This article is within the scope of WikiProject Novels, an attempt to build a comprehensive and detailed guide to
novels,
novellas,
novelettes and
short stories on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the project and contribute to the general Project discussion to talk over new ideas and suggestions.NovelsWikipedia:WikiProject NovelsTemplate:WikiProject Novelsnovel articles
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the discussion and see a list of open tasks.Fictional charactersWikipedia:WikiProject Fictional charactersTemplate:WikiProject Fictional charactersfictional character articles
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Women's history and related articles on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
the discussion and see a list of open tasks.Women's HistoryWikipedia:WikiProject Women's HistoryTemplate:WikiProject Women's HistoryWomen's History articles
I'm moving them here, because none of them are sourced. When they are sourced, then can be reinserted in the article.
Trivia
In Season 4, Episode 5 ("The Wallet") of Seinfeld, the character Elaine refers to the power her psychiatrist boyfriend has over her, but mispronounces the name as "Svenjolly," prompting Jerry to suggest, "Maybe he has, like, a cheerful mental hold on you."
The Three Stooges short, Hokus Pokus, their is a pariody of Svengali called Svengarlic.
In Chicago their is is a horror movie host called Svengoolie.
scifi pet?
I seem to remember reading a scifi story that mentioned a pet called a svengali, which emitted psychic happy-vibes when stroked. Anyone else recall it? —
Tamfang (
talk)
06:31, 13 January 2008 (UTC)reply
Neutral point of view?
The fairly untalented Philadelphia based band The Disco Biscuits has a song titled "Svengali".
[Svengali] has entered the language meaning a person who, with evil intent, manipulates another into doing what is desired
This isn't really right. The elaboration for context - that it means a coach or something similar who does so, seems more right. It's not any kind of manipulation that makes for a svengali.
john k (
talk)
20:25, 17 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Well, AHD4 says: "A person who, with evil intent, tries to persuade another to do what is desired: 'a crafty Svengali who lures talented people with grand promises yet gives them little lasting operational authority'". So one dictionary supports "evil intent." However, www.m-w.com says "a person who manipulates or exerts excessive control over another." Neither dictionary definition actually sounds right to me, because to me the word Svengali implies not only evil intent, but implies that the manipulator evokes a level of performance of which the victim is otherwise incapable. Psychic steroids, if you will.
But barring evidence to the contrary I must assume that the dictionaries are right and that the meaning has drifted over the years.
Hmm...OED says, "one who exercises a controlling or mesmeric influence on another, freq. for some sinister purpose." None of these definitions seems to very closely match any of the others, although there are obviously commonalties. The usages in the OED are distinctly unilluminating.
john k (
talk)
21:03, 17 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Rove and Rush Limbaugh?
This doesn't seem very neutral to me - the article linked to isn't from a mainstream publication, and both examples are right wingers. Neither one is, as far as I'm aware, generally referred to as a svengali. If there's a more mainstream article to link to (a NYTimes op ed or such) then I think it would be more defensible. —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
208.80.68.18 (
talk)
07:00, 23 May 2010 (UTC)reply
In an episode of the sitcom "
Psych", entitled "
American Duos", Shawn and Gus call Juliet a "Svengali" when trying to convince her to be their dance coach.
In an episode of the sitcom Seinfeld, entitled "
The Wallet",
Elaine refers to her psychotherapist boyfriend as a "Svengali" because he wields a powerful mental influence over her. She mispronounces the word as 'svenjolly', causing Jerry and George to mock her.
In the season 1 pilot of the Moonlight TV series, entitled "
No Such Thing as Vampires", Beth interviews a suspect who refers to another character as a "Svengali" who
brainwashed students, using literary references to vampires, sex and dark desires and seduced them into his cult.
In the 1950 movie All About Eve, the character Bill Simpson (played by
Gary Merrill) says to Eve Harrington (played by
Anne Baxter), after she tries to seduce him, "names, I've been called - but never Svengali."
In the NCIS season 3 episode "Silver War", Special Agent
Leroy Jethro Gibbs consoles
Mossad officer
Ziva David about her half-brother
Ari Haswari, whom she had killed, by describing him as a Svengali.
In a Three Stooges short film "Hokus Pokus" (and Flagpole Jitters), Moe (Moses Horwitz, AKA Moe Howard) introduces actor Jimmy Lloyd, who was portraying a magician, as, "Svengarlic. He'll take your breath away!"
