Difference between revisions of "Die Panne"

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The radio play won the 1956 Blind War Veterans’ Prize for best radio play and the literary award of the newspaper Tribune de Lausanne.
 
The radio play won the 1956 Blind War Veterans’ Prize for best radio play and the literary award of the newspaper Tribune de Lausanne.
  
==Translations and adaptations==
+
==Other versions by ==
  
 
The radio drama was almost immediately adapted as a novel, (1956) as well as a TV play (1957) and a stage comedy (1979)  
 
The radio drama was almost immediately adapted as a novel, (1956) as well as a TV play (1957) and a stage comedy (1979)  

Revision as of 06:56, 21 November 2022

Die Panne ("The breakdown") is a German radio drama, TV drama, novel and play by Friedrich Dürrenmatt (1921-1990)[1]

The original text

Written as a radio drama the tale tells the story of a traveller who, when his car breaks down, is taken in for the night by a former judge, where he is invited to participate in a nightmarish game with the judge and his three friends — a former prosecutor, defense attorney and public hangman.

The radio play won the 1956 Blind War Veterans’ Prize for best radio play and the literary award of the newspaper Tribune de Lausanne.

Other versions by

The radio drama was almost immediately adapted as a novel, (1956) as well as a TV play (1957) and a stage comedy (1979)

The novel was translated into English as A Dangerous Game by Richard Winston and Clara Winston (known as Traps in the USA).

Die Panne : eine noch mogliche Geschichte published by Arche in Zurich, 1966.

Translations and adaptations

An adaptation into Afrikaans by Leonora Nel is entitled Spel.

Translated from the original German into Afrikaans by Bartho Smit entitled Teenspoed: 'n nog moontlike verhaal. Published by Human & Rousseau, 1961 and in Bartho Smit-vertalings No 2, by HAUM 1985.

Performance history in South Africa

1964: Spel was presented by Pro Arte in Pretoria in 1964 starring, among others, Lourens Odendaal.

1971: Teenspoed was to have been presented in conjunction with Wolf, Wolf hoe laat is dit? (Aucamp) and Karel (Sławomir Mrożek) by Libertas Theatre Club under the direction of Marie van Heerden, opening 29 October 1971. However, in the absence of any theatre programme or newspaper reports (especially in the local Stellenbosch weekly paper Eikestadnuus), it is assumed that the production never materialised.

Sources

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedrich_D%C3%BCrrenmatt

Twaalfde Nag programme notes, PACT 1964.

Announcement of future Libertas Theatre Club productions, Mary, Mary theatre programme, 1971.

Copy of the Afrikaans translation found in the Stellenbosch University drama archives.

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