...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre)
- 275 statements
- 52 feature instances
- 44 referencing feature instances
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | type |
TVTItem | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | label |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | page |
TheThreepennyOpera | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | comment |
Die Dreigroschenoper is Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill's Darker and Edgier adaptation of John Gay's The Beggar's Opera. Despite the title, it's a musical. It was first performed on August 31, 1928 in Berlin.The play centers around the marriage of Polly Peachum (daughter of "Beggar King" Jonathan Jeremiah Peachum) to notorious gangster and pimp Macheath (better known as Mack the Knife) who is getting old and wants respectability, titles and retirement. Mack has completely outsourced his crimes to his gang, and lives on his reputation. He's best friends with his old army buddy Jack "Tiger" Brown, the London chief of police, whose daughter Lucy he's dating on the side. He's also chummy with his former live-in girlfriend Spelunken-Jenny, a whore he still visits on Thursdays. And he's got great plans: instead of robbing banks and stabbing men, he now wants to found a bank and hire men. Mack is ready to climb out of the criminal slums and into criminal nobility. And Polly is just the right kind of wife to have by his side for it. The only problem in his plan is Jonathan Peachum, who not only hates Macheath, but will do anything to get his daughter back — after all, she's valuable goods, and he's invested a lot of time and money in her proper upbringing. Peachum devises a plan to blackmail Tiger Brown and convince him to arrest Macheath. Since the Queen's coronation is due in a few days, Brown has his hands full trying to keep the beggars off the streets. Which Peachum decides to use to his advantage in blackmailing Brown: imagine thousands of beggars, crawling out of the gutters, crowding around the Queen. Mack tries to flee, but can't shake his Thursday habit at Jenny's brothel and is consequently arrested by a reluctant Brown. And when Lucy Brown shows up, apparently married to Macheath and pretending to be pregnant, Polly starts to realize that the marriage was a huge mistake.Brecht's production was intended to be an ironic Deconstruction of familiar European dramatic conventions and he made several important dramatic innovations, illustrating his concept of "epic theater", namely protagonists the audiences do not easily identify with, action taking place on multiple levels and social and political commentary used for dramatic effect. The music by Kurt Weill has endured in many cover versions recorded in Germany and in English (in a series of translations). The songs frequently covered include "Mack the Knife", "Pirate Jenny", "What Keeps Mankind Alive" which have seen versions by Bobby Darin, Frank Sinatra, Nina Simone, Nick Cave, Tom Waits among others. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | fetched |
2023-08-12T10:45:58Z | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | parsed |
2023-08-12T10:45:58Z | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | processingComment |
Dropped link to Dogville: Not a Feature - ITEM | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | processingComment |
Dropped link to HistoricalDomainCharacter: Not a Feature - IGNORE | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | processingComment |
Dropped link to LoveableRogue: Not a Feature - IGNORE | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | processingComment |
Dropped link to MarianneFaithfull: Not a Feature - ITEM | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | processingComment |
Dropped link to PandorasBox: Not a Feature - ITEM | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | processingComment |
Dropped link to PirateJenny: Not a Feature - ITEM | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | processingComment |
Dropped link to TheThreepennyNovel: Not a Feature - ITEM | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | isPartOf |
DBTropes | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_14beeefd | type |
Darker and Edgier | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_14beeefd | comment |
Darker and Edgier: Like nearly all Brecht productions, it borrows from earlier plays, namely John Gay's The Beggar's Opera, practically all the characters, the love triangle, the Friendly Enemy cop is there and even the Deus ex Machina ending. Only differences is that Mackie Messer is not the Loveable Rogue that the original Macheath is, but a brutal pimp, rapist and child-murderer. The setting-update puts it in context of British Imperialism (via references to Kipling, one of Brecht's favorite writers) and the overall setting is much seedier. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_14beeefd | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_14beeefd | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_14beeefd | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_1645005b | type |
Evil Versus Evil | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_1645005b | comment |
Evil Versus Evil: Macheath versus Peachum; the former tends to get sympathy mostly because of being more charismatic. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_1645005b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_1645005b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_1645005b | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_17fc8b9c | type |
Storyboarding the Apocalypse | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_17fc8b9c | comment |
Storyboarding the Apocalypse: Pirate Jenny promises a bloody naval assault on the London Docks, imprisonment by pirates and beheadings. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_17fc8b9c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_17fc8b9c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_17fc8b9c | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_23473ae7 | type |
Adaptation Expansion | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_23473ae7 | comment |
Adaptation Expansion: In Pabst's film, the Beggar's March which Peachum threatens and blackmails Brown with, actually does go ahead and interfere with Queen Victoria's parade. However, it loses any effect it might have to upset the order once Macheath and the Beggar King resolve their differences. The final shot, shows the beggars sullenly marching in the darkness, their exploitation continuing unchanged. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_23473ae7 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_23473ae7 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_23473ae7 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_259d5879 | type |
