Source:http://www.infoplease.com/encyclopedia/entertainment/dramawestern-twentieth-century-drama.html
During the 20th cent., especially after World War I, Western
drama became more internationally unified and less the product of separate
national literary traditions. Throughout the century realism, naturalism, and
symbolism (and various combinations of these) continued to inform important
plays. Among the many 20th-century playwrights who have written what can be
broadly termed naturalist dramas are Gerhart Hauptmann (German), John
Galsworthy (English), John Millington Synge and Sean O'Casey (Irish), and Eugene
O'Neill, Clifford Odets, and Lillian Hellman (American).
An important movement in early 20th-century drama was
expressionism. Expressionist playwrights tried to convey the dehumanizing
aspects of 20th-century technological society through such devices as minimal
scenery, telegraphic dialogue, talking machines, and characters portrayed as
types rather than individuals. Notable playwrights who wrote expressionist
dramas include Ernst Toller and Georg Kaiser (German), Karel Čapek (Czech), and
Elmer Rice and Eugene O'Neill (American). The 20th cent. also saw the attempted
revival of drama in verse, but although such writers as William Butler Yeats,
W. H. Auden, T. S. Eliot, Christopher Fry, and MaxwellAnderson produced
effective results, verse drama was no longer an important form in English. In
Spanish, however, the poetic dramas of Federico García Lorca are placed among
the great works of Spanish literature.
Three vital figures of 20th-century drama are the American
Eugene O'Neill, the German Bertolt Brecht, and the Italian Luigi Pirandello.
O'Neill's body of plays in many forms—naturalistic, expressionist, symbolic,
psychological—won him the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1936 and indicated the
coming-of-age of American drama. Brecht wrote dramas of ideas, usually
promulgating socialist or Marxist theory. In order to make his audience more
intellectually receptive to his theses, he endeavored—by using expressionist
techniques—to make them continually aware that they were watching a play, not
vicariously experiencing reality. For Pirandello, too, it was paramount to fix
an awareness of his plays as theater; indeed, the major philosophical concern
of his dramas is the difficulty of differentiating between illusion and
reality.
World War II and its attendant horrors produced a widespread
sense of the utter meaninglessness of human existence. This sense is
brilliantly expressed in the body of plays that have come to be known
collectively as the theater of the absurd. By abandoning traditional devices of
the drama, including logical plot development, meaningful dialogue, and
intelligible characters, absurdist playwrights sought to convey modern
humanity's feelings of bewilderment, alienation, and despair—the sense that
reality is itself unreal. In their plays human beings often portrayed as dupes,
clowns who, although not without dignity, are at the mercy of forces that are
inscrutable.
Probably the most famous plays of the theater of the absurd
are Eugene Ionesco's Bald Soprano (1950) and Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot
(1953). The sources of the theater of the absurd are diverse; they can be found
in the tenets of surrealism, Dadaism (see Dada), and existentialism; in the
traditions of the music hall,vaudeville, and burlesque; and in the films of
Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton. Playwrights whose works can be roughly
classed as belonging to the theater of the absurd are Jean Genet (French), Max
Frisch and Friedrich Dürrenmatt (Swiss), Fernando Arrabal (Spanish), and the
early plays of Edward Albee (American). The pessimism and despair of the 20th
cent. also found expression in the existentialist dramas of Jean-Paul Sartre,
in the realistic and symbolic dramas of Arthur Miller, Tennessee Williams, and
Jean Anouilh, and in the surrealist plays of Jean Cocteau.
Somewhat similar to the theater of the absurd is the
so-called theater of cruelty, derived from the ideas of Antonin Artaud, who,
writing in the 1930s, foresaw a drama that would assault its audience with
movement and sound, producing a visceral rather than an intellectual reaction.
After the violence of World War II and the subsequent threat of the atomic
bomb, his approach seemed particularly appropriate to many playwrights.
Elements of the theater of cruelty can be found in the brilliantly abusive
language of John Osborne's Look Back in Anger (1956) and Edward Albee's Who's
Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1962), in the ritualistic aspects of some of Genet's
plays, in the masked utterances and enigmatic silences of Harold Pinter's
"comedies of menace," and in the orgiastic abandon of Julian Beck's
Paradise Now! (1968); it was fully expressed in Peter Brooks's production of
Peter Weiss's Marat/Sade (1964).
During the last third of the 20th cent. a few continental
European dramatists, such as Dario Fo in Italy
and Heiner Müller in Germany ,
stand out in the theater world. However, for the most part, the countries of
the continent saw an emphasis on creative trends in directing rather than a
flowering of new plays. In the United States
and England ,
however, many dramatists old and new continued to flourish, with numerous plays
of the later decades of the 20th cent. (and the early 21st cent.) echoing the
trends of the years preceding them.
