The modern audiences, the serious side of life has
disappeared.
Sad as the sudden death by drowning of Dawn Brancheau at
SeaWorld in Orlando undoubtedly was, it could also be seen as a
terrible warning to the rest of us who increasingly see all
entertainment as some version or another of a SeaWorld act,
treating large aquatic mammals as nothing more than objects of our
amusement. Admittedly, the pleasure that we derive from
condescending to the characters in books, movies, and TV shows is
less likely to be brought up short by reality than was poor Miss
Brancheau's condescension to a five-ton killer whale named Tilikum,
but the principle is the same. There is always something corrupting
to the spirit in the voyeuristic enjoyment of really-existing life
dramas -- whether the savage drama of the ocean depths or the banal
passions of guests on a Jerry Springer show -- in which we are able
to feel ourselves unimplicated and from which, therefore, we
imagine we are somehow insulated.
This truth has occurred to me as I have continued to reflect on
the subject of audience laughter, mentioned in this space a few
months ago (see "An American Tragedy," TAS, November
2009), at Racine's classical tragedy Phaedre and at David
Letterman's confession on national television of inappropriate
sexual behavior. I think what we are seeing there are the habits of
attending which people have picked up from "reality TV," and from
soap operas that look like reality TV, and which have carried over
into other forms of entertainment. As a result, we treat all of our
amusements as being one or another kind of freak show from which
our own lives are comfortably removed. That's why we watch Racine
or Shakespeare as if they were episodes of Jersey Shore or
Celebrity Rehab with Dr. Drew. Like 18th-century
aristocrats laughing at the antics of Bedlam inmates or white folks
at a minstrel show, we have grown so used to the objectification of
those whom we pay to watch that we have lost the fear Aristotle
thought an appropriate reaction to tragedy -- the fear that comes
from self-identification with the tragic victim.
Now, of course, there are no more tragic victims but only (at
best) Beckettian clowns -- which is what Orestes (Jay
Sullivan) and Electra (Holly Twyford) aspired to be in
Anne Washburn's translation/adaptation at the Folger Theatre in
Washington of Euripides' Orestes titled: Orestes: A Tragic
Romp. Actually, the translation was for the most part
straightforward, but for the addition of only a few anachronistic
satirical shafts directed at Fox News -- Orestes says he expects to
get a "fair and balanced trial" -- or the alleged "torture"
practiced by the Bush administration. But that only makes the whole
exercise the more extraordinary. Up until the ending -- of which I
shall have more to say in a moment -- there is very little in
Euripides' text to suggest anything "romp"-ish about the imminent
execution by stoning of Orestes and Electra for the crime of
killing their mother, Clytemnestra, in revenge for her murder of
their father, Agamemnon. Yet the audience when I saw the show found
plenty to laugh at.
It must be admitted, however, that this laughter was not
entirely un-Euripidean in the sense that the laughter at
Phaedre was un-Racinian. Euripides would have shared in
the production's dim view of Menelaus and Helen (both played by
Chris Genebach) for their lack of sympathy with the plight of the
matricidal siblings and especially in the laughter at its
deliberately absurd ending in which Apollo -- in the form of Lynn
Redgrave's voice on a loudspeaker -- appears as a deus ex
machina to let those crazy kids off their gruesome punishment.
At their liberation, all the cast pull out little flags and sing
with the chorus: "Hail, holy victory, hail" -- though both Orestes
and Electra look pretty shell-shocked as they do so. Alas, the
impact of the joke was lessened by its having been flagged so far
in advance -- indeed, in the very title. Euripides himself might
have told them that there is no point to the Theatre of the Absurd
when everything is absurd and nothing ever rises above
absurdity.
His play, that is, must have intended both sympathetic
self-identification with his principal characters when they are
under sentence of death and the sardonic satire of their
unexpected escape. Only the latter is now visible to us because we
have lately grown accustomed to dissociating ourselves from those
who suffer, as tragic heroes do, as a result of their own actions.
I thought the same about a recent production of Shakespeare's
Measure for Measure in New York by the Theatre for a New
Audience. As in Orestes, there is a mixing of tragic and comic
genres in this play, and its ending is almost as absurd as
Euripides'. There, too, the audience anticipated the ending by
laughing throughout at what might once have seemed a very unfunny
situation in which the novice nun Isabella (Elisabeth Waterston)
tries to save her brother, Claudio (LeRoy McClain), from execution
for fornication by pleading with his judge, Angelo (Rocco Sisto),
only to be told that she can save Claudio by engaging in an act of
fornication of her own -- with Angelo.
