Faust
Faust is the protagonist of a classic German legend, based on the historical Johann Georg Faust .
The erudite Faust is highly successful yet dissatisfied with his life, which leads him to make a pact with the Devil at a crossroads, exchanging his soul for unlimited knowledge and worldly pleasures. The Faust legend has been the basis for many literary, artistic, cinematic, and musical works that have reinterpreted it through the ages. "Faust" and the adjective "Faustian" imply a situation in which an ambitious person surrenders moral integrity in order to achieve power and success for a limited term.
The Faust of early books — as well as the ballads, dramas, movies, and puppet-plays which grew out of them — is irrevocably damned because he prefers human to divine knowledge: "he laid the Holy Scriptures behind the door and under the bench, refused to be called doctor of theology, but preferred to be styled doctor of medicine". Plays and comic puppet theatre loosely based on this legend were popular throughout Germany in the 16th century, often reducing Faust and Mephistopheles to figures of vulgar fun. The story was popularised in England by Christopher Marlowe, who gave it a classic treatment in his play, The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus. In Goethe's reworking of the story two hundred years later, Faust becomes a dissatisfied intellectual who yearns for "more than earthly meat and drink" in his life.
Summary of the story
Faust is bored and depressed with his life as a scholar. After an attempt to take his own life, he calls on the Devil for further knowledge and magic powers with which to indulge all the pleasure and knowledge of the world. In response, the Devil's representative, Mephistopheles, appears. He makes a bargain with Faust: Mephistopheles will serve Faust with his magic powers for a set number of years, but at the end of the term, the Devil will claim Faust's soul, and Faust will be eternally enslaved.During the term of the bargain, Faust makes use of Mephistopheles in various ways. In Goethe's drama, and many subsequent versions of the story, Mephistopheles helps Faust seduce a beautiful and innocent girl, usually named Gretchen, whose life is ultimately destroyed when she gives birth to Faust's bastard son. Realizing this unholy act she drowns the child and is held for murder. However, Gretchen's innocence saves her in the end, and she enters Heaven after execution. In Goethe's rendition, Faust is saved by God via his constant striving — in combination with Gretchen's pleadings with God in the form of the eternal feminine. However, in the early tales, Faust is irrevocably corrupted and believes his sins cannot be forgiven; when the term ends, the Devil carries him off to Hell.
Locations linked to the story
, a town in the extreme southwest of Germany, claims to be where Faust died ; depictions appear on buildings, etc. The only historical source for this tradition is a passage in the Chronik der Grafen von Zimmern, which was written around 1565, 25 years after Faust's presumed death. These chronicles are generally considered reliable, and in the 16th century there were still family ties between the lords of Staufen and the counts of Zimmern in nearby Donaueschingen.In Christopher Marlowe's original telling of the tale, Wittenburg where Faust studied was also written as Wertenberge. This has led to a measure of speculation as to where precisely his story is set. Some scholars have suggested the Duchy of Württemberg; others have suggested an allusion to Marlowe's own Cambridge
Literary adaptations
Marlowe's ''Doctor Faustus''
The early Faust chapbook, while in circulation in northern Germany, found its way to England, where in 1592 an English translation was published, The Historie of the Damnable Life, and Deserved Death of Doctor Iohn Faustus credited to a certain "P. F., Gent". Christopher Marlowe used this work as the basis for his more ambitious play, The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus. Marlowe also borrowed from John Foxe's Book of Martyrs, on the exchanges between Pope Adrian VI and a rival pope.for Goethe's Faust
Goethe's ''Faust''
Another important version of the legend is the play Faust, written by the German author Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. The first part, which is the one more closely connected to the earlier legend, was published in 1808, the second posthumously in 1832.Goethe's Faust complicates the simple Christian moral of the original legend. A hybrid between a play and an extended poem, Goethe's two-part "closet drama" is epic in scope. It gathers together references from Christian, medieval, Roman, eastern, and Hellenic poetry, philosophy, and literature.
