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UNIT 5 DEVELOPMENTS IN, 20thCENTURY DRAMA, Structure, , 5.0, , Objectrves, , 5.1, , Introduction, , 5.2., , Modern Drama, 5.2.1, , Ibsen, , 5.2.2, , August Strindberg, , 5.2 3, , Anton Chekhov, , 5.2.4, , J.M. Synge, , 5.2.5, , George Bernard Shaw, , 5.2.6, , W. B. Yeats, , 5.2 7 Luig~Pirandello, 5.2.8, , 5.3, , 5.4, , 5.5, , 5.6, , Garcia Lorca, , Mid-Century Theatre, 5.3.1, , Bertolt Brecht, , 5.3.2, , Samuel Beckett, , American Dramatists, 5.4.1, , Eugene 0' Neill, , 5.4.2, , Tennessee Willianls, , 5.4.3, , Arthur Miller, , Recent Drama, 5.5.1, , John Arden, , 5.5.2, , Arnold Wesker, , 5.5.3, , Harold Pinter, , 5.5.4, , John Osborne, , 5.5.5, , Edward Bond, , 5.5.6, , Caryl Churchill, , Sorne Other Dramatists, 5.6.1, , Jean Paul Sartre, , 5.6.2, , Jean Giraudoux, , 5.6.3, , Jean k ~ o u i l h, , 5.6.4, , Gerhart Hauptrnann, , 5.6.5, , Freidrich Duerrenmatt, , 5.7, , Let Us Sum Up, , 5.8, , Exercise, , 5.9, , Suggested Readings, , 5.10 Glossary, , 5.0, , 36, , OBJECTIVES, , In this "nit you will be introduced to drarna written in the 20thcentury and its growth, and development. The characteristic features of 20' century Drama and the important, dramatists of this period are also discussed in this unit.
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Tlie drama written arid perfor~iiediu tlie 20thcentury is by any standards a major, achievenietit. There has been much innovation arid experime~itand this has been, related to the growth and crisis of civilization. Tlie new movements in 20thcentury, were influenced by liberty, equality and fraternity and the challenging attitude in Art, and Life. There was an array of complex and confusing trends. This century, witnessed tlie final culmination of tlie stage's commercialism arid this was evident in, tlie rise of the repertory playhouses and the associated movements (some of which, we have already studied in Kinds of Drama). A new style of acting emerged: "less, polished, 11:s~virtuoso. but stronger, riiore d~rectand individualistic, more related to, beliav~ouroutside tlie theatre" (Russell Brown: 1)., Tlie characteristic features of drama in 20'" century are:, I. New acting schools and theatres: Rolal Academy of Dramatic Art of tlie, London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art; Abbey Theatre in Dublin (1903);, Gaiety Theatre in Manchester ( I 907); People's Theatre at New Castle ( I9 11);, British Drama League founded by Geoffrey Whitworth (1919) and the, establishmelit of Scottish Community Drama Association, to list a few., 2. Emergence of silent cinema which rapidly destroyed the tradition of theatre. In, thirties came the sound films and then television., 3. Translations of foreign works proliferated and were at equal footing with, English drama, in fact influenced it more., 4. Tlie ctage of this period was influenced and altered by historical, social, political,, economic and scientific trends. The two wars, the economic depression, tlie, technological advancements - from washing machines to nuclear bombs, from, emergence of fractions of religious cults to man's conquest of space, all have, led to diverse arid manifold growth of human mind., 5. Enlei-genceof new plays and new young dramatists with newer creative ideas, and more imaginative presentations. Kitchen sink drama, neo-realist drama,, drama of non-communication. absurd drama, comedy of menace, dark comedy,, drama of cruelty, etc. evolved from the long tradition of stage and drama, lvriting. To understand tlie new movement we must look beyond individual, play:;. Tlie common ground was experimentation and innovation. The motives, for \vriting plays and choice of subjects were different from the previous, Elizr,betlian or Restoration drama. Coriventional drama had accepted standards,, formal rules and technical means in an acted performance. Development in, conventions always exists as the audience is open-minded and therefore the, dramatist may use any change in the performance of the play as there is a, "latent willingness to accept them" (Williams. Raymond: 8)., Tlie newer dramatist liked to be sensational, to surprise and shock; to be fantastic,, and outrageous. Homosexuality, nynipliomania, prostitution, abortion, violence, deaths,, disfigurement and callow humour are all part of new drama. The writers choose, popular, up-to-date, topical, obvious subjects. They use song. dance, soap-box orato~y,, pantominle and conimercial techniques in their play adaptations., Brown writes:, Although the new British dramatists do not want to make statements or, define their aims, they are creatively involved with society and seek a full, re~elatiorlin their plays of what they find in the world around them and within, them. They write for the theatre because this is the art form which allows, then1 to show the complexity of those worlds: the permanent and frightening, forces that lie behind each explosive crisis and each boring, dehumanizing, routine; the limitations, dangers, and exciterne~itsof a personal, sub-iective, view; the impossibility of judging any inan except in relation to others; the, strellgth of truth and permanence of idealism. They write youthful, topical,, se,lsational, theatrical, because the theatre can be a realistic, ex~loratory,, colnplicated alld. hence, responsible medium. They are prolnisini? and impomnt, dramatists (Russel Brown: 14)., , 37
