|
T.
S. Eliot
Thomas
Stearns Eliot was born in St. Louis, Missouri, in 1888.
He is not only one of the greatest playwrights of the twentieth
century, but he is also the poet
of that century. Educated at
Harvard University, he went to Oxford for graduate work, but his return to
the States was interrupted by World War I.
The first volume of his letters, edited by his second wife, Valerie,
depicts him as a lonely, shy and innocent youth, always short of money, and
easy prey for an uninhibited, off-center English woman older than he.
With the connivance of her family who were aware of her mental
problems, Vivienne and Tom were married at the Hampstead town hall.
Despite
his marital difficulties with Vivienne (skewed in her favor by the play and
film "Tom and Viv"), he wrote poetry and criticism that came to
the notice of the Bloomsbury Group, writers and artists including Virginia
Woolf, who lived in that area of London, where Tom also resided.
Woolf and her husband Leonard founded the Hogarth Press, which
published Tom's collected poems, including "The Love Song of
J. Alfred Prufrock" and "Portrait of a Lady."
"The Waste Land" appeared in 1922 in Criterion , a
literary magazine which Eliot was editing.
Of
special interest to lovers of drama is Eliot's use of dialogue in these
early poems, which are important works of modern literature.
"Prufrock" (1917) is an interior monologue by a overly-shy
young man who thinks of himself as old, and who is uncomfortable in society,
where he wastes his time on the trivialities that make up his life. ("I
have measured out my life with coffee spoons.") He realizes he is a nonentity in
society, especially with women, for whom he longs, but at the same
time fears their ridicule.("And should I then presume? / And how should
I begin?")
Eliot’s
wording in “Prufrock” is far from poetic diction; the words are those of
speech or silent thought, and as does thought, “Prufrock” jumps from one
subject to another without the transitions that were expected in literature
at that time. So that another
important contribution made by Eliot was to popularize the "stream of
consciousness" which reaches its height in James Joyce's Ulysses,
a work Eliot championed on its first appearance, while most critics
dismissed it as incomprehensible.
"Portrait
of a Lady" combines the speech of a lady who is visited dutifully by a
young man who would rather be somewhere else and who perhaps is using their
acquaintance to further his own ends, which may be social or even monetary. It contrasts her actual dialogue during his visits with his
thoughts, which he recognizes,
with
some sensitivity, are not always admirable.
"The
Waste Land" makes use of dialogue throughout, but of special theatrical
interest are the two scenes at the end of section II, "A Game of
Chess." Like
"Portrait," it is based on contrasts: first, a marriage
relationship between an upper-class man and woman, who sound like Tom and
Viv, when the wife insists: "Speak to me. Why
do you never speak. Speak./
What are you thinking of? What thinking? What?
/ I never know what you are thinking."
The second scene is set in a pub, a monologue by a lower-class woman
who gives an account of her advice to a friend about how to behave now that
her husband is returning from the army: "He's been in the army four
years, he wants a good time/ And if you don't give it him, there's others
will, I said." Intervening
is the bartender's customary announcement of closing time, symbolizing more
than the closing of the pub: "Hurry Up Please It's Time."
"Sweeney
Agonistes" is an unfinished play with rhythmic dialogue and music,
which Eliot labels "Fragments of an Aristophanic Melodram," in
imitation of the classic Greek satirist.
Performed by the Birkenhead Exchange Company in a pub theater in
London about a decade ago, it was most effective, bringing in Eliot's other
Sweeney poems, and suggesting that the work, a jazzy, disjointed, avant
garde musical, was ahead of its time. Dusty
and Doris, two call girls, tell their fortunes in the cards, and then
welcome a group of men. Sweeney
enters with a song about the South Seas ( a popular song subject then) that
turns somber and eerie.
In
another fragmentary poem by Eliot, "Coriolan," the dialogue is
that of the common people waiting for the triumphal parade of Coriolanus,
which combines Roman elements of the triumphal march (virgins, urns,
temples) with those of World War I: rifles, machine guns, and airplanes, all
suggesting that the enthusiasm of parade-watchers celebrating destruction is
the same no matter the century.
In
1935 Eliot was asked by Canterbury Cathedral to write a play for
presentation at their Festival in June. His first play, "Murder in the
Cathedral" centers upon the character of Saint Thomas Becket, whom King
Henry created Archbishop of Canterbury.
Becket returns to the Cathedral after seven years abroad and is
murdered there in 1170, after which he was sanctified.
