Time and the Theater

“The mystery in drama is time.” –David Mamet

A plot is an arrangement of action and episode held together by the causal glue that Aristotle calls “probability and necessity.” Once it is decided that only a nuclear warhead will serve to destroy Godzilla and the other creatures he is fighting with, then whatever is required to fire such a warhead at the monsters “necessarily” follows. It doesn’t follow by strict necessity. After all, these are actions of human beings, which can always take a willful diversion. But given the end desired, the actions taken to obtain it follow by a kind of “necessity” that Aristotle tries to capture with the made-up phrase, “probability and necessity.”

A plot pictures movement through time, but in doing so it paradoxically seeks to wrest the characters out of time. In the final essay in his book, Theatre, David Mamet writes that “the rejection of this intolerable burden [i.., time], our human specialty, is the goal of the religious mystic, the yogi, the lover, and the drug addict–to live in a world without time, to achieve unbeing.”

To seek a world beyond time is also the goal of the dramatist. Aristotle famously says that tragedy is more philosophical than history because it seeks the universal in the particular. In the preface to 3 Plays Thornton Wilder echoes Aristotle when he contends that the theater’s special ability is to tell the truth both of the particular individual and of the general truth:

“It is through the theater’s power to raise the exhibited individual action into the realm of idea and type and universal that it is able to evoke our belief.”

Accordingly, Wilder disdains the tendency of 19th-century theater to “load the stage with specific objects,” objects meant to ground the action in the particularities of time and place. “So it was by a jugglery with time that the middle classes devitalized the theater. When you emphasize place in the theater, you drag down and limit and harness time to it. You thrust the action back into past time, whereas it is precisely the glory of the stage that it is always “now” there. Under such production methods the characters are all dead before the action starts. You don’t have to pay deeply from your heart’s participation.”

So a piece of drama meant for the stage shows us human beings in action, and thus movement through time, but at the same time it aspires to place that action against the backdrop of that which exists outside of time. The past and future of action is illuminated by the always “now.” For this reason the theater audience is better able to contemplate the eternal truth in the particular.

Mamet concludes his essay by saying, “The examination of this urge [to transcend time] and its avowal and the confession of its tragic impossibility is the subject of all drama.”

Tragic action, surely enough, reveals all that is humble and time-bound in the human condition. But Mamet is incorrect to say that such action is the subject of all drama. For the human mind also has its comic mode, which seeks that which transcends time–and finds it.

Unity of Place and the Family Household

The pursuit of unity of place brings us back ultimately to the home.

Aristotle says in the Poetics that the best tragedies have to do with only a few great houses: those of Atreus, Oedipus, and the like. And Chesterton contends that the best storytelling spirals closer and closer inward to the family and the home. Why? Because the family household is where the human person is most of all a king. Perhaps not a literal king like Agamemnon or Oedipus, but a king, at least, within the confines of the small patch of this earth’s land over which he rules in freedom.

The family household, writes Chesterton, “is the theatre of the spiritual drama, the place where things happen, especially the things that matter. It is not so much the place where a man kills his wife as the place where he can take the equally sensational step of not killing his wife.”

Other institutions, Chesterton continues, are largely made for us by strangers. But the family “is the test of freedom; because the family is the only thing that the free man makes for himself and by himself.”

Pemberley. Bleak House. Tara. Brideshead. Downton Abbey.

The family household is the prime locus where we use our freedom to make or break our happiness, and thus it is the place where our dramas necessarily tend and concentrate.

 

* The image above is of Castle Howard, Yorkshire, where the BBC Television adaptation of Brideshead Revisited was filmed. Reprinted courtesy of diverstonefly at Wikimedia Commons.

Talking John Paul II on “A Closer Look”

Here’s the link to my interview yesterday with Sheila Liaugminas on “A Closer Look.” It was a meaty hour. We talked about:

  • Pope John Paul II’s subversive theater activities during World War II, the subject of my new play, The Actor
  • the crucial importance of the imagination in moral, intellectual and spiritual formation
  • the arts, and especially theater, in their role as a service to contemplation
  • how Catholics can–must–evangelize culture through the arts

Sheila is a gifted interviewer and I really enjoyed our conversation–and I hope you do, too!

Media Appearances Supporting “The Actor”

Had a great time this morning talking to Matt Swaim on “The Son Rise Morning Show” about The Actor. I understand that the show will probably be re-broadcast tomorrow nationally–hopefully on your local Catholic radio station.

And later today I’ll be talking about The Actor with Sheila Liaugminas on her radio show, “A Closer Look.” The conversation kicks off at 6:00pm Eastern, 5:00pm Central.

Announcing the Release of My New Play About Pope John Paul II

I’m very pleased to announce today the release of my new play, The Actor, based upon little-known events in the life of Karol Wojtyla, the man who became Pope John Paul. Here’s the official blurb…

Just in time for the celebration of his canonization on April 27, 2014–a new play depicting little-known events in the life of the young Karol Wojtyła, the man who would become Pope John Paul II.

Karol “Lolek” Wojtyła is a talented university student with an ardent desire to be an actor. But on the morning of September 1, 1939, just as he prepares to serve Mass at Kraków’s Wawel Cathedral, German aircraft approach the city signaling the beginning of the Nazi invasion of Poland and the end of Lolek’s life as he has known it.

