1
|
For other uses, see The Emperor's New Clothes (disambiguation).
Andersen, 1862.
"The Emperor\'s New Clothes" (Keiserens nye Klæder) is a fairy tale by Danish poet and author Hans Christian Andersen about an emperor who unwittingly hires two swindlers to create a new suit of clothes for him. The tale was first published in 1837 as part of Eventyr, fortalte for Børn (Fairy Tales, Told for Children).
The tale is one of Andersen\'s most popular. It appears often in selected tales collections of his work and is frequently published in illustrated storybook editions for children. The tale has seen adaptations in animated film, and television drama.
Contents |
An emperor who cares too much about clothes hires two swindlers who promise him the finest suit of clothes from the most beautiful cloth. This cloth, they tell him, is invisible to anyone who was either stupid or not fit for his position. The Emperor is nervous about being able to see the cloth himself so he sends his ministers to view it. They see nothing yet praise the cloth. When the swindlers report a suit of clothes has been fashioned, the Emperor allows himself to be dressed in their creation for a procession through town. During the course of the procession, a small child cries out, "But he has nothing on!" The crowd realizes the child is telling the truth and begins laughing. The Emperor, however, holds his head high and continues the procession.
Vilhelm Pedersen illustration
The story has been parodied numerous times, including one story in the animated television series Alftales where Alf plays a frustrated tailor of comfortable casual clothes who pulls the trick on the uninterested emperor who refused his usual goods. At the end, when the emperor\'s pretension is exposed by a girl who makes some sarcastic comments about his state of undress, Alf\'s character supplies the ruler some of his usual wares which the emperor finds agreeable. However, the story ends with the emperor making the best of his humiliation by indulging in his one opportunity to go streaking.
The Emperor\'s New Clothes is the title of a fanciful 2001 film starring Ian Holm as Napoleon, and a 1996 play by playwright Eric Coble.
The 1990 song "The Emperor\'s New Clothes" by recording artist Sinead O\'Connor has the same general message as the original fairytale. The song ends with the lines, "through their own words / they will be exposed / they\'ve got a SOLID case of / the emperor\'s new clothes."
In the 1952 film musical Hans Christian Andersen based on the life of the Danish poet and story-teller Hans Christian Andersen, starring Danny Kaye, the story of The Emperor\'s New Clothes is told in The King\'s New Clothes as one of the film\'s eight songs.
In The Romans, a 1965 episode of Doctor Who, the Doctor convinces Emperor Nero that he can play the lyre by announcing before his performance that "the music is so soft, so delicate, that only those with keen, perceptive hearing will be able to distinguish this melodious charm of music". He then pretends to play, making no actual sound, and at the end of his performance he receives cheers and applause from the other guests at the banquet. He later boasts to one of his companions that he gave the idea to Hans Christian Andersen.
The tale itself was adapted as an episode of the 2008 series Fairy Tales.
The Emperor\'s New Mind by Roger Penrose is a book about physics and complexity theory. Penrose concludes that computers, although they appear to think, cannot think as we experience it. He attempts to prove this hypothesis by examining all physics as we know it in a small amount of detail.
In the Halo video game series by Bungie Entertainment, the high prophets refuse to accept the obvious facts that the rings are actually massive superweapons capable of exterminating life throughout the galaxy, instead believing that the rings are capable of launching them towards their great journey. In one scene Master Chief alludes to the story.
The novel Naked Empire by Terry Goodkind makes an allusion to the tale with its title and the book deals with similar themes.
The Chinese novelist Ye Sheng Tao continued the story which Andersen had left off; it is also titled, The Emperor\'s New Clothes.
The PBS series Sagwa also aired an adaptation of this classic tale.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Wikisource has original text related to this article:
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia