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The Condemned of Altona | |
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Written by | Jean-Paul Sartre |
Characters | Major, the von Gerlachs: Father Franz Johanna Leni Werner Minor, in flashbacks: Klages Heinrich a Woman an SS Officer |
Date premiered | 1959 |
Place premiered | Théâtre de la Renaissance, Paris |
Original language | French, Translated from the French by Sylvia and George Leeson |
Setting | Home of the von Gerlachs, in the Altona borough of Hamburg, Germany. |
The Condemned of Altona (French: Les Séquestrés d'Altona) is a play written by Jean-Paul Sartre, known in Great Britain as Loser Wins. It was first produced in 1959 at the Théâtre de la Renaissance in Paris. It was one of the last plays Sartre wrote, followed only by his adaptation of Euripides' The Trojan Women. The English-language title recalls his formulation "Man is condemned to be free." It is the only one of Sartre's fictional works which deals directly with Nazism, and also serves as a critique of the then-ongoing Algerian War.[1] The action takes place in Altona, a borough of the German city-state of Hamburg.