For a modern audience, unfortunately, the very idea of capital
punishment for fornication introduces the absurd note way too early
in the proceedings. Accordingly, Isabella's terrifying dilemma was
never taken seriously by the audience. There was laughter, for
example, when the Duke (Jefferson Mays), who appointed Angelo and
who is Shakespeare's deus ex machina, dons disguise as a
friar, instructing Claudio that he must school himself to welcome
death as a release from life's sorrows, and Claudio replies: "I
humbly thank you." There was laughter again when Isabella
temporized about telling Claudio of Angelo's proposition by saying
that there was a way he might be spared but only
such a one as, you consenting to't,
Would bark your honor from that trunk you bear,
And leave you naked --
whereupon Claudio impatiently says, "Let me know the point."
I could go on, but in these and subsequent laugh lines, as in
the ending, I had to admit the laughter was not quite unwarranted.
The grotesqueness of the moral situation, the caricatured extremes
to which all the characters are driven at one time or another and,
especially, the bizarre behavior of the Duke, who could put a stop
to the whole business at any moment but instead acts as
puppet-master of the moral drama he causes to be played out -- all
these things suggest that laughter was part of what Shakespeare was
going for, even at some of the places where great moral seriousness
must also have been intended. As in the much better-known "comic
relief" episodes of Hamlet, King Lear, or Macbeth,
laughter and seriousness are bound up together as two sides of the
same reaction to the sad absurdity of the human condition. But for
modern audiences, the serious side of things has dropped out of the
equation and we are left with nothing but a vague sense that the
play's central conflict between love, honor, and morality must also
be some kind of satirical butt.
So i assume, anyway, from the New York Times review.
"Keeping track of the saints and the sinners is pretty easy in
Shakespeare's Measure for Measure," wrote Charles
Isherwood, "because there is nary a saint in sight. Consider that
Isabella, the apparent exemplar of moral perfection and the play's
chief cheerleader for purity, prefers to see her beloved brother
beheaded rather than surrender her prized virginity. With angels
like that, who needs demons?" Leave aside the vulgarity and sarcasm
of "chief cheerleader for purity" and "her prized virginity"; can
Mr. Isherwood possibly imagine that his suggestion of a moral
equivalence between Isabella and those who seek to coerce her into
an unwanted sexual relationship, including "her beloved brother,"
is remotely Shakespearean? Although ostensibly a comedy Measure
for Measure reserves to itself the right to be serious on
certain subjects, and these the audience appeared not to
recognize.
But Mr. Isherwood makes what I take to be a common assumption
these days, namely that everything to do with morality is to be
taken as satire -- and not only satire but satire of the only form
of immorality (if such it be) that our culture is now capable of
recognizing, namely that of hypocrisy, self-righteousness, and
"judgmentalism." I think we can safely say that Shakespeare was
looking at a much, much bigger picture than this one when he wrote
the play -- a picture that grows progressively dimmer to those who
have grown accustomed to TV "reality." I don't know how many of
those in the audience were joining in the critic's sardonic and
ill-judged form of mirth and how many were laughing at the
absurdities Shakespeare had actually put there, but I am inclined
to believe that, as our hearts have been hardened by the ever
nearer approximation of dramatic characters to performing animals,
those in the former camp probably outnumbered those in the
latter.
About the Author
James Bowman, our movie and culture critic, is a resident scholar at the Ethics and Public Policy Center. He is the author of Honor: A History and Media Madness: The Corruption of Our Political Culture, both published by Encounter Books.
You make an excellent point, Mr. Bowman, and one which relates to
more than just the arts. I think the insulation from reality has
been a perennial problem for middle class children, particularly
the wealthy middle class, since the beginning of time. The
wealthier they get the more parents attempt to shield their
children from harm, a totally natural state of affairs of course,
but one which does little service to the children when it expands
to include protecting their feelings. It is not so large a
problem in the upper classes, because there's no great difference
between the generations. A self-made man with silver-spoon
children is the real difficulty, and even though we prefer not to
see it that way, what we call poor in America is wealth in most
of the world.