In the little known but multiple tony award winning musical
On the Twentieth Century, Lily Garland, an actress, repeatedly refers to Oscar Jaffe, the producer/director/pretty much everything who discovered her and made her initial career as well as her former lover, as a Svengali
In an episode of the American comedy show Malcolm in the Middle entitled,
"Hal's Friend", Malcolm is called a "Svengali" by a friend's mother after Malcolm convinced his friend to go play
paintball with him.
A hard rock band from Canada that had albums in the early 1990s is named Sven Gali.
Derren Brown's fifth live tour will be called Svengali, due to the nature of his mentalist acts.
In one
Powerpuff Girls comic book, Him dresses up in a business suit, claiming to be a record executive named "Sven Golly".
In an early 1960s episode of The Andy Griffith Show, Opey's teacher Helen Crump asked Sheriff Andy Taylor, "Sheriff, what are you, some kind of Svengali?" To the dismay of Miss Crump, Andy had earlier implied to Opey and his friends that they didn't have to study history in Miss Crump's class. To redeem himself in Miss Crump's eyes, Andy later regaled Opey and friends with stories of Redcoats, Indians, Cowboys, guns, the shot heard round the world, and "you know ... history stuff." The next day Opey and friends surprised Miss Crump with their knowledge and enthusiasm about the topic, prompting her to visit Andy and pose the question about Svengali.
In the movie Falling Up (2009), the main character Henry O'Shea is warned by a taxi driver named Rajib never to trust women. He makes a reference to Svengali saying that a while ago he was very rich, had a house with pool, tennis court and waterfall and a good life and lost everything because of such women.
In the book A Father´s Story: One Man´s Anguish at Confronting The Evil of His Son, serial killer´s
Jeffrey Dahmer´s father Lionel Dahmer wrote that upon hearing the news of his son´s crimes, he initially thought that Jeffrey had been brainwashed and manipulted into committing the crimes by a dominant accomplice, a Svengali.
In the 1953 movie Lili, Paul (
Mel Ferrer) is asked if he is a "Svengali".
I've repeatedly undone edits by
user:ArdenHathaway for making unsourced, poorly worded edits about Svengali being an antisemite. At this point I believe that I have gotten the editor to understand that the character himself is not actually an antisemite, but rather the author may be for portraying Svengali as he does. What I now can not get across to the editor is that any edit about this needs to be sourced, npov, and located in the appropriate place in the article. It may actually be more approproate in the Trilby article anyways. I am reluctant to be involved anymore after the number of edits I have made and after repeatedly being called an antisemite despite my best efforts to explain things to
user:ArdenHathaway. Thanks for any help.
Beach drifter (
talk)
19:11, 27 January 2012 (UTC)reply
Arden Hathaway cites a 1960 book, From Shylock to Svengali: Jewish stereotypes in English fiction, by Edgar Rosenberg. Glancing through what Google Books shows me,
[1], Rosenberg is identified as an assistant professor at Harvard, so I think he can be called a "scholar." I don't see why the article shouldn't say "The scholar Edgar Rosenberg calls the character Svengali a Jewish stereotype, and identifies him as a version of Ahasver,
The Wandering Jew," and cite
page 242 as the source. As a matter of fact, I'll do that myself, Beach drifter, because I think it's an interesting point. I'm embarrassed to say I did read the novel, or at least skim it, a couple of years ago, and did not notice Svengali as being a Jewish stereotype.
I agree with Beach drifter that the character Svengali is, of course, not "antisemitic." That is to say, Svengali is not prejudiced against Jews. He is a Jewish stereotype. Whether to call it an antisemitic depiction of a Jew, and whether to call DuMaurier antisemitic is a tricky judgment that would need a good source; in 1894, casual antisemitism was common in Europe, and indeed in the United States. I don't think notorious antisemite is good either, because I might be wrong but I don't believe Trilby is famous for being antisemitic.
The Birth of a Nation was popular because it was racist. Was
Trilby popular because it was antisemitic? I'd be interested to see whether anyone can come up with a source suggesting it was.
Dpbsmith(talk)00:28, 30 January 2012 (UTC)reply
P. P. S. This probably relates more to the article on
Trilby than
Svengali, but a Google Books search on
trilby svengali jew surprised me; it turns up a large number of hits:
"Du Maurier also clearly establishes Svengali as the demonic Jew in his relationship to Trilby..."
"the racial hatred and obsession is projected on to Svengali, coming back from him with great force: here it is exclusively the Jew who is busy evaluating the others in reductive eugenic terms..."
"He is part Jewish, and to gentile American audiences still frightened by the otherness of new Jewish immigrants, Svengali's Jewishness is explanation for what he has done with Trilby..."
