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Life x 3: A Play
 
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Life x 3: A Play [Paperback]

Yasmina Reza (Author), Christopher Hampton (Translator)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 17, 2001 0571207383 978-0571207381 1st
From the celebrated writer of Art, a scathingly hilarious commentary on vanity, professional insecurity, and the vicissitudes of marriage.

Life X 3 presents three versions of two couples (and an offstage six-year-old) trying to make a success of one evening despite the fact that they neither like nor respect one another. When Hubert and Inès arrive a day early to dinner at the home of Henri and Sophie, Sophie barely has time to change out of her robe and Inès is in a foul mood about a run in her stocking-from there, the evening can only go downhill. Over an improvised meal of chocolate fingers, potato chips, and wine, the couples trade insults on every social and professional level and loyalties are changed with the same rapidity that glasses of Sancerre are drained. However, as she has so astutely done in the past, Yasmina Reza uses these acidic exchanges to illuminate the innate desire for love and acceptance in us all.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Praise for the London premiere of Life X 3 by Yasmina Reza:

"[Reza] has perfected the technique of combining light comedy with the play of ideas . . . [Life X 3]is clever, it's elegant, it's entertaining."--Charles Spencer, The Daily Telegraph

"[Reza] is the most exported living playwright on the planet, a woman whose culturally rich background has given her real insight into the melting pot of today's society . . . Life X 3 ruminate[s] on man's place in the universe . . . Her amalgamation of laughs with smart arguments and flashes of raw emotion is a crowd-pulling recipe . . . [Her] social satire is often cryingly funny."--Kate Bassett, The Independent

"Alan Ayckbourn meets Edward Albee . . . The writing is sharp, the observation spot-on."--Georgina Brown, Mail on Sunday

"The Grand Chaos Theory . . . is applied to a Parisian dinner-party in Yasmina Reza's delightful . . . comedy of manners. Life X 3 is designed to show how chance, with its impact upon our actions and behaviour, changes everything . . . A wicked pleasure to behold. Miss Reza is a star-reporter at the sex-war front and a thorough mocker of male pretensions."--Nicholas de Jongh, The Evening Standard

"Adroitly translated by Christopher Hampton . . . LIfe X 3 amounts to pleasure-in-triplicate."--Paul Taylor, The Independent

About the Author

Yasmina Reza, born in Paris in 1959, is an acclaimed playwright, screenwriter, and novelist. Her first play, Conversations Après un Enterrement (Conversations After a Burial) won her the 1987 Molière Award for Best Author along with a Johnson Foundation Award and a SACD New Talent Award. Her other works for the theater include Art and The Unexpected Man. She lives in Paris.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 84 pages
  • Publisher: Faber & Faber; 1st edition (October 17, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0571207383
  • ISBN-13: 978-0571207381
  • Product Dimensions: 7.7 x 5 x 0.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,643,128 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars "How can we grasp the world as it is?", June 26, 2004
This review is from: Life x 3: A Play (Paperback)
This clever, light comedy, written in 2000, presents the same basic reality in three different ways in three different acts. Sonia and Henri, a married couple with a small child, are relaxing after putting their recalcitrant son to bed. Suddenly, Ines and Hubert, guests whom they had expected the following evening, arrive for dinner, which, in this emergency, turns out to be "chocolate fingers" and "crisps." Henri is an astrophysicist who has devoted three years to a research project which is about to be published, and Hubert tells him that night that another researcher may have beaten him to the publisher. Hubert, also an astrophysicist, may be able to help Henri professionally.

In each of the three acts, which replay this scenario, one or more characters changes, dramatically affecting the dynamics of the group and the outcome of the evening. In Act I, Sonia is rigid and assertive, while Henri is the opposite, wanting to placate both their screaming son and Hubert, who can help him professionally. In Act II, sexual politics becomes a focus, with Hubert and Sonia agreeing to an assignation, until Hubert's self-promotion and condescension, combined with intemperate remarks by Ines, bring the evening to a disastrous close. In Act III, everyone is more relaxed and is conversing about "unity theory." Both couples are patient with the child upstairs, Henri has more confidence, he is sanguine about the research of the other scientist, and Hubert, while insensitive in his relationships, is not a complete dolt.

