The Ghost Sonata

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The Ghost Sonata (Spöksonaten) is a play in three parts by Swedish playwright August Strindberg. Written in 1907, it was first produced at Strindberg's Intimate Theatre in Stockholm on January 21, 1908. Since then, it has been staged by such notable directors as Max Reinhardt, Olof Molander, Roger Blin, and Ingmar Bergman. Bergman directed it four times: in 1941, 1954, 1973, and 2000.

The Ghost Sonata is a key text in the development of modernist drama. In it, Strindberg creates a world in which ghosts walk in bright daylight, a beautiful woman is transformed into a mummy and lives in the closet, and the household cook sucks all the nourishment out of the food before she serves it to her masters...

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

The play relates the adventures of a young student, who idealizes the lives of the inhabitants of a stylish apartment building in Stockholm. He makes the acquaintance of the mysterious Jakob Hummel, who helps him to find his way into the apartment, only to find that it is a nest of betrayal, sickness and vampirism. The world, the student learns, is hell and human beings must suffer to achieve salvation.

A Ghost Sonata centers itself on a family of strangers who meet for the sake of meeting. They exchange no dialogue, nor gestures, they simply sit and bask in their own misfortune. To Strindberg, family was something that he could never understand or even be a functioning part of: “Family... the home of all social evil, a charitable institution for comfortable women, an anchorage for house-fathers, and a hell for children” (Strindbergs “Inferno”). As a child, Strindberg went through the very hell he alludes to about the family. As an adult he realized that he would rather have died then lived a childhood hell and an adult hell, thus spawning a mania fixating on death.

  • The Old Man (Jakob Hummel)
  • The Student
  • The Milk Girl
  • The Lady Doorkeeper
  • The Dead One
  • The Dark Lady
  • The Colonel
  • The Mummy
  • The Young Lady; Miss X
  • The Distinguished Man
  • Johansson
  • Bengtsson
  • The Fiancé
  • The Cook


  • Strindberg, August. Inferno and From an Occult Diary. Trans. Sandbatch, Mary. London: Penguin Books, 1979.
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