Realism in a number of guises—psychological, social, and
political—continued to be a force in such British works as David Storey's Home
(1971), Sir Alan Ayckbourn's Norman Conquests trilogy (1974), and David Hare's
Amy's View (1998); in such Irish dramas as Brian Friel's Dancing at Lughnasa
(1990) and Martin McDonagh's 1990s Leenane trilogy; and in such American plays
as Jason Miller's That Championship Season (1972), Lanford Wilson's Talley's
Folly (1979), and John Guare's Six Degrees of Separation (1990). In keeping
with the tenor of the times, many of these and other works of the period were
marked by elements of wit, irony, and satire.
A witty surrealism also characterized some of the late 20th
cent.'s theater, particularly the brilliant wordplay and startling
juxtapositions of the many plays of England 's Tom Stoppard. In
addition, two of late-20th-century America's most important dramatists, Sam
Shepard and David Mamet (as well as their followers and imitators), explored
American culture with a kind of hyper-realism mingled with echoes of the
theater of cruelty in the former's Buried Child (1978), the latter's Glengarry
Glen Ross (1983), and other works. While each exhibited his own very
distinctive voice and vision, both playwrights achieved many of their effects
through stark settings, austere language in spare dialog, meaningful silences,
the projection of a powerful streak of menace, and outbursts of real or implied
violence.
The late decades of the 20th century were also a time of
considerable experiment and iconoclasm. Experimental dramas of the 1960s and
70s by such groups as Beck's Living Theater and Jerzy Grotowski's Polish
Laboratory Theatre were followed by a mixing and merging of various kinds of
media with aspects of postmodernism, improvisational techniques, performance
art, and other kinds of avant-garde theater. Some of the era's more innovative
efforts included productions by theater groups such as New York's La MaMa
(1961–) and Mabou Mines (1970–) and Chicago's Steppenwolf Theatre Co. (1976–);
the Canadian writer-director Robert Lepage's intricate, sometimes multilingual works,
e.g. Tectonic Plates (1988); the inventive one-man shows of such monologuists
as Eric Bogosian, Spalding Gray, and John Leguizamo; the transgressive drag
dramas of Charles Ludlam's Ridiculous Theater, e.g., The Mystery of Irma Vep
(1984); and the operatic multimedia extravaganzas of Robert Wilson, e.g. White
Raven (1999).
Thematically, the social upheavals of the 1960s, 70s, and
80s—particularly the civil rights and women's movements, gay liberation, and
the AIDS crisis—provided impetus for new plays that explored the lives of
minorities and women. Beginning with Lorraine Hansberry's A Raisin in the Sun
(1959), drama by and about African Americans emerged as a significant
theatrical trend. In the 1960s plays such as James Baldwin's Blues for Mr.
Charley (1964), Amiri Baraka's searing Dutchman (1964), and Charles Gordone's No
Place to Be Somebody (1967) explored black American life; writers including Ed
Bullins (e.g., The Taking of Miss Janie, 1975), Ntozake Shange (e.g., For
Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow is Enuf, 1976) and
Charles Fuller (e.g., A Soldier's Play, 1981) carried these themes into later
decades. One of the most distinctive and prolific of the century's
African-American playwrights, August Wilson, debuted on Broadway in 1984 with
Ma Rainey's Black Bottom and continued to define the black American experience
in his ongoing dramatic cycle into the next century.
Feminist and other women-centered themes dramatized by
contemporary female playwrights were plentiful in the 1970s and extended in the
following decades. Significant figures included England 's Caryl Churchill (e.g.,
the witty Top Girls, 1982), the Cuban-American experimentalist Maria Irene
Forńes (e.g., Fefu and Her Friends,1977) and American realists including Beth
Henley (e.g., Crimes of the Heart, 1978), Marsha Norman (e.g., 'Night Mother,
1982), and Wendy Wasserstein (e.g., The Heidi Chronicles, 1988). Skilled
monologuists also provided provocative female-themed one-women shows such as
Eve Ensler's The Vagina Monologues (1996) and various solo theatrical
performances by Lily Tomlin, Karen Finley, Anna Deveare Smith, Sarah Jones, and
others.
Gay themes (often in works by gay playwrights) also marked
the later decades of the 20th cent. Homosexual characters had been treated
sympathetically but in the context of pathology in such earlier 20th-century
works as Lillian Hellman's The Children's Hour (1934) and Robert Anderson's Tea
and Sympathy (1953). Gay subjects were presented more explicitly during the
1960s, notably in the English farces of Joe Orton and Matt Crowley's witty but
grim portrait of pre-Stonewall American gay life, The Boys in the Band (1968).
In later years gay experience was explored more frequently and with greater
variety and openness, notably in Britain in Martin Sherman'sBent (1979) and
Peter Gill's Mean Tears (1987) and in the United States in Jane Chambers' Last
Summer at Bluefish Cove (1980), Harvey Fierstein's Torch Song Trilogy (1981),
Larry Kramer's The Normal Heart (1986), David Henry Hwang's M. Butterfly
(1988), which also dealt with Asian identity, and Paul Rudnick's Jeffrey
(1993). Tony Kushner's acclaimed two-part Angels in America (1991–92) is generally
considered the century's most brilliant and innovative theatrical treatment of
the contemporary gay world.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.