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Beckett in the living room, Beckett up your earhole
by Alan Lockwood
Winter 2003
Stage plays on DVD, radio plays on CD
Nothing is funnier than unhappiness
its the most comical thing in the world.
Endgame, Samuel Beckett
Recent months have brought significant commercial availability to Samuel Becketts theater work, with 19 stage plays out on DVD and a CD release of the playwrights astonishing radio plays. Jeremy Irons hosted an evening of short plays in September on PBS, which also more recently broadcast director Michael Lindsay-Hoggs Waiting for Godot on January 1st. The DVD box now packs the Beckett on Film project onto four discs, while the CDs document the Beckett Festival of Radio Plays, another ambitious project that features a veteran cast of Beckett actors including Billie Whitelaw and Barry McGovern, which premiered on NPR in 89. These projects bring the 20th Centurys master of bleak vision and black humor much closer to home, with provocative results and some key revelations.
The Beckett Project makes films of the stage plays, with big names from the film world joining the theatrical expertise of Dublins Gate Theater. Cinematic strategies and gleaming production values translate Becketts plays to the roving cameras vocabulary, supplemented by the DVD formats latitude for interview and exegesis. They are in effect a rewriting of the plays foundation in the sustained, activated interface that is live theater. Becketts fitful stance about adapting his work into other media is the stuff of theater lore. He co-directed his one movie, Film, starring an aged Buster Keaton, and retooled the stage plays Not I and What Where for TV, but refused permission and/ or enthusiasm for many other such genre-crossing efforts. Theres no mistaking the extraordinary impact his stage work can make when cut loose from the theaters potentially heart-stopping confines. But theres also no denying that the jolting visual clarity of his mise en scenes suffers from the mobile aptitudes of film, a medium often more devoted to capacity in movement than to the vaunted "moving image."
Where the DVDs strive to fit the theater pieces into films broadening context, the CDs of Becketts radio plays strikingly recreate the works original transmission value, and comprise a brilliantly refined aspect of the writers purpose. Radios popularity as communal entertainment was already hard hit by television in the late 50s when the BBC asked Beckett to write new work for the medium. The CD performances cover five of six pieces he completed over the next several years. And they play like secret weapons, as if pre-designed for the Walkman generation, bringing shocking emphasis to Becketts themes: voices struggling on the alternating brinks of hilarity and despair with inexorable memory and the isolation of consciousness.
The 69 Nobel Prize laureate is widely considered the influential playwright of his century; Pinter, Stoppard, Albee and Mamet work today from his innovations. The task of first scripting the concision and extraordinary impact of his theatrical imagination, and then of attempting to ensure the works accurate production, led Beckett to ruthlessly excise personal content from ever-briefer plays, many of which went through eight or ten typescripts.
"Beckett didnt totally trust directors, and he didnt trust actors to carry out his very specific directions," according to Barney Rosset, Becketts US publisher at Grove Press and his American theatrical agent. "He wrote his plays out on graph paper, at least for production purposes."
His exacting production standards, in conflict with the inclination of performing artists to seek new approaches and associative content, resulted in Rossets having to file legal injunctions against renegade productions, at Becketts urging.. Perhaps most famous was the attempt to halt director JoAnne Akalaitis, who warped set directions for a Harvard production of Becketts caustic masterpiece Endgame, placing it in an abandoned New York subway station and then importing incidental music by Phillip Glass.
The DVD films dont play that hard with stage directions, and theres admirable devotion throughout to Becketts indubitable tone and pacing. Producer Michael Colgan developed the Beckett Project from the cycle of plays he originated with Dublins Gate Theater a decade ago (Colgans been the Gates director since 83; the theater began its adventuresome work in the 20s, and Orson Welles and James Mason are two alums). The Gates Beckett cycle was featured at Lincoln Centers inaugural Summer Festival in 95, with the films of Waiting for Godot, Happy Days and Footfalls reprising casts from those productions.
Then come the money names: director Atom Egoyan and John Hurt team for Krapps Last Tape, while in Catastrophe, David Mamet directs Harold Pinter and Rebecca Pidgeon as they manipulate John Gielguds silent, stoic decrepitude.
Each DVD opens with a full-length play (Waiting for Godot, Endgame, Happy Days, Krapps Last Tape), followed by the remarkable variety of playlets ("dramaticules," as their author called them), vignettes and mime pieces with which Beckett honed his craft. The participants are avid about Beckett: Anthony Minghella, whose The English Patient got vast audiences and multiple Oscars, credits that the "sense of language and poetry in his writing has been the single biggest influence on me."
In his film of Play, Minghella toys with rapid cuts and darting patches of exposed film stock to bring the love triangles disconcerting fourth character to life, a spotlight "played" in the theater with uncanny rapidity as it illuminates or exposes the other three characters confessions and cover-ups. These three are, to appearances, stewing in an eternity of petty demands and betrayals, time-verdigrised and stuck to their necks in decaying amphorae. In Minghellas film, leaping side shots profile the speakers accomplices, where Plays theater spotlight eliminates two as the third speaks.
