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           George A. Scranton, Ph.D.Seattle Pacific University
 RENT:Reinterpreting The Gospel of Mark At the Close of the Millennium
  In 
        this paper I do not want to suggest the specific focus I have chosen fully 
        explores or defines the Rent experience or its multiple meanings. 
        I wish to explore a few of the "Gospel" characteristics of Rent 
        I have found in my experience of the show. I further wish to suggest there 
        may be deeper structural reasons for some of the power and popularity 
        of this musical than that which first meets the eye and ear.
  My journey with Rent will 
        serve as an introduction.   Prior 
        to the last time the Association for Theatre in Higher Education was in 
        New York I reserved tickets for several shows that I knew I couldn't get 
        into by going to Tickets Tonight. At the time I knew little to nothing 
        about Rent besides the usual information: that it was a contemporary 
        reworking of La Boheme for the New York's East Village, that the 
        characters that had Tuberculosis in La Boheme had AIDS in Rent, 
        that it revolutionized the American Musical, and so forth, so I got a 
        ticket to see it on Broadway.   During 
        the production I was enjoying its energy, freshness, honesty, truthfulness, 
        and joyous sense of life in the midst of death  when suddenly I 
        found myself sitting in on a "Last Supper" scene as the climax 
        of act one in the "Viva la Vie Boheme" sequence. This 
        was further accompanied by a betrayal that betrays them all, by one of 
        the former "company" members (Benny). I was unprepared for any 
        such scene, or sequence of events by any of the "press" I had 
        heard or read about the play. I had to rethink some of my impressions 
        during intermission. When I came back in for the second act I was looking 
        at it through a more consciously multi-focused (or multi-valiant) series 
        of lenses.   The 
        opening of Act II for me then became a statement of Rent's "Gospel 
        of Love" as articulated in the song "Seasons of Love." 
        It asked how one measures a year: 525,600 minutes  yes, fully living 
        every minute of your life  yes, but mostly it states the way to 
        "measure your life" is "in love." What followed was 
        a series of visual statements referencing the "death, Pieta, [page 
        143] deposition of the body, burial, and resurrection" 
        of "Angel." This series pretty well cemented the experience 
        for me. I was then forced to think back through Act One to see if there 
        was any "set-up" material that I had missed on first viewing. 
        There was plenty, but I will let that rest for a while.   My 
        daughter asked for the Rent CD sound track for her birthday so 
        I, like a dutiful father, obeyed. She listened to the Rent recording 
        nightly. I knew this because the sound would waft its way from her bedroom 
        next to the sitting room, where my wife and I tend to spend much of our 
        evenings together. One evening, after listening to her CD's on a regular 
        basis in this manner, I tried out my emerging "interpretation" 
        on her. Her response was something like a nice warm and appreciative "COOL." 
        At some time during the gestation of this reading of Rent Lionel 
        Walsh, then Focus Group Representative for the Lesbian and Gay Theatre 
        Focus Group, and I talked about doing a joint panel between his group 
        and the Religion and Theatre Focus Group (of which I was the Focus Group 
        Representative). I committed both to the panel and to looking more closely 
        at Rent as the prime possibility for me to tackle. As a Christmas 
        present in 1997 my daughter gave my wife and me tickets to the touring 
        production of Rent that came to Seattle the following spring. I 
        went with my multi-valiant "religious" glasses on from the beginning 
        of the show this time. I also had listened, inadvertently most of the 
        time, to my daughter's Rent CD's for several months, read the Julie 
        Larson McCollum book on the process of Rent, and read the libretto/book 
        of Rent in the interim. That should provide more than enough information 
        on my "journey" with Rent.   I 
        want to go back to that AH! HA! moment for me at my first viewing: the 
        Central Image of Rent -- The Last Supper. In Julie Larson McCollum's 
        "Big Book" on Rent (p. 45) director Michael Greif states:  
         I think the design of the whole show was dictated 
          by our desire to dance on tables in "La Vie Boheme." 
