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Frank Wedekind

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Frank Wedekind
Frank Wedekind
in 1883
Born
Benjamin Franklin Wedekind

(1864-07-24)July 24, 1864
DiedMarch 9, 1918(1918-03-09) (aged 53)
NationalityGerman
Occupationplaywright

Benjamin Franklin Wedekind (July 24, 1864 – March 9, 1918), usually known as Frank Wedekind, was a German playwright. His work, which often criticizes bourgeois attitudes (particularly towards sex), is considered to anticipate expressionism and was influential in the development of epic theatre.[1]

Life and career

Benjamin Franklin Wedekind was born on July 24, 1864 in Hannover, Germany. His mother was Swiss and became pregnant with him in San Francisco. His father, a German, had a Swiss castle in which Wedekind grew up.

Until World War I, when he was forced to obtain a German passport, he was an American citizen and traveled throughout Europe.[2] He lived most of his adult life in Munich, though he had a brief period working in advertising, for the Maggi soup firm, in Switzerland in 1886.[3]

His sex life was prodigious and he frequented prostitutes, contracting syphilis. He also enjoyed the pleasure of platonic female company and kept his tendencies toward homosexuality and sadism in check.[2] He had an affair with Frida Uhl who bore him a child.[4]

Having worked in business and the circus, Wedekind went on to become an actor and singer. In this capacity he received wide acclaim as the principal star of the satirical cabaret Die elf Scharfrichter (The Eleven Executioners), launched in 1901.[5] It was thanks to Wedekind's success that the tradition of German satirical writing was established in the theatre, producing the cabaret-song satirists Kurt Tucholsky, Walter Mehring, Joachim Ringelnatz and Erich Kästner among others, who invigorated the culture of the Weimar Republic; "all bitter social critics who used direct, stinging satire as the best means of attack and wrote a large part of their always intelligible light verse to be declaimed or sung".[6] At the age of 34, after serving a nine-month prison sentence for "lèse-majesté" (thanks to the publication in Simplicissimus of some of his satirical poems), Wedekind became a dramaturg (a play-reader and adapter) at the Munich Schauspielhaus.[7]

In 1906, he married the Austrian actress Tilly Newes, 22 years his junior and became strictly monogamous. His relationship with his wife was turbulent, with Wedekind prone to jealousy and he felt pressure to maintain strenuous creative and sexual activity in order to please her. They had two daughters, Pamela and Kadidja,[8] but his jealousy led his wife to attempt both separation and suicide.[2]

Near the end of his life, Wedekind underwent an appendectomy and immediately began acting again, leading to a hernia. His doctor refused to operate immediately but Wedekind insisted and complications from the surgery led to his death at the age of 53 on March 9, 1918.[2]

Tilly Wedekind went on to appear in such films as Travelling People and was romantically linked to the author Gottfried Benn.[8] In 1969, at age 83, she published an autobiography in German, Lulu: Die Rolle meines Lebens (Lulu: The Role of My Life).[9]

Works

Wedekind's first major play, Frühlings Erwachen (Spring Awakening, 1891), which concerns sexuality and puberty among some young German students, caused a scandal as it contained scenes of homoeroticism, implied group male masturbation, actual male masturbation, sado-masochism between a teenage boy and girl, rape and suicide, as well as references to abortion.

The "Lulu" plays Erdgeist (Earth Spirit, 1895) and Die Büchse der Pandora (Pandora's Box, 1904) were probably his best known works until the 2006 adaptation of Spring Awakening. Originally conceived as a single play, the two pieces tell a continuous story of a sexually-enticing young dancer, who rises in German society through her relationships with wealthy men but who later falls into poverty and prostitution.[10] The frank depiction of sexuality and violence in these plays, including lesbianism and an encounter with Jack the Ripper (a role which Wedekind played in the original production),[11] pushed the boundaries of what was considered acceptable on the stage at the time. Karl Kraus also helped Wedekind stage it in Vienna.[12]

Der Kammersänger (The Court-Singer, 1899) is a one-act character study of a famous opera singer who receives a series of unwelcome guests at his hotel suite.

