Öz
Theatre discusses the nature, adventure and destiny of human. While this adventure shaped by historical, social and cultural conditions is discussed the roles of the players are fictionalized in a way that reflects or directs the values system of the society in which they are involved. When the theater plays written after the republic are examined, demonic women, who usually establish the dramatic structure, appear as the common element of the plays. In Gungor Dilmen's play Bagdat Hatun, Bağdat Hatun, the chief of the play, is fictionalized as an demonical woman who destroys those around her because of her disobedience, ambitions and desires. Bagdat Hatun, threatening the structure and moral values of the patriarchal social order, also prepares her own end because she cannot restrain her desires. When looked at the myths of expulsion from heaven, in the early narrative genres, and in modern narratives outside the theatre, the woman is often the seducer. In this study, the sources of the evil look brought to women, the reflection of the image of the demonic woman produced by the collective unconscious in this play, as well as the contribution of elements such as Erlik Han, Kam, and magic making in Turkish mythology to this transformation will be tried to be determined.