          It just seemed like a wonderful way in such a small space to show that 
          kind of exuberance  just a bursting through the seams. Also, the 
          song begins in a religious frame: there's all this talk of Bethlehem. 
          We staged a Last Supper, and it became this big feast, this big ceremony. 
          And then I think we decided we needed the tables for everything else, 
          that they could be everywhere. [page 144] There 
        are several spin-offs from that Central Image:   At 
        the opening of the show it is Christmas Eve (just like in La Boheme). 
        It is Mark the cinematographer/narrator who records all the events of 
        "the coming together of this community" of homeless individuals 
        (or almost homeless since they are living in "free" housing). 
        The community eventually includes both drug addicts and non-addicts, some 
        with money but others who are impoverished, gays, lesbians, straights, 
        ethnically diverse persons  almost all of whom would fall outside 
        the traditional American notion of "the IN group." These people 
        as a group are not a part of the "power" set, the moneyed class, 
        or the politically, financially, or religiously powerful.   They 
        are not the Biblical equivalent of the Pharisees or Sadducees of the Markan 
        Gospel text. They are rather the equivalent of the Publicans, tax collectors, 
        wine-bibbers, prostitutes, and the poor. They are the more generally designated 
        "sinners" that the Biblical Jesus was rather wont to "hang 
        out with," and out of whom he formed a community. These were also 
        the people for whom Jesus claimed he came, and by and large they are the 
        ones who accepted his gospel of Love and forgiveness. They were also the 
        people he claimed were closer to the kingdom of God than the "power 
        groups" of his day, which were the obviously wealthy, and may I say, 
        ostentatiously religious Pharisees and Sadducees. It was these "religious" 
        groups that Jesus not so politely called "whited sepulchers" 
        and "blind guides." It was of such "powerful" people 
        that he made the butt of some of his most stinging parables. It was on 
        these "righteous" (or self-righteous) "in groups" 
        that most of Jesus' attacks on false spirituality were leveled.   Into 
        this loose group of "outcasts," bohemians, and "sinners," 
        comes Angel, a messianic figure who also arrives on Christmas Eve. It 
        is "Angel" who cares for, gives love to, and in many ways solidifies 
        this "ragamuffin" group of individuals into a consciously caring 
        community. The musical progress through a series of multi-valiant visual 
        images:  
        
           the end of Act One and the Last Supper affirmation 
            of La Vie Boheme,
 
 the betrayal by Benny of the whole group,
 
 the Act Two opening gospel of the "Seasons 
            of Love," which leads to,
 
 the death of Angel (on one of the three beds/crosses),
 
 the Pieta picturization, and
 
[page 145]  
            the deposition of the body (Collins and Angel) in the central bed/tomb,
 
 Angel's "resurrection" (the dance of 
            life and death with the rest of the cast - with Angel's dance spotlighted 
            after his death),
 
 Angel's "disappearance" from the center 
            "table/cross/ tomb" enshrouded in, and trailing the huge 
            "sheet" used in the group dance (a la Jesus Christ Superstar?), 
            as he exited up center stage.   All 
        of these images spring from that central "Last Supper" image. 
        Angel dies on Halloween. All Hallows' Eve is the Church's designation 
        of that holiday (holy day). Because Angel's friends cannot afford to pay 
        the undertaker Benny pays for the burial. Benny the betrayer/Judas figure 
        now becomes the Nicodemus figure, (this rich member of the Sanhedrin earlier 
        had come to Jesus by night and at his death provided the unused tomb for 
        Jesus' burial).   The 
        organized religious leader  the pastor  chases Collins off 
        with a preemptory "off the premises Queer."  The "religious 
        establishment" is not often presented in very positive lights in 
        the Gospel of St. Mark either.   [Roger 
        and Mark suggest that while "The film-maker cannot see and the song-writer 
        can not hear," and "we're dying in America," that is not 
        the end of the story. They also affirm that "we're dying in America" 
        but it is "to come into our own." They further sing, "when 
        you're dying in America you're not alone  I'm not alone."]   The 
        musical Rent brings us full circle, and we are back to the Advent 
        season, with the street people singing, "Christmas Bells are Ringing." 
