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          78] In America, one of our sentimental complaisances has 
          been to rest assured that love is holy, and the preserving of it preserves 
          everything worth saving, from the Family to the Free Market, from Doublemint 
          to Democracy. Evolutionary biologists remind us, however, that love 
          is just part of the fabric of being. Nothing obligates nature to mirror 
          our ideas about love (or anything else) in any way whatsoever. It may 
          be equal folly to attribute that to the divine presence, creating God 
          in the image of humanity. Fifteen years ago(8) I criticized the fixation 
          of American playwrights with romantic melodrama, at the cost of looking 
          at the larger issues of society, at war, inequality, hunger, the structure 
          of our order. It seemed to me then that our contemporary subtext was 
          being blinkered, carefully reduced down to one interest--the fate of 
          two people in a relationship. I reminded us of the contrast between 
          even the best of the typical American romantic melodrama, like Mark 
          Medoff's Children of a Lesser God, and the plays of Barrie Stavis, 
          particularly his play about George Washington, The Raw Edge of Victory. 
          Stavis has said that his plays were written in response to Chekhov's 
          exhortation that "Every playwright is responsible not only for 
          what man is, but for what he can be," and to Artistophanes' effort 
          to banish "the little man and woman affair" from the stage.(9) 
          The palette from which American drama has been painted since the 60's 
          has, until the last few years, been a shrinking one. I saw this shrinkage 
          as an escape, a retreat to reliable trivialities and enduring, gossipy 
          voyeurism. But I think now that there was, and is, something larger 
          at stake. Our hunger has been to define what love might be, to see how 
          relationships might hold together against a storm of forces trying to 
          tear them apart. We needed nothing less than a new comic vision. Instead 
          we had trivialized both form and content by repetition and predictability, 
          simply leaving out that storm of forces, treating each precious relationship 
          as a sentimentally cliché, in romantic isolation. Thus we maintained 
          only a sentimental triste, rather than building a new vision 
          of society--the comic vision of union that love (Eros?) really requires.   Now 
          the drama has learned to speak of the love that could not be named, 
          learned to talk of plague and holocaust, learned to visit the horrors 
          of war and the addictions of violence. [page 
          79] From Streamers to Angels in America, from 
          Bent to Oleana, we are learning to talk of the hidden 
          and the denied. But revelation can sometimes come from unexpected places. 
          In the film of Carousel, surely a typical example of sentimental 
          romance, Billy keeps hitting people he cares about, even near the end 
          when he is only a ghost. Amazingly, the women excuse him by sharing 
          the startling perception that they have both felt a slap that didn't 
          hurt at all. The clear implication of the action at this point is that 
          the slap was the touch of love, and it has infused them with warmth. 
          As repugnant as this conversion of knee-jerk violence (what we now call 
          abuse) into care, love and respect may be, it is very Dionysian, and 
          we should be warned. We never know from where feelings of love, attachment, 
          or fear and hatred may spring. Wisdom tells us the places to look for 
          one or the other, but wisdom is not always the truth, especially when 
          we are stressed and stretched out to our fullest capacities. Now our 
          popular sentimental dramas tell love stories that twenty or thirty years 
          ago would be rejected out of hand as disgusting. So we can have some 
          vision of what we lost back then. But what sacrifice are we making now? 
          The drama seems to me to be a key to that vision, a repository of it, 
          the sharpest mirror in which we can find our limitations, our stumblings, 
          and our capacities, our greatest reaches of understanding.   My 
          Dionysian prejudices by this time are abundantly clear. What is most 
          confrontational, conflicting, out at the edge of our sensibilities, 
          needs, capabilities, imaginings, what is most challenging in this way, 
          is most likely to widen our vision, to enhance our experience, and to 
          be attractive and exciting in the theatre. Others, of course, will disagree 
          vehemently. They would argue that, whether serious or funny, tragic 
          or comic, reverent or mocking, the drama does the most for us when it 
          is closest to what we recognize, when it engages us most intimately 
          in our own realities and enlarges us only by moving us slightly out 
          of that context, pushing us one small step further. Why? The risk of 
          incomprehension and rejection, so this voice says, is huge. If we are 
          deeply shocked, upset, puzzled or hurt, we will fly from the experience 
          rather than embrace it, and rapidly convert what we remember to what 
          stereotype makes it most palatable. The popular theatre, this same voice 
          asserts with the force of practical wisdom, can never afford to forget 
          this. A most enduring value and eternal verity is entertainment. We 
          are entertained by what delights us and makes us look for more of the 
          same. We love entertainment because it is fun, and also because it is 
          so absorbing it distracts us from whatever else we might be doing or 
          thinking about. It does not have to be happy talk-- [page 
          80] witness the occasional fashion of sad melodrama in theatre 
          and movies--we can also enjoy watching things come out badly. But we 
          need to be entertained.   Kushner's 
          choices become more interesting in this context because he has chosen 
          a set of flashy, campy, highly theatrical idioms in which to encase 
          his social/political/spiritual melodrama. And like all melodrama, it 
          is about a harsh conflict of values, of black evil and white virtue--fidelity 
          and disloyalty, courage and cowardice, about love and the lust for power. 