Or spews, as the case may be. James Knowlson, in his Beckett-authorized biography Damned to Fame, tells of rehearsals for Plays London premier in 64, where director George Devine declared the text "dramatic ammunition." Beckett arrived, wanted the lines delivered faster still and arguments ensued with Kenneth Tynan and Laurence Olivier of the National Theater Company, both of whom dreaded the sacrifice of intelligibility.
Play reflects the manner in which the power of thought obsessively traces the dubious exactitude of circumstance. Not a simple premise to embody in the first place, the evocation is compounded further by Becketts rendering of the actors as all but immobile. Minghella explores technical sophistication with an arsenal of effects, but ultimately he relies on his players. Kristin Scot-Thomas and Alan Rickman are both mockeries of impenitence, while Juliet Stephenson is positively feral, a minx armed with smelting diction. And then Play deals its trump card
Rosaleen Linehan, as the irrepressible Winnie in Happy Days, shows the comic warmth and determination she brought to the Gate Theater production. Glib towards the devastated world around her, all sinew and human nature on the inside, Linehans performance embodies the farce and the courage of middle class mores.
And shes beautifully set by director Patricia Rozema (Mansfield Park) in a deft construction of short, medium and crane shots. Rozemas long takes accumulate to form a visual box in which Winnie goes on and on, fixed first to her waist and then, in the second act, to her neck, in the bare earth of a craggy slope that could be the heart of the outback or the sun-broiled face of Mars. Beckett deleted overt references to nuclear holocaust as he completed the play in 61. The settings blasted mound and harsh light are left unexplained, and this dramatic disconnect reinforces both the delight and the dismay of Happy Days.
PBS broadcast a prime-time Godot on January 1st, to kick off the plays 50th anniversary. Featuring Barry McGovern and the cast of the Gates authoritative production, it netted as big an audience as has ever seen the play, which is renowned for doing nothing in two acts.
But two very funny acts, at that. Stranded in a wasteland, McGovern and Johnny Murphy play Gogo and Didi, Becketts tramps who play slapstick with their bowler hats and cant stand to be apart just a wee bit less than they cant stand to be together. A theater landmark, Godot established Becketts reputation, though many consider his greatest legacy to be the three postwar novels so consuming and intense that he wrote the comedy to provide himself with a diversion. The play established him financially, too, for Godot is performed in neighborhood playhouses and in national theaters all over the world, with high-profile productions like Mike Nichols Lincoln Center extravaganza in 88 that starred Steve Martin, Robin Williams, Bill Irwin and F. Murray Abraham (a cast that remains a favorite for Barney Rosset).
The Godot broadcast followed PBSs mid-September evening of seven short plays. Host Jeremy Irons brought his star stature to bear, along with an atmospheric pint of Guinness. The evenings line-up was interspersed with interviews, location clips and teasing snippets of films not screened, bridging the Beckett Projects treasures and its indulgences. Of the latter, Irons assertion that the actorless skit Breath, which lasts less than a minute, is "Becketts boldest experiment in bare bones theater," sounded a knell that recalls the writers recondite reputation: one of theaters great comic voices and awesome visual artists remains better known for spurring doctoral theses than for stirring audiences.
The perils of hosting aside, Irons is remarkably affecting in both roles of Ohio Impromptu, his face and seated posture wrought with personal pain, the care-worn eloquence of his diction battered, ennobling. His presence allows the slowly swirling camera to create an effect more concentrated than much of the Beckett Projects visual technique.
Neil Jordan directs Julianne Moore in Not I, another solo albeit one in hyper-focus: the actors mouth is all thats shown through the scripts fifteen-minute torrent. Screened at the New York Film Festival in 01, Jordans version feels peculiarly damped down on both large and small screens. He darts about with voyeuristic camera angles and plays unfortunate screen rhythms against the compulsive words. And Moore seems half-conversational in her delivery, reciting as if for clarity, which seems another distraction from this plays rabid intensity.
For Mouth in Not I is not so much telling a story as being that story. Beckett directed Billie Whitelaw, one of the actors with whom he worked most closely, in a TV production of the play in the mid-70s. In that still-available production, a silent companion role crucial to the stage setting was dispensed with, leaving only the indelible full-screen image of Whitelaws flapping lips and periodically clamped teeth (the image got comic mileage in The Rocky Horror Picture Show). Attending Not I in the theater, where the speaking mouth is elevated in a precise point of light in the depths of the stage, is to take the very real chance of being blown away by the double barrels of astonishment and horror. The Jordan/Moore Not I, though, takes some discernible turns away from the plays full impact, letting the difference between being vitriolic and being a curiosity become the viewers choice.
Billie Whitelaw, much missed on the DVDs, is a major presence on the CDs of the Beckett Festivals radio productions. She plays Maddy Rooney to Barry McGoverns Dan in All That Fall, a raucous send-up of the turn-of-the-century Dublin gentility among whom Beckett was raised. This send-up, being Beckett, takes a turn first for the worse and then for the inexplicable (hed answer queries as to meaning in his enigmatic work by saying that, had he known what it meant, he wouldve written it in). Whitelaw is also Ada to David Warrilows Henry in Embers sustained plaint, where her arch, thin voice haunts Dans frustrated communion with the Killiney surf and his memory.
