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===In American media=== ''[[Lilith (play)|Lilith: A Dramatic Poem]]'' is a four-act medieval fantasy [[verse drama and dramatic verse|verse drama]] written in [[blank verse]] by American poet and playwright [[George Sterling]], first published in 1919. Influential critic [[H. L. Mencken]] said of Sterling: "I think his dramatic poem ''Lilith'' was the greatest thing he ever wrote."<ref>“Poet Found Dead in Bed in S. F. Club,” ''Oakland Tribune'' (17 November 1926), p. 1.</ref> The ''New York Times'' declared ''Lilith'' "the finest thing in poetic drama yet done in America and one of the finest poetic dramas yet written in English."<ref>Percy A. Hutchison, “Poetic Drama Did Not Die with Stephen Phillips,” ''New York Times Review of Books'' (22 August 1926), p. 9.</ref> Author [[Theodore Dreiser]] said: "It rings richer in thought than any American dramatic poem with which I am familiar."<ref>Theodore Dreiser, “Introduction,” ''Lilith: A Dramatic Poem'' (New York: Macmillan, 1926), p. xi.</ref> Poet [[Clark Ashton Smith]] wrote: "''Lilith'' is certainly the best dramatic poem in English since the days of [[Algernon Charles Swinburne|Swinburne]] and [[Robert Browning|Browning]]. ... The lyrics interspersed throughout the drama are as beautiful as any by the Elizabethans."<ref>Clark Ashton Smith, “Praise for Sterling,” ''Oakland Enquirer'' (10 January 1920), p.8.</ref> In the role playing game series ''[[Vampire the Masquerade]]'', [[Lilith (World of Darkness)|Lilith]] plays a major part in the mythology within the games. ''Lilith'' is a 1961 novel by [[J. R. Salamanca]] that tells the story of a man, Vincent, who is seduced by a schizophrenic woman named Lilith. It explores themes of love, obsession, and blurred lines between fantasy and reality. [[Lilith (film)|A feature film of the same name]] written by [[Robert Rossen]] and starring [[Jean Seberg]] and [[Warren Beatty]] was released in 1964. In the 2019 adult animated series ''[[Hazbin Hotel]]'', Lilith is depicted as the wife of Lucifer and the queen of Hell. Charlie, the protagonist of the series, is Lilith's daughter. According to ''The Washington Times'', ''Hazbin Hotel'' subverts traditional narratives of Lucifer and Lilith by presenting their betrayal of God as heroic and noble.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Kellner |first=Mark A. |author-link=Mark Kellner |date=January 25, 2024 |title=The devil, they say: Amazon's Prime Video offers Satan-positive 'adult cartoon' flipping Bible story |url=https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2024/jan/25/devil-they-say-amazon-prime-offers-satan-positive-/ |access-date=May 14, 2024 |work=The Washington Times}}</ref> In the [[Diablo (series)|Diablo]] series of video games, Lilith is depicted as the daughter of Mephisto and the creator of the games world alongside her lover, the angel Inarius. Lilith serves as the main antagonist in [[Diablo IV]].
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