Political festivals
- Also spelled:
- theater
In the years immediately following the Russian Revolution, mass spectacles were mounted in many Soviet cities. The subjects of these spectacles were drawn from events in the Revolution and the subsequent Civil War. They were a conscious attempt to create a new form of social ritual out of the celebratory reenactment of revolutionary events. They also represent an attempt to create a new proletarian art form, and in this they arose naturally from the broader movement to utilize art for social purposes. The former Futurists and Suprematists painted the fronts of buildings and exploited the bustling atmosphere of street markets for their performances. The ideological point of such actions was that the theatres, concert halls, and art galleries had been the preserve of the privileged; proletarian artists proclaimed their allegiance by creating it in the streets.
It seemed only reasonable that St. Petersburg, which had seen so much of the high drama of the Revolution, should be the city that presented the most memorable mass spectacles. In 1920, five of these were presented, climaxing in The Storming of the Winter Palace, directed by Evreinov, with the help of the directors of the other spectacles. The performers numbered more than 8,000, and the spectators have been estimated at 100,000. A 500-piece orchestra provided accompaniment. The spectacle reenacted the events leading up to the October Revolution in St. Petersburg, on the site at which they actually happened.
The spectacles corresponded directly with the proposal by Rousseau and Diderot in 18th-century France that the theatre be made the church of the secular state. These productions were almost certainly influenced by the arguments of Romain Rolland for a people’s theatre at the beginning of the century and were the most vivid examples of the large-scale revival of pageant theatre that was very strong in many European countries and North America between the two world wars. A change of Soviet policy in 1921 phased out the mass spectacles, though they did not disappear entirely. The Bicentennial celebrations in the United States in 1976 included reenactments of the Battle of Lexington, among others. During the opening ceremonies of the Los Angeles Olympic Games in 1984, performers presented a “condensed” history of the settling of the United States. In the socialist countries the tradition was continued in more disciplined and less imaginative forms in military parades and the large athletic Spartakiades.
As Soviet society settled into a more dogmatic and defensive period after 1921 and particularly after 1928, the unrestrained release of emotion sparked by the mass spectacles, the critical satire of the Blue Blouses, and the highly imaginative and often idiosyncratic experimental work of the directors came increasingly to be seen as dangerous to the state. In direct opposition to the direction in which 20th-century art was moving—i.e., away from representation toward abstraction—the Soviet aesthetics branded any tendency toward abstraction as Formalist and established Socialist Realism, which was in effect a reduction of the older forms of Naturalism and psychological realism, as the official mode.
Developments in France
At the turn of the century, the preeminence of Paris as the centre of avant-garde theatre had declined and the lead had passed to Berlin and later Moscow. The revival in the French theatre produced a theory diametrically opposed to that of Meyerhold and Tairov. Jacques Copeau founded the Théâtre du Vieux-Colombier in 1913, arguing that the director’s job was to translate faithfully a play into a “poetry of the theatre.” Believing the actor to be the only important element in a production, he advocated the return to a bare stage. In the Vieux-Colombier he removed the proscenium arch to create a raised open platform. At the rear of the stage he placed an alcove with a balcony, a structure similar to that of the Elizabethan theatre. In a succession of productions and with great ingenuity this permanent setting could be transformed with minor alterations and adaptations to suit a whole season of varied plays.
Copeau’s reasoning was based on an assessment that the modern theatre had initiated a mass of new staging techniques but had singularly failed to find the new dramatists to maintain the literary standard of the theatre. He founded his theatre in hopes of attracting those new dramatists. This effort largely failed, and Copeau’s contribution to the history of the theatre consists almost entirely in his approach to staging. The restriction of scenic means on the bare stage placed great stress upon the actor’s ability to play in a variety of styles. In the school attached to the theatre, Copeau pursued a program of actor training very much in line with that of Meyerhold, encompassing exercises drawn from commedia dell’arte, folk theatre, masked theatre, Oriental theatre, and Dalcroze eurythmics. His actors trained with the Fratellini family, the great Italian family of circus clowns and acrobats. Copeau’s aim was to equip his actors with a wide cultural understanding and a full range of physical and vocal skills. Rehearsals were improvisational. The discipline and self-denial inherent in Copeau’s program provided an example for others to follow not only artistically and administratively but also morally. The line of influence from Copeau, his colleagues Charles Dullin and Louis Jouvet, and their students extends throughout the European theatre. The example of the Théâtre du Vieux-Colombier can be followed through many of the leading postwar European theatres, such as Giorgio Strehler’s Piccolo Teatro of Milan and the Old Vic and the Royal Court theatres of London.
Developments in the United States
The currents of innovative stagecraft eventually reached the United States. The first migration was represented by the Viennese Joseph Urban, who when he went to the Boston Opera before World War I took with him an entire atelier of draftsmen and scenic artists. Urban moved into musical comedy and eliminated the acreage of painted vistas and box sets that had been manufactured by the stock scenic studios.
The next change grew out of marginal experimental groups, such as the Provincetown Playhouse on Cape Cod in Massachusetts and the Neighborhood Playhouse in New York City, which fostered designers such as Robert Edmond Jones, Cleon Throckmorton, and Aline Bernstein. By the middle 1920s, their simple, tasteful romanticism had invaded Broadway as the groups had become commercial and as the more artistic theatre managers extended commissions to the freelance designers. The industrial designer Norman Bel Geddes entered the growing ranks of theatre artists and devised grandiose projects and engineering marvels. With the impetus provided by ecstatic reports from Europe on the work of Reinhardt, Copeau, Meyerhold, and Tairov, American directors such as Arthur Hopkins and Philip Moeller attempted to synthesize the elements of production into a persuasive whole. The imaginative poetry of Robert Edmond Jones was balanced by the sensible craftsmanship of Lee Simonson for the Theatre Guild. Simonson as the exponent of “selective realism” was more attuned to the practicalities of the earthbound psychological problems that provided the staple fare of Broadway’s “serious” drama.
By the 1930s, scenery consisted of solid carpentry and tasteful furnishings that were tailored to the mood, atmosphere, and mechanical requirements of the individual play. The Urban style in musical comedy design was replaced by that of Albert Johnson—a style characterized by loose colour and calligraphic line that went well with the sharp revues that prevailed until World War II. In staging musicals, a peculiar division persisted between the direction of the plot and comedy segments and that of the production numbers—the sumptuous song-and-dance displays under the separate supervision of a “stager” who was noted for his taste. Director-producer George Abbott surmounted this artificial departmentalization in an important step forward in the development of the rhythmic, lively musical show that became America’s contribution to world theatre.
The importation of Blue Blouse techniques, through direct exposure to German groups or through political theatre groups formed by ethnic immigrants, led to one sensational development in the United States. The Living Newspaper had been a relatively crude form of propaganda elsewhere. Under the Federal Theatre Project (1935) several Living Newspapers were produced, of which Triple-A Ploughed Under (1936) and One Third of a Nation (1938) are probably the best known examples. These productions were articulate documentaries of great sophistication. So impressive were they that the model was reexported into Europe as the basis for many documentary theatre productions. Another refinement of these techniques married to the skill of Broadway-experienced professionals produced the political revue Pins and Needles (1937), which was put on to aid a strike and which ran on Broadway for 1,108 performances.
The influence of Brecht
By 1936 a wide range of experimentation and innovation had established the parameters of the contemporary theatre. The training of actors in the Western theatre has since become more organized to take in concepts and programs from the earlier innovators. There are few schools today that do not acknowledge the work of Stanislavsky in their training. Less obvious but equally pervasive is the influence of Reinhardt and Copeau, largely by way of their pupils in teaching. And towering above all others (save perhaps Stanislavsky) is the figure of Brecht. It is reasonable to argue that Brecht absorbed, and in turn perpetuated, more influences than any other individual in the modern theatre.
Of central importance in establishing this argument is Brecht’s essay “On Experimental Theatre” (1940), in which he reviews the work of Vakhtangov, Meyerhold, Antoine, Reinhardt, Okhlopkov, Stanislavsky, Jessner, and other Expressionists. Brecht traces through the modern theatre the two lines running from Naturalism and Expressionism. Naturalism he sees as the “assimilation of art to science,” which gave the Naturalistic theatre great social influence, but at the expense of its capacity to arouse aesthetic pleasure. Expressionism (and by implication the other anti-illusionist theatres), he acknowledges, “vastly enriched the theatre’s means of expression and brought aesthetic gains that still remain to be exploited.” But it proved incapable of shedding any light on the world as an object of human activity, and the theatre’s educational value collapsed. Brecht recognized the great achievements of Piscator’s work, in which he himself played a significant role, but proposed a further advance in the development of so-called epic theatre.