Anachronism Stew | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_259d5879 | comment |
Anachronism Stew: The story nominally takes place in 1904. While the "Cannon Song" and its discussion of colonial warfare would seem to place the story in the mid to late 1800s, the coronation the play is centered around is that of Queen Victoria, thus implying an earlier date. Not to mention that the play its adapted from was written and set in the 1700s. Oh, and Macheath tends to dress as a Roaring Twenties gangster. The Donmar Warehouse production with Tom Hollander had something of a Setting Update with references to onion bhajis and Marks and Spencers in the lyrics. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_259d5879 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_259d5879 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_259d5879 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_27a42ebc | type |
Spiritual Successor | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_27a42ebc | comment |
Spiritual Successor: The Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_27a42ebc | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_27a42ebc | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_27a42ebc | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_33f8d776 | type |
BreakoutPopHit | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_33f8d776 | comment |
Breakout Pop Hit: "Pirate Jenny", "What Keeps Mankind Alive", "Mack the Knife". No matter the version, Weill's music and Brecht's distinctly ironic lyrics have an ongoing afterlife in popular culture. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_33f8d776 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_33f8d776 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_33f8d776 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_34f6774c | type |
Concept Album | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_34f6774c | comment |
The Twopenny Opera (It's One Cheaper), a Concept Album by The Tiger Lillies. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_34f6774c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_34f6774c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_34f6774c | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_35b429f3 | type |
Weird Trade Union | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_35b429f3 | comment |
Weird Trade Union: Peachum's guild of beggars. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_35b429f3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_35b429f3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_35b429f3 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_35e3383a | type |
Pirate Girl | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_35e3383a | comment |
Pirate Girl: Becoming this is part of Jenny's fantasies of revenge on society for her miserable life, about which she sings the song "Seeräuber-Jenny". | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_35e3383a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_35e3383a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_35e3383a | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_3d4d3dc9 | type |
Humans Are Bastards | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_3d4d3dc9 | comment |
Humans Are Bastards: "What Keeps Mankind Alive" | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_3d4d3dc9 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_3d4d3dc9 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_3d4d3dc9 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_3f1f6c04 | type |
The Cover Changes the Meaning | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_3f1f6c04 | comment |
The Cover Changes the Meaning: Bobby Darin's famous version of "Mack the Knife" is faithful in the first and second verses (which describes Mack as a rogue connected to mysterious murders, Undisclosed Funds, and suspicious sightings) but the following verses can be described either as propaganda or Romanticized Abuse when compared to the original, since it makes Mack the Knife's victims sound like willing conquests to a rake. In the original production, the song known as Pirate Jenny was to be sung by Polly and intended to be an Imagine Spot about how much she hates her family and dreams of escape. Later productions, and the 1931 Film version, gave it to Lotte Lenya's Jenny note This was probable because Lenya sang the song on the 1930 studio recording. By merely changing the character and singer, and especially Lenya's performance, the song acquired its now familiar meaning of an oppressed woman's fantasy Imagine Spot of revolutionary justice and retribution. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_3f1f6c04 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_3f1f6c04 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_3f1f6c04 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_3fca462c | type |
Deus ex Machina | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_3fca462c | comment |
Deus ex Machina: At the very end, out of nowhere, Macheath is saved from the gallows with the information that he's not only pardoned but won a peerage. This was a deliberate parody showing how criminals are spared their fate and receive unearned rewards in the manner of heroes in the old trope. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_3fca462c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_3fca462c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_3fca462c | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_4ef62a4d | type |
Full-Circle Revolution | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_4ef62a4d | comment |
Full-Circle Revolution: The Dark Reprise added by Brecht to the 1931 film version which plays over the failed Beggar's March reflects this: | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_4ef62a4d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_4ef62a4d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_4ef62a4d | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_4f62bde6 | type |
Kavorka Man | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_4f62bde6 | comment |
