2020年9月16日 星期三

Salome by Oscar Wilde.




Wilde's interest in Salomé's image had been stimulated by descriptions of Gustave Moreau's paintings in Joris-Karl Huysmans's À rebours.
Salomé
Beardsley-peacockskirt.PNG
The Peacock Skirt, one of the illustrations Aubrey Beardsley produced for the first English edition of Wilde's play Salome (1894)
Written byOscar Wilde
Place premieredComédie-Parisienne
Paris
Original languageFrench
GenreTragedy

Salome (French: Salomépronounced [salome]) is a tragedy by Oscar Wilde. The original 1891 version of the play was in French. Three years later an English translation was published. The play tells in one act the Biblical story of Salome, stepdaughter of the tetrarch Herod Antipas, who, to her stepfather's dismay but to the delight of her mother Herodias, requests the head of Jokanaan (John the Baptist) on a silver platter as a reward for dancing the dance of the seven veils.




Maud Allan as Salomé with the head of John the Baptist in Vision of Salomé, her 1906 loose adaptation of Wilde's play. She was billed as "The Salomé Dancer".[5]



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Michael Payne
The Pre-Raphaelite Art Appreciation Society

16小時 ·



Robert Fowler, R.W.S. (1853-1926)
The Dance of Salome
signed with monogram and dated '1885' (lower right) and further signed and inscribed ''Dance of Salome'/by Robert Fowler' (on an old label attached to the reverse)
oil on canvas
48 5/8 x 72¾ in. (123.5 x 184.8 cm.)
Provenance:
The Watkins Collection, MA.
with Kurt E. Schon, New Orleans.




讀者某君指出:
Salome wasn't white!


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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Salome
Opera by Richard Strauss
Richard Strauss-Woche, festival poster, 1910 by Ludwig Hohlwein.jpg
1910 poster by Ludwig Hohlwein
LibrettistOscar Wilde (Hedwig Lachmann's German translation of the French play Salomé, edited by Richard Strauss)
LanguageGerman
Premiere
9 December 1905

SalomeOp. 54, is an opera in one act by Richard Strauss. The libretto is Hedwig Lachmann's German translation of the 1891 French play Salomé by Oscar Wilde, edited by the composer. Strauss dedicated the opera to his friend Sir Edgar Speyer.[1]

The opera is famous (at the time of its premiere, infamous) for its "Dance of the Seven Veils". The final scene is frequently heard as a concert-piece for dramatic sopranos.



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