TY - JOUR TI - “Playing Handy-Dandy”: Early Hungarian s Translation of King Lear AU - Kiss, Zsuzsánna TI - “Playing Handy-Dandy”: Early Hungarian s Translation of King Lear AB - The paper offers a few insights into the textual and dramaturgical challenges of Hungarian King Lear playtexts, from the earliest ones till 1922. Since the last decade of the 18th century, when the first full adaptation with the so-called Viennese ending was penned, King Lear has constantly been an ‘object of desire’ in Hungarian theatre, literature and culture. Competing with Hamlet and The Taming of the Shrew in terms of popularity, King Lear quickly became a stock-piece. The task of appropriating King Lear attracted the attention of the best actors, authors and translators. Many Hungarian adaptations of King Lear promoted the professional development of Hungarian acting companies and theatres, of translation itself, and of national dramaturgy. Shakespeare’s darkest tragedy filled a vacuum not only on the stages, but also in Hungarian social life, proving to be the perfectly appropriated, updated, and, to some extent, even politically tolerated representation of crisis. From the first stage adaptations, King Lear’s numerous translations into Hungarian have conveyed a compelling sense of ‘double bound’ between page and stage, text and interpretation, translation and performance.  This paper investigates how context and congruity validated certain texts and performances of Hungarian King Lears, and how some texts and performances, having illumined one another, expressed what both actors and audience felt, and thus genuinely filled the void between personal and public spheres.  VL - 2018 IS - Volume 13, Issue 3 PY - 2018 SN - 1897-3035 C1 - 2084-3933 SP - 165 EP - 183 DO - 10.4467/20843933ST.18.016.8959 UR - https://ejournals.eu/czasopismo/studia-litteraria-uic/artykul/playing-handy-dandy-early-hungarian-s-translation-of-king-lear KW - playtext KW - copied versus genuine King Lears KW - Hungarian social-cultural- -geopolitical context KW - theatre as media