        In this "waiting season of the Church Year" there is still no 
        room in the (Holiday) Inn (for outsiders) and "How time flies when 
        compassion dies."   Mark 
        is set to celebrate Christmas Eve a year after Angel came and formed a 
        community of this group of "outsiders." He is going to celebrate 
        by reviewing his filmed record, or "Gospel," of the past year. 
        The shattered, or "rent" (torn apart) "community" 
        arrives by ones and twos as if Mark is going to call the company back 
        into cohesive existence.   [page 
        146] Collins arrives with cash since he has miraculously "rewired 
        the ATM at the Food Emporium/ to provide an honorarium to anyone with 
        the code A-N-G-E-L." A "BIRD," or an "angel" 
        has arranged for Benny's removal from the East Village location, and Maureen 
        and Joanne bring in Mimi in very bad condition. She and Roger share a 
        short reprise of "I should tell you," with Mimi's confession 
        of "I love you" before she fades. Roger's response is to sing 
        her the song ("Your Eyes") he has been able finally to write, 
        before Mimi's "head falls to the side and her arm drops limply off 
        the edge of the table."   They 
        think she had died, but suddenly Mimi's hand twitches. Incredibly she 
        is still alive and sings,  
         I jumped over the moon! . . . I was in a tunnel. 
          Heading for this warm, white light, . . . (Maureen: Oh, my God!) And 
          I swear Angel was there  and she looked good. And she said, 'Turn 
          around, girlfriend  and listen to that boy's song.'   Mimi (Mary) is the first person Angel (Jesus) appeared 
        to after his "resurrection." Her fever breaks and they all join 
        in singing the "Finale B  No Day Like Today:" an affirmation 
        of living life "in the moment."   This 
        song does not forget those haunting questions of being able to control 
        their destiny, and whether they will loose their dignity, and whether 
        someone will care at the end of their lives. These are questions we all 
        must ask as we move through our lives.   This 
        scene is performed while Mark's filmed version of the events of the past 
        year is shown on the back wall. Two other projectors also show "Scenes 
        from Rent." Are these other video versions suggestive of the 
        two other synoptic Gospel accounts of Matthew and Luke? Perhaps it is 
        just an effective theatrical complication for visual effect, or perhaps 
        it is only a way to tell the story more completely within a minimum time 
        frame. Perhaps it is "all of the above." Perhaps it is just 
        a "mystery." Who can tell?   Once 
        again I wish to state clearly that in the following section, as in the 
        whole paper, I do not want to suggest the specific focus I have chosen, 
        in any way, fully explores or defines the Rent experience or meanings. 
        I merely wish to explore a few of the "Gospel" characteristics 
        [page 147] I have found in my multiple 
        experiences of Rent, which I feel reinterprets the Gospel of Mark 
        for the end of the Millennium.   Some 
        questions naturally present themselves because of this reading of the 
        musical. Is Rent a "Christian" Gospel? Well, . . . No, 
        . . . and then again perhaps, . . . Yes! Is Rent just a safe retelling 
        of the "old, old story of Jesus and his love?" No! Is it a crypto-Christian 
        "message" play? No! Do I believe Jonathan Larson was a "crypto-Christian" 
        writing to convert his audience to this theological point of view? No! 