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Drama: An Introduction, , A compariso~iwith the Elizabethan theatre can help us understand the new drama, better., 1., , Marlowe, Jonson, Greene, Decker, Heywood, Shakespeare and Beaumont and, Fletcher all started writing for the theatre in their twenties. All of Jonson's best, works were written by his mid thirties; Shakespeare started writing plays, when he was twenty six and great tragedies like Hamlet were written by midthirties., , 2., , Elizabethans were sensational. Some of the title pages of printed editions, proclaim " extreme cruelty", "lamentable tragedy", "odious death". "pitiful, murder", "filthy best", etc. Plays dealt not only with violence, murder, grotesque, deaths but also rape, sodomy, blasphenly, necrophilia sex., , 3., , The Elizabethans too were 'pop'., , 4., , The Elizabethans too worked in closest contact with theatre companies., , Modern theatre is a richly varied enterprise of realism on the one hand, and of, numerous departures from it, on the other. Practical matters and comnionplace, interests stirred the creativity of the new dramatists. They not only accept their, environment as a subject for study and improvement but derive from it a new,, comparatively literal style and approach. Each dramatist brought a new and individual, touch to the growth of theatre from the transitional age of twentieth century to the, present times. There is a change in dramatic method. Each movement offered, completion of the creative effort., Drama in the world is no longer coexistent with theatre alone as the largest audience, for drama is in cinema and on television. The liberating media and advanced, technological inputs have released the drama from a closed form to a more open, and wide frame work., The twentieth century drama is "a record of difficulty and struggle ... from Ibsen to, Brecht, [it is] one of the great periods of dramatic history, a major creative, achievement of our own civilization which gives us a continuing understanding,, imagination and courage" (Williams Raymond: 40 1)., , 5.2, , MODERN DRAMA, , Modern Drama has partially been read in the Kinds of Drama unit as epic theatre,, theatre of the absurd, poetic drama, etc. In this unit we need to read the important, dramatists at some length. This will give you a view of specific creativities., , 5.2.1, , Ibsen (1828-1906), , Henrik Ibsen was born on 20'" March 1828 in Skein (Norway) to middle class, parents. He was unable to communicate his mental gropings with the few people he, knew initially. Later he prepared for matriculation and it was at this time that he, composed his first tragedy Catiline. When it appeared in 1850, it was the first, Norwegian play to be published in seven years. This was followed by the one act, play - The Warriors Barrow. Towards the end of 185 1 he was made the official, playwright of the theatre. Then came the comedy St. John 's Night (1852), historical, drama Lady Inger of Ostrat, The Feasr at Solhc~ug,The Kkings of Helgeland, and poetic-satiric Love 's Comedy, The period of apprenticeship ended with The, Pretenders: Then came the major non-theatrical plays Brand, Peer Gynt, Emperor, and Galilean. The prose plays are also known as the domestic plays and thus, Ibsenism established in The League of Youth, A Doll's House, Ghosts and Hedda, Gablex The fourth major period was that of visionary plays -- The Masterbuilder, and When We Dead Awaken. In the early years i.e. between 1851 to 1864 he, worked as a dramatist, producer and stage manager. The most heroic and affirmative, of his plays was Brand The play is arranged not to study a cllaraCter but to state, a theme.
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In Peer Gynt lbsen created a character that was ttie incarnation o f everything that, is vacillating and unstable i n man. I t is said that Peer Gynt was the most daring, extravaganza o f the modern theatre, as i t was a "realistic critique couched in terms, o f mock-heroic fantasy9'(Gassner: 366)., lbsen i s known for A Doll 's House and Ghosts. I11 A Doll's House he addressed to, woman's place in the home and her limitations. Nora the heroine is never allowed to, develop and grow as a woman either by her father or by her husband. The woman, 111 the doll's house was not intrinsically a doll; she only pretended to be one, because, this was expected o f her when she was locked in a dolls house where she was, expected ro be pretty and playful, submissive and mindless., The intensification o f Ibsen's grappling with realities was witnessed in Ghosts., Ibsen created a taut human drama as it combined realism with protest against, everything that shackles the individual in his pursuit o f happiness and integrity., Heddu Gilbler is a powerful play too, as it is a psychological study o f a child., Ibsen did envision a new social order and created the conscious~~ess, o f modem, European drama. tle created new attitudes o f drama, and i s credited with being the, first major dramatist to write tragedy about ordinary people in prose., , 5.2.2 August Strindberg (1849-1912), Strindberg was a Swedish playwright born in Stockholm to a steamsliip, agent. His first important play was Muster Oloj a history play; followed by, fairy play Luckey Peters' Travel; The Father, Miss Julie and Creditors, which combine a highly aggressive and original version o f naturalism with a, sense o f the extreme and pathological. The later works are tense, symbolic,, psychic dramas, marked by a sense o f suffering and a longing for salvation, and absolution. These are To Damuscus, The Dance of' Death, A Dream, Play and The Ghost Sonata. Strindberg's genius as a dramatist was that his, influence has been immense, both from the conflict plays and from the, experiments in dramatic sequence and imagery in the later work. He is, supposed to be the most restless and experimental playwright as he was, "perpetually dissatisfied, perpetually reaching after shifting truths seeking the, miracle o f transmutation in the crucible o f his tormented intellect". (Brustein, in Modern Drama: 3 13)., Strindberg initiated an alternative anti-realistic theatre in opposition to Ibsen's realism., He has been regarded as Ibsen's antimasque. He was a master o f both naturalism, and symbolism, and a forerunner o f the expressionisln o f the post fiar theatre. His, weakness was his deficiency in balance and consistent rationality. His rebellious, discontent expressed through drama highlighted his dissatisfaction with the essence, o f life. He wrote in his last play The Great Highway:, Bless me, whose deepest suffering, deepest o f human suffering was this, -..., L,. +, ,-.,12, uL &heone 1 longed to be., , ..-,, , --&, , 5.2.3 Anton Chekhov (1860-1904), , -1, , Developments in, 20th Century Drama
