
Remembering HC Andersen
He died in Copenhagen on August 4, 1875 but his stories live on — in children's rooms, on theatre stages and movie screens.
His sagas often feature characters who've been rejected by society. They are tales of human weakness, of anguish and longing, but also beauty.
The writer's children's stories are his greatest legacy, and the Hans Christian Andersen Award is the highest international recognition given to an author and illustrator of children's books.
Here are five reasons why Andersen remains relevant 150 years after his death.
1. From childhood struggles to feted artist
Born on April 2, 1805, Andersen grew up in humble circumstances in Odense, a town in southern Denmark. His father was a cobbler, his mother a laundress and alcoholic. His aunt ran a brothel.
During Andersen's childhood, his family's struggled to put food on the table, and he attended a local school for impoverished children. It was there that he discovered his love for books and the theater and began to write his first stories.
At the age of 14, he went to Copenhagen and met the director of the Royal Danish Theatre, who took Andersen under his wing and nurtured his talent. By the time the writer turned 30, the whole of Europe was captivated by his poems, plays, two novels and the first volume of Fairy Tales Told for Children.
But recognition eluded him back home in Denmark, where critics derided his fairy tales as "harmful" and "irresponsible."
Nonetheless, Andersen's mythical tales underpinned his global fame and Denmark ultimately celebrated his talent as he received patronage and travel grants from the Danish king.
2. Protests against injustice
Look behind the fairy tale sheen of Andersen's stories and you'll often find subtle satire or veiled criticism of power, vanity and social injustice.
The Emperor's New Clothes is a parable about vanity and the fear of contradicting authority — a theme that's more relevant than ever in the social media age.
Few children's tales are as poignant as the story of the little girl trying to sell matches on a freezing cold New Year's Eve. The next day she's found on the street, frozen to death and nameless.
Andersen didn't just write The Little Match Girl to make us feel something. It's also intended as a social critique, a silent protest against indifference to poverty and child suffering.
The Ugly Duckling, often interpreted as autobiographical, relates the success story of a humiliated outsider, the life of a misunderstood chick that, despite numerous setbacks, finally fulfills its dream and transforms into a beautiful swan. As Hans Christian Andersen once said: "It doesn't matter if you're born in a duck yard, so long as you're hatched from a swan's egg!"
The Little Mermaid is a metaphor for the longing for another world and the willingness to sacrifice one's self for love. The main protagonist in this story falls in love with a prince and sacrifices her voice to be with him as a human being. But he marries someone else. In the end, she dissolves into the sea and becomes a "daughter of the air," granted the opportunity to earn an immortal soul through good deeds.
The stories tune into emotions familiar to people regardless of where in the world they are: the search for love and identity, the hope of recognition, the power of personal transformation. And the fact that life doesn't always give us happy endings. These messages are timeless.
3. A life marked by fear and eccentricity
Andersen was a colourful character, highly sensitive and at the same time full of idiosyncrasies. He suffered from paranoia, mood swings and hypochondria. He was afraid of dogs and robberies. When he received a bad review, he would roll around on the floor in a rage. When travelling, he always carried a rope with him so that he could abseil out of burning hotels in an emergency.
Andersen also suffered from a pronounced fear of being buried alive, also known as taphephobia. Fearing that he might be mistaken for dead when he slept, he left notes on his bedside table with the words: "I only appear to be dead."
What was originally planned as a brief visit to the home of Charles Dickens in London became a five-week-long stay — much to the chagrin of the British writer, who was more than relieved when his eccentric guest finally left. On a mirror in the guest room, Dickens noted: "Hans Andersen slept in this room for five weeks - which seemed to the family ages!"
4. Message for young and old
Andersen didn't write to entertain children with stories about beautiful princesses and noble knights. His stories of animals and magical creatures contain complex narratives with multiple layers of themes and emotions such as longing, loss, death and identity.
These fairy tales often contain a moral message. As well as evil being punished, goodness, kindness and compassion are also rewarded. The author strived to positively reinforce these values and ethics throughout his stories.
5. Globe-spanning legacy
The works of Andersen have been translated into more than 150 languages, and motifs from his stories can still be found in theater, music, ballet, comics and films.
Disney made his fairy tales world-famous: Films like The Little Mermaid is based on the Dane's story of the same name, while the wildly successful Frozen franchise was inspired by The Snow Queen.
His characters have become global icons — from the mermaid statue in Copenhagen to the monument dedicated to him in New York's Central Park.
Now, 150 years after Andersen's death, his stories live on because they're more than just fairy tales: they hold up a mirror to human fallibility — and transformation.
