The play’s title refers to the fable of The Pied Piper of Hamelin. There are several versions of this tale. One of the most famous is by Robert Browning. The town of Hamelin is overrun by rats. The townspeople want to be rid of the rats and so the Pied Piper arrives and promises to destroy the rats in exchange for money. He uses his music to enchant the rodents and lead them into the river, where they drown. However, the townspeople refuse to pay him. In revenge, the Pied Piper enchants the children of the town to follow him and they disappear behind a mountain. The only child left behind is a lame child who cannot keep up with the other children. In some versions of the tale, the town repents and pays the Piper and the children are returned. In others, the children never return.
Browning, Robert. 1888. The Pied Piper of Hamelin, with 35 illustrations by Kate Greenaway. London; New York, George Routledge and Sons
A beautiful city glitters during the day. But at night, the rats emerge.
A wealthy man is accused of buying sexual favours from a young boy from a disadvantaged family. Montero is in charge of the judicial investigation of these allegations. Is Pablo Rivas, the accused, guilty? Or is he simply a kindly benefactor whose fatherly interest in the boy has been misinterpreted? Soon more serious questions arise. How can the truth emerge when the wealthy use their contacts to escape justice and when the media distort the facts? What chance do the poor and inarticulate have when those in power equate poverty to criminality? Where is the Pied Piper who will rid this corrupt city of its rats?
Hamelin is set in an unnamed city over a period of several weeks. It is divided up into seventeen scenes, each one introduced by an internal narrator who is called the Commentator. This... (Read more...)
The allegations in Hamelin were inspired by actual events. In 1997 the neighbourhood of Raval in Barcelona became the focus of media scrutiny as accusations of child abuse were investi... (Read more...)
Hamelin has won a number of national prizes including Spain’s National Theatre award in 2005. This prize was specifically awarded to the Animalario company for their version of the pla... (Read more...)
Montero, the character looking into the claims of paedophilia in Hamelin is an investigating judge. This is a position in Hispanic-speaking countries but may appear unusual to English-s... (Read more...)
Mayorga, Juan. 2005. Hamelin. Ciudad Real, Ñaque
Mayorga, Juan. 2007. Hamelin, 2nd edn. Ciudad Real, Ñaque
Espada, Arcadi. 2000. Raval: del amor a los niños. Barcelona, Anagrama (in Spanish)
This award-winning book by the journalist Arcadi Espada investigates and criticises the media's sensationalist reporting of the 1997 Raval allegations of child abuse.
Entry written by Gwynneth Dowling. Last updated on 6 October 2010.
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