Kavorka Man: Macheath is an unattractive cutthroat, physically abusive and, as Brecht described him, "bald, old, humorless, with a face like a turnip". Still, women seem to throw themselves at him. Modern ensembles (including Brecht's own ensemble in Berlin) instead cast young and attractive actors for the part. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_4f62bde6 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_4f62bde6 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_4f62bde6 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_4fb60159 | type |
Do Not Do This Cool Thing | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_4fb60159 | comment |
Do Not Do This Cool Thing: invoked Although the play was intended as a vicious attack on capitalism, it is quite popular with non-communists. Though Brecht intended it for a non-communist audience in any case, since in theory, communists don't need to see a play about how capitalism works. More generally, people tended to uncritically glorify Macheath as an Anti-Hero by neglecting the strong women characters in the play who he subjects to all kinds of abuse and exploitation. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_4fb60159 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_4fb60159 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_4fb60159 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_537dd8fe | type |
Affably Evil | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_537dd8fe | comment |
Affably Evil: Macheath's gang like to see themselves as this, but it's only an illusion to their depravity. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_537dd8fe | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_537dd8fe | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_537dd8fe | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_590eb583 | type |
Domestic Abuse | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_590eb583 | comment |
Domestic Abuse: All the prostitutes are kept in line by this, either from their clients or Mackie. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_590eb583 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_590eb583 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_590eb583 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_6056f853 | type |
Homoerotic Subtext | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_6056f853 | comment |
Homoerotic Subtext: Mack and Brown. Brecht has admitted that it's on purpose: Brown's love for Macheath is what keeps him going, but it's damaging to his job as a keeper of the peace. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_6056f853 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_6056f853 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_6056f853 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_607df6c | type |
Recruiters Always Lie | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_607df6c | comment |
Recruiters Always Lie: "The Cannon Song" evokes this. John, Jim and George are three friends who sign up for the Call to Adventure. They end up committing atrocities against people in colonial outposts and eventually end up as Shell Shocked Veterans, disgraced for being deserters or in the case of George, shot for looting: | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_607df6c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_607df6c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_607df6c | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_63cad64b | type |
Threatening Shark | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_63cad64b | comment |
Threatening Shark: Discussed. The song compares Mackie to the Shark with Mackie being Eviler than Thou: | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_63cad64b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_63cad64b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_63cad64b | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_737394ab | type |
Iconic Item | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_737394ab | comment |
Iconic Item: Mackie Messer's "white kid gloves" which is how Peachum deciphers from his wife that the Captain courting his daughter Polly is him. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_737394ab | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_737394ab | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_737394ab | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_75f626a5 | type |
Nostalgia Filter | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_75f626a5 | comment |
Nostalgia Filter: The song "The Ballad of Immoral Earnings" is deliberately sung and set to tune to evoke an Arcadian setting of Good Times. The lyrics nastily subvert it: | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_75f626a5 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_75f626a5 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_75f626a5 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_7aea8bae | type |
Murder Ballad | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_7aea8bae | comment |
Murder Ballad: "Die Moritat von Mackie Messer", obviously (Moritat is the German word for a Murder Ballad). | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_7aea8bae | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_7aea8bae | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_7aea8bae | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_7eebe99c | type |
The Alcoholic | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_7eebe99c | comment |
The Alcoholic: Mrs. Peachum. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_7eebe99c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_7eebe99c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_7eebe99c | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_80eb641c | type |
Straw Nihilist | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_80eb641c | comment |
Straw Nihilist: It's not that Mr. Peachum is a miser — he simply doesn't believe that money or anything can save him, so he may as well make the best of what little money he's got. It's not that he doesn't like his daughter — it's just that his opinion of her, just like his opinion on the rest of humanity, is "already at its lowest possible point". And it's not that he particularly likes the Bible — he just figures he should have it in front of him to remind him of how rotten the world's Christians are. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_80eb641c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_80eb641c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_80eb641c | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_83a903f6 | type |