"it is no coincidence that Svengali is so spectacularly a Jew. Indeed, in some sense he could not have been anything else..."
"[Svengali is the] third of a trio of literary Jews who entered the English language after Shylock and Fagin..."
So Arden Hathaway is in good company. I'm feeling a little embarrassed at personally having missed Svengali's being "so spectacularly a Jew," but I feel a little better when I read that "Unlike Fagin and Shylock, who are clearly identified as Jews by most readers and viewers, Svengali is not so obvious."
[2]Dpbsmith(talk)01:01, 30 January 2012 (UTC)reply
Here from the RFC. I agree that more discussion of Svengali's Jewishness is called for as there's an enormous amount of discussion of it (besides the sources quoted, there's also "The Music Master and 'the Jew' in Victorian Writing: Thomas Carlyle, Richard Wagner, George Eliot and George Du Maurier," and the Edgar Rosenberg source already cited). However, I don't think it's appropriate to foreground the antisemitism in the lead; it's not the point of the novel, as it's not the point of Oliver Twist (see: in
Fagin's article, we mention in the lead that he is "the Jew" but save the discussion of the antisemitism for the body). –
Roscelese (
talk ⋅
contribs)
04:05, 31 January 2012 (UTC)reply
I agree with Roscelese's remarks. In deference to Beach drifter, I changed ArdenHathaway's section title from "Anti-Semitism" to "Svengali as an example of Jewish stereotyping." I don't quite understand either Beach drifter's or ArdenHathaway's point of view perfectly. I take it that ArdenHathaway feels it's important to use the specific phrase "anti-Semitism." I can't tell whether Beach drifter thinks that term is too strong, or whether he just objects to clumsy phrasing in earlier edits that don't make it clear who is displaying anti-Semitism.
Dpbsmith(talk)19:55, 31 January 2012 (UTC)reply
SEDUCES
The article begins: Svengali is a man who seduces, dominates and exploits Trilby, a young English girl, and makes her a famous singer.
I take exception to "seduces." There is not an iota of evidence in the "Trilby" novel that Svengali seduces Trilby. Trilby dies as pure as, yes, the driven snow, and more than several times the character Gecko states that Trilby failed to love Svengali as he wanted her to love him.
Abenr (
talk)
02:15, 8 April 2017 (UTC)reply
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Novels, an attempt to build a comprehensive and detailed guide to
novels,
novellas,
novelettes and
short stories on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the project and contribute to the general Project discussion to talk over new ideas and suggestions.NovelsWikipedia:WikiProject NovelsTemplate:WikiProject Novelsnovel articles
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Fictional characters, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of
fictional characters on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
the discussion and see a list of open tasks.Fictional charactersWikipedia:WikiProject Fictional charactersTemplate:WikiProject Fictional charactersfictional character articles
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Women's History, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of
Women's history and related articles on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
the discussion and see a list of open tasks.Women's HistoryWikipedia:WikiProject Women's HistoryTemplate:WikiProject Women's HistoryWomen's History articles
I'm moving them here, because none of them are sourced. When they are sourced, then can be reinserted in the article.
Trivia
In Season 4, Episode 5 ("The Wallet") of Seinfeld, the character Elaine refers to the power her psychiatrist boyfriend has over her, but mispronounces the name as "Svenjolly," prompting Jerry to suggest, "Maybe he has, like, a cheerful mental hold on you."
The Three Stooges short, Hokus Pokus, their is a pariody of Svengali called Svengarlic.
In Chicago their is is a horror movie host called Svengoolie.
scifi pet?
I seem to remember reading a scifi story that mentioned a pet called a svengali, which emitted psychic happy-vibes when stroked. Anyone else recall it? —
Tamfang (
talk)
06:31, 13 January 2008 (UTC)reply
Neutral point of view?
The fairly untalented Philadelphia based band The Disco Biscuits has a song titled "Svengali".
[Svengali] has entered the language meaning a person who, with evil intent, manipulates another into doing what is desired
This isn't really right. The elaboration for context - that it means a coach or something similar who does so, seems more right. It's not any kind of manipulation that makes for a svengali.
john k (
talk)
20:25, 17 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Well, AHD4 says: "A person who, with evil intent, tries to persuade another to do what is desired: 'a crafty Svengali who lures talented people with grand promises yet gives them little lasting operational authority'". So one dictionary supports "evil intent." However, www.m-w.com says "a person who manipulates or exerts excessive control over another." Neither dictionary definition actually sounds right to me, because to me the word Svengali implies not only evil intent, but implies that the manipulator evokes a level of performance of which the victim is otherwise incapable. Psychic steroids, if you will.