Yet along with other thespian friends, Lolek refuses to give up on his dream. In secret they pursue their dramatic activities underground, eventually forming the much-heralded Rhapsodic Theater as a form of cultural resistance against the Nazi occupation.

But even as Lolek becomes more deeply immersed in underground theater, the more he begins to hear a call to a very different life. The suffering of his people, combined with the friendship of a mystic-tailor named Jan Tyranowski, challenge him to think more deeply about what his country needs most from him. In the crucible of war, Lolek finds himself an actor in a most unexpected drama.

Based on exciting historical events, and brimming with the indefatigable idealism of youth, The Actor provides an inspiring and captivating portrait of the saint as a young artist.

Find the play here on Amazon. Very soon to be released on iTunes, barnesandnoble.com, and Kobo. Enjoy!

Can You Name This Actor?

My friend Jeff Bruno is doing the cover design for my new play, The Actor, based on part of the early life of Karol Wojtyla, the man who became Pope John Paul II, and today he secured the use of this photograph of the 18 year-old future pope (the photograph was taken in 1938). I think such a headshot makes a fabulous cover for this play.

What do you think?

Radio Drama–A Transitional Art Form?

After I posted on Saturday my friend Joseph Caro over on Facebook asked me:

“Could you discuss why radio plays aren’t just an anomaly or transitional form? I have an impression that they are unique to human history, they seemed to occupy a short time-span when we had the time ability to transmit audio but not video.”

Let’s think about this question by first considering this short visual history of drama:

Drama is born in Greece as part of the religious festival honoring the god Dionysos.

By Shakespeare’s day (1564-1616) the theater has become secular entertainment (though not divorced from a broadly classical-medieval understanding of human beings and their place in the cosmos).

Technology in the late 19th c. helps create drama through the moving image projected onto a screen.

Technology in the 20th c. brings drama into the home via radio waves.

Later technology in the 20th c. brings visual drama into the home via television.

So is the radio play merely transitional, like the ancient Greek dithyramb? (Who remembers the dithyramb?)

I don’t think radio drama is going to go the way of the dithyramb, and that is because the intimacy and creative participation involved with radio/audio drama will always be attractive to us. Television and film are exciting but more passive media. The vocal quality of the radio/audio play–which makes it seem as though the characters are right in the room with us–creates a special brand of intimacy, and the fact that radio/audio comes without visual images compels our imaginations to take up the exciting task of supplying images on its own. That is a special blend that I don’t believe human beings are going to completely tire of, though I admit that the radio/play will probably forever remain less popular than film and television.

I follow Aristotle in considering what he called “tragedy” to be the highest of human art forms. And among contemporary forms of drama, I believe the live stage performance to be the most perfect expression of drama, with film, television, radio/audio drama, puppet shows, and pantomimes being declensions from this standard.

 

The images above are reproduced courtesy of, in descending order, Jorge Lascar, Alistair Young, Wikimedia Commons, Jamiecat, and Alan_D. All but the Wikimedia Commons image are reproduced under the following license.

Plays for Audio

I’ve long been enamored of the programming on BBC Radio 4: 15 Minute Drama, Afternoon Drama, Book at Bedtime, Classic Serial, comedy serials of all kinds… And with my BBC Radio app all of this is as close as a push of the button on my iPhone (though as I write this on a Saturday morning I’m listening to the “football” on Talk Sport).

On U.S. radio I’m not sure where you can find any fiction. There’s all kinds of non-fiction storytelling on the radio, and on iTunes there are scads of comedy podcasts, but the rich radio tradition of fictional storytelling of the 1930s, 40s, and 50s is long gone.

The audio podcast, however, makes possible a revival of audio storytelling. Some basic recording and editing equipment, a quick gargle and fluttering of the tonsils, and you’re in business. I’m currently at work on a short play for audio that I’m aiming to introduce here on the site later in March. I plan to continue with more plays for audio as the year goes along. The audio play I’m working on, a cheery comedy I’m calling The Death Symposium, is a stand-alone work, but we all love serials, and I want to follow-up this first effort with an audio serial of some kind.

My influences? Tom Stoppard’s radio plays top the list. I have his Plays for Radio 1964-1983, but I just came upon this collection of actual performances of his radio plays from 1967-1991. Stoppard still works now and again in this genre, his most recent effort being 2013’s “Darkside,” a philosophical comedy celebrating the 40th anniversary of Pink Floyd’s album, The Dark Side of the Moon.

My favorites of Stoppard’s radio plays? “Where Are They Now?,” “Albert’s Bridge,” “Artist Descending a Staircase,” “The Dog It Was That Died.”

Who will perform my plays? Last fall I played the title role in the Castaways Repertory Theater’s production of Macbeth, and I also recorded the unabridged version of the first book in my Kingdom of Patria series, Stout Hearts & Whizzing Biscuits, a “full-cast solo recording,” and so with this experience in my pocket I plan on performing “The Death Symposium” myself.

Anyone else enjoy plays for radio/audio?

The featured image is reproduced courtesy of James Cridland at Flickr Creative Commons under the following license.