Difference between revisions of "Category:Salome (subject)"

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|[[1957]]||[[Helga Pilarczyk (1926-2011), German singer]]||[[Salome (1957 Goehr, Pilarczyk / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera)]]||
|[[1957]]||[[Helga Pilarczyk (1926-2011), German singer]]||[[Salome (1957 Goehr, Pilarczyk / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera)]]||
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|[[1961]]||[[Brigid Bazlen (1944-1989), American actress]]||[[King of Kings (1961 Ray), feature film]]||Bases on the [[Gospel of Mark]] and the [[Gospel of Matthew]]. Produced in the United States.
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|[[1964]]||[[Paola Tedesco (b.1952), Italian actress]]||[[Il vangelo secondo Matteo (The Gospel According to St. Matthew / 1964 Pasolini), feature film]]||Bases on the [[Gospel of Matthew]]. Produced in [[Italy]].
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|[[1971]]||[[Mascha Rabben (b.1949), German actress]]||[[Salome (1971 Schroeter), TV film-play]]||Filmization of the 1893 Wilde play. Produced and broadcast in West Germany (11 June 1971). 
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|[[1972]]||[[Donyale Luna (b.1945-1979), African-American actress]]||[[Salomé (1972 Bene), film]]||Freely inspired by the 1893 Wilde play. Produced in Italy. 
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|[[1974]]||[[Teresa Stratas (b.1938), Canadian singer]]||[[Salome (1974 Böhm, Stratas / Friedrich / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera)]]||
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|[[1979]]||[[Montserrat Caballé (b.1933), Spanish singer]]||[[Salome (1979 Rudel, Caballé / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera)]]||
|[[1979]]||[[Montserrat Caballé (b.1933), Spanish singer]]||[[Salome (1979 Rudel, Caballé / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera)]]||
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|[[2008]]||[[Nadja Michael (b.1969), German singer]]||[[Salome (2008 Jordan, Michael / McVicar / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera)]]||  
|[[2008]]||[[Nadja Michael (b.1969), German singer]]||[[Salome (2008 Jordan, Michael / McVicar / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera)]]||  
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|[[2008]]||[[Karita Mattila (b.1960), Finnish singer]]||[[Salome (2008 Summers, Mattila / Sweete / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera)
|[[2008]]||[[Karita Mattila (b.1960), Finnish singer]]||[[Salome (2008 Summers, Mattila / Sweete / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera)]]||  
]]||  
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|[[2009]]||[[Emily Gajek]]||[[Salome (2009 Quint), short film]]|| Produced in the United States.
|[[2009]]||[[Emily Gajek]]||[[Salome (2009 Quint), short film]]|| Produced in the United States.

Revision as of 07:04, 3 February 2017

Salome Caracciolo.jpg


Salome (1st century CE) was the daughter of Herodias and Herod II, and the step-daughter of Herod Antipas.

Salome -- Sources
Salome -- Sources

The character of Salome is mentioned both in Josephus and in the Gospels of Mark and Matthew.

The Gospels of Mark and Matthew (which do not mention her name or any other incidents in her life) suggest her (involuntary) involvement in the death of John the Baptist. They tell us that as a girl she danced before her uncle (and now step-father) Herod Antipas. At the instigation of her mother Herodias, she requested and obtained the head of John the Baptist as her reward from the king.

Josephus (who does not mention Salome in his account of the death of John the Baptist), in a genealogical list of the descendants of Herod the Great, talks briefly of her life as the daughter of Herod II and Herodias, and the step-daughter of Herod Antipas after her mother's divorce and remarriage. Salome was given as wife to her uncle Herod Philip, son of Herod the Great. A young widow, she remarried with Aristobulus of Chalcis, from whom she had three sons named Herod, Agrippa and Aristobulus (see Ant XVIII 136-137).

The story of Salome and her involvement in the death of John the Baptist is repeated also in Islamic traditions.

Gabriele Boccaccini, University of Michigan

From the historical point of view, Salome is part of the scion of powerful and politically engaged women that characterized the House of Hasmoneus and the House of Herod, from Queen Salome Alexandra to Alexandra the Hasmonean, Mariamne, Herodias, Berenice, Drusilla, and others. Research on Salome however is limited by the paucity of historical sources and the legendary nature of the Gospel account.

Scholars have rather focused on the study of the Salome legend and its ramifications in literature and the arts.

Related categories

External links


Salome -- Highlights
Salome -- Highlights


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Music.jpg

Cinema.jpg

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The character of Salome has been subjected in fiction to a dramatic metamorphosis, from innocent child or indifferent teenager to powerful icon of morbid female seductiveness (and anti-Semitism). Salome is one of the most successful and recognizable characters from Second Temple Judaism in modern culture.

