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Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)

 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
type
TVTItem
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
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Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
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HanselAndGretel1893
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
comment
Hansel and Gretel (Hänsel und Gretel in the original German) is a three-act opera composed by Engelbert Humperdinck from a libretto by his sister Adelheid Wette. It is based on the Fairy Tale of the same name.The titular characters are the son and daughter of an impoverished couple, Peter and Gertrud. After one too many shenanigans results in the loss of the milk they were supposed to have for supper, Gertrud sends Hansel and Gretel off to forage for food. A dismayed Peter informs her that the Gingerbread Witch steals children and turns them into gingerbread in her oven, and the parents set off to find their children.Hansel and Gretel wander around the woods but are protected through the night by the Sandman and the Dewman, a pair of benevolent nature spirits. The next day, they happen upon the cottage of the Gingerbread Witch and wind up nibbling on it. The Witch catches the two, fattens Hansel up, and turns Gretel into her servant. However, the pair are able to throw her into her own oven and free the children she had previously captured. They are reunited with their parents, who remind them that God's grace delivers in times of need.The opera first premiered in Weimar, Germany in 1893 and is frequently performed around the winter holiday season to this day.
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
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2024-04-26T11:04:18Z
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Magic Wand
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_17059108
comment
Magic Wand: The Wicked Witch paralyzes the titular children with the powers of her wand and a rhyming incantation, a variation of which she later uses to remobilize Gretel. Gretel manages to steal the wand for the moment and free Hansel with the latter spell, which is used once again after they kill the witch to fully reanimate the gingerbread children.
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 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_1ccad9a3
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Villain Song
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_1ccad9a3
comment
Villain Song: "Witch's Aria", sung by the Witch. Depending on the production, she either sings it as she flies off on her broom, or while she's preparing Hansel for dinner.
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 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_20989d05
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Parents as People
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_20989d05
comment
Parents as People: When Mother finds the children horsing around and the milk she was relying on is lost, she starts screaming at them in frustration, says some terrible things, and drives them out into the forest. However, her desperation, fear, and exasperation are understood by the viewer and she remains a sympathetic character. Her horror is palpable when she realizes they are now in danger, and the reunion at the end is a happy one void of any reference to her first scene. Father is a heavy drinker, which is Played for Laughs, and in the German libretto he almost hits his wife with a broom in his Papa Wolf anger when he learns she sent the children into the woods.
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Adaptation Expansion
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Adaptation Expansion: The premise of Hansel and Gretel going is expanded upon, and the second act of their adventures in the woods prior to finding the witch's cabin is entirely original.
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Adaptational Job Change
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Adaptational Job Change: The father becomes a broom-maker rather than a woodcutter, allowing his occupation to be symbolically linked to the Wicked Witch's activities.
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Hidden Depths
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Hidden Depths: Father may be a drunk who isn't doing very well at providing for his family at the moment, but he is clearly the more pious of the two parents, with his statement of religious faith being a recurring mantra in their home.
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Girlish Pigtails
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Girlish Pigtails: Nearly all productions have Gretel wear her hair in pigtails, since they help to make the adult soprano look more like a little girl.
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 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_33d5b7f2
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Adapted Out
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_33d5b7f2
comment
Adapted Out: The opera cuts the famous episodes from the fairy tale where Hansel first leaves a trail of pebbles, then a trail of breadcrumbs to guide himself and Gretel home from the woods. note  Some productions do have the siblings leave a trail of pebbles, only for the Witch or an assistant of hers to pick them up unnoticed behind their backs. It also cuts the episode where a duck carries them home across a river. Hansel and Gretel don't find chests of pearls and jewels in the Witch's house to end their family's poverty the way they do in the fairy tale. They do find plenty of food for the taking, though, and their Father already had a big windfall of cash at the beginning, so the family still won't be hungry again for a very long time.
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Adaptational Heroism
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_3f45f1e6
comment
Adaptational Heroism: In this opera, Hansel and Gretel's Evil Stepmother is changed to their more sympathetic birth mother. She's still very hard on her children, but only because she's exhausted from their impoverished lifestyle. She does genuinely love her kids, is frightened when she realizes they could be in danger, and accompanies her husband to go searching for them.
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"Could Have Avoided This!" Plot
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_44989f6f
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"Could Have Avoided This!" Plot: By the time the curtain rises, Father is already on his way home with a windfall of cash, a bag of decadent groceries, and news that their troubles are over. Unfortunately, his wife and children don't know it yet, and he makes it home about ninety seconds too late.
