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Caryl Churchill Theatre, politics and the voice of women. Contemporary Literature in English ELTE Natália Pikli, PhD. English theatre after 1968. After 1968: no censorship (abolition of the office of the Lord Chamberlain – submitting plays to him before production began)
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Caryl ChurchillTheatre, politics and the voice of women Contemporary Literature in English ELTE Natália Pikli, PhD
English theatre after 1968 • After 1968: no censorship (abolition of the office of the Lord Chamberlain – submitting plays to him before production began) • changing the theatrical landscape – small theatres and groups in late 1960s-early 1970s: ‘fringe’ theatre • different approaches to drama – questioning the establishment • political/gender issues and realism/biting satire • experimentation – new forms of collaboration: The Joint Stock Company (Max-Stafford Clark), Out of Joint • small and independent theatrical venues (1968: cca 6 → late 1970s over 100 in London) • women as playwrights ("women can't do structure" ) – women as theatre (Monstrous Regiment) – feminism: 1967: Abortion Act + partially legalising homosexuality; 1970 Equal Pay Act propsed – 1975: a reality, liberalisation of divorce Subsidizing theatre: 1970s – public funding to small/inventive theatres too ↔ 1980s: Thatcherism: cuts! (Thatcherism = musicals, Cats, Andrew-Lloyd Webber – theatre as money-maker)
Caryl Churchill (born 1938) ” born in London, father political cartoonist, mother actress/model • lived in Montreal • Oxford, read English • 1960s: wife of a barrister, raising 3 small children AND writing radio plays for BBC (1961-72) • 1972: first major success – The Owners, Royal Court Theatre • 1974-75: playwright in residence (Royal Court Theatre, first woman playwright!) • 1970s: The Monstrous Regiment; Joint Stock Company • established, canonised – still active and fresh
The Royal Court Theatre: new playwrights, testing field • The Monstrous Regiment: 1970s feminism, all-female theatre company • The Joint Stock Company, Max Stafford Clark (ironical name!) – workshops → writing the play (communal/group AND individual experience/effort; actors – field work, improvisations led by the director, playwright taking part – writing the play- rehearsals start) – even Mad Forest, 1990 – with Ruminian students – Cloud 9, Serious Money, Fen
Major Plays for the Theatre • Owners (1972) • Light Shining in Buckinghamshire (1976) • Vinegar Tom (1976) • Traps (1976) • Cloud Nine (1979) • Top Girls (1982) • Fen (1983) • Softcops (1984) • A Mouthful of Birds (1986) • Serious Money (1987) • Mad Forest (1990) • Lives of the Great Poisoners (1991) • The Skriker (1994) • Blue Heart (1997) • This is a Chair (1999) • Far Away (2000) • A Number (2002) • Drunk Enough to Say I Love You? (2006) • Seven Jewish Children — a play for Gaza (2009) • Love and Information (2012)
Inventions in subject matter and form: postmodernism • non-naturalistic technique • women’s role, possibilities and position in society • The Owners (1972) – owning things and persons (capitalism and gender problems) – exploitation of others (politics and private lives) • form: ‘always expect the unexpected’ • dialogues: carefully constructed (‘engineering’) – with slashes/polyphonic dialogue; pauses are more important than the words – ‘look behind’ • multimedial forms
Cloud 9 (1979) • two acts: two timelines • 1880, Africa, model Victorian English family (Clive, Betty ♂ , Edward ♀, Victoria /doll/+ Betty’s mother), colonialism (servant, Joshua /white/ + explorer Harry Bagley), independent widower Mrs Saunders (‘go away’) • 1979 London – family members only age 25 years: Betty ♀, Victoria, Martin, Edward, Gerry, Lin, Cathy (♂ 5 year-old daughter of Lin )
Cloud 9 – irony and grim humour • title: ‘a feeling of extreme happiness or euphoria, feeling like you're floating on air’, 12 clouds – 9th inhabited – place of heaven (Urban Dictionary) • stereotypical Victorian happy family (cf. the songs at the beginning): underneath – unhappiness, frustration • adultery (Clive-Mrs Saunders, Betty ♥ Harry), homosexual desire: Ellen, Nurse ♥ Betty, with pedophilia: Edward ♥ Harry, END of Act One: another forced ‘happy’ marriage: Ellen and Harry • Cross-casting: • Betty: stereotypical Victorian wife, trying to live up to the expectations of (male) society, silent and obedient – played by a male actor • homosexual Edward by an actress • black servant by a white actor • young daughter by a mute doll HUMOUR AND CONSCIOUSNESS-RAISING: gender and social stereotypes highlighted and problematised
Cloud 9 – the present day • SEX – after 1960s: liberation ≠ happiness • female sexuality: to be feared in 1880 (dark, mysterious force) – problematic even after emancipation • Martin/Victoria: unhappy marriage, Lin: Lesbian desire for Victoria, Edward’s unfaithful and callous male partner, Gerry, Cathy – a disturbing presence for her mother, Betty leaving Clive = insecurity, strange ‘living arrangements’ (Lin, Victoria, Edward, Cathy)
Brechtian theatre – teach/alienation • episodic rather than ‘plotwise’ • no ‘psychological realism’ • Brechtian songs (stereotypes, eg. Edward/Betty: ‘Boy’s best friend is her mother’) – alienation effect + irony • Cross-casting – no easy sympathy with the characters on stage – the world is unsympathetic • doublings – eg. Fen 22 roles by 6 players • ‘scizophrenia’ – further explored in later plays (Lives of the Great Poisoners – dancers/singers/actors – split personality The Skriker, A Number)
Top Girls (1982) • First scene: Marlene, successful businesswoman of the age invites a quintet of famous historical-legendary women to celebrate her recent success at a restaurant: • Isabella Bird (1831-1904) Victorian traveller between the ages of 40 and 70 • Lady Nijo (b. 1258) Japanese courtesan of the Emperor, later Buddhist nun travelling on foot through Japan • Pope Joan, disguised as a man, Pope between 854-856 • Dull Gret – Brueghel’s painting, leading a grotesque attack of women against hell and devils • Patient Griselda – a legendary figure of female patience and obedience (Boccaccio, Petrarch, Chaucer) – a peasant girl, Marquis marrying her if promised full obedience, tested (children taken away, sent home, arranging for a future marriage), finally rewarded • MARLENE: ”We’ve all come a long way. To our courage and the way we changed our lives and our extraordinary achievements.”
