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Mother Courage and Her Children by Bertolt Brecht in a translation by Tony Kushner Background pack The National's production 2 Tony Kushner on Mother Courage 4 Mother Courage's Journey Timeline 7 Rehearsal diary by Bruce Guthrie 8 Rehearsal exercises 12 Interview with Duke Special (Music) 13 Interview with Sophie Stone (Kattrin) 15 Production research bibliography 17 Brecht's life and work 19 Further production details: nationaltheatre.org.uk This background pack is published by and copyright The Royal National Theatre Board Reg. No. 1247285 Registered Charity No. 224223 Views expressed in this workpack are not necessarily those of the National Theatre Director Deborah Warner Discover National Theatre South Bank London SE1 9PX T 020 7452 3388 F 020 7452 3380 E discover@ nationaltheatre.org.uk Workpack writer Bruce Guthrie Copy on Brecht by Didi Hopkins and others Editors Emma Gosden & Lyn Haill Design Clare Parker Rehearsal and production photographs Anthony Luvera discover: National Theatre Background Pack 1 The National’s production The Voice of the Scene Headings. .Gore Vidal Scene 1 Anna Fierling, Mother Courage. . . .Fiona Shaw Kattrin, her daughter . . . . . . . . . . . .Sophie Stone Swiss Cheese, her younger son . . .Harry Melling Eilif, her elder son. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Clifford Samuel The Army Recruiter. . . . . . . . . . . . . Sargon Yelda The Sergeant. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Gary Sefton Scene 2 Mother Courage. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Fiona Shaw Eilif. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Clifford Samuel The Cook. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Martin Marquez The General. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Colin Stinton The Chaplain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Stephen Kennedy Scene 3 Mother Courage. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Fiona Shaw Kattrin. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sophie Stone Swiss Cheese. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Harry Melling Yvette . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Charlotte Randle The Quartermaster. . . . . . . . . . . . . Youssef Kerkour Soldier with cannon . . . . . . . . . . . . William J Cassidy The One with the Eyepatch . . . . . . Anthony Mark Barrow Sergeant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Gerard Monaco Yvette’s Colonel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Roger Sloman Stretcher-bearers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Guy Rhys, Johannes Flaschberger Scene 4 Mother Courage. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Fiona Shaw The Clerk. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jonathan Gunthorpe The Young Soldier. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Louis McKenzie The Older Soldier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Stephen O’Toole Scene 5 Mother Courage. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . FionA SHAW Kattrin. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sophie Stone Farmer’s Wife . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ELEANOR MONTGOMERY The Chaplain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Stephen Kennedy First Soldier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .MORGAN Watkins Second Soldier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Kyle McPhail Farmer One . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Gary Sefton Scene 6 Mother Courage. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . FionA SHAW Kattrin. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sophie Stone The Regimental Secretary . . . . . . . Johannes Flaschberger The Chaplain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Stephen Kennedy Scene 7 Mother Courage. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . FionA SHAW Kattrin. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sophie Stone Scene 8 Mother Courage. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . FionA SHAW Kattrin. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sophie Stone Yvette . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Charlotte Randle Serving Man . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Anthony Mark Barrow The Old Woman . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Eleanor Montgomery The Chaplain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Stephen Kennedy The Cook. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Martin Marquez Eilif. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Clifford Samuel Young Man . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Morgan Watkins A Soldier. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Guy Rhys The Soldier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Youssef Kerkour discover: National Theatre Background Pack 2 Scene 9 Mother Courage. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . FionA SHAW Kattrin. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sophie Stone The Cook. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Martin Marquez Dog. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Gary Sefton Scene 10 Mother Courage. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . FionA SHAW Kattrin. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sophie Stone Scene 11 The Lieutenant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Roger Sloman First Soldier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Sargon Yelda Second Soldier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Gary Sefton Third Soldier. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Anthony Mark Barrow The Farmer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Gerard Monaco The Farmer’s Wife . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Siobhan McSweeney The Farmer’s Son. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Kyle McPhail Kattrin. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sophie Stone Scene 12 The Farmer’s Wife . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Siobhan McSweeney Mother Courage. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . FionA SHAW Kattrin. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sophie Stone The Farmer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Gerard Monaco The Farmer’s Son. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Kyle McPhail All other parts played by members of the company Duke Special and the Band Paul Pilot (guitar) Ben Castle (saxophone & clarinet) Jules Maxwell (pianos & organs) Simon Little (upright bass) Phil Wilkinson (drums) Chip Bailey (percussion) Duke Special (piano) Director. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Deborah Warner Set Designer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tom Pye Costume Designer . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ruth Myers Lighting Designer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jean Kalman Songs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Duke Special and the cast Musicscape. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Mel Mercier Sound Designers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Andrew Bruce & Nick Lidster for Autograph Video Designers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Lysander Ashton & Mark Grimmer for Fifty-Nine Productions Ltd Company Voice Work . . . . . . . . . . .Jeannette Nelson & Kate Godfrey Company Movement . . . . . . . . . . . Joyce Henderson discover: National Theatre Background Pack 3 Tony Kushner on Mother Courage Fiona Shaw as Mother Courage Photo by Anthony Luvera Is Mother Courage and Her Children an antiwar play? It’s certainly not a wildly enthusiastic endorsement of war, not a pro-war play. Brecht had been an ambulance driver during World War I, an experience that cured him of any appetite for military conflict. The Thirty Years’ War, the setting for Mother Courage, in Brecht's dramatic account, was a pointless, grotesquely protracted, gruesome catastrophe for everyone except the handful of victors among the European aristocracy who profited from it. This is an assessment of the conflict to which no historian I've encountered would take exception. War, for Brecht, as it was for the American Civil War General William Tecumseh Sherman, as it is for Mother Courage by the end of the play, as it is assumed to be by most people who haven't lived through it and known to be by nearly everyone who has, is hell. Driven into exile by the Third Reich, Brecht began work on Mother Courage in Sweden in the summer and fall of 1939; he was writing it when Germany invaded Poland. Ten years later, the play received its German premiere at the Deutsches Theater in Berlin. The refugee playwright in his wanderings had circumnavigated the planet. The city to which he returned, once his home and the arena for his great successes, scandals and remarkable theatrical experiments, was now a wasteland of burnt, rat-infested rubble. The Reich was gone, World War II had ended, but the Cold War was heating up. The possibility of atomic annihilation overshadowed an uneasy peace. In 1949, Mother Courage’s characters, creator, cast and audience shared a warweariness and an ashen, heartsick terror at the prospect of more war. It was manifestly one of Brecht's ambitions for the play to expose the transactional, economic nature of war. But by the end of Mother Courage, arguably the bleakest conclusion Brecht wrote, his adage that war is business carried on by other means feels inadequate and hollow. The play reveals war not as business but as apocalypse, as the human nemesis, the human antithesis. War devours life. It's understandable that the