as Don Juan, by
Józef Simmler, 1846 ,
Seville|thumb Don Juan fascinated the 19th-century English novelist
Jane Austen: "I have seen nobody on the stage who has been a more interesting Character than that compound of Cruelty and Lust". The Danish philosopher
Søren Kierkegaard discussed Mozart's version of the Don Juan story at length in his 1843 treatise
Either/Or. In 1901, Finnish composer
Jean Sibelius wrote the second
movement of his
second symphony based on the climax of Don Juan. The piece begins with a representation of Death walking up the road to Don Juan's house, where Don Juan pleads with Death to let him live. Also, the 1905 novel
The Song of the Blood-Red Flower by the Finnish author
Johannes Linnankoski has been influenced by Don Juan along the protagonist of the story. The protagonist of Shaw's 1903
Man and Superman is a modern-day Don Juan named not Juan Tenorio but John Tanner. The actor playing Tanner morphs into his model in the mammoth third act, usually called
Don Juan in Hell and often produced as a separate play due to its length. In it, Don Juan (played by Charles Boyer in a noted 1950s recording) exchanges philosophical barbs with the devil (Charles Laughton). In 1911, Ukrainian writer
Lesya Ukrainka wrote poetic drama
The Stone Host about Don Juan. As the author herself determined, it's about the victory of the conservative principle over the split soul of Donna Anna, and through her – over Don Juan. The traditional seducer of women became a victim of the woman who had broken his will. In Spain, the first three decades of the twentieth century saw more cultural fervor surrounding the Don Juan figure than perhaps any other period. In one of the most provocative pieces to be published, the endocrinologist
Gregorio Marañón argued that, far from the paragon of masculinity he was often assumed to be, Don Juan actually suffered from an arrested psychosexual development. During the
1918 influenza epidemic in Spain, the figure of Don Juan served as a metaphor for the flu microbe. The mid-20th-century French author
Albert Camus referred to Don Juan in his 1942 essay
The Myth of Sisyphus. Camus describes Don Juan as an example of an "absurd hero", as he maintains a reckless abandon in his approach to love. His seductive lifestyle "brings with it all the faces in the world, and its tremor comes from the fact that it knows itself to be mortal". He "multiplies what he cannot unify ... It is his way of giving and vivifying". In the 1956
Buddy Holly single "Modern Don Juan", the singer gains a reputation for being like the libertine in his pursuit of a romantic relationship. Swedish film director
Ingmar Bergman wrote and directed a comic
sequel in 1960 titled ''
The Devil's Eye'' in which Don Juan, accompanied by his servant, is sent from
Hell to contemporary
Sweden to seduce a young woman before her marriage.
Anthony Powell in his 1960 novel ''
Casanova's Chinese Restaurant'' contrasts Don Juan, who "merely liked power" and "obviously did not know what sensuality was", with
Casanova, who "undoubtedly had his sensuous moments".
Stefan Zweig observes the same difference between both characters in his biography of "Casanova". in 1970 Faroese author William Heinesen released his short story , in which a character embodying Don Juan is washed up on the Faroe Islands in Torshavn and begins to seduce the women of that town. In the 1910 French novel
The Phantom of the Opera by
Gaston Leroux, the titular character (also known as Erik) had spent much of his life writing an opera,
Don Juan Triumphant, refusing to play it for
Christine Daaé and telling her that it was unlike any music she ever heard and that when it was complete, he would die with it, never sharing it with mankind. Following the unmasking scene, Erik refers to himself as Don Juan as he confronts Christine, verbally and physically abusing her as he uses her hands to gouge his face, exclaiming "When a woman has seen me – as you have – she becomes mine ... I'm a real Don Juan ... Look at me! I'm Don Juan Triumphant!" Don Juan is also a plot point in
Susan Kay's novel
Phantom, which expands on
Gaston Leroux's novel
The Phantom of the Opera. The titular character was referred to as "Don Juan" in his childhood, a nickname given to him by Javert, a man who exploited Erik as a child. Later in life, he began writing
Don Juan Triumphant, spending decades on the piece, which
Christine Daaé heard after hiding in her room after removing Erik's mask. In the
1986 Broadway musical adaptation of
Gaston Leroux's 1910
The Phantom of the Opera, the character of the Phantom writes an opera based on the legend of Don Juan called
Don Juan Triumphant. Don Juan is mentioned in the 1980
Broadway musical adaptation of
Victor Hugo's 1862 novel , in which the character
Grantaire states that
Marius Pontmercy is acting like Don Juan. The former Thai Queen
Sirikit once told reporters that her son Crown Prince
Vajiralongkorn, now King Rama X, was "a bit of a Don Juan". Don Juan is referenced in Star Trek the Original Series, season one episode 16 "Shore Leave". "Don Juan" is
Cockney rhyming slang for a 2:1 degree classification. Rapper
Future referenced Don Juan in the title and lyrics of his song Magic Don Juan (Princess Diana) on his 2024 album
We Don't Trust You. == Folkloristics ==