          These broad conflicts are made more realistic and digestible when they 
          occur in complicated ways within one person. For instance, Joe wants 
          to be loyal to Harper, but also to his emerging sexuality. Louis is 
          endearing in his desire to be close and loving in spite of his (very 
          funny) analytic excesses, but his cowardice steers him to desertion, 
          then to infidelity. Belize, who is tolerance and understanding personified, 
          is able to reject Roy Cohn's vileness and take care of him all at once, 
          while she steals Roy's drugs for those who need them (she becomes a 
          Robin Hood of the hospital). The result of these and other sticky conflations 
          of good and evil, is that the traditional values are transfigured. Love 
          and fidelity are still Good. Justice is still Good. Hatred, violence, 
          malevolence and disease are still Evil. But the historical perspective 
          suggested at the beginning of the play by the oldest living Bolshevik, 
          and by the generations of Prior's ancestors, combines with the constant, 
          tongue-in-cheek domestic mockery to urge us toward a properly comic 
          tolerance for everyday misbehavior--for lying, for sexual confusion, 
          for cowardly self-indulgence, for drug-induced escape and reverie, and 
          even for abandonment of one's love in a crisis. Evil is confined to 
          one devil (Cohn) and the plague that ravages both him and Prior. This 
          is metaphorically extended to the self-aggrandizement, manipulation, 
          power hunger, and inhumane politics Cohn represents. Through Kushner's 
          mockery of the smugness of the Regan-Bush era, we are reminded that 
          the politics of intolerance and greed continues to plague us.   To 
          keep us securely domestic, our spiritual perceptions are mocked too, 
          reducing them to Spielbergian angels descending in a sudden explosion, 
          ten-foot-high Hebrew characters in flashing lights, ladders to heaven 
          with super-bright internal lighting, and notes on conspicuous wires 
          descending from the flies. We know this is an exaggerated stereotype 
          of how we see these things, and know at the same time it cannot be true--a 
          perfect object for wonderfully entertaining mockery. If God were to 
          appear, wouldn't she be staging herself for effect? And in a way, she 
          does, when her angel kisses the Mormon Mother Pitt on the mouth [page 
          81] and fills her with ecstasy of an entirely unexpected 
          kind. We get to have our cake and eat it too--see our limitations, accept 
          them, wonder at them, be frightened by them, and laugh at them all the 
          same time. Part I, Millennium Approaches, is, because of all 
          this, a wonderful experience, using traditional forms to push out our 
          boundaries of vision and prepare us to see new. Unfortunately, Part 
          II, Perestroika, leaves us without the promised vision, staggering 
          in the dark to find our comforting monuments (Bethesda) in a vain hope 
          of healing, stuck in the ground of ordinary perception and platitude.   Other 
          widely praised contemporary dramas deserve examination from this point 
          of view. Do they use the ordinary means of drama, and some view of our 
          daily realities to propel us to new vision, to transport us to a world 
          somehow enlarged, enhanced, sharpened?   In 
          Edward Albee's Three Tall Women, the structure of the play is 
          a metaphor for the continuation of the generations. The first half shows 
          two adult women, one middle aged and one young, paid to cope with the 
          cantankerousness, bitterness, and the prejudiced, offensive, virulent 
          meanness of an old woman. She gets the best of them. In the second half 
          the two younger women play the older woman at earlier ages, and the 
          three of them interact as if one could talk to oneself, at different 
          ages, at any time in one's life. For the most part, the youngest one 
          is projecting her own hopes, dreams and desires into her future and 
          her two older counterparts are listening indulgently or trying to disillusion 
          her, to wisen her up. Sometimes this is funny, sad, or upsetting, but 
          mostly it is simply hackneyed, trying, boring, and trivial. Partly, 
          this is because the character of the young women is predictable, sentimental, 
          and somewhat selfish, without, for instance, any of the perspective 
          or social awareness that made the peremptory young lawyer faintly interesting 
          in the first half. Her self-absorption and narrowness get dull, and 
          cease standing for anything. It would have been much funnier if the 
          two older women had tried to reject her, to say, "that's not me," 
          to attempt, contrary to all logic and expectation, to disown their own 
          youth(s). That might have been funny and interesting, though it would 
          have had almost as little to do with the first half as the existing 
          second half does. In either case, the metaphor does not hold. The idea 
          of seeing through one's youth and middle age what we come to as an old 