play has often been labeled as anti-war, both by those for whom this constitutes high praise and by those for whom Mother Courage is evidence that Brecht, writing an ostensibly pacifist text in 1939, supported the Hitler-Stalin non-aggression treaty, thereby unmasking himself as a dull Stalinist drone and obedient functionary of the Comintern. discover: National Theatre Background Pack 4 Tony Kushner on Mother Couragecontinued... Emblazoned on the house curtain of the Berliner Ensemble, whose signature production was Mother Courage, was a peace dove drawn by Picasso. In a poem about those curtains, Brecht admiringly describes Picasso’s peace dove as streitbare – “argumentative” or “cantankerous.” If there's a pacifist, anti-war spirit stirring within Mother Courage, it too must be described as streitbare, to say the least. It's a problematic sort of anti-war play, given that its climactic, least ambiguous and most hopeful moment is the one in which a town of sleeping people are awakened and summoned to battle against a merciless foe. The great moment of heroism and sacrifice in Mother Courage, the great instance of a refusal of obedience to an evil order, is not a refusal to fight but rather a call to arms. So is that an anti-war play? Almost all of us believe that war is ghastly and ought to be avoided whenever possible. Most of us don’t believe war is always avoidable, but if we've survived it, or tried imaginatively to comprehend its horrors, we dread its outbreak. Non-violence isn’t a course most of us can embrace, but its arguments, if not persuasive, are compelling to any thoughtful person: There's very little evidence in history that war brings peace. There’s ample evidence that, given our assumption of war's inevitability, we're more than a little susceptible to militarist advocacy for wholehearted and constant preparedness and, when our troops are engaged in combat, for a blinders-on determination to win. In other words, pacifists and militarists and the vast rest of us in between, have contradictory thoughts and feelings about war, even to the point of torment. Simple plays with simple, single answers can be of little use to us. Bertolt Brecht was not a simple man. His personality and his politics are fascinatingly complex, as is his theoretical writing, his poetry, his plays, all of which are remarkably resistant to reductive labeling. Mother Courage and Her Children, in my opinion the greatest of his many great works, is not a simple play. It places us in judgment of the actions of a woman who inhabits a universe defined by war, who often makes calamitous choices but who makes them faced with scarcities and perils Fiona Shaw as Mother Courage Photo by Anthony Luvera so severe that her choices are unbearably hard, and sometimes all but impossible. She refuses to understand the nature of her tragic circumstances; she refuses to look back; she is afraid looking back will weaken her. She reaches correct conclusions and then immediately discards them. She's afraid she can't afford to learn. She presents us with a maddening and dismaying spectacle; she refuses to judge herself, and we judge her for that. And also, we watch her world grow lonelier and less forgiving with each bad choice she makes. We feel we are watching her dying – the losses she countenances would kill anyone – yet she refuses to die. We judge even that refusal; her indomitability, her hardiness, come to seem dehumanizing, uncanny, less mythic than monstrous. And yet we are moved by this woman, as, inarguably, Brecht meant us to be. She's egoistical because she has almost nothing. She's selfish but she's spared nothing. She has a vitality and a carnality. Even though her appetites seem obscene, set as they are against widespread carnage, the mortification of Courage's dignity, of her flesh, the grindingdown of her ambition and self-possession are devastating to watch. She's smart and she discover: National Theatre Background Pack 5 Tony Kushner on Mother Couragecontinued... thinks her cleverness has gained her the little something, the small sufficiency – her wagon – by means of which she attains a degree of agency and power in her malevolent, antihuman world. The shattering of that illusion of power leads her to self-loathing and from that to a bitter contempt for the powerless, and then on to a creeping slow stupidity, leaving us with a terrible sense of loss. The smartass, skeptical, secular intelligence governing Courage is at war with a fatal darkness that suffuses the action. As with nearly all of Brecht's big plays written in exile, Courage is set at one of the many transitional historical moments when the medieval is yielding to the mercantile (a process it took centuries to complete, if indeed it's completed even now). The bad new things are preferable, according to another of Brecht's adages, to the good old things, but in Courage, a pre-modern, peasant Christianity is set against the onslaught of the modern, the vehicle for which is the war. It's impossible to resist the power of this sorrowful Christian ethos of redemptive suffering. It is equally impossible to imagine for it any existence in the Hobbesian war-of-all-againstall world of Mother Courage – our world – other than as the nearly subliminal, nearly sublingual, poetic, oppositional specter that haunts and at a few critical moments possesses Brecht's play, which at least in part accounts for its divided pro- and anti-war soul. boots, buckles, beer and black market bullets to sell instead. Courage isn't neglecting any plausible, palatable, even endurable alternative. In choosing to write about a canteen woman trailing after armies in war-ravaged 17th-century Europe, Brecht precluded any alternatives or options from presenting themselves. If his formal inventions – the jarring succession of bluntly spliced juxtapositions and epic theatrical chronological elisions and leaps, the probing of the social basis of character, of personality – invite us to adopt a stance of critical observation, his choices of time and place and circumstance force us out of judgment and into empathy. There's a life in Courage's details that refuses to participate in anything schematic. Like all great plays, Courage instructs; like all great plays, its instruction flashes forth from within a churning, disorienting action, compounded of conflict, of contradiction. Clarity is intended, but confusion is no accident. What Courage shows us will escape our judgment, but it remains infinitely available to our arguments, to our struggles to understand. This article was written for the NT programme for Mother Courage and Her Children© Tony Kushner, 2009 In her blindness to the Pyrrhic nature of her victories each time she succeeds in hanging on to the goods she sells, Courage embodies an uncomfortably familiar modern disfigurement: A relationship to commodities, to money and the marketplace, to the non-human and the inorganic that perverts human relationships and is ultimately inimical to life. And yet… what else can she do? If she's oblivious to the consequences of hanging on, she's eagleeyed about the consequences of losing what she has. Neither Courage nor Kattrin will have to sell herself—neither will end up like the prostitute Yvette—as long as they've got discover: National Theatre Background Pack 6 Timeline: Mother Courage’s journey 1599 Bamberg, Bavaria Anna Fierling (Mother Courage) first goes into business as a canteen woman. 1604 Bamberg, Bavaria Kattrin is born. Mother Courage leaves her native South German home of Bamberg to go to the Sweden-Denmark war. 1611 Sweden Gustavus Adolphus is crowned King. 1612 Bamberg, Bavaria Mother Courage buys her wagon. 1618 Bohemia Thirty Years' War between Catholics and Protestants begins with the Bohemian revolt. 1621 Riga Gustavus Adolphus II captures the city. Anna Fierling earns the name Mother Courage by travelling through the battle to deliver bread. 1624, Spring (Scene 1) Sweden (Dalarna) Eilif is recruited into the Swedish army to fight in the Sweden-Poland war. 1625-26 (between Scenes 1 and 2) From Dalarnia to Poland (Wallberg) Mother Courage follows the Swedish army across Poland. 1626 (Scene 2) Poland (near the fort at Wallhof), General's tent Mother Courage meets Eilif for the first time in two years. 1629, October (Scene 3) Poland. Been following the 2nd Finnish regiment for three years Made prisoners of war as the Catholics defeat the Protestants and Swiss Cheese is killed. 1629 (Scene 4) Poland, an officers' tent of the Catholic armies While waiting to complain, Mother Courage talks a young soldier out of complaining. 1629-31 (between Scenes 4 and 5) Poland, Moravia, Bavaria, Italy, Bavaria Following the Catholic army. 1631, May (Scene 5) Magdeburg Tilly's victory costs Mother Courage four officers' shirts. 1632, April (Scene 6) Near Ingolstadt, Bavaria Field Marshal Tilly's funeral. 1632 (Scene 7) Travelling with Catholic army Mother Courage at the height of her business career. 1632, Summer (battle was in November) (Scene 8) Lutzen Swedish King Gustavus Adolphus has fallen at in the Battle of Lutzen. A brief peace is declared. Eilif dies. 1634, Autumn/Early Winter (Scene 9) German mountains called Fichtelbirge Business is bad. The Cook leaves for Utrecht. 1635, whole year (Scene 10) Central Germany Mother Courage and Kattrin travel throughout Germany. 1636, January (Scene 11) Farmhouse on the outskirts of Halle Catholic forces threaten the city. Kattrin is killed. 1636. January (Scene 12) Leaving the farmhouse Mother Courage follows the last Protestant regiment. 