New Orleans in fiction: Difference between revisions
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* ''[[All Dogs Go to Heaven]]'' |
* ''[[All Dogs Go to Heaven]]'' |
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* ''[[Angel Heart]]'' |
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* ''[[Belle of the Nineties]]'' |
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* ''[[The Big Easy]]'' |
* ''[[The Big Easy]]'' |
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* '' |
* ''[[Blaze]]'' |
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* ''The Bucaneer'' ( |
* ''[[The Bucaneer']]' (1938) |
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* ''[[The Bucaneer]]'' (1958) |
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* ''[[Cat People (1982 film)|Cat People]]'' |
* ''[[Cat People (1982 film)|Cat People]]'' |
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* ''[[The Cincinnati Kid]]'' |
* ''[[The Cincinnati Kid]]'' |
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* ''[[Double Jeopardy (film)|Double Jeopardy]]'' |
* ''[[Double Jeopardy (film)|Double Jeopardy]]'' |
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* ''[[Father Hood]]'' |
* ''[[Father Hood]]'' |
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* ''[[The Flame of New Orleans]]'' |
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* ''[[Interview with the Vampire]]'' |
* ''[[Interview with the Vampire]]'' |
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* ''[[Jezebel (1938 film)|Jezebel]]'' |
* ''[[Jezebel (1938 film)|Jezebel]]'' |
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* ''[[Lady from Louisiana]]'' |
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* ''[[Last Holiday]]'' |
* ''[[Last Holiday]]'' |
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* ''[[Live and Let Die]]'' |
* ''[[Live and Let Die]]'' |
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* ''[[Miller's Crossing]]''—the location of the city where the fictional events take place is never specified, but the scenes were filmed in New Orleans. |
* ''[[Miller's Crossing]]''—the location of the city where the fictional events take place is never specified, but the scenes were filmed in New Orleans. |
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* ''[[Obsession]]'' |
* ''[[Obsession (film)|Obsession]]'' |
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* ''[[The Pelican Brief]]'' |
* ''[[The Pelican Brief]]'' |
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* ''[[Runaway Jury]]'' |
* ''[[Runaway Jury]]'' |
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* ''[[A Streetcar Named Desire]]'' |
* ''[[A Streetcar Named Desire]]'' |
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* ''[[Tightrope (film)|Tightrope]]'' |
* ''[[Tightrope (film)|Tightrope]]'' |
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* ''[[The Toast of New Orleans]]'' |
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* ''[[The Wacky World of Dr. Morgus]]'' |
* ''[[The Wacky World of Dr. Morgus]]'' |
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Revision as of 01:24, 16 August 2006
The city of New Orleans, Louisiana is part of a number of fictional works. A very incomplete version of the list includes:
Books
- The Awakening by Kate Chopin
- Blues and Trouble: Twelve Stories by Tom Piazza (first short story "Brownsville" is set in New Orleans)
- Clarimonde by Napier Bartlett (features a Creole tale and a description of New Orleans during the American Civil War)
- A Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole
- Dinner at Antoine's by Francis Parkinson Keyes
- The Grandissimes by George Washington Cable
- Junkie by William Burroughs
- Life on the Mississippi by Mark Twain (Chapter XLI: "The Metropolis of the South")
- Lives of the Mayfair Witches by Anne Rice
- Manon Lescaut by Antoine François Prévost (features the early French colony at New Orleans at one point in the book)
- Midnight Bayou by Nora Roberts
- Monsieur Motte by Grace King
- Mosquitoes and Pylon by William Faulkner (the latter novel takes place in "New Valois," a thinly disguised New Orleans)
- The Moviegoer by Walker Percy
- New Orleans, Mon Amour by Andrei Codrescu
- Paul Marchand, F.M.C. by Charles Chesnutt
- The Vampire Chronicles by Anne Rice
- Violets and Other Tales and The Goodness of Saint Rocque and Other Stories by Alice Dunbar-Nelson
Authors who have repeatedly or frequently used New Orleans as a setting for their fiction include Poppy Z. Brite, Truman Capote, Nancy A. Collins, Barbara Hambly, Anne Rice, and Tennessee Williams.
Comic Books
In the DC Comics fictional universe, New Orleans has been given a neighbouring city, St. Roch, Louisiana, serving as an occasional home to the original Hawkman and Hawkgirl.
- All Dogs Go to Heaven
- Angel Heart
- Belle of the Nineties
- The Big Easy
- Blaze
- The Bucaneer'' (1938)
- The Bucaneer (1958)
- Cat People
- The Cincinnati Kid
- Double Jeopardy
- Father Hood
- The Flame of New Orleans
- Interview with the Vampire
- Jezebel
- Lady from Louisiana
- Last Holiday
- Live and Let Die
- Miller's Crossing—the location of the city where the fictional events take place is never specified, but the scenes were filmed in New Orleans.
- Obsession
- The Pelican Brief
- Runaway Jury
- The Skeleton Key
- Stay Alive—the location of the city where the fictional events take place is never specified, but the scenes were filmed in (and around) New Orleans.
- A Streetcar Named Desire
- Tightrope
- The Toast of New Orleans
- The Wacky World of Dr. Morgus
Star Trek
- Star Trek:Deep Space Nine character Benjamin Sisko is a native of New Orleans. His father Joseph Sisko is also a native of New Orleans, and has a restaurant near Jackson Square in 2371. The family restaurant is seen in the episodes "Homefront," "Tears Of The Prophets," "Image In The Sand," and "Shadows And Symbols."
- The New Orleans class starship is named for the city.
The Simpsons
- New Orleans is the setting of the Simpsons spinoff, "Chief Wiggum P.I.," starring Chief Wiggum.
- New Orleans is also the setting for "Oh! Streetcar!," a musical version of A Streetcar Named Desire.
The X-Files
The X-Files character Monica Reyes worked for the FBI in New Orleans before becoming John Doggett's partner.
Other television references
Several episodes of television series have referenced the city:
- The short-lived 1997 CBS series Orleans was set in New Orleans.
- Season 9 (2000) of The Real World was set in New Orleans.
- In a 2001 episode of Seven Days, Parker goes to New Orleans to prove that his friend, who is scheduled to be executed, is innocent.
- In a 2003 episode of The Drew Carey Show, Drew and his buddies set off on a road trip to New Orleans to find a girl he met after placing an ad on a beer bottle.
- In a 2004 episode of Las Vegas called "New Orleans", Danny, Ed and Sam head to New Orleans in search of a big gambler who owes the casino money.
- In a 2005 episode of Law and Order: Special Victims Unit, the detectives pursue a child molester who kidnapped three young sisters from New Orleans after their parents were killed in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
- Frank's Place
- In a 2005 episode of Bones, Dr. Temperance Brennen and Agent Seely Booth head to New Orleans to help identify bodies found after Hurricane Katrina. The plot revolves heavily around the underground voodoo practices in the city.
Theater
- A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams is famously set in the city of New Orleans and the city itself plays a major role in the play.
Videogames
- Gabriel Knight: Sins Of The Fathers, a 1993 adventure game for PC, is set in the city of New Orleans.