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Drama: An Introduction, , Short stories: The Dzlel and Other Stories, Lady with Lapdog, and other stories,, A Dreary Story,, , Ward No. Six, My Lije, The Man in a Case and The Horse Thieves;, One Act Plays: Swan Song, The Bear, The Proposal, The Wedding and The, Anniversar.y;, Full length plays: The Seugtrll, Uncle Vat~yu,The Cherry Orchard, Three Sisters., His plays were staged by the Moscow Art Theatre., Clieckov's plays are thought to be complex, soulful (as also since) vague they, reflect the mood of dejection which permeates the anxieties of 20" century. For, Chekhov, "life was an insoluble problem" and he wrote in The Seagull: "Tell me,, what can I do?'. This sentence, and feeling runs like a leit motive through his, works. The central theme of all his plays is estrangement. He was aware of the, fact that the very conditions of life doom man to failure. Despite this realization, he, finds projects meaningful relationships and meaningful action in his writing. In Sea, Gzrll nobody succeeds in finding love; in Uncle Vanya, no one achieves tlie goal; in, Three Sisters, the sisters do not go to Moscow and in Cherry Orclzard the cheny, orchard is not saved. His characters dream and rebel and try to reach out for what, they want. Thus, defeat is transferred into spiritual triumph. His plays offer an, alternate shade of despair and hope, tears and laughter., 111 The Three Sisters, the three sisters and a brother are stranded in a provincial, town after the death of their father and their only hope of escape from the tedium, of exile is the brother Andrei who has prospects of professorship in the capital., However he marries a shallow woman who betrays him. Olga remains wedded to, her school-teaching job; Masha is united to a fatuous pedagogue (a friend of her, father); and Isina takes a job in telegraph office and later becomes a teacher. To the, end, the sisters retain their vitality and vigour., , In Cherry Orchard tlie chief character Madame Ranevsky who represents the, upper classes. She brings on her calamities by leading a spendthrift life abroad and, converts her estate into a summer colony. Her adopted daughter Varya manages, the household and finds the ecorlolny insuff~cientto save the situations. Madame, Ranesvsky is accustomed to a life of pleasure and liberty and possesses no pragmatic, understanding of the world. The cheny orchard is a luxury that cannot be afforded, and thus is auctioned off. The play is an attempt to come to ternis with the past, to, live without owning the orchard and its servants., Chekhov wanted his plays to express the paradox and the contradictions of, experience. Thus a Chekhovian play shows the inner lives of his characters., , 5.2.4, , J.M. Synge (1871-1909), , lrisli playwright, Synge was born near Dublin. He was educated at Trinity College,, Dublin. Later he went to Paris where he met W.B. Yeats who suggested that he go, to Aran Islands to write of lrish peasant life. He wrote The Aran hlands that, documents his life among these rural people. His first play was In the Shadow of, the Glen followed by famous elegiac one-act tragedy Riders to the Sea and his, best known controversial play The Playboy of the Western World. His plays were, produced by the lrish National Theatre Society and were presented by the Abbey, players. His later works include The Tinkers Wedding and an unfinished tragedy, Deirdre ofthe Sorrows. He uses rhythmic, lyrical prose to achieve effects of great, power and resonance. He instilled poetry into the modern drama and romanticism, was invigorated with reality. Synge was changed with satirizing Ireland and thus the, , I
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His most popular play is The PlayBo-y oj'the Wester11 World In this play, Synge, weaves a web of ironies through romantic illusion and reality. It's a perfect blend of, a co~iiedyand seriousness. His characters en-joy a sense of individuality Christy is a, bragging tale-teller, Pegeen is a curious figure as she is mix of sharp tongue and, romantic illusions. the Widow Quin is lookin_efor a second husband and Old Mohan, possesses incredible strength. In the Preface to this play, Synge writes:, I, , I, , I, , On the stage one must have reality, and one must have joy; and that is why the, intellectual ~noderiidrama has failed. and people have groun s ~ c kof tlie false joy of, tlie musical comedy, that has been given them in place of the rich joy found only in, what is superb and wild in reality. 111a good play every speech should be fully, flavoured. .., , 5.2.5 George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950), , Sliaw was born in Dublin but moved to I,ondon. He was a supporter of women's, rights and an advocate of equality of income. abolitio~iof private property and a, radical change in the voting system. He campaigned for a theatre of ideas. Sliaw, I, wrote over 50 plays including Man and Szrpertnan, Major Barbara, Pygmalion,, I, Scrint Jouri. Back to Methuselah, The d4i~yleCurt and The Siinpleton of the, Unc.