Aladdin
(an Anglicisation of the Arabic name Ala' ad-Din
, Arabic: ???? ????? literally "nobility of the faith") is one of the tales of medieval Arabian origin in the The Book of One Thousand and One Nights (
Arabian Nights)
, and one of the most famous, although it was actually added to the collection by Antoine Galland (see sources and setting). [1]
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ALADDIN TICKETS
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Aladdin Tickets 11/27 | Nov 27, 2024 Wed, 7:00 PM | | Aladdin Tickets 11/27 | Nov 27, 2024 Wed, 1:00 PM | | Aladdin Tickets 11/29 | Nov 29, 2024 Fri, 8:00 PM | | Aladdin Tickets 11/29 | Nov 29, 2024 Fri, 2:00 PM | | Aladdin Tickets 11/30 | Nov 30, 2024 Sat, 2:00 PM | |
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Synopsis
The original story of Aladdin is a Middle-Eastern folk tale. It concerns an impoverished young ne'er-do-well named Aladdin, in a Chinese city, who is recruited by a
sorcerer from the
Maghreb (who passes himself off as the brother of Aladdin's late father) to retrieve a wonderful
oil lamp from a
booby-trapped magic
cave. After the sorcerer attempts to double-cross him, Aladdin finds himself trapped in the cave. Fortunately, Aladdin retains a
magic ring lent to him by the sorcerer. When he rubs his hands in despair, he inadvertently rubs the ring, and a
djinni appears, who takes him home to his mother. Aladdin is still carrying the lamp, and when his mother tries to clean it, a second, far more powerful djinni appears, who is bound to do the bidding of the person holding the lamp. With the aid of the djinni of the lamp, Aladdin becomes rich and powerful and marries princess
Badroulbadour, the Emperor's daughter. The djinni builds Aladdin a wonderful palace - far more magnificent than that of the Emperor himself.
The sorcerer returns and is able to get his hands on the lamp by tricking Aladdin's wife, who is unaware of the lamp's importance, by offering to exchange "new lamps for old". He orders the djinni of the lamp to take the palace to his home in the Maghreb. Fortunately, Aladdin retains the magic ring and is able to summon the lesser djinni. Although the djinni of the ring cannot directly undo any of the magic of the djinni of the lamp, he is able to transport Aladdin to Maghreb, and help him recover his wife and the lamp and defeat the sorcerer.
Sources and setting
No
medieval Arabic source has been traced for the tale, which was incorporated into
The Book of One Thousand and One Nights
by its
French translator,
Antoine Galland, who heard it from an
Arab Syrian storyteller from
Aleppo. Galland's diary (
March 25,
1709) records that he met the
Maronite scholar, by name
Youhenna Diab ("Hanna"), who had been brought from Aleppo to
Paris by
Paul Lucas, a celebrated French traveller. Galland's diary also tells that his translation of "Aladdin" was made in the winter of 1709–10. It was included in his volumes ix and x of the
Nights
, published in 1710.
John Payne,
Aladdin and the Enchanted Lamp and Other Stories
, (London 1901) gives details of Galland's encounter with the man he referred to as "Hanna" and the discovery in the
Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris of two Arabic manuscripts containing
Aladdin
(with two more of the "interpolated" tales). One is a jumbled late 18th century Syrian version. The more interesting one, in a manuscript that belonged to the scholar
M. Caussin de Perceval, is a copy of a manuscript made in Baghdad in 1703. It was purchased by the Bibliothèque Nationale at the end of the nineteenth century.
Note that although it is a
Middle-Eastern tale, the story is set in
China, and Aladdin is explicitly Chinese.
[2] However, the "China" of the story is an Islamic country, where most people are Muslims; there is a Jewish merchant who buys Aladdin's wares (and incidentally cheats him), but there is no mention of
Buddhists or
Confucians. Everybody in this country bears an Arabic name and its monarch seems much more like a Muslim ruler than a Chinese emperor. Some commentaters believe that this suggests that the story might be set in
Turkestan (
Central Asia).
[3] It has to be said that this speculation depends on a knowledge of China that the teller of a folk tale (as opposed to a geographic expert) might well not possess - compare "
Cathay".
[4]
For a narrator unaware of the existence of America, Aladdin's "China" would represent "the Utter East" while the sorcerer's homeland of
Morocco represented "the Utter West". In the beginning of the tale, the sorcerer's taking the effort to make such a long journey, the longest conceivable in the narrator's (and his listeners') perception of the world, underlines the sorcerer's determination to gain the lamp and hence the lamp's great value. In the later episodes, the instantaneous transitions from the east to the west and back, performed effortlessly by the Djinn, make their power all the more marvelous.
