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Audience
The
audience was seated facing the raised stage (B). The floor level playing
area (A) between the audience and the stage was the variable "place"
where many actions took place. The "place" included the aisles
through the center and around the outside of the seating area. As many
scenes as possible were staged in this platea in an attempt to
involve the audience in the action of the play. Both Prologues and much
of the Conspiracy were played here, as were Jesus' Arrest and His four
Trials. Those who came before the cross stood in the "place"
too. In the Ascension scene, the disciples stood on the floor looking
up at Jesus on the platform (C) as he spoke. When He finished, they all
joined in the "Hosanna," facing the audience. Even the actors
who were not on-stage came on and finished the song; then they all walked
out through the center aisle.
The
audience is an important character in this play. Demon's Prologue is addressed
directly to the crowd, as is the sermon of John the Baptist. Jesus (or
Jesus' Spirit) talks to the audience about His work of Resurrection following
His suffering, and the need for repentance: "Man, and thou let me
thus gone /. . . Such a friend findest thou never none, / To help thee
at thy need"(45) ["If you let me go today without following,
you will miss the friend who knows your need" (Scene XVII, 118)].
Jesus also includes the audience when He speaks to his disciples both
at the Last Supper and at the Ascension. In staging the Ascension, the
disciples faced Jesus and the actor playing Jesus addressed them and the
crowd. Meg Twycross described the value of this device, suggesting that
among other things the production of medieval drama has taught us "it
is possible to look the audience full in the face".(46)
[page 130]
Evaluation
Script
The
process of developing and producing a performance script from a medieval
religious play has led to a number of conclusions. Paraphrasing and updating
language is not as simple as it first appears, because there exist a nearly
infinite number of possibilities when one attempts to make medieval references
sensible and meaningful today. The loss of poetry by modern paraphrase
is worth the sacrifice if the audience can relate to the play as a somewhat
contemporary experience, rather than a relic of an unknown age.
Themes
N-town's
Passion sequence presents a unified story that may be read as a conflict
between Law and Grace. The protagonist is Jesus and the antagonists are
the Pharisees. Jesus offers new life and new Law by coming to Earth, dying
and resurrecting. His victory over death becomes Man's victory over sin.
The language of the plays includes many levels of understanding. Repeated
productions would make different emphases. This production emphasized
the ideas of Law and Grace, while another might point up the commercial
considerations of Judas and the Pharisees.
Production Methods
Concerning
presentation, again many modes are possible. It is best, however, to base
any production design or technique on the loca-platea staging described
in Passion Plays I and II, which is an effective, interesting
and flexible plan. To prevent the production from becoming too archaic,
costumes should be updated for at least some of the characters, such as
Rewfin and Lyon, the judges, for example. Characters like these were touchstones
for the audience of their day and may be rewritten or at least re-costumed
to illustrate their role in modern society. Miracles may be effectively
staged without expensive special effects, particularly in an age of film
when theatrical effects often appear inferior to those in the movie theater.
A sense of symbolic ritual may be maintained as well by limiting the "realism"
of these effects.
[page 131]
Audience Relationships
The
production audience was similar to the medieval one in another important
way: most of the audience members knew one or more of the actors personally.
When the cycles were put on by a town and its guilds, most of the audience
members knew the performers from everyday life. R. T. Davies has written,
"Medieval folk were more used than we are to responding to the role
a man was performing as distinct from . . . the man himself, more used
than we are to responding to a priest or a king than to Robert or Richard".(47)
Acquaintance
with the performers was not the only connection the audience made with
the performers, then or now. In terms of physical contact, the Prologues
brought the actors into direct relationship with the audience. Demon moved
all the way around the audience; John walked up and down the center aisle.
Elsewhere in the play, characters entered from behind, around and through
the audience, implicating the observers as a part of the action or at
least as co-inhabitants of the acting-place, the platea. For example,
before His Crucifixion Jesus was led out the center aisle of the church.
The arrest party in an earlier scene entered from the back of the room
and approached Jesus and His disciples through all three aisles.
This
audience-performer connection could have been made clearer and stronger
in a number of ways. First, the entire performance could have been turned
into a worship service, framed by liturgical readings and responses. In
a similar manner, the "Hosannas" which welcomed Jesus and praised
Him at His Ascension could have included audience participation, requiring
effort on the part of the audience members and identification with the
actors and their characters who welcome Jesus, condemn Him, and then praise
Him as they say good-bye.
