The Happy Prince and Other Stories

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Happy Prince and Other Stories is an 1888 collection of stories for children by Oscar Wilde. It is most famous for The Happy Prince, the short tale of a metal statue who becomes friends with a migratory bird. Together they bring some happiness to others in life and in "death."

The stories included in this collection are:

  • The Happy Prince
  • The Nightingale and the Rose
  • The Selfish Giant
  • The Devoted Friend
  • The Remarkable Rocket

The stories convey an appreciation for the exotic, the sensual and for masculine beauty. They also are one of the rare instances of a kiss between two males – between the prince and the swallow. Thus they have been seen as intended to transmit a pederastic ethos.[1]

Contents

[edit] The Nightingale and the Rose

There are many adaptations of this story in the form of operas and ballets, including:

  • A ballet by Harold Fraser-Simson, an English composer, (London, 1872 - Inverness, 1944) The Nightingale and the Rose, (based on Oscar Wilde) (1927); [www.fullerswood.fsnet.co.uk/fraser-simson.htm see the link].
  • An opera by Jonathan Rutherford, a British composer (b 1953) – The Nightingale and the Rose, (after Oscar Wilde), 1966; link.
  • One act opera by Margaret Garwood, an American composer (born Haddonfield, NJ, 1927) The Nightingale and the Rose, (libretto by Garwood, after Oscar Wilde), Chester, Widener College Alumni Auditorium, 21 Oct 1973

[edit] Other media

[edit] Selfish Giant

- In 1972, Peter Sanders wrote and produced an animated version of "The Selfish Giant", which was nominated for an academy award. [1]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Naomi Wood, Creating the Sensual Child: Paterian Aesthetics, Pederasty and Oscar Wilde's Fairy Tales in Marvels and Tales 16.2, 2002