          person, of seeing through the effort to cope with the old and decayed 
          what we are and will continue to be, is deeply trivialized in the second 
          half and emptied of significance. All we see is a feather-light cliché--the 
          bitter, prejudiced old crone was once a pretty, idealistic girl. What 
          do these lives stand for? Has anything at all been [page 
          82] gained or lost? What was the stake in those women's lives 
          that could live on the stage and move across the footlights from them 
          to me? As you can see, I have the strong feeling that the transfer simply 
          has not taken place at all. There is a vision of the transformation 
          of narrowly selfish and idealistic youth into narrowly selfish and nasty 
          old age, but there is no resonance, no metaphorical juice to transform 
          these facts into a significance beyond the cliché they represent.   In 
          a British play, Tom Stoppard's Arcadia, the environment of the 
          play, the grounds of a country estate in Derbyshire, and the process 
          of landscaping it, become a metaphor for the development of the mind, 
          and the progress of our thought through history. It is an echo of the 
          "ontology recapitulates phylogeny" principle in a historical 
          setting. Transforming from rigid order to an order perceived within 
          apparent natural chaos--this is what happens to the estate as it is 
          re-landscaped, and what happens within the estate, to the mind of young 
          Thomasina Coverly as she engages in her education and discovers the 
          elements of fractal geometry and chaos theory. Here is a metaphor so 
          deliberately set that we lick our lips in anticipation. What will we 
          learn? How can chaos make us feel? The two contemporary scholars, Bernard 
          and Hannah, searching this early nineteenth century landscape for the 
          truth of what happened there, find murder, deception, retreat into hermitage--an 
          old whodunit mystery--while they manage to fight with each other comically 
          about what really happened, who did what, and who the hermit was. In 
          the process they engage the interest of Valentine, the contemporary 
          heir to the estate, a mathematician who is studying the patterns of 
          the growth of the grouse population on his own lands. He runs Thomasina's 
          mathematical series on his computer, and notes that these are the same 
          as the contemporary iterated functions used to describe natural phenomena 
          (in fractal geometry and chaos theory). However, he resists the idea 
          that she really knew what she was doing, it spite of a note she left 
          announcing that she has discovered a new "Geometry of Irregular 
          Forms," a "method by which all forms of nature must give up 
          their numerical secrets, and draw themselves through number alone."(10) 
          He helps Bernard and Hannah to a little more sophisticated understanding 
          of the relationship between science and truth, trying to convince them 
          and himself that Thomasina really could not have understood the implications 
          of her discovery. Intriguingly, he keeps a pet turtle, just like his 
          counterpart [page 83] from 1810, 
          Thomasina's young tutor, Septimus Hodge, who trained as a scientist 
          at Cambridge. Hodge and Valentine are played by the same actor.   All 
          of this, in traditional Stoppardian style, is a wonderfully entertaining 
          riddle. But the metaphor stalls, this time on the track of cleverness. 
          Then it withers as we anticipate a drama that never happens. Our fascination 
          with the young girl and her tutor, our questions about their future, 
          our wonder at what these new apperceptions of nature might tell us about 
          the events in the play--all this is never put together. There is a lot 
          of sexual activity off stage, and a lot of witty talk about it on stage, 
          including Thomasina's opening line, a question to her tutor: "Septimus, 
          what is carnal embrace?" Back in 1810 the sexual pairings involve 
          Thomasina's mother, Septimus, another woman on the estate, and possibly 
          Lord Byron, and on the contemporary scene, Bernard and Chloë, the 
          sister of Valentine. While most of this is funny, in the end it seems 
          to connect with nothing, to be mere comic decoration, with one possible 
          exception.   Thomasina 
          is coming of age, and because of a combination of her insouciance and 
          brilliance, Hodge is beginning to be attracted to her. However, instead 
          of seeing the play, the dramatic action that might reveal this, the 
          fates of Thomasina and Septimus are simply dumped into the dust of history's 
          documents. Stoppard prefers the aching silence of the historical record 
          and the cleverness of his detective story to the life he might have 
          made of his metaphor. She dies in a fire, we are told, a day before 
          her seventeenth birthday, just after her tutor, reading the latest essay 
          she has written for him, may have come to understand what she has discovered. 