1648 Europe Thirty Years' War ends with the signing of several treaties. The results are: Peace of Westphalia; Hapsburg supremacy curtailed; rise of the Bourbon dynasty; rise of the Swedish Empire; Decentralisation of the Holy Roman Empire. discover: National Theatre Background Pack 7 Rehearsal Diary by Staff Director Bruce Guthrie Photo (Deborah Warner in the rehearsal room for Mother Courage and Her Children) by Anthony Luvera “Intelligence is not to make no mistakes, but quickly to see how to make them good.” Bertolt Brecht The following is a summary of the sevenweek rehearsal period at the National Theatre Week 1 A terrific start to the rehearsal process. The company have really gelled and had a lot of fun with the play. There is a vitality and optimism buzzing in the room come the end of the week. The group warm-ups, improvisations, exercises and readings with cast members playing each other's parts seemed to remove any potential blocks on the play caused by a reverence or awe paid to it because of its reputation as a classic of the 20th century. There was plenty of getting-to-know-you on day one. Movement and games with Joyce Henderson every day with all of the team involved was fantastic. Great to get the blood pumping and the mind working on a daily basis. It also helps to create the feeling of an ensemble with the whole team, not just the actors. What really struck me was the willingness of everyone to pursue and support other people's ideas. This was most evident in the early runs of the play where possibilities were explored in their freshest state. Discovering how actors could create their own sound effects with the use of a microphone was great. The use of scene titles and the stage directions gave a root to the readings and really helped the clarity of the story. I am looking forward to the weeks to come. Week 2 The week begins with the arrival of Duke Special and his band. They play through the songs for the show with the cast and then perform two songs for everyone at the meet-and-greet (over 100 people who will be working on the show from all departments come to the rehearsal room). It's a wonderful morning. Everyone is buzzing about the music. Duke tells us the songs will develop with the show and how much he is looking forward to his first venture into theatre. Tony Kushner talks to the company about the play (see article from the programme) and answers the actors’ questions. He is a fascinating man. His passion for this play is evident (the first Brecht play he read at the age of 18) as he talks about the setting and the Thirty-Year War. Certain things he says about the play stick in my head; “If you hang on to anything – even the smallest idea – it will destroy you. You have to roll with the forces of the world.” “The play is the world presented – it’s discover: National Theatre Background Pack 8 Rehearsal Diary – continued not there to teach any specific lessons.” “Each sentence is its own moment and the characters will contradict themselves in order to survive.” He also summed up his view of Brecht's muchdebated Alienation technique: “Making the strange familiar and the familiar strange.” As the week progresses, we dig deeper into research materials. We look at pictures of wars over the last 180 years. The images are harrowing. While the technology changes, the results seem to be very similar. We also look at images of gypsies and travelling people to get a sense of Courage, her family and the wagon. We have our first reading of the play with everyone playing the parts they have been cast in. It is great to hear the voices and see some of the initial choices made by the actors. There are a great many interesting things to play with. I am intrigued to see where we go from here in weaving them into the story. What stays, what develops and what becomes something else. We start work on the scenes. The work is very detailed and interesting. The text is tough. The scenes are more complicated than they may seem at first. It is a time-consuming process and before we know it the week is over. We come up with a plan of action and a rehearsal timetable to get us through the entire play by 12 August. This will involve long days. It's a challenge to get that amount of work done but we will get there. Week 3 We crack on with the play now. The sessions are long and tiring for all involved but I feel that we are making progress. Deborah and Fiona [Shaw] seem to have boundless energy and enthuiasm for the play. The scenes are complicated and rich and it takes time to excavate detail from them but it will stand us in good stead I'm sure. Particular highlights are the end of Scene 3 (the death of Swiss Cheese) and Scene 4 (Song of the great Capitulation). Colin Stinton as the General in Scene 2 was fantastic too. Characters are beginning to develop now from the initial ideas. By the time we reach Scenes 5 and 6 we are starting to find the playing energy levels that we need to start Scene 1 with. Detail is being layered in and ideas are expanding all the time. It would be great to go straight back to Scene 1 again and work from the start of the play but time is pressing on. Good progress made but we have to keep up this level of energy and commitment or we may struggle to have enough time. Week 4 A difficult week. At the top of Scene 8, one of our younger actors struggled to find a way into the scene. It proved to be very time-consuming but is a perfect example of the importance of smaller roles in a huge play. There is a common misconception amongst young actors that bigger roles are easier because there is more to say and consequently more to play. But this is not the case. The smaller roles are just as important as the leads. The play must work as a whole. The challenge (especially with supporting and ensemble roles) is for the actor to make choices and bring them on stage with them rather than relying on reacting to others all the time. The skill is in making interesting choices that add to the action rather than run against it in a non-constructive way. Progress picks up as the week goes on. Interesting ideas for Scene 9. We experiment with the actors playing the scene as if on a substance like crystal meth. It gives the scene a mad, desperate quality. Tony Kushner talked about how the Song of Solomon mirrored the plight of the children in the play: each of the great individuals in the song was undone by their virtues. Scene 11 is often referred to as one of the great scenes of European drama. We spend a lot of time discussing relationships in this scene. Sophie [playing Katrin] experiments with climbing up ladders and different types of drum. It is a great scene, one to re-visit and clean up, but the intention is there. Scene 12 is such a tough scene – but it is going to be brilliant. Fiona experiments with disjointed physical movements and erratic emotion; the farm family look on at a woman who is unhinged and dangerous. It's a good session and will settle the more we do it. discover: National Theatre Background Pack 9 Rehearsal Diary – continued We get back to the start of the play and revisit Scene 1. It's still a tough one to make clear but at least the pressure of getting through the play for the first time is off. The actors are being encouraged to be more specific and to bring more ideas to the play now we have got through it once. Even though it is only the end of week four, time is against us. This is a big play with big ideas. The next few weeks will be packed, interesting and exciting. “This must be played like a classical text or Shakespeare. It is a high action play. All of the characters are focused on whatever they are after. We cannot let the level of intention drop and the thoughts must be exquisitely clear at all times. When our energy levels are up, it's the stuff of terrific theatre.” Deborah Warner Week 5 It has been a week of solving problems and discovering new challenges. Certain scenes are really beginning to take off while the complexity and length of others tells us we need to revisit them a few more times. Even though we still have two weeks left, I think it's going to be tight. Running Scene 3 was a very positive step. It allowed the actors to get a feeling of roughly how the scene will flow. The scene is over a quarter of the play and is almost worthy of being a play in its own right! The complexity of prop logistics is beginning to be a problem as ideas are explored, expanded upon and some are discarded. More and more detail is being layered in. It is fascinating to watch Fiona work so instinctively. She is constantly trying new things and coming at each scene in a multitude of different ways. We are still waiting to hear about fire regulations in the theatre. We need to know whether we can open the huge shutters at the back of the Olivier stage to allow the cart to get on and off. This will have a massive impact on the staging of the show (thus far we have been working on the principle that it will be possible to open the shutters). As a result of this delay, the actual cart we will use in the show will not be ready until the first day of the Technical Rehearsal, which will contribute to slowing us down since the actors will have to get used to the way the cart moves, its weight etc. If it gets here earlier, we'll try to get the actors on stage sooner than the tech to work with the cart. Duke Special is in the rehearsal room next week with the whole band. This will be a welcome addition. The music they played for us at the beginning of week two has been fleshed out and worked with the actors. Brecht wanted the songs to be events within Mother Courage, I think that they certainly will be in this version. I will start work with the understudies next week. Their roles will be confirmed and we will have a reading. I would usually have started work with them before now but we have been working long hours and I feel the actors should concentrate on their primary roles in the play before turning their attention to understudying. They will be ready. Week 6 So much to do