The composition and refinement of Goethe's own version of the legend occupied him, off and on, for over sixty years. The final version, published after his death, is recognized as a great work of German literature.
The story concerns the fate of Faust in his quest for the true essence of life. Frustrated with learning and the limits to his knowledge, power, and enjoyment of life, he attracts the attention of the Devil, who makes a bet with Faust that he will be able to satisfy him; a notion that Faust is incredibly reluctant towards, as he believes this happy zenith will never come. This is a significant difference between Goethe's "Faust" and Marlowe's; Faust is not the one who suggests the wager.
In the first part, Mephistopheles leads Faust through experiences that culminate in a lustful relationship with Gretchen, an innocent young woman. Gretchen and her family are destroyed by Mephistopheles' deceptions and Faust's desires. Part one of the story ends in tragedy for Faust, as Gretchen is saved but Faust is left to grieve in shame.
The second part begins with the spirits of the earth forgiving Faust and progresses into allegorical poetry. Faust and his Devil pass through and manipulate the world of politics and the world of the classical gods, and meet with Helen of Troy. Finally, having succeeded in taming the very forces of war and nature, Faust experiences a singular moment of happiness.
Mephistopheles tries to seize Faust's soul when he dies after this moment of happiness, but is frustrated and enraged when angels intervene due to God's grace. Though this grace is truly 'gratuitous' and does not condone Faust's frequent errors perpetrated with Mephistopheles, the angels state that this grace can only occur because of Faust's unending striving and due to the intercession of the forgiving Gretchen. The final scene has Faust's soul carried to heaven in the presence of God by the intercession of the "Virgin, Mother, Queen,... Goddess kind forever... Eternal Womanhood. The woman is thus victorious over Mephistopheles, who had insisted at Faust's death that he would be consigned to "The Eternal Empty."
Bulgakov's ''The Master and Margarita''
The story of Faust is woven into Dr. Mikhail Bulgakov's best-known novel, The Master and Margarita with Margarita being modeled on Gretchen and the Master on Faust. Other characters in the novel include Woland and Mikhail Alexandrovitch Berlioz.Mann's ''Doctor Faustus''
's 1947 '' rose in Germany, and Leverkühn's fate is shown as that of the soul of Germany.Benét's ''The Devil and Daniel Webster''
's short story The Devil and Daniel Webster published in 1937 is a retelling of the tale of Faust based on the short story The Devil and Tom Walker, written by Washington Irving. Benet's version of the story centers on a New Hampshire farmer by the name of Jabez Stone who, plagued with unending bad luck, is approached by the devil under the name of Mr. Scratch who offers him seven years of prosperity in exchange for his soul. Jabez Stone is eventually defended by Daniel Webster, a fictional version of the famous lawyer and orator, in front of a judge and jury of the damned, and his case is won. It was adapted in 1941 as The Devil and Daniel Webster with James Craig as Jabez and Edward Arnold as Webster. It was remade in 2007 as Shortcut to Happiness with Alec Baldwin as Jabez and Anthony Hopkins as Webster.Selected additional dramatic works
- Faust by Nikolaus Lenau
- Faust Ludwig Hermann Wolfram
- Doctor Faust. Dance Poem by Heinrich Heine
- Faust: The Third Part of the Tragedy by Friedrich Theodor Vischer
- The Death of Doctor Faustus by Michel de Ghelderode
- Mephisto Klaus Mann
- Faust, a Subjective Tragedy by Fernando Pessoa
- Doctor Faustus Lights the Lights by Gertrude Stein
- My Faust by Paul Valéry
- Doctor Faustus by Don Nigro
- Temptation by Václav Havel
- Faustus by David Mamet
- Wittenberg by David Davalos
- Faust by Edgar Brau
- Faust 3 by Peter Schumann, Bread and Puppet Theater
Selected additional novels, stories, poems, and comics
- The Devil and Tom Walker by Washington Irving
- Faust novella by Ivan Turgenev
- The Cobbler and the Devil by August Šenoa
- Fausto by Estanislao del Campo
- The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde
- Faust by Robert Nye
- Mefisto by John Banville
- Eric by Terry Pratchett
- Jack Faust by Michael Swanwick
- Frau Faust by Kore Yamazaki
- Soul Cartel by Haram and Youngji Kim
- Teeth in the Mist by Dawn Kurtagich
- This Ruler novel by Mark Duff
- Faz & Mef And Some Christmas-Card Stories short story by John Thomas
Cinematic adaptations
Early films
- Faust, an obscure 1921 American silent film directed by Frederick A. Todd
- Faust, a 14-minute-long 1922 British silent film directed by Challis Sanderson
- Faust, a 1922 French silent film directed by Gerard Bourgeois, regarded as the first ever 3-D film
Murnau's ''Faust''
In one, Mephisto towers over a town, dark wings spread wide, as a fog rolls in bringing the plague. In another, an extended montage sequence shows Faust, mounted behind Mephisto, riding through the heavens, and the camera view, effectively swooping through quickly changing panoramic backgrounds, courses past snowy mountains, high promontories and cliffs, and waterfalls.