          On what turns out to be her last night, she has, with her utterly innocent 
          and irrepressible impetuosity, kissed him on the mouth in an effort 
          to get him to teach her how to waltz, a skill she thinks will insure 
          her sexual appeal and seductiveness as an adult. The dance lesson begins 
          with full propriety between tutor and pupil. But then Septimus kisses 
          Thomasina "in earnest." We are left to surmise that he has 
          intuited her genius and fallen in love with her. We are told, in a last 
          minute revelation from Valentine, the mathematician, that Thomasina 
          also discovered, in essence if not in mathematical form, the concept 
          of entropy, the second law of thermodynamics. She knew the universe 
          was running downhill. So, we surmise, her death in a fire that night 
          will cause Septimus to retreat into hermitage, lapsing into insanity, 
          writing "cabalistic tracts" about the end of the world. So 
          we have solved the mystery of the identity of the hermit, which is confirmed 
          when we remember a historical [page 84] document 
          that is quoted earlier, noting that the hermit had a pet turtle. We 
          are left with the victory of Hannah, who was sure the hermit was Septimus, 
          and the humorous defeat of Bernard (who gets caught up in a false thesis 
          about Lord Byron and his involvement at the estate.)   Where 
          have we been taken? If Hannah and Bernard are our surrogates, what has 
          happened to them that has any significance? Has all this transported 
          us to an understanding, an apperception of past and present, order and 
          chaos, nature and love, that makes a new vision? Do the contemporaries' 
          search for the truth of the past, and the fates of Thomasina and Septimus, 
          come together into a single action, or even an ironic reflection about 
          a terribly sad set of events where the huge promise of a brilliant mind 
          and a budding romance were cut off by an accident? Is there any relationship 
          in the drama between the transformation of the estate's landscape in 
          1810 and the remarkable discoveries of Thomasina? I think, as with the 
          second half of Three Tall Women, and the second part of Angels 
          in America, that the promised vision never materializes. Perhaps 
          this can help us appreciate how difficult this is to do, and what it 
          takes to do it.   We 
          come to eternal verities and enduring values in mysterious ways, or 
          at least ways that remind us that our previous visions of what must 
          accompany the eternal and the true are as mutable as our visions of 
          the eternal and true themselves. This makes it all the more interesting 
          to look back at the huge variety of drama generated in the Golden Age 
          of Greece, and note that it was all contrived in celebration of the 
          god, and all performed at ritual celebrations that reminded the audience 
          of the holiness of the occasion.   I 
          doubt there is anything left of that sense of holiness. But there is 
          a pale reflection of it in that feeling of necessity that can creep 
          over those who have found themselves rooted in the bowels of a theatre, 
          preferring the artificial light to the natural, sensing the power of 
          what happens only in that very special place, that particular oomphalos.   In 
          there, we can be transported. We can become living metaforai. 
          But though we work inside, in a special incubator, our work is about 
          what happens in the light, in the course of lives. The theatre disappoints 
          when we let it be about itself, or let it be trapped in reductive triviality, 
          in sentimental predictability, or fascinating games (or, as some have 
          alleged, as [page 85] illustrations 
          of post-modern theory). It delights when it presents us with a vision 
          of the ecstasies, horrors, losses and achievements that make the stuff 
          of lives. When the form flows from the action rather than from an abstract 
          scheme, when it moves from the math to the physics, then there is a 
          chance that that action has been meta-phored, carried beyond our ordinary 
          perceptions into a new vision. It is these visions, I think, working 
          through the ancient, almost genetic, tragi-comic nexus of dramatic form, 
          which evoke the god-of-many-names, shake and move us, and endure.    Bibliography Albee, Edward. Three Tall Women. 
          New York, 1994.  Kiefer, Daniel, "Angels in America 
          and the Failure of Revelation." American Drama 4:1 (Fall, 
          1994), 21-38.  Kushner, Tony. Angels in America, 
          Part I: Millenium Approaches. New York, 1993. Part II: Perestroika. 
          New York, 1994.  Larner, Daniel. "Prophet in a 
          Passive Theatre," Religion and Theatre 5:1, (1981). Also, 
          in a slightly altered version, as "What Should Theatre's Concerns 
          be?" in Dramatics 52:5 (May 1981).  McNulty, Charles. "Angels in 
          America: Tony Kushner's Theses on the Philosophy of History." Modern 
          Drama 39 (1996), 84-95.  Medoff, Mark. Children of a Lesser 
          God. New York, 1980.  Stavis, Barrie. Comments on his own 
          work and career [1973] in Contemporary Dramatists, fourth edition, 
          ed. D.L. Kirkpatrick, 1988, 504-5.   Stavis, Barrie. The Raw Edge of 
          Victory. Act I in Dramatics 57:8 (April, 1986), 15-32; act 
          II in Dramatics 57:9 (May, 1986), 13-28.   Stoppard, Tom. Arcadia. London 
          and Boston, 1993. |