
MAJOR BARBARA - BERNARD SHAW
In a cozy January evening, the drama opens in the well‑appointed library of Lady Britomart Undershaft. The matriarch, a formidable yet oddly tender figure, summons her son Stephen—a freshly graduated, slightly nervous young man—to a serious conversation. Their exchange crackles with wit and tension, revealing a household balanced on the edge of propriety and hidden anxieties.
Lady Britomart confides that the family’s affairs have become too heavy for her alone, urging Stephen to step into a role he has long avoided. The discussion turns to the enigmatic figure of their father, a powerful industrialist whose influence looms over the sisters’ futures and the family’s moral compass. As Stephen grapples with his own uncertainties, listeners are drawn into a world where personal ambition, social duty, and questions of right and wrong begin to collide, setting the stage for the spirited debates that define the play.
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (181K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Eve Sobol. HTML version by Al Haines.
Release date
2003-02-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1856–1950
A razor-sharp Irish playwright and critic, he turned comedy into a tool for questioning politics, class, religion, and social habits. Best known for plays like Pygmalion and Saint Joan, he wrote with wit that still feels fresh.
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by Bernard Shaw

by Bernard Shaw

by Bernard Shaw

by Bernard Shaw

by Bernard Shaw

by Bernard Shaw

by Bernard Shaw

by Bernard Shaw