Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Dom Juan

 

Five-act comedy in prose by Molière on a popular subject, first performed 1665. Before the play begins, Dom Juan, a dissolute Spanish nobleman and a libertin, has murdered the father of one girl he has dishonoured in a duel, and is being pursued by the family of another, Done Elvire, whom he enticed away from a convent and married. Unrepentantly, he continues his life of unrestrained pleasure-seeking in the company of Sganarelle, his superstitious valet. His seductive charms are exercised on peasant girls, creditors, Done Elvire, and his father, whom he eventually fools with a display of feigned devoutness. Having visited the grave of the man he murdered and flippantly invited him to dinner, Dom Juan is confronted with the statue from the tomb, who drags him off to hell after he has refused to repent. The play uses a number of theatrical effects—a nodding statue, the mouth of hell, a ghostly apparition—which were especially popular at the time.

[Ian Maclean]

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Dom Juan
Top

Dom Juan or The Feast with the Statue (Dom Juan ou le Festin de pierre) is a French play by Molière, based on the legend of Don Juan. Molière's characters Dom Juan and Sganarelle are the French counterparts to the Spanish Don Juan and Catalinón, characters who would later become familiar to opera goers as Don Giovanni and Leporello. "Dom Juan" is the last part in Molière's hypocrisy trilogy, which also includes The School for Wives and Tartuffe. It was first performed on February 15, 1665, in the Palais-Royal, with Molière playing the role of Sganarelle.

The play's title and the name of the main character are often translated as "Don Juan".

The play was originally written in prose, and was withdrawn after 15 performances after attacks by Molière's critics, who considered he was offending religion and the king by eulogizing a libertine. The play was a costly failure. Sganarelle, Dom Juan's valet, is the only character who speaks up for religion, but his particuliar brand of superstitious Catholicism is used more as a comic device than as a foil to his master's free-thinking. As a result, Molière was ordered to delete a certain number of scenes and lines which, according to his censors, made a mockery of their faith. A severely edited text of the play was published for the first time in 1682, and it was revived only in 1687, after Molière's death, in a versified and softened version by Thomas Corneille (brother of Pierre Corneille). Corneille's adaptation was the only version of the play performed for nearly a century and a half. The play was produced in its original, uncensored version for the first time in 1884.

Molière drew his inspiration from the main character of a work by Tirso de Molina called El burlador de Sevilla y convidado de piedra. Molière's Dom Juan clearly states that he is an atheist, the Don Juan of Tirso de Molina's original play is a Roman Catholic who believes that he can repent of his evil deeds many years later before he dies. However, his death comes sooner than expected and he finds that his attempts to repent and confess his sins are ineffective. In both plays the main character is condemned to Hell.

Plot Summary

Don Juan is essentially a casanova. He exasperates his servant Sganarelle and must constantly be extricated from sticky situations by his disapproving father. He excels at trapping countless women because he engages in secret, mock marriages that appease the girls but leave him with no strings attached when he gets tired of them. He has most recently lured the beautiful Elvire from a convent to "marry" him in this manner.

Despite Sganarelle's indignation and warnings of Heaven's wrath, Don Juan has left Elvire and now plans to ensnare the fiancée of a friend. In order to do so, Don Juan and Sganarelle get into a small boat on the same lake where his friend and the fiancée are going to go sailing. Suddenly, the boat is capsized and both master and servant face danger until they are rescued by a peasant. In no time at all, Don Juan is proposing marriage to two peasant girls who argue with each other about which one of them he will choose. The disillusioned Sganarelle then informs the girls that Don Juan will not actually marry either of them.

At this point, Don Juan learns that Elvira's brothers intend to kill him in revenge for abandoning their sister. Sganarelle and his master disguise themselves to make their way back to the city. On the way, Don Juan saves a stranger from bandits. This stranger turns out to be one of Elvira's brothers. This man now owes Don Juan his life; even after he finds out his savior's identity, he decides to have mercy on Don Juan instead of avenging his sister.

Starting out for the city again, Dom Juan and Sganarelle come across the tomb of a Commandant who had recently been killed. Don Juan jokingly tells Sganarelle to invite the statue to dinner, but is surprised when the statue actually nods its acceptance. Even more frightening for Sganarelle is the fact that the statue actually appears at dinner time. The servant attributes the incident with the statue to Heaven's due wrath.

Don Juan is not concerned by "Heaven's wrath," though, and decides to pretend to become religious. Heaven's wrath cannot tolerate this insincerity, however, and swallows Don Juan up in a flaming abyss during his hypocritical rant. To this event, Sganarelle comments:

"By his death everyone gets satisfaction. Heaven offended, laws violated, girls led astray, families dishonored, relatives outraged, wives ruined, husbands driven to despair, they all are satisfied. I am the only unlucky one. My wages, my wages, my wages!" [1]

Notes

  1. ^ Fort, Alice B. and Kates, Herbert S. Don Juan or The Stone Death. Minute History of the Drama. New York: Grosset & Dunlap, 1935. p. 47. Nov 27, 2007. http://www.theatrehistory.com/french/donjuan001.html

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

French Literature Companion. The New Oxford Companion to Literature in French. Copyright © 1995, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Dom Juan" Read more