~peca?dIsles. These plays were pub1ished in collect ions Plays Pleasant and, Unpleasalzt and Three Plays for Puritans. The plays had lengthy prefaces in, i which Shaw clearly expresses his views as a non-romantic and a champion of the, I, thinking man. The dramatic conflict in his plays is the conflict of thought and belief., I Discussion is tlie basis of the plays. He believed that war, disease and the present, brevity of lifespan frustrate the Life Force and that "functional adaptation, a, current of creative evolution activated by the power of human will, was essential to, i any real progress, and indeed to the survival of the species (Drabble:924). His The, ' Quintessc.tice of Il~senrsnrreveals his debt to Ibsen as a playwright. He died at the, i age of 94., I, , 1, , I, , ', , I, , I, , I, 1, , il.Iutl und Supc~rmaiz:A Conleclv and a Philosophy is a paradoxical version of tlie, , Don Juan Story. The hero is John Tanner who is pursued by Ann Whitefield, who is, interested in him as a potential husband than in his political theories. The most, I, important Act is Act 111 which consists of a dream sequence set in hell in wliicli, Tanner captured by Brigand Mendoza becomes his ancestor Don Juan; and Ann, I becomes Ana. The play ends with the anllouncement of Ann and Tanner's marriage, and Tanner's submission to the life force., , I, , I, , ,, , I, , i, , (, , Arnzs anti the il-ian is play that resorted to liumour in stripping war of its glamour., The pla) critiques the 'roniance of arms' and the 'romance of love'. The play, ridicules pretentious rationalisms., , I, , hlajjor Btzrbara portrays tlie conflict between spiritual and worldly power enibodied, in Barbara, a major in tlie Salvation Army and her villainous father Andrew, Undershaft, a millionaire armament manufacturer. Barbara suffers a crisis of faith, as she glimpses the possibility that all salvation and philanthropy are tainted at the, source. Hy the elid she recovers her spirits and embraces tlie possibility of hope for, future., Pygtncrlion was made into a film titled My Fair Lady in 1957. The flower seller, Eliz? Doolittle gets transformed into a duchess by tlie phonetician professor Henry, Higgins who undertakes this task in order to win a bet and to prove his own, point about English speech and the class system. He teaches her to speak standard, English and introduces her to social life, thus winning the bet. The play ends, with a truce between them. Shaw was not a Inan but a phenon~eno~~., If some, of Ilis plays conlnlilnicate personal feeling of great intensity, others e r b o d y, powerful feelillgs wliicli are not emotional; the parody is not confined to conventional, forn1., , Developments in, 20th Century Drama
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Drama: An Introduction, , 5.2.6, , W.B. Yeats (1865-1939), , Yeats was born in Dublin, studied at the school o f A r t in Dublin and at 21 aba~ldo~ied, art as a profession in favour o f literature. He helped in the founding o f an Irisli, Literary Society in London as well as Dublin. Better known as a poet Yeats applied, himself to tlie creation o f an Irisli National Theatre. He died in France. His well, known plays are The Countess Culhleen, fairy drama The Land o f Hcurls Desire., The Shudowing Waters, On Buile :s Strand and Tile Deuth of Clichuluin., , 5.2.7 Luigi Pirandello (1867-1936), Pirandello the Italian dramatist, short story writer and novelist challenged the, conventions o f naturalism. Best known o f l i i s published plays are Abkcd hlusks,, Right KIU Are. If You Think You Are and Six Characters in Seurch of an, Author. His major contribution i s to re-evaluation o f the [mature o f man and his, reassessment o f conceptions o f reality. According to tlie well-known critic Raymond, Williams:, "The worlds o f naturalism and expressionis~ncross and engender what i s, really a new form: one which has continued to be influential. Delusion, loss o f, identity, the reduction o f personality to a role and o f society to a collective, impersonation: these are the elements o f a new kind o f theatre: a use o f the, theatre to expose itself, and then in the double exposure to question any, discoverable reality. What began as a twist o f romantic drama become a, decisive twist o f a whole dramatic tradition" (Williams Raymond: 184)., , 5.2.8 Garcia Lorca (1898-1936), Lorca Spanish poet and dramatist was killed in the early days o f Spanish civil war., He had been experimenting in drama since l i i s earliest years. He drew on the life o f, Spanish country people, on tlie national literature and on tlie gipsy songs and dance., His popular plays are Blood Weddi~ing,Yermu and The House uf Berr~ardaA lba., Blood Wedding is about jealousy and revenge in which the unique notes are the, creation o f a dramatic poetry o f intense desire. Lorca moves from realistic, conversation through speeclmes which are lyrics, elegies, songs or cliorus. The play, begins with the mother talking to lier only son about work and marriage. I t ends, wit11 the lament o f the mother and the bride at tlie death o f tlie son the bridegroom,, and t l ~ eother man with whom the bride went away. Interestingly the characters are, called, The Bride, Bridegroom, Mother, Wife, Father and Leonardo, for i t is him, wlio breaks the pattern. It's a poetics drama in which the imagery and action are, fused. I n The House of Bernarda Alba, the house o f Bernarda Alba is occupied, only by women, all unmarried and the mother wlio works against their marriage., The father has died, the largest portion o f money has come to the eldest girl. The, bitter jealousy breaks the whole situation open. Adela takes her life., , MID CENTURY THEATRE, 5.3.1, , Bertolt Bresht (1898-1956), , Brecht, Gennan dramatist and poet, settled i n East Berlin in 1949. Breclit's early, plays Baal, Drums in the Night and Man is Mun anticipate later development o f, his 'alienation effect'. The Three Pentzy Opera, The Caucusian Chalk Circle,, Mother Courage and He Who Said Yes/He Who Said No made him an outstaiding, dramatist i n modern Europe., , 42, , What Brecht created was a dramatic form in which men were shown in the, process o f producing tliemselves and their situation. This i s a dialectical form, drawing directly on Marxist theory. His methods o f writing, producing a ~ i dacting, embodied a critical detachment. He used boards across tlie stage to indicate the, time and place of the actor and situation. He presented characters tl~atwere
