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1927 novella Albert Nobbs by George Moore
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- Albert Nobbs is a 2011 period drama film directed by Rodrigo García and starring Glenn Close. The screenplay, by Close, John Banville and Gabriella Prekop, is based on the 1927 novella Albert Nobbs by George Moore.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert_Nobbs
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Apr 30, 2020 · Albert Nobbs is a reliable and successful waiter in Dublin in the 1860s, who has worked at Morrison’s Hotel for the past seven years. He is popular with the guests, and valued by the proprietors, the Bakers, because he works hard and is not distracted either by drink or by chambermaids.
- Siobhan Chapman
- src@liverpool.ac.uk
- 2020
The short story ‘Albert Nobbs’ by the Irish novelist George Moore first appeared in A Story-Tellers Holiday, in 1918. It was later republished by Moore in his Celibate Lives (1927).
- Mary Noonan
- 2020
Apr 26, 2012 · Albert Nobbs, the cross-dresser of literary fiction, meets his earthy popular-culture counterpart in this historical drama, and there is little doubt about who wins the day. Postscript: Alison Oram is professor in social and cultural history at Leeds Metropolitan University.
The story of Albert Nobbs, therefore, is one of multiple adaptations and translations. In this chapter, Noonan first considers the techniques Benmussa used to make a play that exposes the coercive nature of narrative within patriarchy, and the relationship between performance and gender.
This chapter examines a critically overlooked literary fiction by an Irish writer whose legacy has tended to be overshadowed by the modernist generation which succeeded him. George Moore’s Albert Nobbs depicts the lives of not one but two female-bodied men working in a Dublin hotel in the 1860s.
'Albert Nobbs', Ladies and Gentlemen, and Quare Irish Female Erotohistories This article models an approach to quare Irish female erotohistoriography through analyzing George Moore's 1918 novella 'Albert Nobbs'1 (along with two key stage and screen adaptations of Moore's work), and Emma Donoghue's 1996 stage play, Ladies and Gentlemen.
George Moore's story of cross-dressing and sexual confusion, 'Albert Nobbs', approaches these topics not via ideology or psychotherapy but with a sophisticated empathy learnt from literary tradition.