        Jonathan Larson was raised in a Liberal Jewish family, whose tradition 
        he honored. In his theatrical journey, however, both Jesus Christ Superstar 
        and Godspell were significant influences.   It 
        is entirely possible, perhaps even probable, all the observations I will 
        make (or have already made, or intimated) can be attributed to no more 
        than this influence, . . . but then perhaps not. Perhaps the "Gospel" 
        of Rent is Jonathan Larson's response to the version(s) of the 
        Christian Gospel with which he came in contact.   Fredi 
        Walker (who played Joanne) in her bio in "The Big Book" referred 
        to Jonathan as having given, 
         "his life for what is one of the best spiritual 
          messages available in the form of entertainment. The spiritual message 
          of Rent is all about love, accepting the imperfections of others, 
          being human. That's what Rent is about, and it's what we in the 
          cast have allowed ourselves to do with each other." (150)   My 
        reading of Rent suggests that while it may have begun as a rethinking 
        of La Boheme transposed to contemporary New York's East Village, the production 
        in its final version takes the audience farther back in time than that 
        opera. If the sub-text of Rent is to be found in a reworking of 
        La Boheme, I submit that its "UR" text is to be found 
        in the Synoptic Gospels, particularly in the Gospel of Mark (but with 
        the understandings of the Gospel of Luke).   The 
        Gospel of Mark, as the first written Gospel, is often called the "essential" 
        Gospel. (Yes, I am aware of the "Q" text, but it has not come 
        down to us as a Gospel.) From the Gospel of Mark the writers of Matthew 
        and Luke take more than 50% of each of their texts, and while [page 
        148] they do not contradict the Mark text, they add their own 
        spin in their versions. While Mark is assumed to have been written by 
        a Jew, and written to Gentiles, the Gospel of Luke definitely both was 
        written to Gentiles, and also was written by a Gentile - a doctor. Being 
        such an "outsider" (a Gentile) himself Luke had a strong affinity 
        for the "outsider." His Gospel is written to anyone who considers 
        her or himself an outsider. In Luke's world and time these "outsiders" 
        were the poor, the homeless, the women, the "Samaritans and tax-collectors," 
        the common laborers, the prostitutes, the "enemies" of the religious 
        "establishment," the gluttons and "wine-bibbers," 
        and most of the rest of those kinds of "sinners." In short it 
        included those with whom Jesus constantly ate and drank, and those whom 
        he accepted as part of the family of God. Does this sound like our contemporary 
        world at the end of this millennium? Does it sound like any of your friends 
        and family? It certainly sounds like some of mine.   Where 
        then do I want to go with this loose telling of the Gospel of Mark?" 
        I would like to suggest that many of us find in the Gospel Story a power 
        of mythic proportions. (I mean mythic in a very positive and religious 
        way. I am suggesting that it transcends our personal stories. It exists 
        on a larger than life dimension, one that transcends time and place. It 
        is a story, an event that has power throughout time.) The story of the 
        specific life, death, and resurrection of one Jesus of Nazareth carries 
        with it continuing power that we can continue to feed upon, even at the 
        end of the 20th century. (Put in slightly different terms; for many the 
        "punctual" Jesus-event has over-arching "durative" 
        meaning and power as "Christ-event.") As with Rent, it 
        is not a story of the "privileged class," or the politically 
        and financially powerful. It is on the contrary a story  a life 
        in which the poor, the despised, the marginalized, the "unclean," 
        the publican, the disenfranchised, the sinner, can in fact find "home." 
        I would also argue that for most of us who have been "rent" 
        in our lives, here we can find belonging, community and love  can 
        in fact find "home." It is from this story that Jonathan Larson 
        finds a good deal of the power of his Gospel story, his story of "good-news." 
