Meijeri : Kolminäytöksinen kansanhuvinäytelmä by Artturi Järviluoma
"Meijeri : Kolminäytöksinen kansanhuvinäytelmä" by Artturi Järviluoma is a three-act folk comedy play written in the early 20th century. Set in a Finnish backwoods village of the 1880s, it pits a new cooperative dairy against household butter-making, turning progress versus tradition into village-sized farce. The gentle widower Enkkeli, his practical sister-in-law Vappu, blustery farmhand Janne, steady neighbor Aapo, and showy would-be bride Mariaana drive the tangle of courtship, money worries, and milk
morals. Expect lively dialect humor, musical interludes, and community politics where love matches hinge on cream, cash, and reputation. The opening of the play sketches the village and Heikkilä household as gossip spreads that a meijeri may be founded, alarming Janne and Fiia, who mock “kurnaali” (meijerimilk) while the accordionist Tuppu boasts he’s been asked to be meijerist. Roughhousing, a meijeri-song, and comic bluster follow until Enkkeli returns from a failed proposal—scuttled when he mentioned the dairy—only for the peddler Susso to steer him toward the richer Mariaana. Meanwhile Aapo tentatively courts Vappu, but they quarrel over the dairy on moral and domestic grounds. The schoolteacher barrels in to rally a meeting, and on Sunday Mariaana visits, flaunts Leppälä’s means, and all but conditions marriage on Huhtajärvi getting a meijeri, prompting Enkkeli to pivot in favor. This alarms the servants, who trade tales of poisoned milk until Miina reveals they already ate tasty velli cooked with meijerimaito, sending the anxious Iiska into slapstick hypochondria. The scenes build toward the village’s decision, with romance and reputation tied to whether the churn or the cream separator will rule. (This is an automatically generated summary.)