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I, , alienated from tlie~iiselvesand from one another. His figures often moved in vacuum, where the most unexpected must be expected. Brecht's epic theatre i s a legitinlate, offspring o f the expressionist revolution o f the twenties and o f European theatrical, (history. Politzer writes: "His aesthetic theory is a mechanism. both o f offence and, I, defence, it may well be recognized for what it is: the intellectual mimicry behind, I bvhich a creative mind hid from outwvard persecution and inward doubts.", , ' ~ The, n Cirllcasinn Chalk the prologue i s set in Soviet Russia. Russian peasants, wlio return to a village destroyed by the Gennans are engaged in a discussion, bordering on a quarrel: one group claims the valley as a homestead, the other plans, to irrigate i t arid to use it for vineyards arid orchards. The latter group wins. To, celebrate tlie reconciliation, the play o f 'Chalk Circle' is performed. The play, describes Gruslia7s rescue o f the governor's deserted child, her flight before the, revolution. her marriage to a peasant w l ~ oi s supposedly dying and finally tlie return, o f tlie Governor's wife and her claim for the child. Azdak tries the case o f the child, and awards the child to Gruslia the foster mother wlio had saved him by sacrificing, her personal happiness. Her sacrifice is recognized as superior., In itlother Cour.crge and Her Children, Mother Courage i s a canteen woman, se~vingwith the Swedish Army during tlie Thirty years War (16 18-48). Despite an, early warning that war can never be all take and no give, she intends to make a, living o f f (lie war while keeping her children out o f it. Her brave son E i l i f is tempted, into the infantry, kills a peasant and is executed. Her honest son Swiss Cheese, defends the regi~nentalcashbox. He is captured and executed by the enemy. Warin, hearted daughter Kattrin dies warning tlie sleeping town o f Halle that the enemy is, at the gates. Mother Courage's business prospers and then declines. Bowed and, alone. she drags her battered wagon. Speaking on the performance o f the play, Brecht said that the show primarily highlighted that. "War is a continuation o f, business by other means, and makes human virtues fatal. No. sacrifice i s too great, for tlie struggle against war.'', , I(, li 5.3.2, , Samuel Beckett (1906-89), , Beckett who became known as a playwright o f Theatre of the Absurd, was born, in Dublin. He became popular with plays like Finneguns Wake, Malone Dies, Waiting ,li)r Godot, End Ganze, Happy Duys and Come und Go. He used stage, and dramatic narrative to revolutionize drama., , Waitingjor Godot is essentially about uncertain waiting. Pozzo and Lucky are in a, fonnal world and in an unorthodox social relationship: dominating and being dominated., They are tied to each other. Vladimir and Estragon have a different relationship:, informal and outside society; at once loving, doubtful and resentful; wanting to, brealc away and yet anxiously returning to each other. There i s a major contrast i n, tone as well. Each pair i s on the road. I t i s Vladimir who is waiting for Godot;, Estragon i s waiting for death. Beckett controls with extraordinary skill, his actions,, speech, imagery uncertainty and revelation., , Developments in, 20th Century Drama
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Drama: An Introduction, , 0' Neill caught the reality of common people living on sea or land. His Desire, Under the Elms is about tlie timelessness of the inner struggle between a son and, a father. Eben and old Ephraim. Epliraim was a hard husband to his gentle first wife, whom he worked to death and whose child Eben he hated for resembling her. The, HairjsApe tells the story of the super stoker Yank who discovers his sliortcomings, fro111a chance meeting with one of the passengers, cultured and wealthy Mildred. It, is a symbolic play about a man who has lost his old harniony with nature and has, not acquired a new spiritual way. The Iceman Conlet11 is a lengthy naturalistic, tragedy set in Harry Hope's Bowery saloon, where a collection of down- and -out, alcoholics nourish their 'pipe-dreams' with the aid of an extrovert, cheerful salesman, Hickey., Lorig Day.s Jotrnery Into Aright has been praised as his finest play. l'he play is the, cultural expression of American - Irish-Catholicism., , 5.4.2 Tennessee Williams (1911-83), Tentlessee Willia~nswas born in Mississippi and brought up in St. Louis. His important, plays are American Blues, Battle of Angels, The Glcrss Menagerie, A Streetcar, Narned Desire, The Rose Tattoo, Suddenly Last Suntn~erand Cat on a Ho/ Tin, Roo$ The serni-autobiographical play The Glass Menagerie is a poignant and, painful family drama set is St. Louis, in which a frigid and frustrated mother dreams, of her glamorous past. The conflict is with the grimness of her reduced circumstances, as she persuades her rebellious son Tom to provide