Difference between revisions of "Der Furchtsame"
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− | ''[[Der Furchtsame]]'' is a German comedy in three acts by the Austrian playwright Philipp Hafner (1735 -1764)[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philipp_Hafner], first published in 1774. | + | ''[[Der Furchtsame]]'' ("The Fear") is a German comedy in three acts by the Austrian playwright Philipp Hafner (1735 -1764)[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philipp_Hafner], first published in 1774. |
== Translations and adaptations == | == Translations and adaptations == |
Revision as of 17:20, 27 November 2015
Der Furchtsame ("The Fear") is a German comedy in three acts by the Austrian playwright Philipp Hafner (1735 -1764)[1], first published in 1774.
Translations and adaptations
Adapted and made widely known as a German musical comedy ("Ein Komisches Singspiel In Zwei Aufzügen") with the title Das Neue Sonntagskind (lit: "The new Sunday's Child") by Joachim Perinet, and published in Leipzig by A. Geers, 1794.
Translated into Dutch as De Vreesachtige uit Vooroordeel, wegens zyne Geboorte op Zondag (1799/1800) by Gosenwijn Christiaan de Greuve.
Translated once more into Dutch, and adapted as a musical, under the title De Nachtmerrie or De Nachtmerrie, of De Vampyr by G. Vreedenberg (1829/1840)[2]
Performance history in South Africa
1853: Performed in Dutch as De Nachtmerrie, of De Vampyr in Cape Town in August 1853 by Door Yver Bloeit de Kunst, alongside Eleonora van Rosalba, of De Puinhopen van Paluzzi.
Sources
https://de.wikisource.org/wiki/BLK%C3%96:Hafner,_Philipp
https://searchworks.stanford.edu/catalog/citation?id=2046441
http://www.let.leidenuniv.nl/Dutch/GroteFiles/Ceneton05.html
Gerd Aage Gillhoff. 2013. The Royal Dutch Theatre at the Hague 1804–1876. Springer.[3]
J. A. Worp. 1907. Geschiedenis van het drama en van het tooneel in Nederland. Grongingen. [4]
Bosman, 1928: pp. 234, 458
Go to ESAT Bibliography
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