "t", so I think the difference comes down to running ink.

Act 4 is PL OK! :thumbs:

Act 5 is also PL OK! :thumbs:
I'll note that the credit is at the end of this file. I think Todd's likely to skip "End of the first part" in editing, since it's just a line or two ahead of the closing "End of The Comical History of Don Quixote, Part 1, by Thomas D'Urfey."
redrun
LibriVox Admin Team
Posts: 2930
Joined: August 11th, 2022, 8:32 pm
Contact:

Post by redrun »

adrianstephens wrote: October 3rd, 2022, 12:16 am Sancho Act 5
https://librivox.org/uploads/toddhw/comicalhistorypart1_sanchopanca_5.mp3 about 10 minutes
Just one optional note for Sancho, Act 5:
@1:14, on page 82, in: "I have a -[s/f]ore- place here in my shoulder", I think from the context it's probably "sore".

Also, I laughed at the epilogue. Be kind to asses, whether they wear saddles or no!
adrianstephens
Posts: 1810
Joined: August 27th, 2019, 5:06 am
Location: Cambridge UK
Contact:

Post by adrianstephens »

redrun wrote: October 3rd, 2022, 6:56 pm
adrianstephens wrote: October 3rd, 2022, 12:16 am Sancho Act 5
https://librivox.org/uploads/toddhw/comicalhistorypart1_sanchopanca_5.mp3 about 10 minutes
Just one optional note for Sancho, Act 5:
@1:14, on page 82, in: "I have a -[s/f]ore- place here in my shoulder", I think from the context it's probably "sore".

Also, I laughed at the epilogue. Be kind to asses, whether they wear saddles or no!
Here's the correction: https://librivox.org/uploads/toddhw/comicalhistorypart1_sanchopanca_5.mp3
I laughed at the visual imagery of the Epilogue.
My Librivox-related YouTube series starts here: Part 0: Introduction. https://youtu.be/pMHYycgA5VU
...
Part 15: Case Study (Poem) https://youtu.be/41sr_VC1Qxo
Part 16: Case Study 2 (Dramatic Reading) https://youtu.be/GBIAd469vnM
Inkell
Posts: 1336
Joined: July 10th, 2022, 2:52 pm

Post by Inkell »

Here you go, redrun, should all be right now hopefully. I would sometimes stop to try to decipher the fs and ss so I must've mistaken one of those pauses for it being a separate word with the despairing love thing so I rerecorded it so it would sound more coherent. One of the acts is also shorter as thanks to your clearer version that sections seems the same paragraph so I cut down on the spaces, did all the rest of your corrections. And I agree that end of act thing will probably be cut but I always figure it's better to err on the side of including it because it's a lot easier to cut stuff then rerecord them back in.

1: https://librivox.org/uploads/toddhw/comicalhistorypart1_stagedirections_1.mp3
2: https://librivox.org/uploads/toddhw/comicalhistorypart1_stagedirections_2.mp3
3: https://librivox.org/uploads/toddhw/comicalhistorypart1_stagedirections_3.mp3
ToddHW
LibriVox Admin Team
Posts: 19957
Joined: August 14th, 2011, 4:24 am
Contact:

Post by ToddHW »

Thank you.

Todd
redrun
LibriVox Admin Team
Posts: 2930
Joined: August 11th, 2022, 8:32 pm
Contact:

Post by redrun »

adrianstephens wrote: October 4th, 2022, 1:26 am Here's the correction: https://librivox.org/uploads/toddhw/comicalhistorypart1_sanchopanca_5.mp3
I laughed at the visual imagery of the Epilogue.
Sancho Act 5, spot-PL OK! :thumbs:

Stage directions later today.
redrun
LibriVox Admin Team
Posts: 2930
Joined: August 11th, 2022, 8:32 pm
Contact:

Post by redrun »

Inkell wrote: October 4th, 2022, 4:37 am Here you go, redrun, should all be right now hopefully. I would sometimes stop to try to decipher the fs and ss so I must've mistaken one of those pauses for it being a separate word with the despairing love thing so I rerecorded it so it would sound more coherent. One of the acts is also shorter as thanks to your clearer version that sections seems the same paragraph so I cut down on the spaces, did all the rest of your corrections. And I agree that end of act thing will probably be cut but I always figure it's better to err on the side of including it because it's a lot easier to cut stuff then rerecord them back in.

1: https://librivox.org/uploads/toddhw/comicalhistorypart1_stagedirections_1.mp3
2: https://librivox.org/uploads/toddhw/comicalhistorypart1_stagedirections_2.mp3
3: https://librivox.org/uploads/toddhw/comicalhistorypart1_stagedirections_3.mp3
Thanks for the fast turnaround! Stage directions, acts 1-3 are also PL OK! :thumbs:
ToddHW
LibriVox Admin Team
Posts: 19957
Joined: August 14th, 2011, 4:24 am
Contact:

Post by ToddHW »

Thank you.

Todd
alanmapstone
Posts: 8094
Joined: February 15th, 2012, 12:20 pm
Location: Oxford

Post by alanmapstone »

Alan
the sixth age shifts into the slippered pantaloon with spectacles on nose
ToddHW
LibriVox Admin Team
Posts: 19957
Joined: August 14th, 2011, 4:24 am
Contact:

Post by ToddHW »

Thank you.