a gentleman caller for her, crippled daughter Saura. A Streetcar Nutized Desire is a study of sexual frustration., violence and aberration, set in New Orleans, in which Blanche Dubois's fantasies, of refinement and grandeur are brutally destroyed by her brother-in-law Stanley, whose animal nature fascinates and repels her., , ., , 5.4.3 Arthur Miller (1915-2005), Arthur Miller became famous with the play All hfv Sons, an lbsenesque drama, about a manufacturer of defective aeroplane parts, and established himself as a, leading dramatist with Deulh of a Salestrrar~in which a travelling salesman, Willy, Lolnan is brought to disaster by accepting the falser values of coritelnporary society., This was followed by The C'rtrcible in which the Salem witchcraft trials of 1692, are used as a parable for McCarthyism in America in tlie 1950s. A I3ew front the, Bridge is a tragedy of family honour and revenge; The M i ~ f i tis~ a screenplay for, his wife Marilyn Monroe; Afier /he Fa11 presents the semi-autobiographical figure, of Quentin and The Price contrasts the lives and opinions of two estranged brothers., Miller llimself wrote:, It is the everlastingly sought balance between order and the need of our soul, for freedom; the relatedness between our vaguest longi~igsour inner questions,, and private lives and the life of the generality of men which is our Society, and our world., Miller's plays deal with questions of social status, horiour and freedom from, constraints., , 5.5 RECENT DRAMA, The recent Europea~ldrama is unusually serious, vital and responsive. The emergence, of working class drama presented disorganized life. This movement with common, ailns and methods created the new drama. The prominelit new dramatists are, Arden, Wesker, Pinter, Osborne Edward Bond and Cary Churchill., , 5.5.1 John Arden (1930 - ), Ardell was educated at Cambridge and Edinburgh university where he studied, architecture. His popular plays are The Waters of Babylo,r, a g r o b y u e satirical,, , I
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1, , sprawling play about a corrupt municipal lottery organized by a slum landlord, Live, Like Pigs dealing with social conflict and violence, Sergec~nlhfzrsgrave :s Dunce, and The F?up~tvHaven. In The CVufers q#' Bubylon tlie central character i s a, Polish emigre who leads a double Life, working in an architect's office by day, while, out o f office he runs a lodging house. The characters are likeable, amiable and, good-natured. His plays are fragments selected, isolated and shaped illto a whole., I t was wit11Sergecmf Musgrc~ve:v Dunce that Arden made a break with real ism. I t, i s a complex play with confusing characters who appear as concepts. About this, , play. Gilman said, "it i s not a political play except in the sense that Arden writes to, test certain modes o f political action . .. it i s not real, it i s an artefact o f the dramatic, i~iiagination,and it leaves the problem o f violence to those agencies, outside art,, whose province it is' (Gilman in Modern Dratna, 1 14)., , i/, , 1, , Arden i s ~~oclassifiable, and cannot be put into a category. His drama i s between, didacticism and inipressionism. Arden is one o f the few co~npleteoriginals., , 5.5.2 Arnold Wesker (1932- ), Wesker was educated in Hackney. He worked at various jobs before making a, name as a playwright. He i s known for his kitchen sink drama and his popular, plays are The Kitchen, Chicken Soup wilh Barley, Chips wilh Everything, The, Four Sea,s.ons. Their kr,y (hvtz and Golden City. Wesker was recognized as a, social dramatist whose plays need a large cast. In Chips With Everythitzg, Wesker, studies a class o f attitudes in the RAF during National service ou the parade, ground. Audiences are gripped by the savage precision o f military training and the, rebellious dancing and singing at a canteen party. The plays i s an attack on the, British ruling class. The individual and group reaction both are portrayed., , 'I, , I The Fozrr Seasons has only two characters and tells the story o f a love affair that, was private, intimate and finally in-conclusive., I, , I, , Wesker uses theatre to explore arid demoust~-atesignificant themes in more, , 1 comprehensive arid subtle ways. His most notable qualities are emotional maturity, 7, , I arid his command o f action in depth., I, , 1, , 5.5.3, , Harold Pinter (1930, , - 2008 ), , Piater is the most consistent o f new British dramatist as his settings remain simple., They come from the world he lives i n and the plot progresses b y a revelation o f, inner tensions. His interests belong to the everyday ritual, from a birthday party to a, homecoming from taking possession to taking care o f a room, from breakfast or, lunch to fulfilling routines are subjects o f dramatic focus. Pinter was born i n East, London to a tailor Jewish and educated at Hackney. His first play The Room was, followed by The Birlhday Party and then came The Homecoming, No Man b, Land, Betruyul, Party Tittle and Ashes to Ashes to list a few. Drabble writes., 'Tinter's gift for portraying, by means o f dialogue which realistically produces the, nuances o f colloquial speech, the difficulties o f communication arid the many layers, o f ~neanirigi n language, pause and silence, have created a style labelled by the, popular imaginatiou as 'Pinteresque' and his themes - nameless menace, erotic, fantasy, obsession and jealousy, family hatreds and mental disturbance -are equally, recognizable" (Drabble: 793). He i s the inventor o f comedy of menace. Pinter, wrote for radio and television also., , The ROOINand The Birthday Party present seven or eight people, each carefully, introduced. The Room dramatises the fact that every room has a door and the very, existence o f a door suggests the unknown. In The Birflzday Parry, Stanley the hero, has found cosy home i n a seaside boarding house. The heralds o f the outside world, appear to drive Stanley from the warmth o f his security for reasons not explained., The play merely conveys tlie image nameless menace., , Developme~itsin, 20th Century Drama
