The Blue Bird (play)
The Blue Bird is a 1908 play by Belgian playwright and poet Maurice Maeterlinck. It premiered on 30 September 1908 at Konstantin Stanislavski's Moscow Art Theatre, and was presented on Broadway in 1910. The play has been adapted for several films and a TV series. The French composer Albert Wolff wrote an opera based on Maeterlinck's original play, and Maeterlinck's innamorata Georgette Leblanc produced a novelization.
The story is about a girl called Mytyl and her brother Tyltyl seeking happiness, represented by The Blue Bird of Happiness, aided by the good fairy Bérylune.
Maeterlinck also wrote a relatively little known sequel to The Blue Bird titled The Betrothal; or, The Blue Bird Chooses.
Story
In the opening scene, the two children gleefully describe the beautiful decorations and rich desserts that they see in the house of a wealthy family nearby. When Bérylune says that it is wrong for the rich not to share their cakes with Tyltyl and Mytyl, the boy corrects her. It is enough that he gets to watch others’ happiness; their joy does not create envy in him. The theme is emphasized again when the children meet the Luxuries, particularly the biggest one of all, the Luxury of Being Rich. When Tyltyl turns the diamond, the hall is bathed with a dazzling brightness, and the Luxuries run wildly in search of a dark corner where they may hide their ugliness from the ethereal light. The names of such Happinesses as Innocent Thoughts and Seeing the Stars Rise and of such Joys as Being Good and Maternal Love affirm Maurice Maeterlinck’s view that true happiness lies in simple things, particularly in the warmth of family love.At the end of the play, Tyltyl shows what he has learned about happiness. He looks out the window at the forest and remarks how beautiful it is. The inside of the house looks much lovelier to him than it did before. Also, he creates great happiness for another by giving his pet bird, which seems much bluer than before, to the sick child.
Adaptations
Novelization
The Blue Bird for Children by Georgette Leblanc and Maurice MaeterlinckFilm
- The Blue Bird, a silent film starring Pauline Gilmer and Olive Walter
- The Blue Bird, a silent film directed by Maurice Tourneur
- The Blue Bird, starring Shirley Temple, directed by Walter Lang
- The Blue Bird, a Soviet animated film
- The Blue Bird, a joint Soviet-American production directed by George Cukor
- Blue Bird, filmed in Togo. Directed by Gust Van Den Berghe and presented at the 2011 Cannes festival.
Fine art
- L'Oiseau bleu, is a 1912–13 Cubist painting by Jean Metzinger.
Television
- , a 1980 Japanese animated TV series
- Different Dreams, broadcast 05-04-2019 to 07-13-2019, a Korean Drama. The main character who is played by actress Lee Yo-Won portrays a Korean woman adopted by Japanese parents. Referencing the "Bluebird" as her alias during the 1919 Japanese colonial era while Korea was attempting to find its independence and the March 1st Movement and the establishment of the Provisional Government of the Republic of Korea.
Radio
- The Blue Bird was dramatized as a half-hour radio play on the December 24, 1939, broadcast of The Screen Guild Theater, starring Shirley Temple and Nelson Eddy.
Opera
- L'oiseau bleu, 1919 opera by Albert Wolff, libretto by Maurice Maeterlinck based on his play.
Mentions in other works
;RahXephon:Blue birds appear as symbols and one of the characters is named "Michiru", which is the Japanese name for Mytyl.
;Eureka Seven: Three of the characters were named after the author's name, his surname being divided: Maurice, the eldest of Eureka's children; Maeter, the second oldest; and Linck, the youngest. The book itself also appears briefly in the series being read by one of the characters.
;The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya: Kyon seemingly randomly asks Haruhi if she has read The Bluebird of Happiness. This initially appears to be a random reference, however it has since been noted that the Land of Memory, the Palace of Night and the Kingdom of the Future which appear in L'Oiseau bleu may each correspond to one of Haruhi's three unusual companions This is also a reference as to how what Haruhi is searching for is around her every day. In the manga, Kyon comments on it as a "children's book". He refers to his "Bluebird of Happiness" on several occasions later in the novel.