and so little time! So many elements need to come together now to make this show work. We have to start nailing down who uses which props and where. The scene changes will be huge. The songs are going to be brilliant. Lots of great stuff this week. Members of the company with drector Deborah Warner (centre) Photo by Anthony Luvera discover: National Theatre Background Pack 10 Rehearsal diary – continued Particular highlights this week were The Song of Fraternisation, The Song of the Hours and The Song of the Great Capitulation. Putting Duke Special on stage and integrating him into the scenes really works. There are times when he is directly involved in the action, and times when he is more removed. He seems to me like a ghostly minstrel, embodying the spirit of the war (but perhaps I am trying too hard to label him). The sound work on the show is very exciting too. Gore Vidal reading the scene titles, combined with Youseff's Arabic versions is very interesting to listen to. Gary Sefton using the microphone to create a bombardment soundscape gets better every time we do it. He also has a foot pedal now which, when hit, creates a deafening explosion. The play is beginning to become clearer. The episodic nature of the piece means that it feels like lots of mini-plays with the same core characters. Lots of time passes between almost every scene (with the exception of 3-4). This brings its own set of challenges and makes it difficult to continue any through-line of effect from the previous scenes. Almost every line is a new thought and this is becoming clearer the more we do it. We are all full of contradiction, and that's what makes us fascinating. We also had Sky Arts in filming a mini-documentary of the rehearsal process. This is available to watch at www.skyarts.co.uk/video/video-mothercourage/ One week left and the Olivier stage is looming. I get the feeling we will only truly find this play during the previews. The actors need to work in the space now. This play is huge in terms of logistical size, themes and dramatic content. I have absolute faith that Deborah will bring all of the terrific elements we have explored in the past weeks together on that historic stage. I am looking forward to it. © Bruce Guthrie, 2009 Tom Pye's scene heading designs for the stage discover: National Theatre Background Pack 11 Rehearsal exercises – from a day in Week One Group Warm-Up Movement coach Joyce Henderson takes the whole group through a warm-up session. Everyone in the room participates: the director, staff director, stage management, design team and Sophie's sign-language interpreter. exercise shows how the group can have very different perceptions of the play. It also gives the group an idea of the possibilities that may exist in the playing of the play. It is a very good way of encouraging debate about the play and exploring lateral thinking about it. The physical warm up involves stretching, various name games (as this is early in rehearsals) and physical focus games. Reading the play We read the play with actors playing parts in which they were not cast. This is not gender specific. One actor reads the scene titles for the play and another reads the stage directions. We sit in a circle on chairs and the actors who are playing do so in the middle of the circle. There is a selection of props and costumes in the middle of the circle for the actors to use as they see fit throughout the reading. The only rules are that they keep the action going, listen to each other and play one big idea for the character all the way through – this could be an accent, physicality or attitude – and the idea must be bold. It doesn't matter if it is consistent with the sex of the character or based on evidence held within the play. After the reading, the actors commented that they felt the reading had unlocked many new possibilities of how to play the text and took a lot of pressure off all the actors in terms of playing their own parts. It also allowed experimentation to take place in a way that was both fun and without judgement of what is right and wrong. It liberates the text from a feeling that there is a set of rules that we have to adhere to and helps to give the company ownership of the play. Example The group get into a tight circle facing inward with one person in the centre. The person in the middle throws an object (in this case a small ball) to another company member who stands in the circle who then throws it back. The person in the centre then throws the ball to another member of the company. They must make eye contact when doing this and not attempt to catch each other out. Once a steady rhythem has been established, a member of the circle shouts “change”. The person in the centre of the circle then runs out of the centre, becoming part of the circle, while the member who shouted takes their place. The rhythm of the throwing should stay consistent and the ball should not be dropped. This takes practice and the group have to work out collectively the right time to shout “change”. As the game develops, the aim should be to change the person in the middle on every throw. Group exercise Each member of the group is given a blank sheet of paper and a pen. The director asks the group to write down three sentences about Mother Courage and Her Children without using the title or the writer's name. These sentences can be as long or short as the individual wants. They can be anything the individual thinks or feels about the play or its themes, and do not have to be factual. Once completed, each person should fold their piece of paper and put it down in the middle of the room. Everyone should pick up a piece of paper that isn't their own. The group should walk around the room in random directions, stopping to listen when a member of the group feels the need to read the sentences aloud. Once every thought has been read aloud we discuss the thoughts as a group. The opinions are diverse and range from very specific to sweeping moods and feelings. The Final Exercise The company are given large sheets of paper, brushes and poster paint. Everyone paints a picture of what they think the play is. These pictures range from abstract to literal to impressionistic (anything the company wants). Once they are finished (we allowed about an hour and a half) we walk around the room to view the paintings. Each company member then talks about their painting. It was a very interesting way of exploring the actors' thoughts about the play via a different creative medium. discover: National Theatre Background Pack 12 Interview with Duke Special (Music) Duke Special, recording his songs for Mother Courage and Her Children How did you get involved with Mother Courage? Fiona Shaw saw me play at an awards ceremony in Los Angeles – she was being presented with an award. I was performing at the after-show, and that started the ball rolling in her mind. She'd been thinking about doing a production of Mother Courage with Deborah Warner. Deborah came over to see me play in Ireland a couple of times and gradually they began to form a plan about involving me in some way. Where does the name of the band come from? It's a moniker that I use for anything to do with music. You'll never find my regular birth name on any record that I do. I always come with the name Duke Special and on this occasion it's 'and band.' I do solo gigs or I play with a 7-piece band. The name Is a slightly theatrical thing In that I can hide behind it and say things as Duke Special that perhaps I couldn't as myself. Like a persona? I guess so, a little, in the way that an author puts words in the mouths of his characters, which he may or may not believe. Was the name inspired by anything? Yes, by vaudeville performers from around the early 1900s. A lot of them went on to be known as The Great Suprenzo or the Magnificent. Some of them were the Duke... How did you get started in music? What were your earliest influences? Probably family, to be honest. I have three older sisters, I was the youngest. My mother played piano and all her siblings and all my cousins play piano and sing. I think it felt very normal to express yourself that way at social gatherings or at Christmas. When I was 10 or so, I found it a great way to express myself while other people were playing keepy-upsy with a football. Something just clicked in me with playing and I found it a great outlet. It was encouraged: it was fortunate my parents allowed me to chase that crazy idea. It would be fair to say it's an eclectic group of instruments that you use. What is it that inspires you to do that – is it just because you like the way that they sound or do you actively go out and look for different sounds? It's all to do with the players. You could have the most crazy instruments or the most regular instruments but it's all about the way that they're playing them, how they use them and how they think about it. I think I've always, as Duke Special, tried to have the capacity of reaching into pop and rock circles – with the drum kit and guitar and bass – but also I've tried to align myself to something more theatrical, discover: National Theatre Background Pack 13 Interview with Duke Special (Music) – continued using piano, and with Kurt Weill or Tom Waits as influences; and also through the lyrics, telling a story in the song-writing. I hate being boxed in by any particular genre. If somebody thinks they have me figured out that makes me feel really frustrated and I want to deliberately do something different! So sometimes I want to beat the crap out of my piano and push it over and at other times I want to play the most melodic sound you've ever heard – and often in the places where you shouldn't. What creatively inspires you to write songs? You talked about being very different and your