Captain Macheath

{{Short description|Fictional opera character}}

Captain Macheath is a fictional character who appears both in John Gay's The Beggar's Opera (1728), its sequel Polly (1777), and 150 years later in Bertolt Brecht's The Threepenny Opera (1928).{{cite web|url=https://www.litcharts.com/lit/the-threepenny-opera/characters/macheath|title=Macheath Character Analysis|website=Litcharts.com|accessdate=April 30, 2022}}

File:Thomas Walker Faber.jpg who created the role of Macheath in The Beggar's Opera, in character in a 1728 engraving]]

Origins

Macheath made his first appearance in John Gay's The Beggar's Opera as a chivalrous highwayman. He then appeared as a pirate in Gay's sequel.

He was probably inspired in part by Jack Sheppard who, like Macheath, escaped from prison and enjoyed the affections of a prostitute, and despised violence. His nemesis is Peachum who, in John Gay's original work, keeps an account book of unproductive thieves, something that Macheath does for himself in Brecht's work. Both characters can be understood as satires of Robert Walpole and Jonathan Wild.{{cite book|editor-last1=Moore|editor-first1=Lucy|editor-link=Lucy Moore (historian)|title=The Thieves' Opera|date=1997|publisher=Viking Press|location=New York City|isbn=0-670-87215-6|page=227}}

In ''The Threepenny Opera''

In Bertolt Brecht's The Threepenny Opera, he is referred to as "Mack the Knife", and is the subject of the song of the same name. While his character plays roughly the same role as in the work it is derived from, Macheath is a much less romantic character here, described as a cutthroat, rapist and seducer of underage girls.

References