;Ballet Shoes: In the novel Ballet Shoes by Noel Streatfeild and the television adaptations of it, Pauline and Petrova Fossil play Tyltyl and Mytyl in their stage academy's production of The Blue Bird.
;K-PAX: Prot helps one of the patients by assigning him three tasks, the first of which is to find the Bluebird of Happiness.
;L'Oiseau bleu/Aoi Tori: Japanese TV drama from 1997 telling a "tale of tragic love between Yoshimori, a station employee at a quiet, rural station, and Kahori, the wife of the heir to a family fortune." Kahori's daughter Shiori is reading "L'Oiseau bleu" as a child and the story is cited several times during the 11 episodes.
;Yellow Submarine:At the end of the movie, the Chief Blue Meanie says that "My cousin is the 'Bluebird of Happiness'". It also shows bluebirds on his head when he says this.
;Birds in the Future: In this manga by Osamu Tezuka, one chapter is directly inspired by the play.
;Pokémon: In Try for the Family Stone!, 616th episode of the anime featured in the, two siblings called Ltyl and Mytyl search for a Dusk Stone in order to evolve a Murkrow. The Pokémon Swablu and Altaria are also references to the titular bird, and were named "Tylt" and "Tyltalis" respectively in Japanese.
;Bakemonogatari: In Nisio Osin's light novel Kizumonogatari, Tsukihi Araragi asks her older brother Koyomi Araragi the question, "Where did Tyltyl and Mytyl find the Blue Bird?" In Nekomonogatari Tsubasa Tiger, the character Hanekawa Tsubasa mentions The Blue Bird in her soliloquy, about how one should find a Blue Bird if they don't have a home. She also ponders the possibility that just as the Blue Bird may be in someone's home, so, too, could the beast of misfortune lurk there.
;Herowarz: Tyltyl is among the reimagined characters present in Fable Town, here being a morbid undertaker who's the widower, rather than the sibling, of Mytyl -- his grief and resentment over her death and the other residents' unwillingness to help out of fear of contagion led him to become the Headhunter "Death," killing some of the residents and cursing most of the remainder with chronic illness.
;Sakura Wars: The Hana-gumi perform the Blue Bird on stage in the game Sakura Wars 2 with Iris playing the role of Mytyl, and Reni playing the role of Tyltyl. This is also the focus of an episode in the second OVA series, and one of the Sakura Taisen live Kayo show musicals.
;Umineko no Naku Koro ni: In Chapter 4 of the VN, Maria uses the tale of Tyltyl and Mytyl to explain why Ange can only see sadness in Maria's memories when she herself believed she was having a good time and likens the bluebird to happy Fragments.
;Wandering Son: The chapter 96 is titled "Tyltyl and Mytyl", which is also a multiple pun: the Japanese title can also be translated as "From the Very Bottom to the Top"; also, the japanerse book's title translation is "Aoi Tori", which is a reference to Aoi Hana, another Takako Shimura's work, and Wandering Son's main character, Shuichi NiTORI
;': One of the characters wears a pendant resembling a blue bird in a cage. In one of the game's scenes, she talks about the pendant's meaning to her, and its relation to Maeterlinck's "The Blue Bird."
;': Similar to Virtue's Last Reward. The song Blue Bird Lamentation, featured in both games, plays from the blue bird pendant like a music box and was inspired by Maeterlinck's "The Blue Bird."
Other references
The Dutch school types Mytyl schools and Tyltyl schools are named after Mytyl and Tyltyl: they are for children with a physical disability and for children with both a physical and mental disability, respectively. The Scouting Nederland section for children with special needs is named: "Blauwe Vogels".Celebrating the 100th anniversary of "Maurice Maeterlinck's greatest contemporary success The Blue Bird", as it was termed, his play was selected as the main motif of a high-value collectors' coin: the Belgian 50 euro Maurice Maeterlinck commemorative coin, minted in 2008.