Beckett was haunted by Whitelaws voice since she premiered the English version of Play at Londons Old Vic, and to productive effect. She brings qualities of transparent concentration to these radio performances, playing to the strengths of this seldom-considered part of the Beckett oeuvre. Beckett Festival director Everett C. Frostss exceptional casting abounds on the CDs: McGovern, who plays several of the radio roles, is also Vladimir in the Beckett Projects Godot, and he has toured for years in his own Beckett compendium, Ill Go On. Warrilow staged and filmed The Lost Ones, a novella Beckett finished in the early 70s, and Beckett wrote the stage play A Piece of Monologue for him.
In addition to All That Falls lethal comedy and Embers grim isolation, the CDs include Rough for Radio II, where themes of interrogation and totalitarian methods found in the stage plays What Where and Catastrophe (the latter written for Vaclav Havel while he was imprisoned) are projected into the vulnerability of the listening, envisioning mind.
It is this evocative projection that is a keynote through all of Becketts work, and, though always present, this keynote is explicit to a supreme degree in the radio plays. Call it the fortuitous union of languages power (the adjunct of memorys need) with the inescapable presence of the disembodied voice, as played out in a theater festooned with nothing but obscurity and the lurking presence of silence. In the words of Beckett critic/commentator Linda Ben-Zvi: "One of the things about radio is radio is unencumbered by the need to create a geographical space, it is extra-temporal and extra-spatial
the power of radio is the ability to create a skullscape."
Two of Becketts most startling pieces are the voice/ music plays Words and Music and Cascando, written in the early 60s. They may also be among his least heard, a situation that the CD release helps rectify. Two pieces of a kind, they give the radio plays an acute and radical significance within Becketts work, and as indispensable results of modernist, boundary-broaching art. Meditations on creative process, that persistent goad and shadow of lived experience, both plays make strange bedfellows of a directive voice, a recitative voice (lyric-making in Words and Music, story telling in Cascando), and the perpetually undefined voice named Music.
It bears adding that Words and Music and Cascando are pieces where the commentaries that open and conclude the Beckett Festival recordings are most welcome. While it is hard to image what a listener might do if he or she came cold to this almost surgically revealing work, it takes but a glance to recognize how studiously people in general avoid reconciling the very differences these two pieces play upon. For the Beckett Festivals productions, composers Morton Feldman and William Kraft provide the musical voices, and these recordings of Words and Music and Cascando retain great value in part for their estimable contributions.
All of which leaves one to wonder enthusiastically about the future of Becketts theater: who might be captivated by one of the CDs, or drawn in by the prominent names featured on the DVDs, then go on to see more Beckett in the theater? And which stage artists will bring their talents to new performances of his dark, funny, rigorously rewarding work? Only time will tell, though in the meanwhile we can turn to these two troves of recorded performances, and prepare
Ordering information:
o Beckett on Film DVDs available through Thirteen/WNET, 1-800-336.1917
o Beckett Festival of radio plays CDs,
www.evergreenreview.com
An expanded version of this article, including further comments on Becketts roles for women and his never-produced stage play Eleutheria, is available on the authors page at www.nonserviamnyc.com
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The Rail invites you to a reading with Jason
Flores-Williams and Brian Carreira, along with musical
guest Steve Strunsky of the Lonesome Prairie Dogs.
Thurs., Sept. 22, 8:30 p.m.
Vox Pop--Flatbush, Brooklyn
www.voxpop.net
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OFF THE RAIL FALL 2005 at the Central Branch of the Brooklyn Public Library - Grand Army Plaza
(718) 230-2100 in the 2nd Floor Auditorium
Tuesday, Sept. 13 from 7 till 9
John Ashbery
Leslie Scalapino
Tuesday, Oct. 18 from 7 till 9
Kenneth Bernard
Lynda Schor
Tuesday, Nov. 15 from 7 till 9
Diane Williams
Christine Schutt
Curated and hosted by the Rail's Fiction Editor Donald Breckenridge
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The Independent Press Association-NY recently honored The Brooklyn Rail with the following awards:
1st place: Best article about Immigrant Issues or Racial Justice--Gabriel Thompson, "One Immigrant's Journey" (September 2004).
1st place: Best article about the Arts*--Amy Zimmer, "The Brownsville Rec. Center" (April 04)
2nd place: Best article about the Arts--Brian Carreira, "Harlem Arts: A Faux Renaissance" (Dec 03/Jan 04).
2nd place: Best editorial or commentary--T. Hamm, "The Issue is Free Speech" (Dec 03/Jan 04).
3rd Place: Best Investigative News Story--Marjory Garrison, "Minimum Matter of Survival" (May 04)
Honorable mention: Best Investigative News Story--Williams Cole, "Housing vs. the RNC" (June 04).
Honorable mention: Best Original Feature--Yvette Walton, "My Life in the NYPD" (Dec 03/Jan 04).
Come to the Brooklyn Waterfront Festival.
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