People who have been sheltered from reality long for
authenticity, never realizing that they do live in the real
world, and they often don't learn anything even when tragedy
bites them. Reality TV, which is astonishingly fake compared to
the ordinary kind, caters to this longing by presenting an
imaginary world that soothes the tender feelings of mamma's
little darlings. It allows them to feel superior for things
they've actually accomplished--education, good jobs, a full set
of teeth, etc. What you see in these higher-toned productions is
more of the same, just at a higher level of education. They want
to believe they are superior to the common run, and seeing
tragedy as irony, as mere comedy, is a defense mechanism. They
want to believe that they are more real than they think they are,
and by allowing themselves the pleasure of looking down on
Shakespeare, well, it doesn't get any better than that.
It's just a self-deluding rationalization, and is nothing new.
Only the form is new. The danger is also not a new thing, and
having large swathes of the population living in fantasyland is
an invitation to disaster.
Alan Brooks| 4.27.10 @ 9:10PM
King Lear, Hamlet, Macbeth; they are as good as it gets. But too
violent for children, as when Macbeth murders people in their
bedrooms; and Gloucester gets him eyes torn out.
Alan Brooks| 4.27.10 @ 9:12PM
pardon, his eyes torn out, not "him"... must be the effect of
Reality TV.
wayne| 4.28.10 @ 2:10AM
"Brave New World" ends with the Savage hanging himself, and the
people having an orgy in their excitement. Are we there, yet?
Maybe I wasn't paying attention, again.
Alan Brooks| 4.28.10 @ 4:34PM
Mr. Bowman, this is a much better piece than your review of
'Prophete'.
The scene in 'Prophete' that you mentioned featuring an attempted
prison gay rape-- and resulting murder of the would-be rapist--
would not make it to Focus On the Family's short list.
The scene in 'Prophete' that you mentioned featuring an attempted
prison gay rape-- and resulting murder of the would-be rapist--
would not make it to Focus On the Family's short list.
Jim Wilson| 4.27.10 @ 1:46PM
You make an excellent point, Mr. Bowman, and one which relates to more than just the arts. I think the insulation from reality has been a perennial problem for middle class children, particularly the wealthy middle class, since the beginning of time. The wealthier they get the more parents attempt to shield their children from harm, a totally natural state of affairs of course, but one which does little service to the children when it expands to include protecting their feelings. It is not so large a problem in the upper classes, because there's no great difference between the generations. A self-made man with silver-spoon children is the real difficulty, and even though we prefer not to see it that way, what we call poor in America is wealth in most of the world.
People who have been sheltered from reality long for authenticity, never realizing that they do live in the real world, and they often don't learn anything even when tragedy bites them. Reality TV, which is astonishingly fake compared to the ordinary kind, caters to this longing by presenting an imaginary world that soothes the tender feelings of mamma's little darlings. It allows them to feel superior for things they've actually accomplished--education, good jobs, a full set of teeth, etc. What you see in these higher-toned productions is more of the same, just at a higher level of education. They want to believe they are superior to the common run, and seeing tragedy as irony, as mere comedy, is a defense mechanism. They want to believe that they are more real than they think they are, and by allowing themselves the pleasure of looking down on Shakespeare, well, it doesn't get any better than that.
It's just a self-deluding rationalization, and is nothing new. Only the form is new. The danger is also not a new thing, and having large swathes of the population living in fantasyland is an invitation to disaster.
Alan Brooks| 4.27.10 @ 9:10PM
King Lear, Hamlet, Macbeth; they are as good as it gets. But too violent for children, as when Macbeth murders people in their bedrooms; and Gloucester gets him eyes torn out.
Alan Brooks| 4.27.10 @ 9:12PM
pardon, his eyes torn out, not "him"... must be the effect of Reality TV.
wayne| 4.28.10 @ 2:10AM
"Brave New World" ends with the Savage hanging himself, and the people having an orgy in their excitement. Are we there, yet? Maybe I wasn't paying attention, again.
Alan Brooks| 4.28.10 @ 4:34PM
Mr. Bowman, this is a much better piece than your review of 'Prophete'.
The scene in 'Prophete' that you mentioned featuring an attempted prison gay rape-- and resulting murder of the would-be rapist-- would not make it to Focus On the Family's short list.
M2TS File Converter| 4.29.10 @ 1:17AM
The scene in 'Prophete' that you mentioned featuring an attempted prison gay rape-- and resulting murder of the would-be rapist-- would not make it to Focus On the Family's short list.
fjsdk| 7.1.10 @ 2:18AM
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