Brecht’s Marxist political convictions led him to propose an alternative direction for the theatre that would fuse the two functions of instruction and entertainment. In this way the theatre could project a picture of the world by artistic means and offer models of life that could help the spectators to understand their social environment and to master it both rationally and emotionally. The main concept of Brecht’s program was that of Verfremdungseffekt (“alienation”). In order to induce a critical frame of mind in the spectator, Brecht considered it necessary to dispense with the empathetic involvement with the stage that the illusionary theatre sought to induce. Generally, this has been understood as a deadening coldness in the productions, but such an interpretation proceeds from a general ignorance of Brecht’s own writings on the subject. Rather, he insisted, as Appia, Craig, and the Symbolists did before him, that the audience must be reminded that it is watching a play.
Brecht’s ideas can be approached through the image presented by the theatre he chose to work in on his return to East Germany in 1947. The auditorium of the Theater am Schiffbauerdamm is lavish to the point of fantasy, decorated with ornate plaster figures. The stage, by complete contrast, is a vast mechanized scenic space in which everything is clearly exposed to view as theatrical and man-made. In the contrast between the comfort of the auditorium and the science of the stage lies the condition of Brecht’s theatre. The audience was there to be entertained but also to think scientifically.
Many of the techniques of Brecht’s staging were developments of earlier work. The use of three-dimensional set pieces in a large volume of space clearly derived from Jessner. His delight in the use of machinery and in particular the revolving stage came from Piscator. The insistence on the actors’ demonstrating through the physical disposition of the body their gestus (“attitude”) toward what is happening derived from Meyerhold, though with Brecht the gestus was always socially based. The clearest of his alienation devices, the projection of captions preceding the scene so that the audience knows in advance what will happen and therefore can concentrate on how it happens, derived from Piscator’s jotter screens and film captions.
Brecht acknowledged in his work the need for the actor to undergo a process of identification with the part, and he paid tribute to Stanislavsky as the first person to produce a systematic account of the actor’s technique. Brecht required his actors to go beyond Stanislavsky and to incorporate a social attitude or judgment into their portrayal. Characterization without a critical judgment was in Brecht’s view seductive artifice; conversely, social judgment without the characterization of a rounded human being was arid dogmatism. The theatre of mixed styles and means that Meyerhold and others constructed to cope with the grotesque experience of modern living was transformed by Brecht into a political principle. He used mixed means and styles to expose the contradictions, inconsistencies, and dialectics of situations and characters. Brecht’s strongest theatrical effects were created through the juxtaposition of inconsistent attitudes in a character. Although the settings in Brecht’s productions were clearly theatrical, the costumes and properties were not. Great care was taken to make each property and its use authentic for the period or character. In Brecht’s theatre, if a chicken were to be plucked the actor did not mime or roughly approximate the action—the chicken was plucked. Costumes had to make clear the social class of the persons wearing them. This places Brecht directly in the line with the Meiningen Players, though again the gestus is particularly social rather than historical.
Brecht’s methods of rehearsal were especially innovative. The methods worked out in his own company, the Berliner Ensemble, established a directing collective well advanced beyond those of Reinhardt and Piscator. In Brecht’s theatre, the director, dramaturge, designer, and composer had equal authority in the production. The designer had a special function; in addition to designing the sets and costumes, he also produced, for early rehearsal purposes, a series of sketches of key moments in the action. The rehearsals became a process of testing hypotheses about the play and its production. What held the collective together and made the method workable was the story, or fable. All the elements of production were synthesized for telling this story in public. At some points the music conveyed the meaning, at other times the setting, or the actors, or the words did. Brecht often invited observers to the rehearsals in order to test the clarity of the story. The process of testing could continue into the performance period. When the company was satisfied that the staging was correct, the production was photographed and a Modellbuch was prepared with photographs set against the text to show the disposition of the stage at all times and to mark significant changes of position on the part of the actors. The Modellbuch was then available (in a more advanced form than the designer’s sketches) as the basis for any subsequent productions.
The Modellbuch has aroused resentment on the part of directors who prefer to respond freely to the text. Brecht’s intention was not to limit but to provide a document as scientific evidence of an experiment that could be used in further research. Since the finished text was, in any case, only one facet of the fable, the model book gave evidence of other aspects of the story and its telling.
Brecht’s influence on the contemporary theatre has been both considerable and problematic. His Marxist views have proved a real stumbling block to his assimilation in the West, and his use of formalist techniques in the service of entertainment has presented difficulties in the socialist countries. There is no doubt that the settings and costumes of his productions are the features that have most influenced the contemporary theatre. Contemporary design exhibits in many ways the influences of his staging.
Howard Bay Clive Barker