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Drama: An l~~troductior~, , Pinter's plays do away with lengthy exposition. Further, they leave the action, unexplained and the characters unmotivated. Further, they reach no solution and, force the audience to find their own interpretations. The plays provide observations, of ordinary human behaviour., , 5.5.4 John Osborne (1929- 1994), Osborne was born in London to a commercial artist. He made his name with Look, Buck it1 Anger, and for his outbursts of rage against contemporary society and this, anger made him known as the Angry Young Mali. His other known plays are, Epituph for George Dillon, Luther, Inadnzissible Eviderice and a Patriot for, Me. His first plays were structurally conventional, but mirrored Osborne's world, and its idealistic pretensions., In Lutlzer, the hero driven by his moral, sexual and physical tensions brings terror, and pain to himself and others. The play proves tlie ability of Osborne to grasp, dramatic ideas and the language to convey them dn a poetical level., , Inad~~zissible, Evidence is about the frankly apologetic presentation of Maitland, who is struggling with the same adversary all the time Osborne is no longer angry, and defiant and asks for compassio~lsand understanding., , 5.5.5, , Edward Bond (1934- ), , Bond was born in North London to an East Anglian Labourer. His popular plays are, The Popek Wedding, Saved, Early Morning, The Sea, The Fool Summer and, The War Plays. "Bond's theatre is an out-spoken indictment of capitalist society;, his belief that violence occurs in 'situations of injustice' and that it therefore flourishes, as 'a cheap consumer commodity' under capitalism, continues to arouse extreme, responses from critics and audiences" (Drabble 11 8)., , 5.5.6 Caryl Churchill (1938- ), Churchill was educated at Montreal and Oxford. Most of her plays are radical and, feminist it1 tone. Her well known plays are: Owners is a satire on property and, capitalism; Cloud N i ~ eexplores contemporary sexual identity; Light Shining in, Buckinghamshire exhibits sexual repression in Victorian Africa., , 5.6 SOME OTHER DRAMATISTS, Other dramatists who are equally important and made landmark presentations and, wrote plays in the contemporary period of turmoil, experiment, innovation and, adjustment need to be studied at a glance, if not in detail. 'These are the French and, German dramatists., , 5.6.1 Jean Paul Sartre (1905-80), Sartre, the French philosopher, novelist, playwright, literary critic and political activist, was the principal exponent of existentialism in France and exercised a considerable, influence on French intellectual life. His dramas The Flies, In Camera, No Exit,, Dirty Hands and Loser Wins are well known. Sartre's plays are marked by clarity, of attitude. He tried to mediate between man's despairing sense of a void in the ,, world and his need to recover some justification for remaining alive and respecting, himself. He offered a new idea of courage and integrity., , 5.6.2 Jean Giraudoux (1882-1944), Giraudoux became popular because of his plays Amphitryon 38; Judith; Tiger at, the Gates and Duel of Angels, His gifts of irony and paradox and modernized
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ersions o f biblical or classical legend made him stand apart from the rest. He used, imple individual coiiflicts as metaphors, simplified the terms o f conflict and then, layed freely with the element o f surprise in unexpected reversals. Almost all works, f this French dramatist are organized around analogous debates: war and peace;, ve o f a young man and the love o f an old man, etc. His is tlie 'theatre of, nguage' as the rnagic o f words and power o f combination o f words was, ndamental to his universe., , I, , b.6.3, , I, , Jean Anouilh (1910-87), French dramatist with nearly 50 dramatic works. The, , Carnival, Ring Round, Que Moon, The Lurk, The Wultz qf The Toreadors. Anouilh's works do not reflect reality as everyday, They do not attempt an explanation o f the human individual in t e r m o f, realism. Thus his drama was essentially a-social. He implies no faith, i n social relations as such. His bitter satirical portraits o f aristocracy, , .6.4, , Gerhart Hauptmann (1862-1946), , first German naturalistic play to be produced was Before Sunrise by Hauptmann, His other important plays were The Weavers. Signalnjan Thief and, He combined naturalist observations with social democratic sympathies, The Weavers epoch-making. He cemented a new bond between, and the masses. Joyce called The Weavers a "masterpiece; a little, For him a pessimistic conclusion was peculiarly relevant. He created, , (1 5.6.5, ., I, , 1, , Freidrich Duerrenmatt (1921-90), , Swiss dran~atistDurrenmatt was a writer o f grotesque black comedy and he thought, that after the Second World War tragedy was a form no longer applicable to our, modern upside-down world.' His best plays are The Ksit and The Physicists. Both, deal with power and responsibility, tlie first with reference to money, the second on, the thenie o f criminality o f atomic physics. Certain tendencies typical to his drama, are the grotesque setting with emphasis on bizarre and macabre., , I, , 1, , 1, , 1, , LET US SUM UP, , The twentieth century drama was a naturalistic, realistic, existential, epic, absurd, and impressionistic drama. It was experimental and each dramatist made a mark, with