Via MeFi, a link to the first act of a Kushner play, Only We Who Guard The Mystery Shall Be Unhappy. Kushner wrote a new scene on Monday which you can also read. A funny funny man.
Tag Archives: theater
mundane and mysterious
I spent most of yesterday hanging out with Abby, who was in from out of town. We went to the Castro and up Noe Valley to catch some of the crazy hilly street views and work up an appetite for the ultra cheap sushi at Yokoso Nippon (15th and Church). Nothing like $5 for a 7 piece nigiri combo, although now it’s more like $6 since they raised their prices. We pretty much ate ourselves silly, drank all the tea, and probably overstayed our welcome. One of these days I will learn to eat octopus nigiri in one bite. It was nice to catch up over a meal, and it felt very comfortable, even though we hadn’t talked in months really.
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Tony Kushner speaks out
There’s a mini-interview with Tony Kushner in the NY Times. Some quotes:
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misc notes
Apparently when the battery is reconnected to a car for the first time, it spends the next 10-15 minutes “learning the idle,” which determines how it is supposed to behave while idling. Any activity during this time goes into this learned idle behavior. So if your battery drains down and you have to get a jump, your car may have forgotten its idle and may need to be retrained. My newly retrained and retuned car is noticeably better. It’s amazing what a little TLC can do.
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politics and theatre
Many of the plays that I admire most are overtly political — Marat/Sade (Weiss), Mother Courage and Her Children (Brecht), In The Heart of America (Wallace), Light Shining in Buckinghamshire (Churchill), Marisol (Rivera), and Bhoma (Sircar), for example. I appreciate plays in a different way than I appreciate film or literature. When I see a play and fall in love with it, I want to get involved with it, to grapple with the text and bring it to performance. The theatre is aural, visual, and immediate, which gives it a different flavor than a novel, poem, or movie. The thing I like most about these political plays is the way in which they make their message theatrical.
That is not to say they must be single-mindedly bashing you over the head with some (usually leftist) “point.” A good production of Brecht is not overtly Marxist, but shows the flaws in the way in which society works. Revolution is rarely made the action item of the day, for a generic revolution (as advocated by those Socialist Worker touts on Sproul Plaza) is not going to solve the immediate problem at hand. In Good Woman of Sezuan, Brecht posits that in order to avoid being poor, one must be cruel. When Shen Te comes into some money, she cannot possibly keep more for herself then for her starving neighbors. The poor are shown as opportunistic, and the rich are forced to exploit them, hardly the noble proletariat oppressed by Mr. Moneybags. Of course, that is one way to read it, but I think it’s akin to reading Hamlet as a play about sex-obsessed guy who can’t decide whether to kill himself or not, and then decides to kill his parents. These directorial choices are what make or break a play in terms of nuance.
Directors can spin a story many ways, and herein lies the problem with political plays in the professional theater. In professional theater, you have to satisfy the audience and give them their money’s worth, which leads to two possible outcomes when you produce a political play. If you want simply to entertain, then you produce the play with very little political investment, toning it down, if you will, to make it more palatable for the audience. You play up the jokes and play down the dog-kicking. If, on the other hand, your audience is a bunch of Cambridge or Berkeley intellectuals, they may want to come to the theater to be educated, so you turn your production into a mini-lecture, an intellectual exercise. The need to tell the message is killed, because the dominant need of the professional theater is to stay afloat and get enough subscribers.
The ART has fallen into both traps at different times. One of the first plays I saw there was Dario Fo’s We Won’t Pay, We Won’t Pay, which is a farce about the high price or groceries. It was a farce alright, but I felt about the same as after A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum on Broadway — sides aching and head empty. More recently I saw Mother Courage and although I was transfixed by some of the performances, the direction was opaque to me. There were terra-cotta Chinese figures, stylized fight practices, and ominous droning for the the scene changes, which I felt added a stylistic noise with no substance. What was worse, I came out of the theater with the thought “war is bad — look at how that poor woman went along with it and then suffered.” It was an almost Aristotelian take on a Brechtian play. I’m all for genre-bending, but I don’t think it follows that if you have the politics of the playwright then you necessarily experience a catharsis (as in Aristotle) from the play where others would be forced to muddle out the open question (as in Brecht).