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Guardian Angel
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Guardian Angel: Gretel's "Evening Benediction" sings of fourteen guardian angels at bedtime:
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 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_53224e46
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Bookends
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_53224e46
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Bookends: The show opens and closes with Father's statement of religious faith.
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 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_58bb77a6
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OurOgresAreDifferent
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_58bb77a6
comment
Our Ogres Are Different: English versions will sometimes translate the witch villainess "Knusperhexe" as "gobbling ogress", resulting in a very witchy-acting ogre. note  Some fairy tale scholars argue that even in the original story, the witch acts more like a traditional ogre than a traditional witch, since her defining trait is eating children.
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 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_65dfbf11
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Innocent Soprano
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_65dfbf11
comment
Innocent Soprano: Although Children Are Innocent is played straight with both of the leads, the soprano Gretel is much more virtuous and pious than her mezzo brother Hansel. Hansel constantly drags her into mischief and she follows only reluctantly. The Sand Fairy and the Dew Fairy, pure and all-loving spirits of nature, are sung by coloratura sopranos.
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 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_71748a39
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Named by the Adaptation
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_71748a39
comment
Named by the Adaptation: The unnamed witch from the fairy tale introduces herself Rosine Leckermaul in the German libretto. The multiple layers of the name's significance have proven difficult to translate comprehensively within the proper sung meter, and any number of efforts at English translation have been made in different versions: Rosina Rubylips, Rosina Dainty-Mouth, Rosina Sugarface, Rosina Sweetie-Tooth, Rosina Tasty-Snout, Rosina Lickspittle... The libretto's stage directions give the parents' names as Peter and Gertrud, although their names aren't mentioned by the characters.
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Henpecked Husband
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_72852a93
comment
The Father in the original tale is a weak-willed Henpecked Husband, who loves his children but gives in to his wife's demands that they abandon them. In the opera, he's a hardy, cheerful optimist, albeit with a fondness for alcohol that's Played for Laughs, and a Papa Wolf who's willing to search the woods day and night for his children rather than let the Witch catch them.
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 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_759005f4
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Leitmotif upon Death
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Leitmotif upon Death: Happy example. The Wicked Witch's demise is immediately celebrated with a jubilant waltz arrangement of her motifs, and the gingerbread she was turned into arrives in the final scene with an utterly triumphant version of the broomstick motif.
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 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_762b9223
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Played for Laughs
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Father is a heavy drinker, which is Played for Laughs, and in the German libretto he almost hits his wife with a broom in his Papa Wolf anger when he learns she sent the children into the woods.
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 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_91672d3e
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Children Are Innocent
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_91672d3e
comment
Although Children Are Innocent is played straight with both of the leads, the soprano Gretel is much more virtuous and pious than her mezzo brother Hansel. Hansel constantly drags her into mischief and she follows only reluctantly.
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 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_95b7c400
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Faux Affably Evil
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Faux Affably Evil: The Witch is cheerful and affectionate toward Hansel and Gretel, both before and after she reveals that she intends to eat them.
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 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_9afa05c7
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Family-Unfriendly Death
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Family-Unfriendly Death: The Witch turns into a giant gingerbread and is devoured by her resurrected victims.
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Alto Villainess
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comment
Alto Villainess: The Witch is often played by a contralto or mezzo-soprano, but she has just as often been played by a male singer in drag.
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It's Probably Nothing
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It's Probably Nothing: Twice while the children are busily taking pieces off the Gingerbread House and eating them, a voice from inside demands to know who's been nibbling at her house. The children think for a moment, and they declare it was the wind, the heavenly child.
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Gratuitous Latin
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Gratuitous Latin: The witch chants, "Hocus pocus, bonus jocus, malus locus, hocus pocus" as part of her spell. Though "hocus pocus" is meaningless, the rest actually translates as "good joke, bad place."
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 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_ba5bbda5
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Mirror Character
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Mirror Character: Father/Gretel and Mother/Hansel when it comes to religion. The former two draw comfort from the knowledge that God is watching out for their struggling family, while the latter two react without much appreciation when reminded of it.
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 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_bc00493f
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Precision F-Strike
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_bc00493f
comment
Precision F-Strike: The severity of Mother's exclamatory reaction to the broken milk jug varies depending on the translation. English versions may stick to something completely innocuous like "Oh, no!" or "Gracious!", but you're just as likely to get into the realm of "Damn it!" or "Jesus!" (It's "Jesus!" in the original German.)