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Express Tribune
2 days ago
- Express Tribune
Remembering HC Andersen
Hans Christian Andersen was a dreamer who migrated between the worlds of fantasy and reality while becoming one of the world's best-known fairy tale authors, reports DW. He died in Copenhagen on August 4, 1875 but his stories live on — in children's rooms, on theatre stages and movie screens. His sagas often feature characters who've been rejected by society. They are tales of human weakness, of anguish and longing, but also beauty. The writer's children's stories are his greatest legacy, and the Hans Christian Andersen Award is the highest international recognition given to an author and illustrator of children's books. Here are five reasons why Andersen remains relevant 150 years after his death. 1. From childhood struggles to feted artist Born on April 2, 1805, Andersen grew up in humble circumstances in Odense, a town in southern Denmark. His father was a cobbler, his mother a laundress and alcoholic. His aunt ran a brothel. During Andersen's childhood, his family's struggled to put food on the table, and he attended a local school for impoverished children. It was there that he discovered his love for books and the theater and began to write his first stories. At the age of 14, he went to Copenhagen and met the director of the Royal Danish Theatre, who took Andersen under his wing and nurtured his talent. By the time the writer turned 30, the whole of Europe was captivated by his poems, plays, two novels and the first volume of Fairy Tales Told for Children. But recognition eluded him back home in Denmark, where critics derided his fairy tales as "harmful" and "irresponsible." Nonetheless, Andersen's mythical tales underpinned his global fame and Denmark ultimately celebrated his talent as he received patronage and travel grants from the Danish king. 2. Protests against injustice Look behind the fairy tale sheen of Andersen's stories and you'll often find subtle satire or veiled criticism of power, vanity and social injustice. The Emperor's New Clothes is a parable about vanity and the fear of contradicting authority — a theme that's more relevant than ever in the social media age. Few children's tales are as poignant as the story of the little girl trying to sell matches on a freezing cold New Year's Eve. The next day she's found on the street, frozen to death and nameless. Andersen didn't just write The Little Match Girl to make us feel something. It's also intended as a social critique, a silent protest against indifference to poverty and child suffering. The Ugly Duckling, often interpreted as autobiographical, relates the success story of a humiliated outsider, the life of a misunderstood chick that, despite numerous setbacks, finally fulfills its dream and transforms into a beautiful swan. As Hans Christian Andersen once said: "It doesn't matter if you're born in a duck yard, so long as you're hatched from a swan's egg!" The Little Mermaid is a metaphor for the longing for another world and the willingness to sacrifice one's self for love. The main protagonist in this story falls in love with a prince and sacrifices her voice to be with him as a human being. But he marries someone else. In the end, she dissolves into the sea and becomes a "daughter of the air," granted the opportunity to earn an immortal soul through good deeds. The stories tune into emotions familiar to people regardless of where in the world they are: the search for love and identity, the hope of recognition, the power of personal transformation. And the fact that life doesn't always give us happy endings. These messages are timeless. 3. A life marked by fear and eccentricity Andersen was a colourful character, highly sensitive and at the same time full of idiosyncrasies. He suffered from paranoia, mood swings and hypochondria. He was afraid of dogs and robberies. When he received a bad review, he would roll around on the floor in a rage. When travelling, he always carried a rope with him so that he could abseil out of burning hotels in an emergency. Andersen also suffered from a pronounced fear of being buried alive, also known as taphephobia. Fearing that he might be mistaken for dead when he slept, he left notes on his bedside table with the words: "I only appear to be dead." What was originally planned as a brief visit to the home of Charles Dickens in London became a five-week-long stay — much to the chagrin of the British writer, who was more than relieved when his eccentric guest finally left. On a mirror in the guest room, Dickens noted: "Hans Andersen slept in this room for five weeks - which seemed to the family ages!" 4. Message for young and old Andersen didn't write to entertain children with stories about beautiful princesses and noble knights. His stories of animals and magical creatures contain complex narratives with multiple layers of themes and emotions such as longing, loss, death and identity. These fairy tales often contain a moral message. As well as evil being punished, goodness, kindness and compassion are also rewarded. The author strived to positively reinforce these values and ethics throughout his stories. 5. Globe-spanning legacy The works of Andersen have been translated into more than 150 languages, and motifs from his stories can still be found in theater, music, ballet, comics and films. Disney made his fairy tales world-famous: Films like The Little Mermaid is based on the Dane's story of the same name, while the wildly successful Frozen franchise was inspired by The Snow Queen. His characters have become global icons — from the mermaid statue in Copenhagen to the monument dedicated to him in New York's Central Park. Now, 150 years after Andersen's death, his stories live on because they're more than just fairy tales: they hold up a mirror to human fallibility — and transformation.


Express Tribune
24-07-2025
- Express Tribune
Why did Adolf Hitler love Richard Wagner's music?