back catalogue of songs shows that. But do you see something and get an idea from it – like a poem? It's all those things. As a songwriter you're always trying to prove something to yourself and to other people, I find. That's often the start of It: you kind of go: I'm going to write something here. It's also trying desperately to get in touch with your own feelings, I suppose. Some people talk a lot. I don't talk a huge amount but I find songs are huge boreholes into what's going on inside me. Sometimes stuff comes out in songs that surprises me, 'cause I haven't really talked or thought about it. I find that quite cathartic. And then it can be anything from reading a book to watching a movie, to a conversation, to hearing another piece of music, to someone saying, Do you want to write some songs for a play and then having to start from that. It's all about staying curious and open. just followed my own instinct with it. I knew that Brecht had collaborated a lot with Kurt Weill, and I kind of knew that Kurt Weill's stuff was often melodic but had a lot of interesting twists and turns in it. So I tried to keep that as my benchmark. But I had no idea whether it was going to work or what anyone was going to think of it. So, yes, I was very pleased that Deborah and Fiona really liked it. Duke Special in Mother Courage and Her Children Photo by Anthony Luvera How has it been, writing music for a play like this, where you have Brecht's words translated through an American writer, and then on to writing the music that you presented in the second week of rehearsal, to Nick Hytner [the National's Director] in the rehearsal room. And how has it differed from your normal work? I really love the process. I respond to lyrics in terms of how they make me feel. Sometimes I like jaunty, upbeat songs with more morose lyrics, or disguising a difficult line with an upbeat melody, and making something accessible through melody that is very dark otherwise. I just tried to respond to the lyric. I had no idea whether it was going in the right direction: I discover: National Theatre Background Pack 14 Interview with Sophie Stone (playing Kattrin) How do you work in a rehearsal room, being an actress who happens to be deaf? What sort of things do you need to have in place in order for you to work? When there are a huge number of people involved – actors and technical crew [around 120 people are involved in this production] – you can't skim over things or be complacent about how much jargon you need to know, like safety procedures, especially on a show like this where safety is paramount. You have to have a certain relationship of trust with the people you work with. I had a communicator put in place so that they could articulate anything that I might have missed, or to position me in the right place, and basically feed back all of the details and any information that could be easily misplaced or misunderstood, or not picked up on at all. On this particular production, have there been differences to the way you might have worked at RADA or on other productions, because of the size of the company and the system it has? What is the system you'd have on a smaller production and how is that different to Mother Courage? In drama school I might have had a communicator, or interpreter, but they do notetaking and lip-speaking. They're very adaptable. At drama school I spent two or three weeks at a time with them, getting to know everybody's lip patterns, getting to know what to expect from each session, and how things work – and working out whether I could be independent in this situation or in this class. Maybe certain circumstances would be a bit more difficult for me and I would need support. After two or three weeks of full-time support I would say, actually I don't need as much. But with this show, because of its size and time restrictions, and the number of lip patterns I had to pick up on – there were so many things happening at once. I couldn't mess about with the director's time, so I had to have support throughout the whole rehearsal period, right into technicals. Even into the previews, where we would have pre-show feedback from the night before, I would need somebody there to ensure that I got all the notes. I have found it a bit difficult letting go of my independence and saying, I need the support. Usually I wouldn’t feel I do. I wouldn’t want to be so reliant that for any other job they would hesitate in taking me on because they think the amount of support I'd need is too much for them to cope with. That's my fear in this profession – that I'm giving people ammunition to not give me jobs. So I want to try and find my own way with my role, but obviously there's a lot of pride to deal with before you can't get there. You're playing Kattrin in Mother Courage. What have been the particular challenges of the role for you as an actress? Not having anything to say! A lot of people have spoken about the relief of talking: when people talk they can unburden an emotion of what they're saying or who they’re saying it to. As I can't articulate any thoughts or feelings for Kattrin, I carry a lot of tension, a lot of withheld emotions, and that can be very exhausting. It's also a case of looking closer at your own experiences, which Deborah, the director, made a point of wanting from me. A way of expressing everything that I, as Sophie, throughout my life have had to change in order to understand people, in order to survive in certain situations where I can't lip-read or I can't understand or can't hear. How do I get through those Sophie Stone in rehearsals Photo by Anthony Luvera discover: National Theatre Background Pack 15 Interview with Sophie Stone – continued circumstances? I watch and I position myself. So I had to incorporate those survival methods into the rehearsal space through which I was able to understand Kattrin's survival methods and how she picks up on everything. Not just by listening, but by watching – which is why she is so affected by everything – but because she can’t talk about what she has seen or what has happened to her, she becomes a mysterious, enclosed character, carrying a lot of things. When you talk about survival methods that you, Sophie, have identified with, what do you mean, in your own life? A lot of it comes down to lip-reading – people have different lip patterns and sometimes I can’t read them, or they may face away from me, or maybe even – bullying tactics from school – they may purposely hide their face so that I can’t understand. So I would either pretend or guess, or find a way of getting somebody to repeat themselves, without pulling focus too much onto them, which is quite important in theatre. If your co-actors have to repeat themselves constantly, it’s hard for them to continue to play the scene. It’s difficult for me to put my finger on because I don't really see it as survival – it’s a way of living. You’re more aware of what’s going on around you. What's the biggest thing you've learnt from doing this show? I find with each show, I learn something vastly different. Do you think in those terms? A couple of things. One of them is physicality, the amount of physical work that Kattrin has to do. Almost to compensate for her lack of speech, she dives into work head on and even further into that world of obsessiveness, and her work is covering the pain of everything she has to experience. And I think, through that, I have learned that you cannot generalise your physicality. Everything is very specific to the moment, to what has just happened and what is going to happen and what comes out of that is almost like an obsessive-compulsive disorder. In people's silent world, how do they communicate with the objects around them? With their bodies. When Mother Courage covers Kattrin's face to hide her from the soldiers, how does she physically express herself without her face being seen and how long does that go on for before she feels she needs to express with her face? I find, with every show that I do, that I’m delving deeper into the question of why is she doing this, where is she going and how does she react? Kattrin's reaction to things changes depending on the dynamics of the show that night, and the intensity of what's happened. The other major thing I've learnt is about my working relationships with people who have been in the industry for a very long time: the experiences I have picked up from them and what I can bring to the table. Not only as a freshfaced drama graduate, but also as somebody with a disability who people may never have experienced working with. Hopefully I've opened some minds as much as they've opened mine. I am very happy with my working relationships; I've grown as a person and developed a better understanding of working with a huge group and maintaining a relationship with them all. You all bring something to a show and if there's one part of it that needs to be sorted out then we have to collectively push this play forward. During the rehearsal process, especially at the beginning, people had to bring ideas into the room. What was your starting point with Kattrin, how did that develop throughout rehearsals and even now, through the process of performing the play? I don’t think I had a specific starting point. As an actor, you research a character to the point where you may have made some decisions about who she is, and sometimes you bring those ideas to the table. Deborah may feel that one or two of your ideas might be right but she wants you to get rid of all of them and to start from the truth of you, which is why she hires the people that she has hired. She wants you to gradually layer on the character from your experiences. You don't force your acting choices onto what you perceive the character to be. It was quite difficult at