In literature, the stage, film, and games
Adam Oehlenschläger wrote his drama
Aladdin
in 1805.
Carl Nielsen wrote
incidental music for this play.
In the
United Kingdom, the story of Aladdin was first published in England between 1704–14; and was dramatised in 1788 by
John O'Keefe for the
Theatre Royal, Covent Garden.
[5] It has been a popular subject for
pantomime for over 200 years.
[6] The traditional Aladdin pantomime is the source of the well-known pantomime character
Widow Twankey (Aladdin's mother). In pantomime versions of the story, changes in the setting and plot are often made to fit it better into "China" (albeit a China situated in the
East End of London rather than Medieval
Baghdad). One version of the "
pantomime Aladdin" is
Sandy Wilson's
musical Aladdin
, from 1979. Since the early 1990s Aladdin pantos tend to be influenced by the Disney animation - for instance the 2007/2008 Birmingham version, which starred
John Barrowman, and featured a variety of songs from the Disney movies
Aladdin
and
Mulan
.
In the 1960s
Bollywood produced
Aladdin and Sinbad
, very loosely based on the original, in which the two named heroes get to meet and share in each other's adventures. In this version, the lamp's
djinni
(genie) is female and Aladdin marries her rather than the princess (she becomes a mortal woman for his sake).
The tale has been adapted to
animated film a number of times, including
Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp
, the 1939
Popeye the Sailor
cartoon.
In 1962 the Italian branch of
the Walt Disney Company published the story
Paperino e la grotta di Aladino
(
Donald and Aladdin's Cave
), written by
Osvaldo Pavese and drawn by
Pier Lorenzo De Vita. In it,
Uncle Scrooge leads
Donald Duck and their
nephews on an expedition to find the treasure of Aladdin and they encounter the
Middle Eastern counterparts of the
Beagle Boys. Scrooge describes Aladdin as a
brigand who used the legend of the lamp to cover the origins of his ill-gotten gains. They find the cave holding the treasure which is blocked by a huge rock and it requires a variation of "Open Sesame" to open it, thus providing a link to
Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves
.
A Soviet film
Volshebnaia Lampa Aladdina
("Aladdin's Magic Lamp") was released in 1966.
In 1979
kollywood produced "
Allaudinaum Arputha Vilakkum" starring big
Tamil actors such as
Kamal Haasan as Aladdin,
Rajinikanth,and many big stars
In 1982
Media Home Entertainment released
Aladdin and the Wonderful Lamp
.
Gary Wong and Rob Robson produced Aladdin the Rock Panto in 1985. The
GSODA Junior Players recently staged the production at the
Geelong Performing Arts Centre.
Adam Oehlenschläger wrote his drama
Aladdin
in 1805.
Carl Nielsen wrote
incidental music for this play.
In 1986, the show Faerie Tale Theatre had and episode based on the story called "Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp".
In 1986, an Italian-American co-production (under supervision of
Golan-Globus) of a modern-day Aladdin was filmed in
Miami under the title
Superfantagenio
, starring actor
Bud Spencer as the genie and his daughter Diamante as the daughter of a police sergeant.
Currently the form in which the
medieval tale is best known, especially to the very young, is
Aladdin
, the 1992
animated feature by
Walt Disney Feature Animation. In this version several characters are renamed and/or amalgamated (for instance the Sorcerer and the Sultan's vizier become the same person, while the Princess becomes "Jasmine"), have new motivations for their actions (the Lamp Genie now desires freedom from his role) or are simply replaced (the Ring Genie disappears, but a magic carpet fills his place in the plot). The setting is moved from China to the fictional Arabian city of Agrabah, and the structure of the plot is simplified.
Broadway Junior has released
Aladdin Junior
, a children's musical based on the music and screenplay of the Disney animation.
One of the many retellings of the tale appears in
A Book of Wizards
and
A Choice of Magic
, by
Ruth Manning-Sanders.
There was also a
hotel and
casino in
Las Vegas named
Aladdin
from 1963 to 2007.
The game
Sonic and the Secret Rings
is heavily based on the story of Aladdin, and the main villain, known in the game as the Erazor Djinn, is the genie from the story as well.
See also
- The Bronze Ring
- Jack and His Golden Snuff-Box
- The Tinder Box
- The Book of One Thousand and One Nights
- Arabian mythology