        It is from this story that audiences sense a presence of mythic proportion.   Through 
        two millennia of visual art the picturizations of Jesus have changed to 
        fit each of the communities to which the artist has belonged. Ethnically 
        Asian artists have depicted Jesus as Asian, African artists as African, 
        Indian artists as Indian, and as in Salman's "Head of Christ," 
        Swedish artists as Swedish. In each of these depictions there is no attempt 
        to claim that Jesus was historically Swedish, or African, or Asian. I 
        believe rather that these artists are [page 149] 
        more closely identifying with the power inherent in the person, 
        life, and work, of this Jesus, and in so doing they make Jesus in their 
        own images. Depictions of Jesus as woman (as in the "Christus" 
        sculpture in Berkeley  which is an absolutely wonderful and powerful 
        sculpture in my estimation) have drawn fire from some quarters. (I try 
        not to worry overmuch about those quarters too often, but unfortunately 
        am affected by them to some degree.) I believe something similar is true 
        of this Christus sculpture. The artist was not claiming that historically 
        Jesus was a woman. For many women to identify more strongly with the power 
        of that salvific life, and to sense the connections between them and Jesus, 
        there is the need, or desire to see the similarities between the two. 
        In this Christ as a crucified woman they can see their own crucifixions 
        embodied. Stephen DeStabler's more ambivalent male/female crucifix in 
        the Newmann Center in Berkeley is another powerful artistic identification 
        with Christ, not an attempt at historical equation.   I 
        think something of this nature is happening with Rent as well. 
        I think Rent is a wonderful example (if somewhat over-amplified 
        and under-articulated for my poor ears) of another art form that borrows 
        of the power of that Gospel story for another era, for another generation, 
        and for another audience. This audience includes those represented in 
        the play, which includes me. It also includes an awful lot more of us 
        than some of us are comfortable with, or even willing to admit. I think 
        a good deal of the power of Rent comes from this sub-textual structure 
        and allusion, whether we realize or acknowledge it or not.   Once 
        again, I am not suggesting that Jonathon Larson was some kind of "crypto-Christian," 
        or that he was trying to preach a "Christian Gospel" so that 
        his audiences might "repent and be saved." Other Jewish artists, 
        however, have been able to use such "Christian" images to make 
        their own points. These include Chaim Potak in his novel "My Name 
        is Asher Lev," Simon and Garfunkel in some of their recordings 
        (including some very specifically "Christian" Christmas songs 
        and prayers), and of course the great Jewish philosopher and theologian 
        Martin Buber in his construct of "Jesus as Brother" (and whose 
        theological understanding of the cognate "I/Thou" has significantly 
        influenced my own understanding of "loving God and neighbor).   As 
        a person raised in a liberal Jewish family Jonathan apparently was able, 
        and open to using images, insights, and the power of another religious 
        tradition outside his own to [page 150] communicate 
        his vision. His "Good News" is a story of love found in an accepting 
        community that was brought together by Angel. This "Good News" 
        can celebrate LIFE, even in the midst of death. This play is not about 
        a narrow, or pinched and restrictive vision of life. It is about LIFE 
        writ large, even to the point of being profligate in its inclusiveness. 
        In that sense it is akin to what I think the Christian Gospel is at its 
        core. It too claims to be open to all. It too does not keep score as to 
        who "deserves" love and graceful acceptance. It too is not about 
        "Cheap Grace." It is about FREE GRACE (or to hearken back to 
        my Bible School years in the Saskatchewan Prairies: it is "free gratis"). 
        It too is profligate in its redundancy. It is free free!! It is available 
        to anyone who wants to join the party.   When 
        told fully, one of the powerful strengths of the Gospel story, as told 
        by St. Mark (and especially by St. Luke), is that incarnated in the life, 
        death, and resurrection of this Jesus of Nazareth, is such an inclusive 
        Gospel, a "Good News" story that everyone can hear and live 
        in it, not just those who already "have it together," who are 
        already part of the "in group," or are part of the power brokers 
        of the world. It is the outline and power of this earlier story Jonathan 
        Larson hit upon in the construction of his Angel and the community of 
        love and acceptance found in Rent. This is especially true for 
        those of us who do not feel we are in any of those "in" categories. 
        We -- the outsider, the powerless, the marginalized -- are the privileged 
        ones in this telling of the Gospel story. I think that is significant, 
        whether it is in St. Mark's, or St. Luke's Gospel, or Jonathan Larson's 
        Gospel found in Rent at the end of the millennium. |