Mozart and Salieri (play)
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Mozart and Salieri (Russian: «Мо́царт и Салье́ри», romanized: Mótsart i Sal'yéri) is a poetic drama by Alexander Pushkin. The play was written in 1830 as one of his four short plays known as , and was published in 1832. Based on one of the numerous rumours caused by the early death of Mozart, it features only three characters: Mozart, Antonio Salieri, and a non-speaking part in the blind fiddler whose playing Mozart finds hilarious, and Salieri is appalled by. It was the only one of Pushkin's plays that was staged during his lifetime.
Mozart and Salieri was the inspiration for Peter Shaffer's 1979 play Amadeus, which Shaffer adapted for the 1984 film of the same name.
Adaptations[]
- 1897 – Mozart and Salieri, opera by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov.
- 1914 – , silent film by Victor Tourjansky.
- 1979 – Little Tragedies, a 1979 Soviet television miniseries.
External links[]
- Mozart and Salieri, English translation.
- A production of the play as an audiodrama .
Categories:
- 1830 plays
- Biographical plays about musicians
- Plays by Aleksandr Pushkin
- Plays adapted into operas
- Russian plays adapted into films
- Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in fiction
- Cultural depictions of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
- Cultural depictions of Antonio Salieri