♪ Background music ♪ Narrator: Europe, 1879, the Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen's A Doll's House in is embraced by supporters of feminist ideals and vilified by opponents of women's liberation. The play is quite the sensation. The renowned Swedish dramatist August Strindberg publicly denounces Ibsen's play, believing it will lead to the emancipation of women, and thus ruin the institution of marriage. Strindberg: All I've done is attack A Doll's House a stupid play lacking a fixed code of marriage. And as far as Henry Ibsen is concerned, I fear neither devil nor troll. Narrator (whispering): Strindberg becomes obsessed with discrediting Ibsen. In his mind, the similarities between the characters in Ibsen's play and Strindberg's life were too coincidental. In 1884, Strindberg launches a counterattack, and writes his own version of A Doll's House in the controversial book Giftas, a collection of short stories dealing with the failures of marriage. Strindberg: In the end, I have nothing left but my great beautiful hatred for them. As for my Giftas, I wrote A Doll's House Ibsen never dreamed before.