Janne Kärki
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TextoIdioma: fi Editor: Salt Lake City, UT : Project Gutenberg, 2026Descripción: 1 online resource : multiple file formatsTipo de contenido: - text
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- Juhani Kärkkäinen and Tapio Riikonen
Release date is 2026-04-16
Juhani Kärkkäinen and Tapio Riikonen
Janne Kärki by Lauri Haarla is a one-act comedic play written in the late 1920s. Set in a rural Finnish village by a riverside grove, it lampoons flirtation, social ambition, and small-town money troubles as a quick-tongued shopboy pursues a supposed wealthy widow through bluff, disguise, and schemes.
The plot follows Janne, an overconfident shop assistant who jilts his seamstress fiancée Lyyli to court the glamorous Mary Tillon (really restaurant worker Marja Tillanen), while the miller’s son Heikki, the jealous pap’s son Vilander, the dandy apothecary Bitter, and the henpecked shopkeeper Vintturi swirl around in rivalries and misunderstandings. Janne even dons a lady’s clothes to dupe Vilander, then helps Mary trick Vintturi into signing a “receipt” under the pretense of handwriting divination. A planned serenade contest dissolves into farce, and Vintturi’s formidable wife Vieno crashes in to expose Mary and Lempi Sirkiä (a telephone operator) as impostors, brandishing reputations and bills. The masquerade collapses: Bitter and Vilander slink off, Vintturi is marched home, Mary and Lempi leave after settling debts, Heikki hurries to reconcile with his true love Suoma, and a chastened Janne is forgiven by Lyyli. The play closes with a wink at vanity, easy money, and “cleverness” that costs more than it gains. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
Originally published: Helsinki: Kustannus Oy Näytelmä, 1929
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