'' (Pranks of Till Eulenspiegel), Dutch children's picture book, (1951)
Literature Hans Sachs (1494-1576) the renowned Meistersinger of Nuremberg drew material from the
Volksbuch for 46 of his comic tales (
Schwänke) and Carnival plays
(Fastnachtspiele). Thirty of the
Schwänke were set to Meistersinger melodies
(töne). Fellow Nuremberger Jacob Ayrer (1544-1605) also produced an Eulenspiegel Carnival play. In the eighteenth century, German satirists adopted episodes for social satire, and in the nineteenth and early twentieth century versions of the tales were
bowdlerized to render them fit for children, who had come to be considered their chief natural audience, by expurgating their many scatological references.
Willy Vandersteen drew two comic book albums about Uilenspiegel, "De Opstand der Geuzen" ("The Rebellion of the
Geuzen") and "Fort Oranje" ("Fort Orange"), both drawn in a realistic, serious style and pre-published in the Belgian comics magazine
Tintin between 1952 and 1954. They were published in comic book album format in 1954 and 1955. The stories were drawn in a realistic style and in some instances followed the original novel very closely, but sometimes followed his own imagination more. Belgian comics artist
George van Raemdonck adapted the novel into a comic strip in 1964. Between 1985 and 1990,
Willy Vandersteen drew a comics series named
De Geuzen of whom the three main characters are Hannes, his girlfriend Veerle and Tamme, Hannes' best friend. All are obviously inspired by Tijl Uilenspiegel, Nele and
Lamme Goedzak. In Moscow in 1974,
Grigoriy Gorin adapted De Coster's novel as a play originally entitled
The Passion of Tyl. A Two-Part Farcical Comedy (
The Passion of had to be removed later) which alluded to the state of the
Soviet Union. Performed at the
Lenkom Theatre with music by
Gennady Gladkov it had elements of
rock opera. In 2019, the original libretto was restored and official soundtrack released.
Clive Barker incorporated elements of the Till Eulenspiegel story in his 1982 play
Crazyface.
Music In 1894–1895,
Richard Strauss composed the
tone poem,
Till Eulenspiegels lustige Streiche, Op. 28. In 1902,
Emil von Reznicek adapted the story as an
opera,
Till Eulenspiegel. In 1913,
Walter Braunfels adapted the story as an opera,
Ulenspiegel. In 1916, the
Ballets Russes adapted the story as a ballet, later re-adapted by
George Balanchine for
Jerome Robbins at the
New York City Ballet. In the late 1930s or early 1940s, the Russian composer
Wladimir Vogel wrote a drama-oratorio,
Thyl Claes, derived from De Coster's book. In 1983, the Soviet composer
Nikolai Karetnikov and his librettist, filmmaker
Pavel Lungin, released a
samizdat opera,
Till Eulenspiegel, which received its official release in 1990. The Polish
poet Jacek Kaczmarski wrote an epitaph to Eulenspiegel in 1981 "Epitafium dla Sowizdrzała".
Magazines Between 1945 and 1950, a German satirical magazine was called
Ulenspiegel. The satirical magazine
Eulenspiegel was published from 1954 in Berlin,
East Germany.
Dance In 1916, choreographer
Vaslav Nijinsky created the ballet
Till Eulenspiegel set to
Till Eulenspiegels lustige Streiche, Op. 28. by Richard Strauss. The libretto was by Vaslav Nijinsky, after
Charles De Coster and the costumes were by Robert Edmond Jones. The work premiered on 23 October 1916 at the Manhattan Opera House in New York City.
Films In 1956, the film ''
Les Aventures de Till L'Espiègle'' was made by
Gérard Philipe and
Joris Ivens, which adapted De Coster's novel. (English title: "Bold Adventure"). The film was a French-East German co-production. In 1965, the
Belgian animated short
Chomophobia, made by
Raoul Servais, features Eulenspiegel. In 1973,
Walter van der Kamp directed
Uilenspiegel, a Dutch film.
Rainer Simon directed
Till Eulenspiegel in 1975, which was an East German production made for State Television. Due to nudity, it was not suitable for children as State Television banned airing the film before 7pm.
Ulenspiegel (Legenda o Tile), was a 1976 Soviet film, based on De Coster's novel, and directed by
Aleksandr Alov and
Vladimir Naumov, "The Legend of Till Ullenspiegel" (1976). In 2003,
Eberhard Junkersdorf adapted the story into a feature-length animated film. In 2014,
Christian Theede directed the film ''''.
Television In 1961, the BRT (nowadays the
VRT) made a children's TV series,
Tijl Uilenspiegel.
Museums There are three museums in Germany featuring Till Eulenspiegel. One is located in the town of
Schöppenstedt in Lower Saxony, which is nearby his assumed birthplace Kneitlingen. The second is located in the supposed place of his death, the city of
Mölln in Schleswig-Holstein, and the third in Bernburg (Saale), Sachsen-Anhalt. In the town of Damme, Belgium, there is also a museum honoring him, and there is a fountain and statue featuring Till Eulenspiegel in the Marktplatz of Magdeburg, capital city of Sachsen-Anhalt.
Other TES, the first
BDSM organization founded in the United States, formerly known as The Eulenspiegel Society, took its original name from Till Eulenspiegel. TES was founded in 1971 and had the name "The Eulenspiegel Society" until it formally changed its name to "TES" in 2002. The original name was inspired by a passage from
Austrian
psychoanalyst Theodor Reik's
Masochism in Modern Man (1941), in which he argues that patients who engage in self-punishing or provocative behavior do so in order to demonstrate their emotional fortitude, induce guilt in others, and achieve a sense of "victory through defeat". Reik describes Till Eulenspiegel's "peculiar" behavior—he enjoys walking uphill, and feels "dejected" walking downhill—and compares it to a "paradox reminiscent of masochism", because Till Eulenspiegel "gladly submits to discomfort, enjoys it, even transforms it into pleasure". == See also ==