his kind o f observations, ameiidments and innovations. I t varied far and wide, between countries and techniques. I t was no more a bastion o f the aristocrats or, specialists; amateurs and middle class, or even low class drama emerged i n this, century. We are indebted to the 20th century for the growth and development o f, drama., , EXERCISE, --, , -, , 1., , Write a critical note on Epic Theatre., , 2., , Ibsen influenced the modern drama. How?, , 3., , Recent dranla is the drama o f 'angry young man' or 'kitchen-sink' or i n other, words o f the middle class .Elucidate the statement., , 4., , Summarise the different ~noveinentsthat emerged in the development o f drama, in 201h century., , 5., , Contemporary drama is a mix o f tragedy, comedy, music, philosophy, etc., Where the effect is heightened by technological devices. Explain., , Developmetlts in, , 20th Century Drama
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Drama: An Introduction, , 5.9 SUGGESTED READINGS, Gassner, John.-Masters of the Drama. 1940; rpt. New York: Dover, 1954., Modern British Dratnatists: A Collection of Critical Essays. Ed. Russel Brown., 1968; Indian rpt; New Delhi: Prentice Hall, 1980., Modern Dratna: Essays in Criticisni. Ed. Travis Bogart and Will ia~nI. Oliver., New York: OUP, 1964., Oxford Con~panionto English Literature. Ed Margaret Drabble. 1932; rpt. Oxford:, OUP, 200., , Williams, Raymond. Dratna frotn Ibsen to Brecht. 1952; rpt. Harmondsworth:, Penguin, 1983., , 5.10 GLOSSARY, Angry Young Men: Since 1950 a host of playwrights came up011 the English, literary scene protesting violently, sometimes even very noisily against a society., They criticized the traditions, standard and manners of the Establishment. They, aimed at exposing the oppressiveness, hypocrisy and stultifying values in the social,, co~nmercialor industrial world. Their protest was mainly directed against a world, for which they did not feel respo~isibleand which seemed to them almost intolerable, on account of its stupidity and cruelty. These writers were labelled as "angry youiig, men" and the eminent playwright was Osborne., Didacticism: is the quality of writing that manifest's the author's desire to instruct, and improve the reader., Epic Theatre: Erwin Piscator is regarded as the founder of this movement but, Brecht gave it a new shape and meaning. Epic theatre does not restrict itself to the, unity of time and uses a number of episodes in a simple and direct way. This theatre, is known for its use of chorus, a narrator, slide projection, film, placards and music., Existentialism : was a philosophy that began as the attempt of French writers as, Sartre and comes to face reality of World War 11, argues that the universe is, meaningless, and that consequently all choice is without reason yet paradoxically, that the individual is the product of the choices he makes. The existential drama, attempts to depict the universal meaninglessness., Expressionism: is a revolt against realism. Its an artistic movement that originated, in Germany during the first three decades of the 20thcentury. Its exponent was the, Swedish playwright Strindberg. It emphasized the primacy or symbolic or stylistic, expression of the artists inner experience and as such realism was of subsidiary, importance. The writer tends not to represent the world as it is from an objective, point of view but describes it as it appears to him from the point of view of his inner, experience. It used stylized dialogue, masked characters and distorted stage setting., Eugene O' Neil and Miller were expressionists., Impressionism: A highly personal manner of writing in which characters and, scenes are portrayed as they appear to the writer rather than as they actually are., The term is borrowed from art., Kitchen - sink drama: The very title of the drama suggests that the action of, these plays is centred mainly on the kitchen sink. The term was used derogatorily., This kind of drama was in vogue in 1950s and it was highly realistic as it portrayed, the life of the working class. Plays of Osborne, Wesker and Owen are examples., Meta-theatre: The term was used first by Lionel Abel in 1963 to describe serious, plays which do not have the qualities as found in tragedies. Such plays as Miller's, , 1
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e ~ ~ ot fho Salesnzan; William's A Street Car Named Desire and Bolt's A Man, r All Se~r~ons, are meta theatre., usical Comedy: It refers to a form of theatrical entertainment developed in the, ~itedStates during the 19"' century but was implemerlted in 20ihCentury also. It, akes use of a light thread of plot, jokes, comic situations, songs, music and spoken, alogue. The coniic play My-Fair Lady which is an adaptation of Shaw's Pygmalion, a fine illustration of this., heatre of the Absurd: This term refers to the works of such dramatists of the, 50s as Adamov, Beckett, Genet, lonesco and Pinter. Their plays did not use, rmal logic and conve~itiol~al, structure. Both form and content support the absurd, redicament. In such plays, human beings are represented as individuals struggling, ard with the irrationality of experience in a state described as meta physical, guisll. Becket's Wailingfor Godot. Pinter's The Birthday Party and Ionesco's, hinoceros are the finest examples., heatre of the Cruelty: This term is derived from the theories of the French, amatist Antonin Artraud. In 1938, he expressed clearly that the theatre is intended, disturb the spectators and aims at changing their minds greatly. This theatre, ttached greater importance to mime, gesture and scenery than to words; and much, epends on spectacle and lighting. The Persecution and Assassination of Marat, , Developments in, 20th Century Drama