These traps are also prevalent in the academic theater, where one might hope that the freedom of speech provided on campus might free the director from the commercial limitations of the professional theater. However, the most insidious trap of all is the open casting process for college productions. In order to a political play to have an impact, the actors must be invested in the message and the story that the director is trying to tell. In this case, they must both understand and desire to tell that story, a tall order for most campuses. The drama majors audition for plays on campus because they need practicum credit to graduate, because it’s their only opportunity to do a large-scale production that semester, and because their friends are auditioning. There are very few people who audition for a play because they know it and really want to act in it, and of those, even fewer are cast because they are not usually as well trained as the drama majors. The director is then faced with a motley crew of actors who are all good but who are not necessarily there for the same reason s/he is.
It’s nearly impossible to do with six actors, let alone twenty-nine. When I did Bhoma, I auditioned because it was an Indian play, I was the president of Dramashop, and I liked to act. I didn’t have a great investment in the politics of water in India, I certainly didn’t understand the play very well, and I had only read because we were selecting plays for that season. The other five actors in the production were probably there for similar reasons. In the end, our production was not as good as it could have been because we didn’t understand and need to tell the story we were telling. The barrage of cultural references and stylized choreography didn’t come together to form a coherent picture in our heads, and thus we couldn’t transmit that to the audience. In Marat/Sade, coordinating nearly thirty actors into sending a coherent message was not even part of the equation. Instead, the director asked us to individually work out our attitudes towards the ideas proposed in the play and to present a multiplicity of comments on the action. That too failed, since all fractional shades of interpretation are reduced to the lowest common denominator. I had really hoped the play would be more powerful than it was, but I don’t think there was a way for that to happen.
The upshot is that in order to really make a strong statement, to grab the audience and shake them to get them to wake up, to incite them to take action, you have to do it with a group of committed individuals, an ensemble that is there to do that play because they all want to say something. The cast of Marat/Sade was divided on how they wanted the audience to react, and thus we succeeded in confusing many of them. To do a play like that at a university with maximum impact, you would need to graft a political consciousness onto the actors. I certainly didn’t feel invested in the whole play, and I failed to articulate a coherent attitude towards revolution. I think that Berkeley’s decision to produce Marat/Sade was a good one, and I think the production was good, but it fell short of the play’s potential.
Perhaps what makes the play so good is that each production can capture some of the nuance and can make a political statement, but no production can get it all, and no production can live up to the potential evoked by reading through the script. The goal should be to tranform the possibility of interpretation into a possibility of change, to simultaneously say that here is how things are but yet they need not be this way. The whole enterprise has to be made concrete, but it’s a goal worth aiming for.
authors
I’m not the sort of person who goes in for lists like the Top 100 Novels or 100 Best GLBT Books mainly because they remind me of the sort of crap that Charles Murray likes to write about in Human Accomplishment. Many universities have a class on Great Works, against which I have railed, for I find the point misguided. How are you ever going to cover all of the great novels? How can you suppose to make ranked lists of authors and say he and she are in, but that guy just doesn’t make the cut?
On the other hand, I do believe that in order to be a good theater artist, you should know many plays, and also that you should know the greats, even if they aren’t your favorites. I don’t think you have to have read every play Mamet’s written, but you should read at least one, so that you know vaguely what Mamet is like. There are holes in my dramatic knowledge and I want to plug them up — I still haven’t read anything by Hellman, Odets, Fornes, or Wasserstein, but I’m going to correct that in time. I feel the same way about film now — I like movies, and there are some directors whose work I’ve never seen, much to my shame. In the last year I saw my first Buñuel (The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoise) and Godard (A Woman is a Woman). I just rented Cassavetes’ Faces, and will be getting my first Fassbinder soon (The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant).
But when I read this article where Martin Amis talks about Saul Bellow, I realized I’ve never read anything by Bellow, only one story by Singer, and half of Portnoy’s Complaint. I’ve never read a novel by Updike, D.H. Lawrence, or Hardy. On the other hand, I’ve read almost everything by Lethem, Borges, and Calvino. I lack a sort of literary literacy, and perhaps it would behoove me to do a survey of those authors who have shaped literature through the ages. For every new book, an old one perhaps. And at the top of the list, Saul Bellow. I’m open to suggestions.
free scripts
my first publication
This was my life recently — I had worked on an algorithm for emulating a FIFO buffer using a switch and clocked delay lines last summer, but couldn’t manage to get my lower bound and upper bound on the switch size to coincide, so I sort of figured that my effort wasn’t really worth it.
