
PAPA HAMLET
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In this wildly inventive comedy, the legendary Hamlet is transplanted into a bustling household in Trondheim, where the famed prince becomes Niels Thienwiebel, a bewildered young man fumbling through everyday chores. The story opens with a cacophony of half‑finished lines, clattering dishes, and frantic exchanges that blur high drama and slapstick. As Thienwiebel wrestles with a broken monologue about existence, the surrounding characters—Amalie, Horatio, and eccentric relatives—react with equal bewilderment and humor. The result is a chaotic domestic farce that echoes the original tragedy.
Beyond the initial swirl of wordplay, the story gently probes the same questions that haunted the original Hamlet—identity, purpose, and the weight of expectation—while anchoring them in petty concerns of laundry, broken toys, and a stubborn kitchen stove. Listeners are invited to follow Thienwiebel’s erratic attempts to make sense of his world, discovering moments of unexpected tenderness amid the absurdity. The first act sets the stage for a journey that is as much about the struggle to find meaning in everyday life as it is about the echo of Shakespeare’s famous soliloquy.
Language
de
Duration
~1 hours (69K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2003-11-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

Best known as the Norwegian-sounding pen name behind the landmark naturalist work Papa Hamlet, this byline masked a literary experiment by two young German writers. The result helped make the book a notable example of late 19th-century naturalism.
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