the beginning, bringing more and more ideas in but not finding the right choices until later on, when I stopped trying to find the choices. I just let it happen naturally, feed off other people, improvise and try things out. I learnt if you try something and it doesn't work, don't give up, try something else. You will get there in the end. One kernel of advice for anybody who may be in a similar position to you, who might discover: National Theatre Background Pack 16 Interview with Sophie Stone – continued be deaf, who might have some particular challenge ahead of them? When I first started acting, a lot of people may have dismissed it as an easy way out, that I chose this because I didn’t want to do any hard work. If only they knew! I followed this because it’s my passion and all I know. Whatever choice you decide to take your life on, be open to changes, be open to the fact that your passions may change further down the line. But you've also got to take a lot of knocks before you get to where you want. If enough people support you, the doors will open and you'll be all right. This is an acting world; there are no beginnings or ends. But that's the buzz. You don't know where you're going to end up, you don't know how long this ride will last, and whether you're in this for the long haul. If you're passion about what you do, however, whatever job you want and whoever you are, whether you're disabled, in an ethnic minority group, or in a particular box, if you fight hard enough, then maybe someone will stand behind you and get you there. Sophie Stone as Kattrin Photo by Anthony Luvera discover: National Theatre Background Pack 17 Mother Courage – Selected Research Bibliography Brecht Mother Courage and Her Children translated by Tony Kushner Mother Courage and Her Children Various Translations Brecht on Theatre ISBN13 978-0413388001 Mother Courage and Her Children – Plays in Production by Peter Thompson, ISBN 0-521-59774-9 Brecht – A Choice of Evils by Martin EsslinISBN 0-413-54750-7 History The Thirty Years’ War by Geoffrey Parker, ISBN 0-415-12883-8 Essential Histories – The Thirty Years’ War ISBN 978-1-84176-378-1 ICRC – Humanity in War ISBN 978-1-906523-15-2 The Thirty Years War – by C V Wedgewood, Penguin Books, 1938 Travelling People Zona – Siberian Prison Camps ISBN 0-9542648-4-3 Stopping Places by Simon Evans, ISBN 978-1-902806-30-3 Hermanovce - Four Seasons with the Roma ISBN 0-9542648-7-8 The Roma Journeys by Cia Rinne, ISBN 978-3-865213716 discover: National Theatre Background Pack 18 Bertolt Brecht 1898-1956 WHO WAS BERTOLT BRECHT? No modern director can fail to be influenced by Brecht. No living writer can fail to be influenced by Brecht. No actor should ignore Brecht’s methodology. No one seriously concerned with theatre can bypass Brecht. Brecht is the key figure of our time, and all theatre work today at some point starts or returns to his statements and achievements. Peter Brook Brecht the writer of poems and plays. Brecht the theorist. Brecht the director. Brecht the Marxist. Brecht the man. Brecht the collaborator. Brecht the stealer of ideas. Brecht the womaniser. Brecht the practitioner. Brecht is undeniably one of the greatest playwrights of the 20th century. His plays remain among the most frequently performed in the world repertoire. Every generation of European theatre practitioner from the 1960s onwards hasencountered and been influenced by Brecht. Many may not be directly aware of his legacy, but his influence has permeated western theatre culture and is evident in the work of contemporary playwrights, theatre companies and directors. BRECHT’S WORLD Contemporary audiences and critics, academics and actors often feel uncomfortable with Brecht’s political commitment. To understand his work we need to look at what was happening in the immediate world around Brecht when he was writing. Berlin was between the two World Wars. The generation of 1914 had died, if not literally, then in every other way. The devastating psychological effects of war could no longer support the artifice of illusory theatre. Truth and raw reality took over. Berlin became a hotbed of art, politics, entertainment and high living that radiated its influence over all the rest of Europe and the world. Cafes, elegant hotels, cabarets, music and concert halls, theatres and cinemas attracted talented entertainers, avant-garde artists, writers and musicians of the age. To see the terrain of Brecht’s Berlin, look at the work of Klee, Kandinsky, Kokoschka, Picasso, Otto Dix, George Grosz, Marlene Dietrich, Reinhart, Schonberg. Cabaret, based on the French model (short topical revues, often political in nature, interspersed with song), had long been a popular form of entertainment for Berliners. (See Der Blaue Engel – The Blue Angel with Marlene Dietrich.) It aimed to startle rather than convert; it was a place where, in rhyme and song, political cabaret artistes would offer their footnotes to the daily newspaper headlines, and where the public would discuss these events. WHAT BRECHT WANTED Brecht was seeking a new kind of theatre that reflected the times in which he was living; that replaced the old-fashioned theatre with a modern new theatre; that used theatre as a tool to examine the society in which he was living; that asked questions of the actors and the audience; that instructed the audience; that entertained whilst also being a tool for social and political change. BRECHT AND THE AUDIENCE – WHY? Although Brecht’s theories changed over the years, he was a political playwright who wanted people to understand the political and social condition of the world around them. He was concerned with the audiences involvement in what they were watching. Early works, like The Mother was a ‘lehrstück’ or learning play and was written with the idea of educating as well as entertaining his audience. The idea of a ‘theatre for the scientific age’ was to investigate life, truth and evidence through theatre, in the same way that a scientist would experiment and examine. To wonder ‘why?’. ‘The world around you is changeable, it is not fixed. You can do discover: National Theatre Background Pack 19 Bertolt Brecht continued… something about it – there is no such thing as fate’. Brecht wanted people to examine the world around them, to see things in a new light, to ask questions about themselves and others, about the inevitability of their lives; to take responsibility for their actions and to be aware that there is always another way. Choice offers alternative outcomes. Brecht explores the role of actor and the role of audience within the theatrical space. He wanted them both to question the actions of the characters on stage and ask: ‘was that necessary’, and use this tool of investigation to ask the same questions of their own lives. THE BRECHTIAN ACTOR Brecht was not interested in his actors ‘becoming’ their characters. He wanted them to be able to step in and out of role and remain detached from the emotional centre of the character they were playing. If an actor ‘acts misery’, the audience immediately empathise and feel the same, mirroring the emotions of the actor. Brecht wanted the audience to question what was going on and not to ‘feel with’ the actor. By using particular rehearsal techniques (see practical drama work), actors were trained in this way. Each character has to make decisions in the play which define their next move. In order for the actor to make these decisions visible to the audience, Brecht devised a series of exercises that separated the text from the action, and deconstructed each moment minutely. When run together again, the actor had to ‘show’ this moment, and as Brecht said, ‘put air around it’ so it was clearly visible to the audience. BRECHT IN BERLIN Brecht moved to Berlin in September 1924 to work as a script reader at Max Reinhardt’s Deutsches Theater. He arrived on the crest of a wave: already Trommeln in der Nacht (Drums in the Night) had won the coveted Kleist Prize after its Munich production; a month after his arrival in Berlin, his Lebens Eduards des Zweiten von England (Life of Edward II of England) opened at the Staatstheater. That same month Im Dickicht der Städte (In the Jungle of the City) was produced by Erich Engels with sets by Casper Neher, Brecht’s classmate from his school days. In 1928, the Berliner Börsen-Courier critic wrote: After this litmus test, the name Bert Brecht will be remembered for reasons other than its attractive alliteration. Spheres of light and confusion revolve around this young man: his emotions are rooted in primordial sounds: his hands uncover fragments of life. They can balance human-ness with humanity and conquer human frailty in the earthly spirit. He has a wild, prize-worthy, young talent, as long as one does not demand that a twenty-year-old begin at his peak. For Brecht, these plays were the beginning of a new theatre: Today’s stage is completely makeshift. To view it as having to do with the intellect, with art, is a misapprehension. Theatre deals with a vaguely comprehended public .... The despairing hope of the theatre is to keep a hold on its public by constantly capitulating to its taste… But unless the public is seen in terms of the class struggle, it must be rejected as the source of a new style. (Brecht, Gesammelte Werke, V: Theoretische Schriften, p.126) Brecht’s success in Berlin was, indeed, based on his view of the audience as representatives of a class. After Baal (a parody of expressionist excesses), and Mann ist Mann, he moved straight to his great and eventually international triumph, The Threepenny Opera. ‘RUBBISH. JUNK. IRRELEVANT’ was the response from Alfred Kerr, Berlin’s leading theatre critic, after seeing Die Dreigroschenoper (The Threepenny Opera) when it opened under the direction of Erich Engels at the Theater am Schiffbauerdamm on 31 August 1928. However, it was an instant hit with the public, and had a long run. The newspaper, Kreuz-Zeitung, wrote of discover: National Theatre Background Pack 20 Bertolt Brecht continued… The Threepenny Opera: ‘It can be most easily summed up as literary necrophilia, of which the most notable factor was the worthlessness of its subject matter. What simple-mindedness – naiveté is too weak a word – for [the manager of the theatre] to believe he can fill his house with emptiness!’ Alfred Kerr, from the Berliner Tageblatt asked – What does The Beggar’s Opera have to do with our time? Good Lord! Does the threatening march of the beggars’ battalion or a little pseudoCommunism make it relevant? Pah! Without the magnificently simple music of Weill it is nothing. Rubbish. Junk. The thirteenth in the baker’s dozen.’ The review was devastating, but Kerr also accused Brecht of plagiarising some of the songs from a translation of Francois Villon’s poetry. A few months later Brecht admitted he was ‘quite sloppy when it comes to matters of intellectual ownership. THE THEATRICAL THEORY OF BERTOLT BRECHT by Anthony Clark What one has to remember about Brecht’s theories on the theatre is that they were formulated after the plays were written as an attempt to analyse the effect they had on audiences. Brecht’s writings about theatre are an inspiration. Throughout his career he valued the theatre as an instrument for political instruction. This is not to say that all his plays are didactic political diatribes, on the contrary, he explores many different ways of instruction. His plays are full of humour, sadness and purpose. Art ought to be a means of education, but its purpose is to give pleasure. Brecht, 1952 A theatre which could inform, educate, challenge and change people needed a dynamic form, significantly different from the prevailing theatre aesthetic of his day. That aesthetic was a kind of naturalism – ‘keyhole theatre’ – voyeuristic theatre – theatre which relied on an audience being spellbound by the illusion of reality on stage. What Brecht was after was a theatre form which clearly acknowledged that the actors and the audience were in the same space; that celebrated the fact that the artists had made choices about how to do things, choices informed by taking political responsibility for what was happening in the contemporary world. He used the medium of theatre in a surprising way in an attempt to get an audience to think about what was going on, on stage. Why has it been portrayed like that? What does this mean? What are the causes for a character’s behaviour? Some of the devices he used, as described in his writing on Epic Theatre, are no longer as provocative as they were. We are now used to suspending our disbelief, accepting the illusion of the work created in the theatre despite the fact that we can see the source of lighting, despite the ecleticism of the design – our relationship to his innovations is very different. They are, to many people, old hat. So we have to find new formal ways of revealing his plays, while respecting the intentions of the writer. Perhaps very overtly theatrical lighting, full of colour, is stranger to us than gradations of open white light – one of Brecht’s many innovations. THE LEGACY OF BRECHT IN THE 21ST CENTURY by Anthony Meech Brecht was immensely influential in the twentieth century, as a writer, director and theatre theorist – even as a survivor of the various régimes he lived through. His plays, theories and his theatre practice have inspired directors, actors and critics the world over. But what of Brecht’s legacy will survive into the new millennium? What will Brecht have to offer us in the 21st century? Recent research suggests that many of the texts which were previously regarded as Brecht’s, are in fact either wholly or discover: National Theatre Background Pack 21 Bertolt Brecht continued… in large part written by his collaborators. Few critics would now support Brecht’s claim to sole authorship of the plays. What of his production values and stagecraft? They were certainly innovatory in their time, but over the years it has become increasingly difficult to remember a time when British theatres would not have expected audiences to pay good money to see dirty or used costumes, and props. Add to this the fact that Brecht was a committed Marxist and devoted the last eight years of his life to establishing not only the company and production values of the Berliner Ensemble, but also actively to encouraging new writers from the GDR. As a result of this, the Berliner Ensemble became a model national theatre in all but name. After 1989 this national theatre lost its nation, its rôle and its unique qualities. So what is there left of Brecht to take with us into the new millennium? A discredited exploiter of the devotion of both men and women? A playwright who did not write his own plays? A theatre practitioner whose once innovative ideas are now common practice? The poet laureate of a political ideology which would appear not to have stood the test of time, and of a country which no longer exists? There must be, and there is, something else. From the allegations of plagiarism which surrounded the premiere of his first play Baal onwards, Brecht was never far from accusations of borrowing from others, whether it was his texts, his ideas or his theories. But Brecht’s genius as a theatre artist lay precisely in this borrowing, in the way he combined and developed what he inspired in (or stole from) others, to realize his new theatre – the collaborative effort which he encouraged throughout his company. The integrity which gives his work its unique power is achieved through Brecht and his followers’ total commitment to the theatrical task in hand. This commitment can be found too in an area of Brecht’s theatrical activity which remained tantalizingly incomplete, its promise unfulfilled. It holds a key to his intentions overall, and perhaps also offers us a model and an inspiration for possible development of theatre in the new century. This is the work Brecht undertook with colleagues in the late 1920s and early 1930s into a new style of teaching theatre to be called the Lehrstück, the intention of which was to institute a new relationship between stage and audience. The new interaction he was attempting to put in place in these theatrical experiments between the stage and the audience, Brecht called “Die Neue Zuschauerkunst”, which could be translated as: the new art of being an audience member, which involves an active, or empowered audience. Brecht was in fact attempting to extend the central plank of his theatre production method, that of collaboration or borrowing, to include the final link in the chain: the audience, as equal partners. And it is the new audiences and Brecht’s ideas on their rôle which are the mainspring of this new theatre form. But what is the new rôle the audience is expected to play? “Lehren” in German means to teach. The plays are teaching plays. This concept is hardly new. It could be claimed that theatre has been used as a teaching medium since mediaeval times. What is new is what Brecht is intending to teach his audience. For centuries the theatre had been expected to communicate eternal truths of the human condition to its audience. Brecht’s theatre instead teaches doubt. His plays do not embody certainties, rather the opposite. The habit of doubt which Brecht is hoping to teach in these plays prepares an audience to contemplate that other concept central to Brecht’s thinking: change. Brecht rejects tragedy and tragic inevitability, because tragedy teaches its audience to accept their lot as inevitable and immutable. His plays aim to show their performers and audiences that they must be prepared to welcome and take responsibility for the change which, he believes, must come. Brecht aims not for the calm of resolution and acceptance at the end of a play, but rather for an animated, discursive and therefore empowered audience. It was this goal of developing a new response from his audience which he was forced to abandon when he had to flee Germany in 1933 to spend the next decade discover: National Theatre Background Pack 22 Bertolt Brecht continued… in exile, away from active involvement in theatre. During this time he reverted to a more traditional expectation of his audiences in plays such as Mother Courage and Her Children, The Life of Galileo and The Caucasian Chalk Circle. By the time he returned to Germany much had changed. He was setting up a major world theatre company, and devoting his time to nurturing new writing talent. There was little chance for him to engage in small-scale experiments. In revisiting his plays in a new century, and in particular in smaller scale productions, in more intimate environments, we have the opportunity to redefine the part the audience can be expected to play in productions of Brecht’s plays, in accordance with his own ideas. If we can discourage the audience from “leaving their brains in the cloakroom with their coats”, we may perhaps realise his aim of an active, empowered audience – what he meant by Die Neue Zuschauerkunst. EPIC THEATRE: POLITICS, PREACHING AND PERSUASION Brecht’s theory of theatre in four main points: From Drama from Ibsen to Brecht by Raymond Williams" 1. The drama Brecht opposes involves the spectator in the stage action and consumes his capacity to act: in the drama he recommends the spectator is an observer and his capacity to act is awakened. 2. The drama he opposes presents experience, drawing the spectator in until he is experiencing the action with the characters: the drama he recommends presents a view of the world in which the spectator confronts and is made to study what he sees. 3. The drama he opposes makes one scene exist for the sake of another, under the spell of the action, as an evolutionary necessity. The drama he recommends makes each scene exist for itself, as a thing to be looked at, and develops by sudden leaps. 