Although the priests and the chorus of women of Canterbury urge
Thomas to save himself, he refuses. Nor
does he succumb to the tempters, who offer him pleasure and power, but the
last temptation, pride, is the most difficult to resist, being the
"greatest treason/To do the right deed for the wrong reason," that
is, to aspire to glory after his death.
But he does overcome the temptation, preaches his Christmas sermon
from the pulpit, and is murdered by four knights, who justify their action
in an address to the audience.
"Murder
in the Cathedral" is an amazing achievement, for it is not only great
poetry but it is great spoken poetry, that is, dialogue.
The wording is simple but rhythmic, sometimes riming, always
balanced, at times using repetition for emphasis, as the Chorus, made up of
the "poor women of Canterbury," repeat the line "living and
partly living" to describe their uneventful lives. The play is frequently revived, staged in churches and
theaters; a fine production was a highlight of the Edinburgh Festival in
recent years, offered by the National Youth Theatre of England.
Eliot's
second play, "The Family Reunion" (1939), a modern version of the
Orestes legend, was recently revived by the Royal Shakespeare Company. Greg
Hicks played Lord Harry, the guilt-ridden son of an aristocratic family
returning to his ancestral home. He
imagines he is being pursued (as was Orestes) by the Furies, mythic
punishers of the guilty, for he believes that he may have been responsible
for the death of his wife at sea. Margaret
Tyzak was Amy, Harry's mother, a tough, unforgiving matriarch who presides
over Wishwood, their home, and who wishes to maintain all as it has been, to
cover up or ignore any unpleasantness that might mar the homecoming.
In contrast to Amy are two forgiving women, Agatha, Harry's aunt, and
young Mary, whom Amy had intended for Harry before he married another.
It is Agatha and Mary who save Harry from his despair and banish the
Furies, who in the legend become the Eumenides, the "kindly ones."
While the dialogue is poetry, it sounds like everyday speech, using
balance, rhythm, and exactness of diction to depict the social chatting of
relatives gathered for a party or the agonized confession of Harry.
The final sequence shifts gears and becomes both lyric and
ritualistic.
"The
Cocktail Party" is Eliot's most successful play, which debuted at the
Edinburgh Festival in 1949 and subsequently was performed both in London and
on Broadway to acclaim from critics and audiences.
It is a drawing-room comedy (then popular on the London stage,
exemplified by the plays of Noel Coward and Terence Rattigan) with a
difference. Not only is it
better written and more polished and sophisticated than any drawing room
comedy before and since, but it treats with wit and compassion that most
serious of subjects, how should we live our lives?
"The
Cocktail Party" begins and ends at a party in the drawing room of
Edward and Lavinia, whose marriage is breaking up.
Who, in modern times, could counsel them but a psychiatrist?
Reilly, however, is more than a psychiatrist, just as Julia and Alex,
social gadflies and friends of the troubled couple, are more than they seem.
With devastating truth and fascinating insights, delivered with the
lightest and most eloquent of touches, it is revealed that Edward is a man
incapable of loving, and Lavinia a woman incapable of being loved. The
psychiatrist informs them of this, and announces, "you begin to see, I
hope,/ How much you have in common. . . . /The best of a bad job is all any
of us make of it." There are shocks throughout, mostly of recognition, but the
surprise that is no surprise when one re-reads the play is what happens to
Celia. Read the play, if you
don't know it, and if you do, hopefully you will agree with this appraisal.
Although
I have not seen the play since the opening night on Broadway in the early
fifties, I can still hear and see Alec Guinness as the psychiatrist, Irene
Worth as Celia, and Cathleen Nesbitt as Julia when I read this play.
Eliot
was not as fortunate in the reception of his subsequent plays, "The
Confidential Clerk" and "The Elder Statesman," though modern
productions well directed might
reveal values missed the first time around.
Eliot's
influence on English poetic drama can be seen in the verse plays of
Christopher Fry as well as in the verse adaptations by Ted Hughes of
"The Oresteia," for the Royal National Theatre in London, and in
Hughes' adaptations of Racine which were produced by the Almeida Theatre and
seen in London and New York. Hughes was one of the young poets Eliot
encouraged as an editorial director of the publishing house of Faber and
Faber.
In 1948 Eliot was
awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature and died in 1965.
His biggest success in theater came after his death, when his delightful book of verse written to amuse the children of
friends, Old Possum’s Book of
Practical Cats, was set to music by Andrew Lloyd Webber, as the musical
"Cats," still playing to enthusiastic audiences in London's West
End.
|