Passion, Poison, and Petrifaction


Book Description

Shaw characterizes Passion, Poison, and Petrifaction as a "Brief tragedy," which, of course, the reader or spectator immediately discovers that Shaw is having us on. One might more rightly describe this play about vanity, jealousy, and murder as ridiculous or even-dare we say it-an antecedent to the Theatre of the Absurd. The play is a world unto itself-tomfoolery from beginning to end. Consequently, the frivolity is its virtue. Tragedy turned on its head. May you laugh yourself silly.







Fatal Gazogene


Book Description

D.C. Recreation Department, city-wide division, thirty-third annual one-act play tournament 1961, St. Margaret's Players present "Passion, Poison and Petrification, or, The Fatal Gazogene," by George Bernard Shaw, directed by John Crockett, Jr., producer, Mary Maxwell.