Tom Stoppard on the Power of Comedy

Here is a interesting snippet from an interview with playwright and screenwriter Tom Stoppard in which he answers a question about why comedy seems to work better than drama at communicating important ideas.

Let me know what you think about it. I find intriguing his golf analogy, and his description of  a joke as an invitation for an audience to do a little work and meet the ideas of a play “halfway.”

You can access the entire interview here.

The Dramatic Unities

In his Poetics Aristotle sets down rough principles in regard to unity of action and time. He remarks that the plot of tragedy concerns, in a real sense, a single action, and that it “tries especially to be bound by one circuit of the sun or to vary little from this.” He doesn’t explicitly mention any stricture in regard to unity of place, though the stricture on time might be taken to imply one. In the neoclassical movement of the 16th and 17th centuries, in the drama of Molière and Racine, Aristotle’s rough principles of dramatic unity calcified into hard-and-fast rules. But even taking Aristotle’s remarks about dramatic unity of place and time as principles, not rules, is there any reason for the dramatist to be bound by them?

I worried especially about the unity of place as I composed my play, The Actor, which depicts the life of the young Karol Wojtyła from the years 1939 to 1942. There is a certain unity of place in the play in that all the scenes take place in Nazi-occupied Kraków, but the scenes themselves move from the university to the Wojtyła apartment to a quarry to a cemetery, etc. At very least I had made the jobs of a future director and set designer more challenging. But I took consolation from Tom Stoppard’s approach in the text of The Coast of Utopia, which effortlessly moves through the months and years and from setting to setting as though it were a screenplay.

In an essay included in his 1923 volumes, Fancies versus Fads, G.K. Chesterton offered an intriguing defense of the principles of dramatic unity. “Wherever [dramatic unity] can be satisfied, something not superficial but rather subconscious is satisfied. Something revisits us that is the strange soul of single places; the shadow of haunting gods or of household gods.”

A single setting and a single action bound more or less “by one circuit of the sun.” Artists have always recognized the freedom that is unleashed by placing limits upon their creativity; the principles of dramatic unity are the “frame” around the action of a plot. The effect of such limitation is, as Chesterton observes, uncanny: something strange and haunting is set free when the action of a play or other story is thus constrained.

“We might say,” concludes Chesterton, “that superior literature is centripetal, while inferior literature is centrifugal.”

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.