On the 13th I was approached by the professor I worked with on this project last summer and was told he wanted to send it to the Globecom 2004 conference. The deadline was 12 AM today. So I worked on the proofs for my bounds, typed it all up, and sent to him. A few days later he got back to me and asked for some better figures, which I made. Then on Friday he said he had reformulated my proof a different way, because mine was too obfuscated. It seemed to me that he had misunderstood my algorthm (because of the obfuscation, perhaps), so it ended with me saying I would rework the entire proof.
At this point we started q2q for Marat/Sade, so I was in the theater 12 hours a day and couldn’t really use my laptop. But I sat on stage and during holds I scribbled out a new proof. Around dinner time on Saturday I got an email saying that he had worked out the misunderstanding, so I didn’t need to work out a new proof. I celebrated by partying with the cast that evening. Sunday was more q2q — at lunch I got another email saying that there was an error in one of my proofs and that unless I could fix it, the paper was a no-go. I spent the rest of q2q and rehearsal revising the proof in little breaks. Then before leaving I typed it up, planning on sending it when I got home.
When I got home, I sent the email, but had gotten another one saying he had proved the lemma anyway, and all was good to go except for a figure that needed to be fixed. The deadline was a mere few hours away. I managed to get the figure done, and the paper made it in by the deadline. My first real publication ever, possibly. Now he thinks we can send it to a journal if we can append a literature review to contextualize it.
There’s a lot to learn from this experience of alternating rapidly between “this paper is wrong and not worth publishing” to “it just needs a few more fixes.” It was certainly stressful, and the fact that I have a lot more at stake in terms of my career by having something published made it even worse.
One of the things this professor said to me is that “proofs are meant to be machine checked” — this runs contrary to the pedagogical approach to proof-writing that I am familar with. In many of my mathematics classes, starting with Mike Artin‘s 18.701-702 abstract algebra class, the emphasis was on building an intuitive notion of why certain propositions were true, and also (more subtly I think) on the process by which certain results were reached. It’s important to know that because A is true, then B is true, but there’s also value to know that B is true because A implies C and C implies B, not because A implies D, since D does not imply B. The route is important. In engineering papers of this type the focus is the result, and the proof is there more or less to cover your ass. As such, it should be concise and almost mechanical, as all good ass covers are.
A related lesson is that once you want to package some idea, it’s good to write it from scratch. Change all of your pet notation, which might be legacy notation from previous approaches to the problem. Condense lemmas into super-lemmas. That way, when you give it to your co-author, they don’t develop misunderstandings about what you are trying to do and then throw up their arms in frustration, saying that your algorithm is totally wrong.
Finally, it’s never over until the fat lady sings. The moment one commits to submitting a piece of research for publication, it will remain an albatross of stress around your neck, squawking loudly and pecking you mercilessly until you submit the damn thing. If the bird seems to be quiet for a little bit, that’s just because it’s preening, and you can be damn sure it will resume attacking you at the least convenient moment.
But then at the end you have something to be proud of.
betting on hamlet
The Times Literary Supplement has a funny discussion (via MeFi) on how to analyze the odds on the Laertes-Hamlet dueling matchup. A little close reading plus some probabilistic analysis can only lead to the conclusion that one shouldn’t take chances on definitive interpretations of Shakespearean texts.
obsession
I think I am obsessed with professionalism in performance groups — people need to be quiet backstage, even if the audience chatter is loud, and they should not mess with the curtains, play with the handicap elevator, and so on. I think it’s a comment on our ADD society that a group of 16 people cannot just stand still and concentrate on the performance to come for 10 minutes. God forbid they have to sing a piece for 10 minutes, I think some might wander off to the bathroom halfway through. Ranting aside, however, I think our performance today was pretty decent, although Poulenc is probably still spinning six feet under.
Marat/Sade rehearsals highlight this problem of people remaining quiet and focussed, although there some fault has to be given to the way in which rehearsal time is (not) used. We go for 4 hours and mostly stand around. In such a visual production, where stage images convey a lot of information to the audience, having bodies to fill the space in rehearsal is important. People start to resent “having nothing to do,” however, and there’s a limit to which you can practice the 3 gestures you have with no context while something else is going on. I’m not sure there is a way to balance the needs of the production against the needs of the actors, but it is true that everyone can get up to 3 units, no matter how many lines they have, and that should pacify psople to some degree. A little sugar to sweeten the deal.