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  1. The Cherry Orchard ( Russian: Вишнёвый сад, romanized : Vishnyovyi sad) is the last play by Russian playwright Anton Chekhov. Written in 1903, it was first published by Znaniye (Book Two, 1904), [1] and came out as a separate edition later that year in Saint Petersburg, via A.F. Marks Publishers. [2] On 17 January 1904, it opened at ...

    • Anton Chekhov
    • 1904
  2. The Cherry Orchard is a play by Anton Chekhov, first performed in 1904. It tells the story of an aristocratic Russian family who are forced to sell their estate, including its famous cherry orchard, to pay off their debts. The play is a tragicomedy that explores themes of social change and generational conflict.

  3. The Cherry Orchard Full Play Summary. The play begins in the pre-dawn hours of a May morning in Russia. We learn that the cherry trees are in bloom even though it is frosty outside. Yermolay Lopakhin, a friend of the family, and Dunyasha a maid on the Ranevsky estate, wait for the estate's owner Ranevsky at the estate's main house, in a room ...

  4. The Cherry Orchard Summary. Next. Act 1. On a frosty morning in May, the aristocratic Madame Ranevsky, her daughter Anya, and their servants Yasha and Charlotte return to their family’s ancestral estate in the Russian countryside from Paris. A coterie of friends, family members, and neighbors anxiously await their arrival, among them Ranevsky ...

  5. The Cherry Orchard, drama in four acts written by Anton Chekhov as Vishnyovy sad. Chekhov’s final play, it was first performed and published in 1904. Though Chekhov insisted that the play was “a comedy, in places even a farce,” playgoers and readers often find a touch of tragedy in the decline of

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. The Cherry Orchard was the last play Anton Chekhov wrote before his untimely death, in 1904. The play is in many ways an elegy for an old Russia that was in the process of dying at the turn of the century, with the new Russia powerless to be born. But despite this elegiac quality, Chekhov himself considered the play a comedy – a ‘four-act ...

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  8. Historical Context of The Cherry Orchard. At the start of the play, Madame Ranevsky is returning to Russia after a five-year stint in Paris. At the time of the play’s setting, 1904—and the decade preceding it—Russian foreign policy was beginning to reflect a newfound alliance with France, which had in previous years been an adversary.

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