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Adaptational Timespan Change
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comment
Adaptational Timespan Change: In the fairy tale, Hansel and Gretel are lost in the woods for three days before they find the Witch's house, and are the Witch's prisoners for a month. In the opera, they spend just one night in the woods, find the Witch's house the next morning, and spend less than an hour with the Witch before they manage to kill her.
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type
Lighter and Softer
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_ce6555f0
comment
Lighter and Softer: In comparison to the original tale. The siblings' horrible stepmother is now a sympathetic biological mother who's just tired of living in poverty, and while she still gives her children an earful like any strict parent, she does genuinely care for them. The Witch doesn't bake children alive anymore; she just magically turns them into gingerbread. She herself also turns into gingerbread instead of being burned alive, and all of her victims come back to life after she is defeated.
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type
Prone to Tears
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comment
In the Brothers Grimm tale, Hansel is the more dominant, resourceful sibling, whose cleverness protects both himself and Gretel from danger and who reassures and looks after his sister, while Gretel is more vulnerable and Prone to Tears, until her Character Development at the climax where she's the one who defeats the Witch. In the opera, Gretel is the more dominant sibling, who has more solo music to sing, and more of a Cheerful Child who teases and reassures the sometimes-sulky Hansel, while Hansel is the more impulsive sibling whose actions tend to get them both into trouble. That said, Gretel still has moments of terror where Hansel comforts and advises her, and Hansel becomes more resourceful while imprisoned by the Witch. When the time comes to push the Witch into the oven, they do it together.
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Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_da360137
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_dd46397e
type
Just Desserts
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_dd46397e
comment
Just Desserts: The witch owns a magical oven which bakes children into gingerbread. Of course, the witch ends up getting pushed into it, and not only does this restore all the gingerbread children to life, an impressive piece of witch-shaped gingerbread is brought out at the finale.
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_dd46397e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_dd46397e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
hasFeature
Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_dd46397e
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_ee5131cc
type
Dream Ballet
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_ee5131cc
comment
Dream Ballet: After the Sandman puts Hansel and Gretel to sleep, a group of guardian angels guide them in their dreams via ballet.
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_ee5131cc
featureApplicability
1.0
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_ee5131cc
featureConfidence
1.0
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
hasFeature
Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_ee5131cc
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_f621e657
type
Hollywood Pudgy
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_f621e657
comment
Hollywood Pudgy: According to the Witch, Gretel is "tender and round," just right for cooking and eating right away, whereas Hansel still needs some fattening up. The two singers' actual builds vary from production to production.
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_f621e657
featureApplicability
1.0
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_f621e657
featureConfidence
1.0
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
hasFeature
Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_f621e657
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_fba75cf2
type
Name and Name
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_fba75cf2
comment
Name and Name: The show is titled Hansel and Gretel after its two protagonists, just like the fairy tale source material.
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_fba75cf2
featureApplicability
1.0
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_fba75cf2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
hasFeature
Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_fba75cf2
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_name
type
ItemName
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_name
comment
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_name
featureApplicability
1.0
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_name
featureConfidence
1.0
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
hasFeature
Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_name
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre) / int_name
itemName
Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
hasFeature
Adaptation Explanation Extrication / int_a33fdeb
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
hasFeature
Adaptational Job Change / int_a33fdeb
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
hasFeature
Everything Is an Instrument / int_a33fdeb
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
hasFeature
Girlish Pigtails / int_a33fdeb
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
hasFeature
Gratuitous Latin / int_a33fdeb
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
hasFeature
Guardian Angel / int_a33fdeb
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
hasFeature
Innocent Soprano / int_a33fdeb
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
hasFeature
It's Probably Nothing / int_a33fdeb
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
hasFeature
Just Desserts / int_a33fdeb
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
hasFeature
Leitmotif upon Death / int_a33fdeb
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
hasFeature
Magic Wand / int_a33fdeb
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
hasFeature
Name and Name / int_a33fdeb
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
hasFeature
One-Hit Wonder / int_a33fdeb
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
hasFeature
Opera / int_a33fdeb
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
hasFeature
Our Ogres Are Hungrier / int_a33fdeb
 Hansel and Gretel (1893) (Theatre)
hasFeature
Sleep Cute / int_a33fdeb