Productions of Wagner's opera Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg divide audiences. Should emphasis be placed on the opera's comical elements, or is it to be seen as more of a serious play about German virtues with antisemitic undertones? As per DW, in this year's new production at the Bayreuth Festival, director Matthias Davids aims to highlight the opera's comical side. Nevertheless, the fact that the Nazis included the piece in their Reich Party Congresses continues to cast a shadow over the production. Richard Wagner was Adolf Hitler's favourite composer, long before coming to power in 1933. The dictator saw Wagner as a kindred spirit who had inspired the masses in the 19th century with the powerful sounds of his operas. Hitler later exploited this for his propaganda. Craving art and music Hitler, who wanted to study art, placed as much importance on large-scale musical productions as he did on state-sponsored architectural projects. "Hitler did indeed attach great importance to art," says art historian Wolfgang Brauneis, who has studied artists of the Nazi era. "You can see this even well into the ravages of war, when he was still personally selecting the color of mosaic tiles for large construction sites." It was no different in Nuremberg, where Hitler's National Socialist German Workers' Party (NSDAP) held its party rallies. He personally selected the singers and conductors for the production of Richard Wagner's opera "Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg," which was performed on the eve of the Reich Party Rallies. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Wagner had already been dead for 50 years. With his concept of a Gesamtkunstwerk, or total work of art, the composer had revolutionised the world of opera. He envisioned a symbiosis of text, music, directing, stage design and architecture, all according to the vision of a single person. Richard Wagner designed an opera house on the green hill in Bayreuth specifically for his operas. He was the first to have the orchestra play from a pit in front of the stage while the audience sat in complete darkness, with only the stage illuminated. This inspired Hitler. From 1935 onwards, the dictator staged his Nuremberg rallies like a big stage spectacle with a special lighting design and huge mass gatherings. The entire city became a backdrop, with flags raised along the streets for the Nazis to march along. In the final scene of Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, which is about the preservation of German art, set designer Benno von Arent used the long rows of flags in front of the city's medieval half-timbered houses as a backdrop for the stage. Quintessential German opera The opera is about a singing contest for the love of a woman. Bakers, tailors, goldsmiths and other master craftsmen go head-to-head. The town scribe Beckmesser carefully makes sure everyone follows the rules. Master craftsman Hans Sachs, a respected singer and shoemaker, urges everyone to honor the old masters and preserve German art. This is one reason Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg is often described as Wagner's most German opera. Jewish Australian director Barrie Kosky agrees. He feels, however, that antisemitism also plays a role. In 2017, he staged Die Meistersinger in Bayreuth as a "witch hunt against a Jewish singer," whom he associates with the character of Beckmesser. "I am not dealing with Jewish culture. I'm dealing with the parody of antisemitism," Kosky explains in the DW film Why Hitler adored Wagner. Whether Jewish characters are portrayed and caricatured in what way in Wagner's operas remains a matter of debate among Wagner scholars to this day. Wagner himself reportedly never commented on the issue. However, the composer was an avowed antisemite. He wrote a pamphlet entitled Judaism in Music, in which he vilified music by Jewish composers and claimed that they were only capable of copying others.


Express Tribune
23-07-2025
- Express Tribune
Papa Jake' dies at 102
The American war veteran Jake Larson has died at the age of 102, as reported by DW. Known to his 1.2 million followers on TikTok as "Papa Jake," he captivated both young and old with his stories. In a statement on his social media accounts, his granddaughter McKaela Larson wrote that he died peacefully on July 17, and was "even cracking jokes 'til the very end." Larson was known for his quick smile and how he combined humorous anecdotes with somber reminders about the horrors of war. He had been living in Lafayette, California. A self-described Minnesota farm boy, he gained a huge following online in later life by sharing stories of WWII. He was born on December 20, 1922 in Owatonna, Minnesota. In 1938, while lying about his age, Larson enlisted in the National Guard at 15 years old. In 1942, he was stationed in Lurgan, Northern Ireland. He became operations sergeant and assembled the planning books for the invasion of Normandy. Larson was among the nearly 160,000 Allied Troops who stormed Normandy's beaches on D-Day, June 6, 1944. He survived machine gunfire when he landed on Omaha Beach. "We are the lucky ones," Larson told the Associated Press at the 81st anniversary of D-Day in June, "They had no family. We are their family. We have the responsibility to honour these guys who gave us a chance to be alive." He had been awarded the Bronze Star, and French Legion of Honour for his service. Larson often called himself "the luckiest man in the world," and expressed awe at the attention he received. "I'm just a country boy. Now I'm a star on TikTok," he told AP in 2023. "I'm a legend! I didn't plan this, it came about."