In the Murnau version of the tale, the aging bearded scholar and alchemist, now disillusioned—by a palpable failure of his antidotal, dark liquid in a phial, a supposed cure for victims in his plague-stricken town—Faust renounces his many years of hard travail and studies in alchemy. We see this despair, watching him haul all his bound volumes by armloads onto a growing pyre; he intends to burn everything. But a wind comes, from offscreen, that turns over a few cabalistic leaves—from one of the books' pages, sheets not yet in flames, one and another just catching Faust's eye. Their words contain a prescription for how to invoke the dreadful dark forces.
Following Faust heeding these recipes, we see him begin enacting the mystic protocols: on a hill, alone, summoning Mephisto, certain forces begin to convene, and Faust in a state of growing trepidation hesitates, and begins to withdraw; he flees along a winding, twisting pathway, returning to his study chambers. At pauses along this retreat, though, he meets a reappearing figure. Each time, it doffs its hat—in a greeting, that is Mephisto, confronting him. Mephisto overcomes Faust's reluctance to sign a long binding pact with the invitation that Faust may try on these powers, just for one day, and without obligation to longer terms. It comes the end of that day, the sands of twenty-four hours having run out, after Faust's having been restored to youth and, helped by his servant Mephisto to steal a beautiful woman from her wedding feast, Faust is tempted so much that he agrees to sign a pact for eternity. Eventually Faust becomes bored with the pursuit of pleasure and returns home, where he falls in love with the beautiful and innocent Gretchen. His corruption ultimately ruins both their lives, though there is still a chance for redemption in the end.
Similarities to Goethe's Faust include the classic tale of a man who sold his soul to the Devil, the same Mephisto wagering with an angel to corrupt the soul of Faust, the plague sent by Mephisto on Faust's small town, and the familiar cliffhanger with Faust unable to find a cure for The Plague, and therefore turning to Mephisto, renouncing God, the angel, and science alike.