In Franziska (1910), the title character, a young girl, initiates a Faustian pact with the Devil, selling her soul for the knowledge of what it is like to live life as a man (reasoning that men seem to have all the advantages).

A number of Wedekind's works have been translated into English by Samuel Atkins Eliot, Jr.

Wedekind in later life

List of major works

Adaptations

The "Lulu" plays formed the basis for G. W. Pabst's acclaimed silent film Pandora's Box (1929), starring Louise Brooks as Lulu and also Alban Berg's opera Lulu (1937), which is considered to be one of the masterpieces of twentieth-century opera.[13] Walerian Borowczyk based his 1980 film Lulu on these plays. Currently the plays are being adapted into comics by John Linton Roberson.[14] They also form the basis for the 2011 album Lulu, a collaboration between the rock musician Lou Reed and the heavy metal band Metallica.[15]

Der Kammersänger was adapted by composer Hugo Weisgall for his English-language opera "The Tenor."

Wedekind's symbolist novella Mine-Haha, or On the Bodily Education of Young Girls (1903) was the basis for the film Innocence (2004) by Lucile Hadžihalilović and The Fine Art of Love (2005) by John Irvin.

In 2006, Frühlings Erwachen was adapted into the successful Broadway musical Spring Awakening.

References

Notes

  1. ^ See Banham (1998) and Willett (1959). In his Messingkauf Dialogues, Brecht cites Wedekind, along with Büchner and Valentin, as his "chief influences" in his early years: "he", Brecht writes of himself in the third person, "also saw the writer Wedekind performing his own works in a style which he had developed in cabaret. Wedekind had worked as a ballad singer; he accompanied himself on the lute." (1965, 69).
  2. ^ a b c d John Simon; John Simon is the former theater critic of New York magazine and National Review. (1990-11-18). "How Sex Killed Frank Wedekind - New York Times". Nytimes.com. Retrieved 2014-08-11.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ Willett (1959, 98n).
  4. ^ Meyer, Michael. Strindberg: A Biography, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1987, p.363.
  5. ^ See Banham (1998) and Willett (1959, 87)
  6. ^ Willett (1959, 87).
  7. ^ Willett (1959, 87, 106).
  8. ^ a b [1] Bio of Tilly Wedekind on the IMDB website
  9. ^ "DER SPIEGEL 47/1969 - Ehe und Atlas". Spiegel.de. 1969-11-17. Retrieved 2014-08-11.
  10. ^ Mueller, Carl R. "Introduction" toFrank Wedekind: Four Major Plays, Vol 1, Lyme, New Hampshire: Smith and Krauss, 2000
  11. ^ Willett (1959, 73n).
  12. ^ Bru, Sascha and Martens, Gunther (2006) The invention of politics in the European avant-garde (1906–1940) pp.52-3
  13. ^ Harewood, Earl of. The Definitive Kobbe's Opera Book, New York: Putnam, 1987. p.875
  14. ^ Roberson, John Linton. "Lulu"
  15. ^ "Lou Reed & Metallica - Lulu". Loureedmetallica.com. Retrieved 2014-08-11.

Bibliography

  • Banham, Martin, ed. 1998. "Wedekind, Frank." In The Cambridge Guide to Theatre. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-43437-8. p. 1189-1190.
  • Boa, Elizabeth. 1987. The Sexual Circus: Wedekind's Theatre of Subversion. Oxford and New York: Basil Blackwell. ISBN 0-631-14234-7.
  • Brecht, Bertolt. 1965. The Messingkauf Dialogues. Trans. John Willett. Bertolt Brecht: Plays, Poetry, Prose Ser. London: Methuen, 1985. ISBN 0-413-38890-5.
  • Mueller, Carl R. 2000. Introduction to Frank Wedekind: Four Major Plays, Vol 1. Lyme, New Hampshire: Smith and Kraus.
  • Willett, John. 1967. The Theatre of Bertolt Brecht: A Study from Eight Aspects. Third rev. ed. London: Methuen, 1977. ISBN 0-413-34360-X.