Ciske de Rat
Author | Piet Bakker |
---|---|
Original title | Ciske de Rat |
Translator | Celina Wieniewska and Peter Janson-Smith |
Country | Netherlands |
Language | Dutch |
Publisher | Elsevier |
Publication date | 1942 |
Published in English | 1958 (Doubleday) |
Media type | Print (Paperback) |
Pages | 620 |
Ciske de Rat ("Ciske the Rat") is the first part of a trilogy by Dutch author Piet Bakker. It is part of the Ciske trilogy which was written between 1941 (publication was however delayed by paper shortages until 1942) and 1946. The book was published in more than ten countries. It was made into two films, a television series and a musical. Best known is the film version of 1984, starring Danny de Munk as Ciske, Herman van Veen and Willeke van Ammelrooy.
Plot summary[]
The setting is in Amsterdam in the 1930s. The story is told by Ciske’s new teacher Bruis.
Ciske de Rat ("Ciske the Rat") is the story of eleven-year-old lonely street child Ciske (Franciskus) Vrijmoeth, who has no friends and is only called "the Rat". Ciske has to change school, because he poured ink over his teacher's head. After school, he helps out in a pub, where his mother Marie also works. His beloved father Cor is a sailor and therefore not at home.
Ciske groeit op ("Ciske grows up") is the second part. Ciske meets his father, who wants to get divorced. At school he makes friends with a sick boy called Dorus. One night, Ciske finds his mother with another man, who beats him. As his mother tears out pages from a book which was borrowed from Dorus, Ciske gets angry and kills his mother with a knife. He is then arrested and put into jail. His teacher helps him out, and after Ciske saves a drowning boy's life, he is declared a hero and lives together with his father and aunt Jans.
In the third part, Cis de man ("Cis the man"), Ciske is now an adult soldier and fights against the German soldiers in May 1940, when the Germans invaded the Netherlands. His former teacher Bruis, who tells this story as well, happens to be his sergeant. Cis actually has more authority than Bruis. In the end, Cis gets seriously injured. This part of the book was published in 1946 after the Dutch liberation and is not included in the films.
Films[]
1955[]
The first film was issued in 1955, starring as Ciske and Kees Brusse as the teacher Bruis. The black-and-white film, which was directed by Wolfgang Staudte, won an OCIC Award and a Silver Lion at the Venice Film Festival. Based on admissions, it is still the third most popular Dutch film in Dutch box office history.
1984[]
The second film was directed by Guido Pieters and filmed by . Ciske is played by Danny de Munk who also sang the title song Ik voel me zo verdomd alleen ("I feel so damned alone") which scored a number one hit in the Netherlands.
An enhanced television series was later broadcast.
Both films are still in the Top fifteen most-successful films in The Netherlands since 1945.
Soundtrack[]
The 1984 soundtrack features two songs from the film: Ik voel me zo verdomd alleen (composed by Herman van Veen, lyrics by Karin Loomans) and Vergeet nu maar je zorgen ("Now forget your worries"), which is played at the closing credits.
Musical[]
From October 5, 2007 to November 29, 2009, a musical based on the full trilogy toured the Netherlands and Belgium, starring 37-year-old Danny de Munk (who had gone on to appear in several Dutch musicals in the years after his portrayal of young Ciske in the movie) as grown-up Ciske. The musical was based on the 1984 film but added part of the storyline of the third book, switching back and forth between flashbacks to the events occurring in the 1930s and the days before the German invasion of the Netherlands in 1940. The show featured music by Henny Vrienten and lyrics by André Breedland. Paul Eenens directed the production. Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands was present at the gala premiere at the Royal Theater Carré in Amsterdam. The show received very positive reviews and seven Dutch musical awards (in 2008 the most awards ever bestowed on a single production).[1] A CD and DVD were released of this stage production.
The musical was staged again in 2016/2017, in a slightly modified version, once more directed by Paul Eenens and starring Danny de Munk. It won, among others, the 2017 Dutch Musical Award for Best Dutch Musical.[2]
References[]
- ^ van den Hanenburg, Patrick (3 June 2018). "'Ciske de Rat' winnaar Musical Awards". De Volkskrant. Retrieved 23 August 2020.
- ^ Entertainment, Stage. "Stage Entertainment". Stage Entertainment. Archived from the original on 2017-08-19. Retrieved 2017-08-19.
External links[]
- Ciske de Rat (1955) at IMDb
- Ciske de Rat (1984) at IMDb
- Ciske de Rat (1955) at hollandsfilmglorie.com
- Psychological study on 1984 film fragment
- 1942 novels
- Dutch children's novels
- Novels set in Amsterdam
- Dutch novels adapted into films
- Dutch novels adapted into television shows
- Dutch novels adapted into plays
- Novels set in the 1930s
- 1942 children's books
- Matricide in fiction
- Dutch musicals