As astrophysicists, both Henri and Hubert have been studying "unity theory," a theory connecting the fundamental forces of the universe and explaining interactions, and the author illustrates this visually through the action on stage. Like the four fundamental forces of nature, we have four characters, some weak and some strong, operating independently on some levels while interrelating on others. As we see from the different outcomes in the three acts, minor changes or glitches, even random ones, can affect relationships, future directions, and the whole concept of "unity." The characters are quite different in personality in each of the acts, not really unified as personalities, illustrating dramatically Hubert's observation about the gap between "reality and representation," and between "object and word." Though the conceit is clever, the play stands as a sparkling, light comedy of relationships on its own--familiarity with science is not a prerequisite to its enjoyment. Mary Whipple

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2.0 out of 5 stars Almost Situation Comedy, May 24, 2009
"Life X 3" is an inconsequential play in which the same situation is reenacted with variations from three different angles in each of three acts. A typical Yasmina Reza gimmick: put three or four people who basically don't like each other together in the same room and let them go at it. Result: this play, "Art" and "The God of Carnage."
Two couples, Henry and Sonia are hosting Hubert and Inez. In this play the couples have three opportunities to screw up. Each time there are differences in dialogue, but the results are the same. Which of the four characters is the most likeable? I think you'd be hard-pressed to say which one was even tolerable. Four rather disagreeable people. In the four-way battle no one is spared. Insults fly, sides change, allies become enemies.
Hubert and Inez show up on the wrong night, and Henry and his wife have only kibbles and bits to serve to them. It's unfortunate because Henry is trying to ingratiate himself with Hubert so he can advance in his profession.
A lot of the play deals with child rearing and spoiling children. Henry and Sonia's child, Arnaud off-stage, never seen, keeps pestering for attention.
I have never seen the play performed so I can only judge from the printed page. It was performed in April 2003 in New York in the Circle in the Square which qualifies as a Broadway production. Helen Hunt and John Turturro were in the cast.
The play is very much in the Absurdist tradition (step-child of Ionesco?), and the dialogue is, at times, comical, inane and off-the-wall. There's some scientific jargon, mumbo jumbo, in the play that is as absurd as the prosaic talk.
Reza doesn't create a really sustainable dramatic situation. It feels like experimental theater, all ultimately disappointing, annoying, and vague. Reza's play "Art" was far more focused and dramatically and esthetically satisfying than this slight effort.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars I am thirsty, March 18, 2009
This review is from: Life x 3: A Play (Paperback)
Reza boosted her fame when Czar Cosy asked her to write about him, and she did that during his election campaign, and it was a success and he won the elections. The man is smart. And I like his wife's music.

But let's return to Reza. She was already a famous playwright in France, otherwise the man would not have chosen her.
Apart from that I know little about her.

She wrote a play called, in English, Life x 3. I would never have noticed it, frankly, if not for the following personal reason: my daughter, the younger one, is a gifted amateur actress and theater person with years of track record in school theaters. Her triumph was her direction of Ionesco's Lesson. As an actress, she sparkled as Philomele, her last part before school was over.

Now as a new out-of-schooler in a gap year, her first acting job (after an unfortunately failed attempt to stage Glass Menagerie, where she would have had the role of the daughter) was in Life x 3. It is a 4 persons play. My daughter was the 5th, the little son who cries behind stage. A bit of a let-down after years of fame.

A play about two couples. One visiting the other for a dinner party. The problem is that there was a misunderstanding about dates. The hosts were thinking in terms of tomorrow. Difficult, because the guest is the host's superior in the world of science (cosmology) with presumed influence on career prospects. You can see right away that this is getting difficult. The senior man asks about the forthcoming publication on the halos of milky ways or something like that. It is ready! But have you seen the recent publications by such and such on the same subject? Depression, dejection, accusations, and then the little son acts up in the background and the tense conversations embrace the subject of education, with glee.

The level of the professional chess games (who is important for whom?) is enriched by bitching about child management and about the women's inability to understand what the owners of creation are talking about and by finger food at the improvised disaster party. It ends in hostility and evacuation.

And then we get the same scenario in different permutations. The protagonists change their character, the reaction to situations changes, the guest goes for the hostess, the son goes on interfering from behind the scenes...

The play is restricted by pragmatical considerations to 3 versions of the same starting situation. It could conceivably last much longer with endless variations.

The concluding question must be: so what? This is a funny evening at the theater, but I don't see any depth in the approach to real life.
Unless your daughter plays a part in it, you do not really need to watch it. I can't think of a reason to read it.
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