But barring evidence to the contrary I must assume that the dictionaries are right and that the meaning has drifted over the years.
Hmm...OED says, "one who exercises a controlling or mesmeric influence on another, freq. for some sinister purpose." None of these definitions seems to very closely match any of the others, although there are obviously commonalties. The usages in the OED are distinctly unilluminating.
john k (
talk)
21:03, 17 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Rove and Rush Limbaugh?
This doesn't seem very neutral to me - the article linked to isn't from a mainstream publication, and both examples are right wingers. Neither one is, as far as I'm aware, generally referred to as a svengali. If there's a more mainstream article to link to (a NYTimes op ed or such) then I think it would be more defensible. —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
208.80.68.18 (
talk)
07:00, 23 May 2010 (UTC)reply
In an episode of the sitcom "
Psych", entitled "
American Duos", Shawn and Gus call Juliet a "Svengali" when trying to convince her to be their dance coach.
In an episode of the sitcom Seinfeld, entitled "
The Wallet",
Elaine refers to her psychotherapist boyfriend as a "Svengali" because he wields a powerful mental influence over her. She mispronounces the word as 'svenjolly', causing Jerry and George to mock her.
In the season 1 pilot of the Moonlight TV series, entitled "
No Such Thing as Vampires", Beth interviews a suspect who refers to another character as a "Svengali" who
brainwashed students, using literary references to vampires, sex and dark desires and seduced them into his cult.
In the 1950 movie All About Eve, the character Bill Simpson (played by
Gary Merrill) says to Eve Harrington (played by
Anne Baxter), after she tries to seduce him, "names, I've been called - but never Svengali."
In the NCIS season 3 episode "Silver War", Special Agent
Leroy Jethro Gibbs consoles
Mossad officer
Ziva David about her half-brother
Ari Haswari, whom she had killed, by describing him as a Svengali.
In a Three Stooges short film "Hokus Pokus" (and Flagpole Jitters), Moe (Moses Horwitz, AKA Moe Howard) introduces actor Jimmy Lloyd, who was portraying a magician, as, "Svengarlic. He'll take your breath away!"
In the little known but multiple tony award winning musical
On the Twentieth Century, Lily Garland, an actress, repeatedly refers to Oscar Jaffe, the producer/director/pretty much everything who discovered her and made her initial career as well as her former lover, as a Svengali
In an episode of the American comedy show Malcolm in the Middle entitled,
"Hal's Friend", Malcolm is called a "Svengali" by a friend's mother after Malcolm convinced his friend to go play
paintball with him.
A hard rock band from Canada that had albums in the early 1990s is named Sven Gali.
Derren Brown's fifth live tour will be called Svengali, due to the nature of his mentalist acts.
In one
Powerpuff Girls comic book, Him dresses up in a business suit, claiming to be a record executive named "Sven Golly".
In an early 1960s episode of The Andy Griffith Show, Opey's teacher Helen Crump asked Sheriff Andy Taylor, "Sheriff, what are you, some kind of Svengali?" To the dismay of Miss Crump, Andy had earlier implied to Opey and his friends that they didn't have to study history in Miss Crump's class. To redeem himself in Miss Crump's eyes, Andy later regaled Opey and friends with stories of Redcoats, Indians, Cowboys, guns, the shot heard round the world, and "you know ... history stuff." The next day Opey and friends surprised Miss Crump with their knowledge and enthusiasm about the topic, prompting her to visit Andy and pose the question about Svengali.
In the movie Falling Up (2009), the main character Henry O'Shea is warned by a taxi driver named Rajib never to trust women. He makes a reference to Svengali saying that a while ago he was very rich, had a house with pool, tennis court and waterfall and a good life and lost everything because of such women.
In the book A Father´s Story: One Man´s Anguish at Confronting The Evil of His Son, serial killer´s
Jeffrey Dahmer´s father Lionel Dahmer wrote that upon hearing the news of his son´s crimes, he initially thought that Jeffrey had been brainwashed and manipulted into committing the crimes by a dominant accomplice, a Svengali.
In the 1953 movie Lili, Paul (
Mel Ferrer) is asked if he is a "Svengali".
I've repeatedly undone edits by
user:ArdenHathaway for making unsourced, poorly worded edits about Svengali being an antisemite. At this point I believe that I have gotten the editor to understand that the character himself is not actually an antisemite, but rather the author may be for portraying Svengali as he does. What I now can not get across to the editor is that any edit about this needs to be sourced, npov, and located in the appropriate place in the article. It may actually be more approproate in the Trilby article anyways. I am reluctant to be involved anymore after the number of edits I have made and after repeatedly being called an antisemite despite my best efforts to explain things to
user:ArdenHathaway. Thanks for any help.