Stepford Smiler | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_83a903f6 | comment |
The music and lyrics by Weill and Brecht mirrors, intentionally, common folk music and music hall style songs and ballads but attacks the entire genre by exposing it as best a coping mechanism for living with poverty, injustice, abuse and other crimes. Where such folk music often by means of euphemism, suggestion and implication commented on reigning issues of the day, Brecht and Weill's music directly highlights it and brings it to the forefront and only makes the characters sentimentalism about poverty even more absurd. This is made obvious in "What Keeps Mankind Alive" which is all about people ignoring or forgetting the ugliness in their own lives and society, becoming a Stepford Smiler and accepting the façade of a Crapsaccharine World. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_83a903f6 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_83a903f6 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_83a903f6 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_898ff050 | type |
Villain Protagonist | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_898ff050 | comment |
Villain Protagonist: Everyone but Polly, whom even Brecht the arch-pessimist stressed to be a "virtuous and agreeable girl" in his notes on playing the parts. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_898ff050 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_898ff050 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_898ff050 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_8ae880f7 | type |
Deconstruction | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_8ae880f7 | comment |
Deconstruction: Brecht's Alienation Effect was all about creating this sensibility and cultivating it among his audience: The music and lyrics by Weill and Brecht mirrors, intentionally, common folk music and music hall style songs and ballads but attacks the entire genre by exposing it as best a coping mechanism for living with poverty, injustice, abuse and other crimes. Where such folk music often by means of euphemism, suggestion and implication commented on reigning issues of the day, Brecht and Weill's music directly highlights it and brings it to the forefront and only makes the characters sentimentalism about poverty even more absurd. This is made obvious in "What Keeps Mankind Alive" which is all about people ignoring or forgetting the ugliness in their own lives and society, becoming a Stepford Smiler and accepting the façade of a Crapsaccharine World. Likewise, certain common archetypes to the crime genre and the Victorian era, are directly attacked and exposed. Brecht's Mack the Knife is not a Loveable Rogue but other characters project that archetype on to him and he uses that sentiment to better exploit his friends, lovers and prostitutes. Unlike John Gay's original work, where Macheath is rakish and funny, Brecht's Mackie is a violent pimp, and the play reminds the audience that Mack and Tiger Brown committed many atrocities and war crimes in India as part of the colonial service, which is somehow more legal and acceptable than his crimes in London. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_8ae880f7 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_8ae880f7 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_8ae880f7 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_8b60a09b | type |
Capitalism Is Bad | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_8b60a09b | comment |
Capitalism Is Bad: Mack the Knife is a pimp and gangster who wants to conduct his operation as a business, affects bourgeois (i.e. capitalist) habits such as consumerism, pretenses of high living and more or less treats people around him as products and employees, including his wife Polly who he sees as valuable as an appendage and front to his business. Mackie hasn't so much quit being a pimp so much as upgraded to a higher form of prostitution. Incidentally, Old man Peachum is more or less the same, running the Beggar's Guild with a profit-minded view and judging employees and giving cuts based on evaluations and returns. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_8b60a09b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_8b60a09b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_8b60a09b | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_8e81efd1 | type |
Tenor Boy | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_8e81efd1 | comment |
Tenor Boy: Macheath is sometimes played like this ironically, and many performances have him singing the "Epitaph" in a sincere tenor, just to accentuate what a two-faced bastard he is. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_8e81efd1 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_8e81efd1 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_8e81efd1 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_94e4c8ab | type |
Betty and Veronica | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_94e4c8ab | comment |
Betty and Veronica: Polly and Lucy. Of course, calling Mackie an Archie is a stretch, since he pretty much uses both of them for his own purposes and ends. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_94e4c8ab | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_94e4c8ab | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_94e4c8ab | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_a49914aa | type |
Bowdlerization | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_a49914aa | comment |
Bowdlerization: English language adaptations of Brecht's original play, inspired by its commercial success, adapted it to the Anglo-American sensibilities of its time, which on account of Popcultural Osmosis has meant that the earlier versions, made in a more timid and censorious times, has endured in cultural memory: Most adaptions do the production like a Broadway Musical, make the characters Lighter and Softer, remove the political views, and clean up all the song lyrics, in other words make it into a remake of the original The Beggar's Opera rather than the Darker and Edgier version it was originally supposed to be. The main things that are softened is the Mack the Knife song, his general misogyny, Domestic Abuse of women, and likewise sentimentalize some of the interactions between Mack and Polly which in the play is meant to be ironic (in the German sensenote German intellectuals meant irony as a mode of representation. The irony of Brecht is that if an anti-capitalist play with unsympathetic characters, lowlifes and other scum has to be made into an off-key musical, than things are already pretty bad in society). | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_a49914aa | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_a49914aa | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_a49914aa | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_a4c37cbe | type |
