of "The Dreaming Iolanthe", depicting the blind Yolande, as portrayed in Henrik Hertz's play ''King René's Daughter'', by
Caroline Shawk Brooks, 1876 In 1845 the Danish poet
Henrik Hertz wrote the poetic drama
Kong Renés Datter (
King René’s Daughter), a romanticised account of her life, in which she is depicted as a beautiful sixteen-year-old princess who lives in a protected garden paradise. Blinded in a childhood accident, her attendants must keep from her the knowledge that she is blind, while a Moorish physician conducts a long slow medical procedure to restore her sight. Once it is complete, she must be told of her blindness to awaken the desire to see. Count Vaudémont arrives for his arranged marriage, which he resents. He accidentally finds her secret garden, and falls in love with her without knowing who she is. He discovers she is blind, and tells her so, but she cannot understand him. However, the physician is now able to complete the treatment and she is cured. The portrayal of Yolande as a saintly dreaming beauty (regularly placed in an entranced sleep by the physician) was immensely popular. The play was translated into numerous languages. The Russian translation by Fyodor Miller was adapted by Vladimir Zotov, whose version was used as the basis for the opera
Iolanta, written by Tchaikovsky, with libretto by his brother
Modest Ilyich Tchaikovsky. It received its premiere on 18 December 1892 in
St. Petersburg. The heroine's name was given as "Iolanthe" in the original Danish version and in the English translation by
Theodore Martin, making this version of her name familiar in the 19th century. In 1913 a silent film of Hertz's play was made by the
Thanhouser Company, starring
Maude Fealy as Yolande. It was also adapted in 1990 as the German film
Das Licht der Liebe. In the pseudohistorical book
The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail Yolande de Bar was alleged to have been the tenth
Grand Master of the Priory of Sion, succeeding her father, King René. The evidence for this claim was derived from the ''
Dossiers Secrets d'Henri Lobineau'', forged documents created in 1967. ==Notes==