The Mighty Magician
The Mighty Magician
The Mighty Magician, Pedro Calderon de la Barca’s Faustian story of religious conversion is his sublime musing on the human condition and one of the greatest works of the Spanish golden age.
It looks forward to such modern dramatic themes as our ever-changing perceptions of reality and the possibility of freedom in a world seemingly governed by fate and/or chaos.
PEDRO CALDERON de la BARCA (1600–1681), was a writer during the Spanish Golden Age. A superb poet with deep psychological perception, de la Barca explored astonishingly modern concerns: an intellectual elite manipulating society; determinism undermining free will; child abuse producing criminality; the subjugation of women.
Born when the Spanish Golden Age theatre was being defined by Lope de Vega, he advanced it much further, his work being regarded as the culmination of the Spanish Baroque theatre. As such, he is regarded as one of Spain's foremost dramatists and one of the finest playwrights of world literature.
“I have read Calderon’s plays and they deserve to be ranked among the grandest and most perfect productions of the human mind. He exceeds all modern dramatists with the exception of Shakespeare.”
-Percy Bysshe Shelley