Mood Whiplash | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_a4c37cbe | comment |
Mood Whiplash: Brecht's alienation-effect was all about creating this effect. The lyrics and the style of music tend to be so-off. "The Ballad of Mack the Knife" is sung by a jolly street-singer who is totally nonchalant about Macheath's crimes. The most shocking is "The Ballad of Immoral Earnings" a jaunty romantic song sung in a swooning style that talks about the whorehouse that featured Domestic Abuse and a disgusting back-alley abortion described in visceral detail. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_a4c37cbe | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_a4c37cbe | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_a4c37cbe | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_a70223 | type |
Karma Houdini | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_a70223 | comment |
Karma Houdini: Macheath. As mentioned in the summary above, this is a major plot point. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_a70223 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_a70223 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_a70223 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_a7382a73 | type |
Imagine Spot | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_a7382a73 | comment |
Imagine Spot: What "Pirate Jenny" is in the Brecht-Weill original, but it paints such a vivid image that its easy to mistake it as an actual call for revolution and upliftment. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_a7382a73 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_a7382a73 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_a7382a73 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_ae3d6438 | type |
Deadpan Snarker | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_ae3d6438 | comment |
Deadpan Snarker: The narration of the Threepenny Novel. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_ae3d6438 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_ae3d6438 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_ae3d6438 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_b0855ef3 | type |
No Historical Figures Were Harmed | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_b0855ef3 | comment |
No Historical Figures Were Harmed: Not within the play, but in a novel adaptation, The Threepenny Novel, Macheath is identified with Jack the Ripper. As a Shout-Out, Macheath also appears in The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, and is presented either as a Jack the Ripoff, or maybe the actual Jack the Ripper. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_b0855ef3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_b0855ef3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_b0855ef3 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_b1562440 | type |
Sinister Tango Music | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_b1562440 | comment |
Sinister Tango Music: Macheath and Jenny have a "romantic" tango song about their past relationship when he used to pimp her, which is mildly sinister in the traditional but bowdlerised Blitzstein English translation. The German original and later more accurate translations go even further by referring to violent abuse and back-street abortion. The differing titles reflect this. In German it is called "Zuhalterballade" (Pimp's Ballad) and in English it is called "The Ballad of Immoral Earnings" which is apt for the setting, since it is a classically Victorian euphemism. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_b1562440 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_b1562440 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_b1562440 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_b4a7b5ef | type |
The Queen's Latin | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_b4a7b5ef | comment |
The Queen's Latin: While productions in translation tend to give the rest of the cast a Cockney accent, which makes sense given the setting, Peachum and sometimes the rest of his family often gets a Scottish accent. This is because one historical stereotype of Scots is that they are Bible-beating misers, which describes the common interpretation of Peachum perfectly. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_b4a7b5ef | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_b4a7b5ef | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_b4a7b5ef | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_b7920c43 | type |
Lost in Translation | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_b7920c43 | comment |
Lost in Translation: In the case of two characters, Brecht's naming of characters was based on misunderstandings of Gay's topical references/slang. In the original, one of Macheath's gang was called "Matt of the Mint", in reference to a sketchy area in London that was located near what used to be a royal mint and functioned as a lawless "sanctuary area" for criminals. In Brecht's version, only the coinage implication carried through, and the character is called "Matthew Money". Similarly, Jenny Diver in Gay's play was named after an actual person who was a notorious pickpocket (with a probable bawdy pun with both the real person and fictional character). Brecht understood dive in the sense of "seedy location" and to this end, in some translations Brecht's character is translated as "Low-Dive Jenny". | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_b7920c43 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_b7920c43 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_b7920c43 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_b88eda46 | type |
Conspicuous Gloves | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_b88eda46 | comment |
Conspicuous Gloves: As detailed in the opening song "Moritat" (better known as "Mack the Knife"), the gangster Macheath is identifiable by his signature white kid gloves. Besides being stylish they help him avoid blood stains. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_b88eda46 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_b88eda46 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_b88eda46 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_c660bc15 | type |