''[La Beauté du diable]'' (''The Beauty of the Devil'')
Directed by René Clair, 1950 – A somewhat comedic adaptation with Michel Simon as Mephistopheles/Faust as old man, and Gérard Philipe as Faust transformed into a young man.''[Phantom of the Paradise]''
Directed by Brian DePalma, 1974 - A vain rock impresario, who has sold his soul to the Devil in exchange for eternal youth, corrupts and destroys a brilliant but unsuccessful songwriter and a beautiful ingenue.''Mephisto">Mephisto (1981 film)">Mephisto''
Directed by István Szabó, 1981 – An actor in 1930s Germany aligns himself with the Nazi party for prestige.''[Lekce Faust]'' (''Faust'')
Directed by Jan Švankmajer, 1994 – The source material of Švankmajer's film is the Faust legend; including traditional Czech puppet show versions, this film production uses a variety of cinematic formats, such as stop-motion photography animation and claymation.''Faust">Faust (2011 film)">Faust''
Directed by Aleksandr Sokurov, 2011 – German-language film starring Johannes Zeiler, Anton Adasinsky, Isolda Dychauk.''American Satan''
Directed by Ash Avildsen, 2017 – A rock and roll modern retelling of the Faust legend starring Andy Biersack as Johnny Faust.''[The Last Faust]''
Directed by Philipp Humm, 2019 – a contemporary feature art film directly based on Goethe's Faust, Part One and Faust, Part Two. The film is the first filmed version of Faust, I and Faust, II as well as a part of Humm's Gesamtkunstwerk, an art project with over 150 different artworks such as paintings, photos, sculptures, drawings and an illustrated novella.Television adaptations
Chespirito's ''Faust''
Mexican comedian Chespirito acted as Faust in a sketch adaptation of the legend. Ramon Valdez played Mephistopheles, and in this particular version, Faust sells his soul by signing a contract, after which Mephistopheles gives him an object known as the "Chirrín-Chirrión" which grants him the power to make things, people or even youth or age, appear or disappear, by speaking the object's name, followed by the word "Chirrín" or "Chirrión". After Faust's youth is restored, he uses his powers to try conquering the heart of his assistant Margarita. However, after several failed attempts to do so, he discovers she already has a boyfriend, and realizes he sold his soul for nothing. At this point, Mephistopheles returns to take Faust's soul to hell, producing the signed contract for supporting his claim. Faust responds by using the Chirrín-Chirrión to make the contract itself disappear, which makes Mephistopheles cry.Musical adaptations
Operatic
The Faust legend has been the basis for several major operas: for a more complete list, visit Works based on Faust- Mefistofele, the only completed opera by Arrigo Boito
- Doktor Faust, begun by Ferruccio Busoni and completed by his pupil Philipp Jarnach
- Faust, by Charles Gounod to a French libretto by Jules Barbier and Michel Carré from Carré's play Faust et Marguerite, in turn loosely based on Goethe's
- Faust, one of the earliest operatic adaptations of the story, with separate versions premiering in 1816 and 1852 respectively.
- Hector Berlioz's La Damnation de Faust
Symphonic
- Faust Overture by Richard Wagner
- Scenes from Goethe's Faust by Robert Schumann
- Faust Symphony by Franz Liszt
- Symphony No. 8 by Gustav Mahler
- Histoire du soldat by Igor Stravinsky
- Faust was the title and inspiration of Phantom Regiment Drum and Bugle Corps' 2006 show.
Other adaptations
- Faustian Echoes by American black metal band Agalloch
- Faust Arp by English rock band Radiohead. From the album In Rainbows.
- The Small Print by English rock band Muse. From the album Absolution. Originally titled Action Faust, it is an interpretation of the tale from the Devil's perspective.
- Bohemian Rhapsody by English rock band Queen. From the album A Night at the Opera.
- "Faust" by singer songwriter Paul Williams from the original soundtrack of The Phantom of the Paradise.
- Faust by English virtual band Gorillaz. From the album G-Sides.
- Absinthe with Faust by English extreme metal band Cradle of Filth. From the album Nymphetamine.
- Urfaust, The Calling, The Oath, Conjuring the Cull, and The Harrowing by American death metal band Misery Index. The first five tracks from the album The Killing Gods. A five-song, modern interpretation of Goethe's Faust.
- Epica and The Black Halo by international power metal band Kamelot. A two-album interpretation of the tale.
- Faust by American metalcore band The Human Abstract. From the album Digital Veil.
- Faust by horrorcore rapper SickTanicK feat. Texas Microphone Massacre. From the album .
- Faust, Midas and Myself by American alternative rock band Switchfoot. From the album Oh! Gravity.
- The Faustian Alchemist by Finnish black metal band Belzebubs. From the album Pantheon of the Nightside Gods.
- Randy Newman’s Faust. A rock opera written and co-produced by Randy Newman with: Don Henley as Faust; Randy Newman as the devil; James Taylor as the Lord; Bonnie Raitt as Martha; and Linda Ronstadt as Margaret.
- Damn Yankees was a 1950s musical inspired by the legend.
In psychotherapy