Jump to content

The Little Prince: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Sansvoix (talk | contribs)
Line 10: Line 10:


==Story==
==Story==
[[Image:Littleprince-businessman.jpg|thumb|right|The Businessman, chapter 13]]


{{spoiler}}
{{spoiler}}

Revision as of 23:05, 10 January 2006

File:The Little Prince.jpg
The Little Prince, drawn by Saint-Exupéry himself, chapter II

The Little Prince (French Le Petit Prince), published in 1943, is French aviator Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's most famous novel, which he wrote while staying at a hotel in New York.

Ostensibly a children's book, it makes several profound and idealistic points about life and love. In it, Saint-Exupéry imagines himself stranded in the Sahara Desert where he meets a young extra-terrestrial prince. In their conversations, the author reveals his own views about the follies of mankind and the simple truths that people seem to forget as they grow older.

The novel includes a number of drawings by Saint-Exupéry himself, which are reproduced in most versions.

The Little Prince has been translated into many languages and, to date, has sold more than 50 million copies worldwide and turned into an anime series that ran 39 episodes.

Story

File:Littleprince-businessman.jpg
The Businessman, chapter 13

Template:Spoiler

The prince lives on an asteroid, B612, which has three volcanoes (two active, and one dormant) and a rose. He spends his days caring for his asteroid, pulling out the baobab trees that are constantly trying to take root there. The trees will rip his little world apart if they are allowed to grow. The Prince leaves one day to see what the rest of the universe is like, and visits several other asteroids each of which is inhabited by an adult who is foolish in his own way:

  • The King who believes he rules the stars because he orders them to do the things that they would naturally do anyway.
  • The Conceited Man who wants to be admired by everyone, but lives alone on his planet.
  • The Drunkard who drinks to forget that he is ashamed of drinking.
  • The Businessman who is always busy counting the stars he believes he owns. He wants to use them to buy more stars.
  • The Lamplighter who lives on an asteroid which rotates once a minute. Long ago, he was charged with the task of lighting the lamp at night and extinguishing it in the morning. At that point, the asteroid revolved at a reasonable rate, and he had time to rest. As time went on, the rotation sped up. Refusing to turn his back on his work, he now lights and extinguishes the lamp once a minute, getting no rest. (The prince actually empathizes with the Lamplighter, who is unique in caring about something other than himself.)
  • The Geographer who spends all of his time making maps, but never leaves his desk to explore.

Out of professional interest, the geographer asks the Prince to describe his asteroid. The prince describes the volcanoes and the rose. "We don't record flowers", answers the geographer, because they are only temporary. The prince is shocked and hurt to learn that his flower will someday be gone. The geographer recommends that he visit the Earth.

On the Earth, the prince sees a whole row of rosebushes, and is downcast because he thought that his was the only one in the whole universe. He then meets and tames a fox, who explains to the prince that his rose is unique and special, because it is the one that he loves.

The prince meets the narrator and asks him to draw a sheep. Not knowing how to draw a sheep, he draws what he knows, a boa with a bulging stomach, a drawing which previous viewers mistook for a hat. "No! No!" exclaims the prince. "I don't want a boa with an elephant inside! I want a sheep..." He tries a few sheep drawings, which the prince rejects. Finally he draws a box, which he explains has the sheep inside. The prince, who can see the sheep inside the box just as well as he can see the elephant in the boa, accepts it.

In the desert, the prince meets a snake that claims to have the power to return him to his home planet. After some thought, he bids an emotional farewell to the narrator, then allows the snake to bite him. The next morning when the narrator looks for the prince, he finds his body has disappeared, leaving no physical trace.

Animated Series

It was also made into an anime series in 1978. Re-edited and dubbed to English, the series premiered in New York and Los Angeles in 1982, then nationwide on Nickelodeon in 1985. The Series showed the extended adventures of the Little Prince, Swifty The Space Bird, and the Rose Girl. In total there were 25 aired in English, with 39 episodes made for the original Japanese run.