Fan Disservice | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_c660bc15 | comment |
Fan Disservice: The notorious lyric describing Jenny Towler's fate ("There they found her/Knife in Breast") in "Mack the Knife" is meant to invoke this. One of the many Bowdlerization subjected to it in English translations to make it a Pop Hit. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_c660bc15 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_c660bc15 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_c660bc15 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_c68ce696 | type |
King of the Homeless | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_c68ce696 | comment |
King of the Homeless: A deconstruction. Macheath and Peachum function very much like capitalists who exploit prostitutes and beggars by overworking them and exploiting them. Both of them have connections with the law and end up assimilating into bourgeois society. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_c68ce696 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_c68ce696 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_c68ce696 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_ce6555f0 | type |
Lighter and Softer | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_ce6555f0 | comment |
Lighter and Softer: English translations of the Moritat tend to erase the verses that describe Mack the Knife's more heinous crimes, like child rape and an arson that killed seven children, and even gloss over the celebration of cannibalism in "The Cannon Song". | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_ce6555f0 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_ce6555f0 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_ce6555f0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_ce70175b | type |
Sociopathic Soldier | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_ce70175b | comment |
Sociopathic Soldier: Macheath and Tiger Brown as shown in "The Cannon Song" | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_ce70175b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_ce70175b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_ce70175b | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_d6e495b2 | type |
Undisclosed Funds | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_d6e495b2 | comment |
Bobby Darin's famous version of "Mack the Knife" is faithful in the first and second verses (which describes Mack as a rogue connected to mysterious murders, Undisclosed Funds, and suspicious sightings) but the following verses can be described either as propaganda or Romanticized Abuse when compared to the original, since it makes Mack the Knife's victims sound like willing conquests to a rake. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_d6e495b2 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_d6e495b2 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_d6e495b2 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_db2f3581 | type |
All Girls Want Bad Boys | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_db2f3581 | comment |
All Girls Want Bad Boys: Bobby Darin's cover of Mack the Knife projects this. Within the play, it's only true of Polly Peachum, the other girls were prostitutes who presumably didn't have a choice in the matter. In her "Barbara Song", Polly Peachum describes how she virtuously turned down all the respectable men who asked for her maidenhead...until a man showed up who was neither respectable nor bothered asking.... | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_db2f3581 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_db2f3581 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_db2f3581 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_dceccabf | type |
Cat Fight | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_dceccabf | comment |
Cat Fight: Between Polly and Lucy in the "Jealousy Duet". Mostly musical in the stage directions, but tends to be "spiced up" in productions, especially the 1960s movie version. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_dceccabf | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_dceccabf | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_dceccabf | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_e5421161 | type |
Expy | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_e5421161 | comment |
Expy: Jenny from The Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny would even be considered a straight-up transplant of Spelunken-Jenny, if the stories took place in the same universe. Both parts were originated by Miss Lotte Lenya. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_e5421161 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_e5421161 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_e5421161 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_ff24ad1d | type |
Bawdy Song | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_ff24ad1d | comment |
Bawdy Song: "Pirate Jenny" and to a lesser extent "Barbara Song", and "The Ballad of Sexual Dependency" are all in a genre of "cabaret music" sung by women at those clubs; for a different kind of Bawdy Song, the "Cannon Song" is based on rousing soldier music in the manner of Kipling's "Barrack-Room Ballads" (Brecht was a Kipling fan), and is intended as a deconstruction of them. | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_ff24ad1d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_ff24ad1d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_ff24ad1d | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_name | type |
ItemName | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_name | comment |
||
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_name | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_name | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) | hasFeature |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_name | |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) / int_name | itemName |
The Threepenny Opera (Theatre) |
The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.
Copyright of DBTropes.org wrapper 2009-2013 DFKI Knowledge Management. Imprint. - Thanks to Bakken&Baeck for hosting. Contact.
Copyright of data TVTropes.org contributors under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.
Copyright of data TVTropes.org contributors under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.