Difference between revisions of "Judas (1910 De Kay), play"

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==External links==
==External links==


[[Category:1910| De Kay]]
[[Category:1910|*De Kay]]
[[Category:Fiction|1910 De Kay]]
[[Category:Fiction|1910 De Kay]]
[[Category:Theatre|1910 De Kay]]
[[Category:Plays|1910 De Kay]]


[[Category:Fiction|1910 De Kay]]
[[Category:Fiction|1910 De Kay]]
[[Category:Theatre|1910 De Kay]]
[[Category:Theatre|1910 De Kay]]
[[Category:Theatre|1910 De Kay]]
[[Category:Plays|1910 De Kay]]


[[Category:English language|1910 De Kay]]
[[Category:English language|1910 De Kay]]
[[Category:Made in the 1910s|1910 De Kay]]
[[Category:Made in the 1910s|*1910 De Kay]]


[[Category:Judas Iscariot (subject)|1910 De Kay]]
[[Category:Judas Iscariot (subject)|1910 De Kay]]
[[Category:Judas Iscariot--fiction (subject)|1910 De Kay]]
[[Category:Judas Iscariot--fiction (subject)|1910 De Kay]]
[[Category:Judas Iscariot--theatre (subject)|1910 De Kay]]
[[Category:Judas Iscariot--theatre (subject)|1910 De Kay]]

Revision as of 13:09, 5 January 2013

Judas (1910) is a play by John Wesley De Kay.

Abstract

In the fashion of Paul von Heyse (1899), the author represents Judas animated by jealous love for Mary Magdalene.

Editions, performances, translations

Published in the United States (New York: 1910), with a French translation by J. Coudurien de Chassaigne. Premiered at the Globe Theatre, on 29 Dec 1910 (with Sarah Bernhardt as Mary of Magdala). A revised version of the drama was issued in 1929 under the title, The Maid of Bethany.

External links