Finding
the sense of unity with a modern audience requires some of the techniques
of staging, technology and script organization delineated above. Updated
contemporary references and costumes may help in this regard, and a modernized
script is necessary, though the degree of modernization will vary from
one production to another. William Marx writes that he attempted to make
as much as possible of his modern performances clear to the [page
132] audience through actions, in order to retain most of the
Middle English and some of the Latin words.
Conclusion
This
production provided a valuable theatrical experience in three primary
ways for different groups of people. For the initiated, it was a religious
experience. Those who did not care for, or agree with, the message might
have been interested by the medieval staging ideas or the epic qualities
of the story itself. And for those who might not have accepted the message
initially, but became convinced, the play functioned as a dialectic, sermon
or argument that concluded with a "conversion."
Whatever
the methods, this drama can be significant and interesting to a modern
audience. If its message is true, it will continue to be an important
story until the "Doomsday" it describes comes to pass. It is
important as well as a glimpse into the life of another age. Performing
medieval plays illustrates, as Meg Twycross has written, that "medieval
theatre" is "different, and often highly sophisticated."[page
133]

Endnotes
- William Tydeman, The
Theatre in the Middle Ages (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1978) 248.
- Glynne Wickham, The
Medieval Theatre (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1974) 67.
- Glynne Wickham, Early
English Stages, 1300 to 1660 (London: Routledge and Paul; New York:
Columbia University Press, 1959-1963) 127.
- Meg Twycross, "The
Theatricality of Medieval English Plays," Richard Beadle,ed. The
Cambridge Companion to the Medieval English Theatre (Cambridge:
Cambridge UP, 1994) 37.
- R.T. Davies, ed. The
Corpus Christi Play of the English Middle Ages (Totowa, NJ: Rowman,
1972) 47.
- John Marshall, "Modern
Productions of Medieval English Plays," Beadle, Companion,
296.
- See John R. Elliot, Jr.,
Playing God: Medieval Mysteries on the Modern Stage (Toronto:
U of Toronto P, 1989) and Marshall.
- See Sheila Lindebaum,
"The York Cycle at Toronto: Staging and Performance Style,"
Medieval English Drama: A Casebook, ed. Peter Happé (London:
Macmillan, 1984) 200-211.
- See Twycross 59; and Martin
Walsh, "The Harlotry Players: Teaching Drama through Performance,"
in Richard K. Emmerson, ed. Approaches to Teaching Medieval English
Drama, Approaches to Teaching World Literature 29 (New York: MLA,
1990) 133.
- See Walsh 137; and Marshall
295.
- Milla C. Riggio, "Festival
and Drama," in Emmerson, 143.
- Harvey Cox, The Feast
of Fools (Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1969) 4.
- Cox 7.
- Eleanor Prosser, Drama
and Religion in the English Cycle Plays, Stanford Studies in Language
and Literature 23 (Stanford: Stanford UP, 1961) 53.
- Davies 45.
- Cox 46.
- V.A. Kolve, The Play
Called Corpus Christi (Stanford: Stanford UP, 1966) 119-20.
- Kolve 119.
- Marshall 179.
- William Marx, "Medieval
Religious Drama in Modern production," Diss. Mich. State U, 1991
(Ann Arbor: UMI, 1991, 9216333) 13.
- Davies 235-37.
- Twycross 59; and Richard
Southern, The Medieval Theatre in the Round 1957 (London: Faber,
1975) 17-49.
- Twycross 60.
- Anne Cooper Gay, "The
'Stage' and Staging of the N-town Plays," Research Opportunities
in Renaissance Drama 10 (1967) 136.
- See Alan H. Nelson, "Some
Configurations of Staging in Medieval English Drama," in Medieval
English Drama, ed. Jerome Taylor and Alan H. Nelson (Chicago: U
of Chicago P, 1972) 133-47; and Martial Rose, "The Stagning of
the Hegge Plays," Medieval Drama ed. Neville Denny, Stratford-Upon-Avon
Studies 16 (London: Arnold, 1973) 210-19.
- Beadle xiii.
- Twycross 37.
- Beadle xv.
- Davies 96.
- Davies 221,
- Davies 109.
- Alan J. Fletcher, "The
N-town Plays" in Beadle 178.
- Davies 241.
- Gay 140.
- Davies 245.
- Davies 255. (italics mine)
- Twycross 58.
- Davies 255.
- Davies 237.
- Davies 235.
- Davies 306.
- Richard Beadle and Pamela
M. King, eds. York Mystery Plays: A Selection in Modern Spelling
(Oxford: Clarendon, 1984) 211.
- Davies 360.
- Nelson 134-35.
- Davies 331-32.
- Twycross 37.
- Davies 49.
[page 134]
Bibliography
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--- and Pamela M. King, eds. York Mystery Plays:
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