Todd
redrun
LibriVox Admin Team
Posts: 2930
Joined: August 11th, 2022, 8:32 pm
Contact:

Post by redrun »

Off to a good start, and I wonder whether kids wouldn't say this was a "trolling" barber these days!

Nicholas, Act 1, PL OK! :thumbs:
stepheather
Posts: 707
Joined: July 14th, 2007, 5:18 pm
Location: In the urban wild

Post by stepheather »

ToddHW wrote: September 14th, 2022, 8:20 am MW updated.

I had actually not noticed the gap in page numbers - I was too focused on the script text! Thanks you for finding that source.

I took a look at the missing pages. This does include what should be the actual start of Act 3. And there are a few lines here for the Narrator, 1st Shepard, Don Quixote, Sancho, Dorothea, Perez. Unfortunately, there are some muddled words in that new source stuff as well. (It means, for example, that we can't ditch the Archive scan and go just with the typed out version for the entire play.)

I will make a clean version, but in the meantime the below could be used....

Thanks, Todd
Missing pages 38 and 39:

1 Shep. - Oons what do the Bedlams mean; Come Friends, let's bind 'em, and put 'em into the Dark, the Fools are Distracted.

Don Qu. - I'll try how sound your Senses are, Sir Dogbolt.

Fight here, and Don Quixote and Sancho beat 'em all off, then Re-enter Don Quixote and Sancho, strutting.

San. - There's for your •rinning, Rogues, I think I am even with ye now; woons! what a fine thing fighting is, when a Man is sure of having the better of it? And what a delicate difference there is between a To∣ledo-Blade, and a Sheephook? But come, Sir, let's get away for fear they Rally, 'sbud I think I behav'd my self bravely.

Don Qu. - Why troth, if thou couldst but keep thy Eyes open a little better, thou might'st in time come to do something: But a plague o• thee, thou fight'st as a Crab Crawls▪ backwards, for Instead of giving one of 'em a side long thump Just now, if I had not step'd quick aside thou hadst strook my Knighthood o'er the Pate? But however, thou mean'st well, I dare swear, and I believe fight'st as well as thou can'st.
And he's no braver that subdues •n Host,
Then he is that stands still and keeps his Post.
Exeunt.
ACT III. SCENE I. The Inn.
Enter Perez and Dorothea.

Doroth. - AH, Sir, I beg ye for my Mother's sake, or if you e••r lov'd poor Dorothea, when with her Pratling Infant Innocence▪ and springing Beauty in it's early blossom, she us'd to please, by both I do Conjure ye, let me not see my Father.

Perez. - Trust to me; You must to your past crime add a gre••er, by Hateful Disobedience.

Doroth. - Oh! I shall dye with shame; Alas! I left him alone unfriended, warp'd with Age and Sorrow! That good Old Man▪ That kind Indul∣gent Father, I shall never dare, forlo•n as now, to meet his Eyes again! Barbarou•Fernando, that False Cruel Tyrant, pleas'd with the spoils of my dear Virgin Honour, has Ravish'd that blest •ight for ever from me.

Perez. - Had you no Contract from this false Fernando.

Doroth. - In Vows and Oaths a thousand; I was too Artless to desire him more: Heavens! He would swear till he was black in the Face; Dissemble six long hours by the Clock; and when he Vow'd the truth of his Affection, the Potestation• came so fast and thick, so feirce with∣all and Eager in Expressing, that I've been fain to let him kiss and breath for fear the thronging Lies should suffocate him.

Perez. - Yet after all this to pretend to marry Lucinda; Nay, forge a false Letter from her, to her betroath'd Love Cardenio, implying she had deserted him; and then [Now onto top of page 40 in scanned main text] sacrilegiously steal her from a Nunnery, to which she fled for Sanctuary, is such a stain to his Nobility as wants Example▪ and rather than not have Justice done thee, Girl, I resolve the Court shall know it.
Note that becuz of PD concerns, I MAY not include the material above in the final cataloged play. I will make that determination later after I ponder it for a while and further review the statements at the website link redrun provided.
Hi, Todd,

Did you check out this version? I see it’s a late nineteenth-century reprint, and I haven’t compared anything except to note that page numbers are slightly different. (I am not currently in the US and I could view it.)
https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044012914743&view=1up&seq=46

This text redrun cited is Early English Books Online.

There seem to be some other options at Google Play as well (but I didn’t check the copyright). See, e.g., https://books.google.com/books?id=zGdVAAAAcAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=Comical+history+of+don+Quixote&hl=en&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&source=gb_mobile_search&ovdme=1&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiKl6SzgOn6AhXzT2wGHY6yC0cQ6AF6BAgJEAM

Hope this helps!
--Stephanie
*******************

Current solo:
Life among the Piutes

Native American history--Come read about removal plans, education, and laws:
Annual Report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, December 1837
ToddHW
LibriVox Admin Team
Posts: 19957
Joined: August 14th, 2011, 4:24 am
Contact:

Post by ToddHW »

Thank you. Will look....

Todd
EltonTheSnowman
Posts: 254
Joined: November 11th, 2019, 12:10 pm
Location: Croatia

Post by EltonTheSnowman »

Hi Todd, I'd like to claim the role of Dorothea :D
Matea Bracic

“Outside of a dog, a book is a man’s best friend. Inside of a dog it’s too dark to read.”
-Groucho Marx
Post Reply