In Chekhov's "Three Sisters," written in 1900, the universal goal is to be in Moscow. In Mikhail Bulgakov's "Zoyka's Apartment," written a quarter-century later, there's hardly a character who doesn't dream of getting the hell out of Moscow. In the interim was the Russian Revolution, which changed everything except human nature. Bulgakov depicts the post-revolutionary […]
SOURCE: www.newcitystage.com at 01:00PM on February 28, 2016