Spring Awakening
Books | Drama / European / German
3.9
Frank Wedekind
From Jonathan Franzen, bestselling author of The Corrections and Crossroads, comes his razor-sharp translation of Frank Wedekind's major modern play, Spring Awakening.Featuring an introduction by Franzen.First performed in Germany in 1906, Frank Wedekind's controversial play Spring Awakening closed after one night in New York in 1917 amid charges of obscenity and public outrage. For the better part of the twentieth century Wedekind's intense body of work was largely unpublished and rarely performed. Yet the play's subject matter—teenage desire, suicide, abortion, and homosexuality—is as explosive and important today as it was a century ago. Spring Awakening follows the lives of three teenagers, Melchior, Moritz, and Wendl, as they navigate their entry into sexual awareness. Unlike so many works that claim to tell the truth of adolescence, Spring Awakening offers no easy answers or redemption.Today, more than a hundred years after the play's first performance, a new musical version of this essential modern masterpiece is being hailed as the "best new musical . . . in a generation" (John Heilpern, The New York Observer). Franzen's rendition of the text—for so long poorly served in English—is unique in capturing the bizarre and inimitable comic spirit that animates almost every line of this unrelentingly tragic play. There couldn't be a better time for this thrilling, definitive new translation.
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More Details:
Author
Frank Wedekind
Pages
104
Publisher
Macmillan + ORM
Published Date
2010-07-19
ISBN
1429969245 9781429969246
Ratings
Google: 5
Community ReviewsSee all
"This early 20th century play is the basis for the musical Spring Awakening. It was actually called The Awakening of Spring so there's a slight difference. It follows the story of young German teens in a somewhat tragic tale. It was considered very controversial at the time it was published due to its themes of suicide, sex, and rape. Similarly, Spring Awakening the musical was very controversial due to its depicting these scenes. It reads like a strange early 1900s soap opera that is tragic but also addictive. These kids have a screwed up life and are repressed in society. A century later, someone reads this and decides, "Let's have these characters sing about it! Let's give them a voice!" "