Image of Pirate Jenny

Pirate Jenny

Jenny (“Spelunken-Jenny”/”Low-Dive Jenny”/”Ginny Jenny”), a prostitute once romantically involved with Macheath; is bribed to turn Mack over to the police. Set in Victorian London, the Threepenny Opera focuses on Macheath, an amoral, antiheroic criminal, who marries Polly Peachum. This displeases her father, who controls the beggars of London, and he endeavours to have Macheath hanged. His attempts are hindered by the fact that the Chief of Police, Tiger Brown, is Macheath’s old army comrade. Still, Peachum exerts his influence and eventually gets Macheath arrested and sentenced to hang. Macheath escapes this fate via a deus ex machina moments before the execution when, in an unrestrained parody of a happy ending, a messenger from the Queen arrives to pardon Macheath and grant him the title of baron.
Alias Pirate Jenny
Real Names/Alt Names Jenny (“Spelunken-Jenny”/”Low-Dive Jenny”/”Ginny Jenny”)
Characteristics Villain, Film Characters, Literary Characters, Modernism Era
Creators/Key Contributors Bertolt Brecht, Kurt Weill, G. W. Pabst
First Appearance The Threepenny Opera (Die Dreigroschenoper)
First Publisher
Appearance List The Threepenny Opera (Play, German: Die Dreigroschenoper, 1928), The Threepenny Opera (Film, German: Die 3 Groschen-Oper, 1931), et. al.
Sample Read Plays by Bertolt Brecht [Internet Archive]
Description Jenny (“Spelunken-Jenny”/”Low-Dive Jenny”/”Ginny Jenny”), a prostitute once romantically involved with Macheath; is bribed to turn Mack over to the police. Set in Victorian London, the Threepenny Opera focuses on Macheath, an amoral, antiheroic criminal, who marries Polly Peachum. This displeases her father, who controls the beggars of London, and he endeavours to have Macheath hanged. His attempts are hindered by the fact that the Chief of Police, Tiger Brown, is Macheath’s old army comrade. Still, Peachum exerts his influence and eventually gets Macheath arrested and sentenced to hang. Macheath escapes this fate via a deus ex machina moments before the execution when, in an unrestrained parody of a happy ending, a messenger from the Queen arrives to pardon Macheath and grant him the title of baron.
Source The Threepenny Opera – Wikipedia
The 3 Penny Opera (1931) | G.W. Pabst
The 3 Penny Opera (1931) | G.W. Pabst