I had been hoping to have posted my ‘ethics of the review’ before speaking of Sydney Theatre Company’s latest production of Brecht’s The Threepenny Opera, though current personal revelations during intermission have impelled me to speak of it urgently.
‘Wrenched away from its time and social content, Brecht’s script is replaced by fifth-rate pantomime dialogue. Mature playgoers are repelled; young playgoers, alas, accept the vulgarity for what it is, not knowing (how should they?) how completely it demolishes the greatness of the original conception. They applaud the bad because they are not allowed to see they good; they are, simply betrayed – deprived of the chance to appreciate some of the best that great writers for the theatre have to offer.’
It appears quite apt that my realisation of how much I despise contemporary theatre came on the day that STC announced its 2012 season line up (with its inclusion of Danger Liaisons and Pygmalion doing little in the way of reviving my then wanning and now dead-in-the-water interest), with editorials not only within this Saturday’s paper but also with a feature in the ‘arts’ lift out. An insightful, if not cynically so, friend of mine was always quick to point out that on the flipside of excitement and attention around something there is always the existence of a lacking of both such things, to the point that such hype must be artificially manufactured. Newspaper articles that appear to be more advert than informative fall easily into this category.
As much as I would desire to make this critique of contemporary (I should say Australian here, as it is the only one I have experienced in any sufficient quantity) theatre impersonal, it is a most personal matter indeed. On being asked by my friends last night how much theatre I had seen I had need to pause in order to calculate. Bought Belvoir seasons tickets since 2006, five plays a piece, two seasons passes to STC, six each, countless Bell Shakespeare productions, the odd independent performance, plus the many sufferable amateur productions I was forced to sit-through for school excursions... probably comes around just shy of or just over fifty. And, as you may well ask, what do I fondly remember out of my half a century of theatrical experience? The list is modest.
The exceptions themselves can be split into three categories:
(1) excellently written plays that would be hard to ruin even if you tried (The Pillow Man, Travesties);
(2) those with performances from notable actors, whose mere lifting of an eyebrow or twitch of the mouth make it all worth sitting through (Geoffrey Rush in Exit the King and Diary of a Madman, Marcus Graham’s Iago and Jackie Weaver in Death of a Salesman);*
(3) productions directed by Benedict Andrews, who is without a doubt Australia’s brightest talent in the arts right now. Who at his worst (The Seagull) is still thoroughly engaging, and at his best (Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf, The City) is sublime, and probably the reason why I ever contemplated going back time and disappointing time again.
But back to the travesty of a production at hand, that which prompted these reflections initially. The following extract from a letter lifted from today’s paper states it better than I ever could:
‘Wrenched away from its time and social content, Brecht’s script is replaced by fifth-rate pantomime dialogue. Mature playgoers are repelled; young playgoers, alas, accept the vulgarity for what it is, not knowing (how should they?) how completely it demolishes the greatness of the original conception. They applaud the bad because they are not allowed to see they good; they are, simply betrayed – deprived of the chance to appreciate some of the best that great writers for the theatre have to offer.’
Of course my own experience, as one such ‘young playgoer’ was much the reverse. Knowing full very well the ‘greatness of the original conception’ I was horrified by the approving laughter and thunderous applause, assuming rather that it was the mature masses** around me that were ignorant rather than myself. My knowledge comes however, not from experience but rather education. Having quite a few years ago now studied the Epic theatre of Brecht in depth I had for sometime longed to see the brilliance of his words and ideas take shape in the phenomenal action of the live show, their enactment in which being the final and ultimate ends of his mighty theatrical conception. Had I known when it would come it would be in a form so disfigured from the original, from the controversial to the banal, the witty to the smutty, with all its political commentary so heavy-handedly updated to relevant references that all nuance is lost, I might well have been better off, and more content, to stay at home with my transcript.
For me, above all else, the greatest disappointment comes from the political sterilely of it. Some would argue that this is the natural result of time on Marxism ideology, and thus is a fault to be found in all contemporary productions of Brechtian theatre. Such replies are lazy, *** and likely indicate the point in which this production failed; namely the initial doubting of the relevance of the original material. Such doubts lead them to modernise the material to the point that rather than provokingly questioning its ‘bourgeoisie’ audience it merely seeks to please their affected whims and desire for light entertainment of a Friday night.
The highlight of my night came well after the shows final curtain. It was had in one of those rare conversations with a group of strangers that you can only get yourself into by accident, and yet have to be willing to stick-out the initial awkwardness of it if you want to reap its benefits. Mine came in the form of four brothers on their way home from that night’s NRL match. When the oldest asked me where and what I had done, I sighed inwardly before I said the words ‘theatre’, recognising the dramatic irony of the situation and anticipating the demoralizing conversation to come. Most surprisingly I sighed too soon, as the boys were fine examples of ‘perfect gentlemen’, whilst being neither physical perfect or pretentiously chivalrous. The eldest in particular showed a genuine interest for what I had seen, making me repeat the title of the play so as he could store it safely in his memory for later, or I can only hope, professing to me that he was attracted to things that made him ‘think’.
I jokingly message my friend later once out of their company that I had exchanged conversation with real contemporary Australian proletariats. On reflection I don’t think it’s much of a joke, and I meant it in an uncondescending fashion. The eldest brother’s natural inclination, one borne purely out of his daily existence rather than being drilled into him from self-referential habits within certain ‘artistic’ trends, towards a search for meaning in that which appears on the surface essentially uninterpretable was exactly what drove the likes of Brecht to write.
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A once over of both Belvoir and STC’s programs for next year seasons is adequate enough to confirm that I’ll not be forking out the dough to attend one or any of their many overpriced and overhyped productions (with exceptions naturally arising along the guidelines as listed above, in particular the Andrew’s written and directed play at Belvoir mid next year). Independent and smaller theatre companies I have not the experience to write off, but I’ll likely not be going out of my way attend them either.
Call me a wanker, a fool and a purist. But I would argue that I’m not as nearly as wanking as those who attend the theatre and enjoy it purely for it being a ‘higher’ art form, that my experience works to offset my foolishness to some degree, and that if desiring both originality and quality makes me a purist, than call me the Richard Baxter of theatre.
* Anything with Timothy Walter or Toby Schmitz is bound to be enjoyable on the eye if nothing else. Also the work of actresses Anita Hegh and Robin McLeavy has been of a consistently high standard.
** Despite all their attempts, and likely because those attempts don’t include decreases in price, elderly folk dominant theatre attendance. In general though I find Belvoir does a much better job at getting younger and firmer bums on seats than STC. Something particularly repellent happens to these crowd in productions performed at Sydney Theatre itself, as with last night’s performance, that can’t help but negatively effect one’s experience of the play.
*** One of the greatest, most influential and respected Ethicists of our time is a socialist, and though he is not pounced about it in any rather obvious fashion, he is able to weave it in seamlessly in with his philosophical commitments in a way that would make Bertolt proud I’m sure. I speak of course of Peter Singer.