Beach drifter (
talk)
19:11, 27 January 2012 (UTC)reply
Arden Hathaway cites a 1960 book, From Shylock to Svengali: Jewish stereotypes in English fiction, by Edgar Rosenberg. Glancing through what Google Books shows me,
[1], Rosenberg is identified as an assistant professor at Harvard, so I think he can be called a "scholar." I don't see why the article shouldn't say "The scholar Edgar Rosenberg calls the character Svengali a Jewish stereotype, and identifies him as a version of Ahasver,
The Wandering Jew," and cite
page 242 as the source. As a matter of fact, I'll do that myself, Beach drifter, because I think it's an interesting point. I'm embarrassed to say I did read the novel, or at least skim it, a couple of years ago, and did not notice Svengali as being a Jewish stereotype.
I agree with Beach drifter that the character Svengali is, of course, not "antisemitic." That is to say, Svengali is not prejudiced against Jews. He is a Jewish stereotype. Whether to call it an antisemitic depiction of a Jew, and whether to call DuMaurier antisemitic is a tricky judgment that would need a good source; in 1894, casual antisemitism was common in Europe, and indeed in the United States. I don't think notorious antisemite is good either, because I might be wrong but I don't believe Trilby is famous for being antisemitic.
The Birth of a Nation was popular because it was racist. Was
Trilby popular because it was antisemitic? I'd be interested to see whether anyone can come up with a source suggesting it was.
Dpbsmith(talk)00:28, 30 January 2012 (UTC)reply
P. P. S. This probably relates more to the article on
Trilby than
Svengali, but a Google Books search on
trilby svengali jew surprised me; it turns up a large number of hits:
"Du Maurier also clearly establishes Svengali as the demonic Jew in his relationship to Trilby..."
"the racial hatred and obsession is projected on to Svengali, coming back from him with great force: here it is exclusively the Jew who is busy evaluating the others in reductive eugenic terms..."
"He is part Jewish, and to gentile American audiences still frightened by the otherness of new Jewish immigrants, Svengali's Jewishness is explanation for what he has done with Trilby..."
"it is no coincidence that Svengali is so spectacularly a Jew. Indeed, in some sense he could not have been anything else..."
"[Svengali is the] third of a trio of literary Jews who entered the English language after Shylock and Fagin..."
So Arden Hathaway is in good company. I'm feeling a little embarrassed at personally having missed Svengali's being "so spectacularly a Jew," but I feel a little better when I read that "Unlike Fagin and Shylock, who are clearly identified as Jews by most readers and viewers, Svengali is not so obvious."
[2]Dpbsmith(talk)01:01, 30 January 2012 (UTC)reply
Here from the RFC. I agree that more discussion of Svengali's Jewishness is called for as there's an enormous amount of discussion of it (besides the sources quoted, there's also "The Music Master and 'the Jew' in Victorian Writing: Thomas Carlyle, Richard Wagner, George Eliot and George Du Maurier," and the Edgar Rosenberg source already cited). However, I don't think it's appropriate to foreground the antisemitism in the lead; it's not the point of the novel, as it's not the point of Oliver Twist (see: in
Fagin's article, we mention in the lead that he is "the Jew" but save the discussion of the antisemitism for the body). –
Roscelese (
talk ⋅
contribs)
04:05, 31 January 2012 (UTC)reply
I agree with Roscelese's remarks. In deference to Beach drifter, I changed ArdenHathaway's section title from "Anti-Semitism" to "Svengali as an example of Jewish stereotyping." I don't quite understand either Beach drifter's or ArdenHathaway's point of view perfectly. I take it that ArdenHathaway feels it's important to use the specific phrase "anti-Semitism." I can't tell whether Beach drifter thinks that term is too strong, or whether he just objects to clumsy phrasing in earlier edits that don't make it clear who is displaying anti-Semitism.
Dpbsmith(talk)19:55, 31 January 2012 (UTC)reply
SEDUCES
The article begins: Svengali is a man who seduces, dominates and exploits Trilby, a young English girl, and makes her a famous singer.
I take exception to "seduces." There is not an iota of evidence in the "Trilby" novel that Svengali seduces Trilby. Trilby dies as pure as, yes, the driven snow, and more than several times the character Gecko states that Trilby failed to love Svengali as he wanted her to love him.
Abenr (
talk)
02:15, 8 April 2017 (UTC)reply