4. The drama he opposes takes man, in the run of the action, as known, given, inevitable. The drama he recommends shows man producing himself in the course of action and therefore subject to criticism and change. What is basically being attacked is “the illusion of reality” so, instead of subjective involvement, there would be objective, critical engagement. Brecht’s ideal was that “the theatre will stop pretending to be the theatre.” Brecht at the time of writing Mother Courage and Her Children Photo © akg images discover: National Theatre Background Pack 23 Bertolt Brecht continued… Timeline: Brecht’s life and work 1898 1917 1918 1919 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 1932 1933 10 February Brecht born Augsburg, Germany. Enrols as a medical student at Munich University. Military service as a medical orderly in Augsburg. Participates in Karl Valentin’s political cabaret; writes Baal. Son Frank born to girlfriend Paula Banholzer. First trip to Berlin. Second trip to Berlin: observes the great director Max Reinhardt in rehearsal. Drums In The Night in Munich then Berlin. Receives Kleist Prize for young writers. Marries Marianne Zoff. In The Jungle Of The Cities in Munich. Baal in Leipzig. Daughter Hanne born to Marianne Zoff. Directs adaptation of Edward The Second in Munich. Moves to Berlin. Meets Helene Weigel who gives birth to their son Stefan. Meets Elizabeth Hauptmann, future collaborator. Man Is Man in Darmstadt. Mahagonny song cycle, first collaboration with Kurt Weill, starring Lotte Lenya. Divorces Marianne Zoff. The Threepenny Opera opens at the Am Schiffbauerdamn Theatre in Berlin, later home of the Berliner Ensemble. Writes first of his “learning plays” (Lehrstücke). Marries Weigel. The Rise And Fall Of The City Of Mahagonny in Leipzig. He Who Said Yes, He Who Said No in Berlin, directed by Brecht. Helene Weigel gives birth to daughter Barbara. The Mother in Berlin. Meets Margarete Steffin, future collaborator. 28 February The burning of the Reichstag – the following day Brecht flees with his family to Zurich and then settles in Denmark. Meets Ruth Berlau, future collaborator. Hitler appointed Chancellor. 1934 1935 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1947 1948 1949 Hitler becomes Fuhrer. Brecht travels to Moscow then to New York for The Mother. Nazis revoke Brecht’s citizenship. Trip to Paris to see his Señora Carrara’s Rifles. Production recorded by Ruth Berlau in the first of what were to become the Berliner’s famous ‘Model Books’. The Life of Galileo completed. Second World War begins. Moves to Finland to avoid Nazi invasion. Completes The Good Person of Szechwan and The Trial of Lucullus. Writes Mr Puntilla And His Man Matti with Hella Wuolijoki. Completes The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui, written with Margarete Steffin. Brecht moves his family to California via Moscow (where Steffin dies) and Vladivostok. In LA the Brechts are classed as “enemy aliens”. Lives in America, meeting other exiles and Hollywood stars including Charlie Chaplin and Charles Laughton. Schweyk In The Second World War completed. Writes The Caucasian Chalk Circle. Works with WH Auden on The Duchess of Malfi. English version of The Caucasian Chalk Circle completed by James and Tania Stern and WH Auden. English version of The Life of Galileo completed by Brecht and Charles Laughton. Second World War ends. The Life of Galileo in LA starring Charles Laughton. Brecht appears before the House Un-American Activities Committee. Next day leaves for Europe. After 15 years in exile, moves to East Berlin. Publishes the Little Organum for the Theatre. Mother Courage and Her Children with Weigel in title role prompts invitation to form state-subsidised Berliner Ensemble. Completes Days Of The Commune. discover: National Theatre Background Pack 24 Bertolt Brecht continued… 1950 1953 1954 1956 Becomes an Austrian citizen. Elected president of PEN, worldwide association of writers. Berliner Ensemble takes up permanent residence at the Am Schiffbauerdamn Theatre. Mother Courage tours to Paris and is a sensation, winning Best Play and Best Production at the Théâtre des Nations festival. Brecht dies. Two weeks later Berliner Ensemble visit Palace Theatre, London with The Caucasian Chalk Circle and Mother Courage. BRECHT ON BEING A WRITER “I am a playwright. I would actually like to have been a cabinetmaker, but of course you don’t earn enough doing that.” BRECHT ON THEATRE “Human beings go to the theatre in order to be swept away, captivated, impressed, uplifted, horrified, moved, kept in suspense, released, diverted, set free, set going, transplanted from their own time, and supplied with illusions. It is not an art at all unless it does so.” “There is nothing so interesting on stage as a man trying to get a knot out of his shoelaces.” BRECHT ON EPIC THEATRE “The epic theatre is chiefly interested in the attitudes which people adopt towards one another, wherever they are socio-historically significant. It works out scenes where people adopt attitudes of such a sort that the social laws under which they are acting spring into sight. The concern of the epic theatre is thus eminently practical.” “Epic theatre can show that almost naturalistic elements are within its range.” BRECHT ON EMPATHY “If in art an appeal is made to the emotions it means reason has to be switched off.” “With rigidly epic presentation an acceptable empathy occurs.” BRECHT ON ART “Art is not a mirror with which to reflect reality, but a hammer with which to shape it.” “The lightest way of life is in the arts.” BRECHT ON ACTORS “Epic Theatre is an extremely artistic affair hardly thinkable without artists of virtuosity, imagination, humour and fellow-feeling.” “An actor, even if he is stupid, can act clever people.” discover: National Theatre Background Pack 25 Bertolt Brecht continued… ACADEMICS ON BRECHT ERIC BENTLEY “Back in the early twenties,Brecht wasn’t getting much attention. ‘What you need’ a friend told him ‘is a theory. To make your stuff important.’ So Brecht went home and got himself a theory, which is now known to more people than the plays.” ROBERT BRUSTEIN “Even at his most scientifically objective, Brecht continues to introduce a subjective note; even at his most social and political, he remains an essentially moral and religious poet.” HERBERT IHERING (when Brecht was 24) “Brecht is impregnated with the horror of this age in his nerves, in his blood. . . Brecht physically feels the chaos and putrid decay of the times.” RONALD HAYMAN “He had one gift in commonwith Jesus: they both knew how to state acomplex truth about human behaviour in a provocative story with the resonance of a riddle.” CHARLES LYONS “His plays are explorations of the quality of a single human action – the futile attempt of the human will to assert itself in a free act.” JOHN RUSSELL BROWN “The Berliner Ensemble... was generously supported by the state: Brecht had sixty actors and two hundred and fifty staff members in all; production and rehearsal time were virtually unlimited. Thus, like Shakespeare and Molière in their time, Brecht had his own private theatre to mount productions of his own work.” JOHN RUSSELL BROWN “Brecht was, on the one hand, democratic, adaptable, and part of a team, but on the other hand also a dominant, charismatic, famous, and politically favored leader who shaped productions according to his own inclinations and theory, whatever particular role he assigned himself on each occasion. He added the role of the wise theatre veteran, his Chinese-philosopher persona, to the flamboyant and spoiled child-genius of the past.” HERBERT LUETHY “Never has Brecht been able to indicate by even the simplest poetic image or symbol what the world for which he is agitating should really look like.” THEATRE-MAKERS ON BRECHT PETER BROOK “He really had almost a strangely split mind between the academic parttof him that wrote theory and the man of the theatre who refused. He would, even in rehearsals, say ‘I don’t know what idiot wrote this theory’ or ‘I don’t know what idiot wrote this part of the play’. I think he was a landmark in theatre history, but like all landmarks, as one moves on, the landmark is behind.” SIMONE DE BEAUVOIR “We knew nothing about Brecht but we were enchanted by the way he depicted the adventures of Mack the Knife. The work seemed to reflect a totally anarchic attitude... Sartre knew all Kurt Weill’s songs by heart and we often used to quote the catch phrase about grub first and morality afterwards.” JOAN LITTLEWOOD “Brecht, like Sartre, never seemed to know exactly what he was saying.” PETER HALL ON BRECHT AND SHAPING THE Royal Shakespeare Company “We used the Brecht model in a totally English way. Cambridge rigour.” William GASKILL ON BRECHT AND SHAPING THE NATIONAL theatre “The idea of the Berliner Ensemble towered over us. Kenneth Tynan arranged for us to visit Berlin and to see the work of Brecht’s company and to meet Helene Weigel. The Oliviers, John Dexter, Tynan and myself stood with Weigel at Brecht’s graveside in the cemetery that he used to see from his workroom window. We were unanimous in our admiration for the work, perhaps for different reasons. We believed that it set a standard to be emulated.” KENNETH TYNAN IN CONVERSATION WITH RICHARD BURTON, 1956 Tynan: Is there any great playwright whose work has never tempted you at all? Burton: Brecht. Tynan: Why not Brecht? Burton: Loathsome, vulgar, petty, little, nothing. Tynan: Large, poetic, universal, everything. discover: National Theatre Background Pack 26