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- Dom_Juan abstract "Dom Juan or The Feast with the Statue (French: Dom Juan ou le Festin de pierre [dɔ̃ ʒɥɑ̃ u l(ə) fɛstɛ̃ də pjɛʁ; t pjɛʁ] or simply Le Festin de pierre) is a French play, a comedy in five acts, written by Molière, and based on the legend of Don Juan. The title of Molière’s play is also commonly expressed as Don Juan, a spelling that began in the seventeenth century. Molière's characters Dom Juan and Sganarelle are the French counterparts to the Spanish Don Juan and Catalinón, characters who are also found in Mozart's Italian opera Don Giovanni 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 15 February 1665 in the Théâtre du Palais-Royal, with Molière playing the role of Sganarelle.The play was originally written in prose, and was withdrawn after 15 performances after attacks by Molière's critics, who considered he was offending religion and the king by eulogizing a libertine.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 particular 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.The play was published in a heavily censored version for the first time in 1682. It was part of an eight-volume edition, edited by La Grange and Vivot, that contained almost all of Molière’s plays. The parts of Dom Juan that offended the censors were pasted over with strips of paper glued into almost all of the copies. This version was in prose, instead of the also censored version by Thomas Corneille (brother of Pierre Corneille) which Corneille had versified. Nearly a century and a half later, in 1813, a full and restored text was published in France. And then in 1847 the play was added to the repertoire of the Comédie-Française. In the twentieth century the play is performed often and has garnered great critical attention and admiration.An uncensored version appeared in Amsterdam in 1683.Molière drew his inspiration from the main character of a work by Tirso de Molina called El burlador de Sevilla y convidado de piedra. However, the characters from the two plays differ in several aspects. Molière's Dom Juan clearly states that he is an atheist, but the Don Juan of Tirso de Molina's original play is a 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.".
- Dom_Juan thumbnail Don_Juan_(Molière).jpg?width=300.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageExternalLink f13.image.r=.langFR.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageExternalLink tt0123808.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageExternalLink v=onepage&q=don%20juan%20moliere&f=false.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageExternalLink v=onepage&q=don%20juan%20moliere%20google%20book&f=false.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageID "3176220".
- Dom_Juan wikiPageLength "12241".
- Dom_Juan wikiPageOutDegree "25".
- Dom_Juan wikiPageRevisionID "696340560".
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLink Armande_Béjart.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLink Béjart.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLink Category:1665_plays.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLink Category:French_plays.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLink Category:Plays_by_Molière.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLink Category:Plays_set_in_Sicily.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLink Category:Works_based_on_the_Don_Juan_legend.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLink Catherine_Leclerc_du_Rose.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLink Comédie-Française.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLink Don_Giovanni.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLink Don_Juan.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLink La_Grange_(actor).
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLink Lagrange_(disambiguation).
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLink Marquise-Thérèse_de_Gorla.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLink Molière.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLink Pierre_Corneille.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLink Tartuffe.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLink The_School_for_Wives.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLink The_Trickster_of_Seville_and_the_Stone_Guest.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLink Thomas_Corneille.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLink Théâtre_du_Palais-Royal_(rue_Saint-Honoré).
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLink Tirso_de_Molina.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLink File:Don_Juan_(Molière).jpg.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLink File:Le_Festin_de_Pierre.png.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLinkText "Dom Juan de Molière".
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLinkText "Dom Juan or The Feast with the Statue".
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLinkText "Dom Juan ou Le Festin de pierre".
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLinkText "Dom Juan ou le Festin de Pierre".
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLinkText "Dom Juan ou le Festin de pierre".
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLinkText "Dom Juan".
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLinkText "Dom Juan, or The Feast with the Statue".
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLinkText "Don Juan".
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLinkText "Don Juan, or The Stone Guest".
- Dom_Juan wikiPageWikiLinkText "of the same name".
- Dom_Juan wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Don_Juan.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:IPA-fr.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Italic_title.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Molière.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refimprove.
- Dom_Juan wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Wikisourcelang.
- Dom_Juan subject Category:1665_plays.
- Dom_Juan subject Category:French_plays.
- Dom_Juan subject Category:Plays_by_Molière.
- Dom_Juan subject Category:Plays_set_in_Sicily.
- Dom_Juan subject Category:Works_based_on_the_Don_Juan_legend.
- Dom_Juan hypernym Play.
- Dom_Juan type Play.
- Dom_Juan type Work.
- Dom_Juan type Character.
- Dom_Juan type Diacritic.
- Dom_Juan type Redirect.
- Dom_Juan type Source.
- Dom_Juan type Work.
- Dom_Juan comment "Dom Juan or The Feast with the Statue (French: Dom Juan ou le Festin de pierre [dɔ̃ ʒɥɑ̃ u l(ə) fɛstɛ̃ də pjɛʁ; t pjɛʁ] or simply Le Festin de pierre) is a French play, a comedy in five acts, written by Molière, and based on the legend of Don Juan. The title of Molière’s play is also commonly expressed as Don Juan, a spelling that began in the seventeenth century.".
- Dom_Juan label "Dom Juan".
- Dom_Juan sameAs Q179485.
- Dom_Juan sameAs Don_Joan_o_el_festí_de_pedra.
- Dom_Juan sameAs Don_Juan_(Molière).
- Dom_Juan sameAs Don_Juan_(Molière).
- Dom_Juan sameAs Le_Festin_de_pierre_(Dom_Juan).
- Dom_Juan sameAs xd7x93xd7x95xd7x9f_xd7x96xd7x95xd7x90xd7x9f_(xd7x9exd7x97xd7x96xd7x94).
- Dom_Juan sameAs Դոն_Ժուան.
- Dom_Juan sameAs Don_Giovanni_o_Il_convitato_di_pietra.
- Dom_Juan sameAs ドン・ジュアン_(戯曲).
- Dom_Juan sameAs Дон_Жуан_(Молиер).
- Dom_Juan sameAs Dom_Juan_(Molière).
- Dom_Juan sameAs Dom_Juan_o_lo_Festin_de_pèira.
- Dom_Juan sameAs Don_Juan_(Molier).
- Dom_Juan sameAs Dom_Juan_ou_le_Festin_de_Pierre.
- Dom_Juan sameAs m.08x7xf.
- Dom_Juan sameAs Дон_Жуан,_или_Каменный_пир.
- Dom_Juan sameAs Dom_Juan.
- Dom_Juan sameAs Дон_Жуан_(Мольєр).
- Dom_Juan sameAs Q179485.
- Dom_Juan wasDerivedFrom Dom_Juan?oldid=696340560.
- Dom_Juan depiction Don_Juan_(Molière).jpg.
- Dom_Juan isPrimaryTopicOf Dom_Juan.