Georges Feydeau, the best-known writer of French farce in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, wrote more than twenty full-length comic plays and twenty one-act ones. Some of these have been adapted for the cinema. Although Feydeau was active well into the era of film he never wrote for the medium, but within two years of his death in 1921 other writers and directors began to take his plays as the basis for films, of which more than twenty have been made, in several countries and languages.
Films based on Feydeau plays
Television adaptations
In the 1960s and 1970s the BBC filmed a series of fourteen farces by Feydeau, adapted by Caryl Brahms and Ned Sherrin, under the collective title Ooh La La!. Some were adapted from one-act plays, others from full-length ones. All fourteen starred Patrick Cargill.
References
- ^ "Ooh La La: A Good Night's Sleep", BBC Genome. Retrieved 30 April 2022
- ^ "Ooh La La: All Night Sitting", BBC Genome. Retrieved 30 April 2022
- ^ "Ooh La La: A Little Bit to Fall Back On", BBC Genome. Retrieved 30 April 2022
- ^ "Ooh La La: Above Reproach", BBC Genome. Retrieved 30 April 2022
- ^ "Ooh La La: Making a Pass", BBC Genome. Retrieved 30 April 2022
- ^ "Ooh La La: Before We Were So Rudely Interrupted", BBC Genome. Retrieved 30 April 2022
- ^ "Ooh La La: Call Me Maestro", BBC Genome. Retrieved 30 April 2022
- ^ "Ooh La La: Keep an Eye on Amelie", BBC Genome. Retrieved 30 April 2022
- ^ "Ooh La La: A Pig in a Poke", BBC Genome. Retrieved 30 April 2022
- ^ "Ooh La La: A-Hunting We Will Go", BBC Genome. Retrieved 30 April 2022
- ^ "Ooh La La: The Lady from Maxim's", BBC Genome. Retrieved 30 April 2022
- ^ "Ooh La La: Paying the Piper", BBC Genome. Retrieved 30 April 2022
- ^ "Ooh La La: Caught in the Act", BBC Genome. Retrieved 30 April 2022
- ^ "Ooh La La: Kept on a String", BBC Genome. Retrieved 30 April 2022