In medieval Christian iconography, Salome is portrayed as an innocent child, the passive instrument of her mother's revenge. By the 16th century, the character has matured into a teenager, now more indifferent than innocent to the drama in which she has been involved. The turning point is the second half of the 19th century when Salome is transformed into an Oriental beauty, fully self-conscious of her power of seduction. In the works of Oscar Wilde and Richard Strauss she becomes the epitome of the femme fatale, a sensual, morbid and sadistic character who destroys the men she loves.

Gabriele Boccaccini, University of Michigan

Salome Performers

Year Performer Film/play/opera Notes
1896 ... Salomé (Salome / 1893 Wilde), play The 1893 play premiered in Paris at the Comédie-Parisienne on 11 February, 1896.
1905 Marie Wittich (1868–1931), German singer Salome (1905 Strauss / Lachmann), opera Mary Garden (1900s); Aino Ackté (1910s); Ljuba Welitsch (1940s); Maria Ewing (1980s); Karita Mattila and Nadja Michael (2000s) are among the most memorable performers of the opera.
1908 Florence Lawrence (1886-1938), American actress Salome; or, The Dance of Seven Veils (1908 Blackton), short film Silent movie. First filmization of the Wilde play.
1908 Mlle. De Wailly Salomé (Salome / 1908 Mariotte / Wilde), opera Lucienne Bréval was Salome in the Paris performances in 1910 and 1919.
1910 Francesca Bertini (1892-1985), Italian actress Salome (1910 Falena), short film Silent film.
1910 Maria Ventura (1888-1954), Romanian French actress Hérodiade (Herodias / 1910 Jasset, Hatot), short film Silent film.
1918 Theda Bara (1885-1955), American actress Salome (1918 Edwards), feature film Silent film.
1922 Alla Nazimova (1879-1945), Russian American Jewish actress Salome (1922 Bryant), feature film Silent film.
1923 Diana Allen (b.1898), Swedish American actress Salome (1923 Strauss), film Silent film.
1925 Gloria Swanson (1899-1983), American actress Stage Struck (1925 Dwan), film A young waitress dreams of being Salome on stage.
1949 Celia Franca (1921-2007), British Canadian Jewish dancer The Dance of Salome (1949 Franca / Hartley), TV film (ballet) Silent film.
1950 Gloria Swanson (1899-1983), American actress Sunset Blvd. (1950 Wilder), feature film A faded silent movie star dreams of making a triumphal return to the screen as Salome.
1953 Rita Hayworth (1918-1987), American actress Salome (1953 Dieterle), feature film
1957 Helga Pilarczyk (1926-2011), German singer Salome (1957 Goehr, Pilarczyk / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera)
1961 Brigid Bazlen (1944-1989), American actress King of Kings (1961 Ray), feature film Bases on the Gospel of Mark and the Gospel of Matthew. Produced in the United States.
1964 Paola Tedesco (b.1952), Italian actress Il vangelo secondo Matteo (The Gospel According to St. Matthew / 1964 Pasolini), feature film Bases on the Gospel of Matthew. Produced in Italy.
1971 Mascha Rabben (b.1949), German actress Salome (1971 Schroeter), TV film-play Filmization of the 1893 Wilde play. Produced and broadcast in West Germany (11 June 1971).
1972 Donyale Luna (b.1945-1979), African-American actress Salomé (1972 Bene), film Freely inspired by the 1893 Wilde play. Produced in Italy.
1974 Teresa Stratas (b.1938), Canadian singer Salome (1974 Böhm, Stratas / Friedrich / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera)
1979 Montserrat Caballé (b.1933), Spanish singer Salome (1979 Rudel, Caballé / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera)
2005 Carolina Felline (b.1978), Italian actress Chiamami Salomé (Call Me Salome / 2005 Sestieri), feature film Produced in Italy.
2007 Alexia Anastasio (b.1981), American actress & film director Salome (2007 Anastasio), short film Produced in the United States.
2008 Nadja Michael (b.1969), German singer Salome (2008 Jordan, Michael / McVicar / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera)
2008 Karita Mattila (b.1960), Finnish singer Salome (2008 Summers, Mattila / Sweete / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera)
2009 Emily Gajek Salome (2009 Quint), short film Produced in the United States.
2010 Débora Melo Salomé (Salome / 2010 Cabral), short film Produced in Brazil.
2012 Angela Denoke (b.1961), German singer Salome (2012 Soltesz, Denoke / Lehnhoff / @1905 Strauss), video recording (opera) Released as a DVD.

Pages in category "Salome (subject)"

The following 72 pages are in this category, out of 72 total.

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Media in category "Salome (subject)"

The following 26 files are in this category, out of 26 total.