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The Emperor's New Clothes" (Danish: Kejserens nye klæder [ˈkʰɑjsɐns ˈnyˀə ˈkʰlɛːðə]) is a literary folktale written by the Danish author Hans Christian Andersen, about a vain emperor who gets exposed before his subjects. The tale has been translated into over 100 languages.
The only other tale in the third booklet was "The Emperor's New Clothes", which was based on a medieval Spanish story with Arab and Jewish origins. On the eve of the third installment's publication, Andersen revised the conclusion (in which the Emperor simply walks in procession) to its now-famous finale of a child calling out, "The Emperor is ...
Print/export Download as PDF; ... Short stories by Hans Christian Andersen (1 C, 36 P) ... The Emperor's New Clothes; Esben and the Witch; F.
Hans Christian Andersen's The Emperor's New Clothes is an animated television special broadcast on ABC on Monday night, February 21, 1972. [1] The special was produced by Rankin/Bass Productions, a former division of Tomorrow Entertainment, using their "Animagic" stop-motion puppetry technique in Japan, along with some live-action footage shot in Denmark.
Pages in category "Works based on The Emperor's New Clothes" The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Dom DeLuise - Emperor (The Emperor's New Clothes) Henry Gibson - Sir Buffoon (The Emperor's New Clothes) Richard Erdman; Ed Gilbert - Wolf Knight (The Emperor's New Clothes) Paul Kreppel; Edie McClurg - Mathilda (The Emperor's New Clothes) Bradley Pierce - Boy Rabbit (The Emperor's New Clothes) Robert Ridgely - Sir Slippery (The Emperor's New ...
"The Story of a Mother" (Danish: Historien om en moder), from New Fairy Tales. Second Volume. Second Collection (Danish: Nye Eventyr. Andet Bind. Anden Samling) (1848), Hans Christian Andersen: The Story of a Mother (1949) The Story of a Mother (1963) The Story of a Mother (1979) The Story of Ferdinand (1936), Munro Leaf: Ferdinand (2017)
Tale 32, "What Happened to the King and the Tricksters Who Made Cloth" [b] tells the story that Hans Christian Andersen made popular as The Emperor's New Clothes. Story 7, "What Happened to a Woman Named Truhana", a version of Aesop's The Milkmaid and Her Pail, was claimed by Max Müller to originate in the Hindu cycle Panchatantra. [3]