File:Adventuresoflittleprincelogo.jpg
The Little Prince Logo
File:Thelittleprince.jpg
The Little Prince
File:Swifty.jpg
Swifty, the Space Bird
The Rose Girl

Episode Titles

Season 1

  1. Higher Than Eagles Fly!
  2. Shipwreck!
  3. On Wings of Love
  4. Rob the Rainbow
  5. A Small Alien
  6. Somewhere in Space
  7. Visit to Another Planet
  8. The Perfect Planet
  9. The Wolf Pack
  10. The Star Gazer
  11. Last Voyage of the Rose
  12. The Chimney Sweep
  13. The Greatest Gift
  14. Too Big for This World!
  15. The Winning Ride
  16. To Be a Man
  17. The Magic Case
  18. Always Listen to a Fox
  19. Hitch Onto Halley's Comet
  20. A Light in the Storm
  21. What Makes Mitzi Mean?
  22. The Wishing Stone
  23. A Different World
  24. Erase All Beauty
  25. Play It Again, Sean!

Astronomy

In 2003, a small asteroid moon, Petit-Prince (discovered in 1998), was named after the Little Prince's inspiration, Empress Eugénie's and Napoleon III's son, Napoleon Eugene, Prince Imperial.

There is an asteroid called 46610 Bésixdouze, which is French for "B-six-twelve". B612 was the name given the asteroid which the Little Prince lived on. In addition, the asteroid's number, 46610, is written B612 in hexadecimal notation.

In addition, asteroid 2578 Saint-Exupéry was named after the author of The Little Prince.

With a need for holding six digits of information in five digit fields for the number of real asteroids, it is now possible to have an actual asteroid designated similarly to B612: B0612. The asteroid (110612) 2001 TA142 is listed as (B0612) 2001 TA142 in the compacted lists that use A=10, B=11, etc. to extend the existing five-digit fields in many asteroid software databases.

The B612 Foundation plans to experimentally alter the orbit of an asteroid to demonstrate that the deflection of an Earth-crossing asteroid is feasible.

Adaptations in other media

  • A film musical on the subject, titled, The Little Prince, was made in 1974. This film is notable chiefly in that it marked the final collaboration of composer Frederick Loewe and lyricist Alan Jay Lerner.
  • In 1979, Will Vinton Studios produced a cartoon adaptation of the book. This short feature, narrated by actor Cliff Robertson, was one of Vinton's first Claymation productions.
  • There was a Japanese-produced cartoon series loosely based on the book that aired in Europe and North America in the 1980s. The show was made by the Knack animation studio and first aired in Japan in 1978 under the title "Hoshi no Ojisama Puchi Puransu" (Prince of the Stars: Petit Prince). In it, the Little Prince often traveled to Earth to help people. During the 1980s, the English-language version was aired in the United States on Nickelodeon, as internationally-produced animation often was. The English version featured veteran voice actress Katie Leigh in the role of the Little Prince.
  • A musical in French, "Le Petit Prince" by well-known French musical composer Richard Cocciante showed at the Casino de Paris from October 2002 to January 2003. CD and DVD recordings are available. Daniel Lavoie played the Pilot while Jeff played the Little Prince.
  • An opera, The Little Prince, based on the book was composed by Rachel Portman. It had its stage premiere in 2003 at the Houston Grand Opera in Houston, Texas. It was broadcast on BBC2 in the UK on 27 November, 2004 as a studio-filmed production starring Joseph McManners as the Prince and Teddy Tahu Rhodes as the Pilot.
  • The book was also adapted into a play, The Little Prince, by Rick Cummins and John Scoullar.
  • In 2005, the book was translated into Toba, an indigenous language of Argentina, as So Shiyaxauolec Nta'a. It was the first book translated into this language since the Bible.
  • The book is one of few modern books to be translated into Latin, as Regulus.
  • The actor James Dean was so fond of the book he actually memorized most of its passages.
  • The Smiths' singer Morrissey is seen holding a copy of the book in his debut solo video, Suedehead, though his affection for the novel almost certainly stems from his admiration of James Dean.
  • The Massively Multiplayer Online Role-Playing Game ROSE Online is supposedly based upon this novel.