Top Girls • as their stories unfold: success came with a price: loneliness, pain, suffering, killed or kidnapped or abandoned children, losses of loved ones • anachronism and humour/irony at several layers: GRISELDA: I never eat pudding. MARLENE: Griselda, I hope you’re not anorexic. We’re having pudding, I am, and getting nice and fat. GRISELDA: Oh if everyone is. I don’t mind. • (self-)exploitation – Marlene: ‘the capitalist internalised’ – male aggression, ruthlessness, choosing her career over her daughter=pain • sisters: Marlene (London, single, career woman) v Joyce (raising M’s daughter, country, isolation, emotional deprivation – no real alternatives
The Skriker (1994) • a magical, nightmarish fairy tale + contemporary concerns (teenage mothers, mental institution, post-natal psychosis and killing) • longing to be loved: symbol – The Skriker: ancient witch/fairy
The Skriker • fairy tale elements: good girl (Lily)- bad girl (Josie) – after a kiss with the Skriker: gold/toads out of their mouths • shape-shifting/gender-switching of the Skriker (beggar, kid, man, etc.) – attractive and repellent • wishes – be careful what you wish for! (Josie trying to save Lily – going to the underworld) • long monologues of the Skriker – eg. Prologue: an invented language: pile of words, nonsensical, Joycean, nursery rhymes, fragmented → obscure but palpable meaning • dialogue: Josie/Lily/Skriker • mute characters – dancers (multimediality) – nightmarish vision (see next slide: dinner in the dark underworld)
The Skriker • love ≈ Skriker: if you love/accept her – she sticks on you, unbearable, when she’s gone – you miss her • granting wishes – stealing/robbing love from others • Josie/Lily: rivals for the Skriker • splitting of the identity (newborn-killing v careful mother) • finally: Lily sacrificing herself for her baby, Josie and the Skriker – so as even she would not remain unloved – Skriker in her full glory again
A Number (2002) • Salter: a man in his early sixties, he was married and had one son. His wife killed herself by throwing herself under a tube train. A few years later he had his son Bernard cloned. • Bernard (B2): His son, thirty-five, first clone of his first son, made to replace original son. • Bernard (B1): His son, forty. First son of Salter, Mother committed suicide when he was two years old. • Michael Black: His son, thirty-five. Another clone of Salter’s first son. He is married with three children, and is a mathematics teacher.
A Number • contemporary concerns/anxieties: cloning (Dolly the sheep, a kitten, a man?) + age-old philosophical/theatrical question: Who am I? • father: facing past sins/facing the sons (sons never meet on stage) • an abandoned son • moral problem of cloning • cloning not only one but ‘a number’ • fragmented dialogue,unfinished sentences, interruptions (no punctuation): nothing/too much to say – spectators’/readers’ task – to make sense • the world as they had know it, collapsed – their speech
‘summary’ • feminist? or a female viewpoint on the world: women are just as silly, ruthless or frustrated as men • leftist/ anti-capitalist? Or: against any economic/emotional deprivation, writing on sexual/gender politics in general • the world v the individual: politics in the private sphere • didactic? Never – never only one viewpoint, never sentimental, never demonizing • Caryl Churchill: a playwright’s duty is ‘to ask questions’ HUNGARY: Vinegar Tom – in Átváltozások 19. 2000., Holdfény (Európa, antológia, The Skriker – Hamvai Kornél), Caryl Churchill: Drámák (Európa, 2007) • Performances: The Skriker/Az Iglic – Vígszínház 2000, Börcsök E., Katona J. Színház-Bábszínház 2013; A Number/Sokan, Szöveg Színház, 2006, Cloud 9, 2009 K.V. Társulat; Blue Heart/Kék szív, 2008 MU Színház • Films: A Number, 2008, Top Girls BBC
In-yer-face theatre and the latest generation of playwrights • www.inyerface-theatre.com – young, violent and aggressive theatre of the 1990s-2010s – esp. Sarah Kane, Mark Ravenhill, Jezz Butterworth • Series: Methuen Drama. Contemporary Dramatists = ‘canon’ • Mike Bartlett (homosexuality, middle class, everyday themes) • Jezz Butterworth (Jerusalem; young, daring, black comedy) • Sarah Kane (1971-99, 24:7, Blasted; psychology, brutal, suicide) • David Harrowen (Blackbird) SZKÉNÉ • Martin McDonagh (1970, inspired by Tarantino and films, In Bruges/Erőszakik/, Irish but distance from Ireland – Synge-ean lge and Tarantinoesque violence; The Beauty Queen of Leenane, 1996, The Cripple of Inishmaan, 1996 – RADNÓTI SZ.; A Skull in Connemara, 1997; The Lonesome West, 1997) now: ‘Vaknyugat’ Átrium Film-Színház.