среда, 21 ноября 2007 г.

How Albee’s 'Zoo Story' Birthed 'Peter and Jerry'


Published Aug 24, 2007


1. In 1958, Edward Albee, a West Village layabout, writes a one-act as “a kind of 30th birthday present to myself,” as he now puts it. In it, down- at-heels Jerry and bourgeois Peter erupt in violence over a Central Park bench. Albee calls it The Zoo Story.

(Photo: Bettmann/Corbis)


2. Albee finds a Swiss actor-director, Pinkas Braun, who agrees to translate it into German and help stage it in Berlin alongside Beckett’s Krapp’s Last Tape. In the fall of 1959, Albee travels to Germany to see his first produced play. He doesn’t understand a word.

(Photo: Matthias Kulka/Corbis)

3. Back in New York, the Zoo Story gets a reading at the Actors Studio. Norman Mailer declares, “That’s the best fucking one-act play I’ve ever seen.”

(Photo: Bettmann/Corbis)

4. The Zoo Story opens in 1960 at the Provincetown Playhouse. Reviews are mixed, but it makes Albee an overnight sensation. By the mid-sixties, he’s won five Tonys for Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, and The Zoo Story is the second-most-produced school play in America.

(Photo: Bettmann/Corbis)

5. In 1981, Albee writes an alternate version called Another Part of the Zoo—“a comedy, almost a parody thing, for a gay benefit,” he says, with a new backstory involving a gay affair. His biographer, Mel Gussow, considered it an artistic low point. “I knew what it was,” Albee counters. “It was a joke.”

(Photo: Denis Scott/Corbis)

6. Albee’s career rebounds a decade later, but The Zoo Story leaves him unsatisfied. “We don’t learn a lot about Peter,” he says. In 2003, Connecticut’s Hartford Stage commissions him to write a first act about Peter’s family called Homelife. Albee picks Pam MacKinnon to direct the two acts together, and they debut there as Peter and Jerry.

(Photo: Denis Scott/Corbis)

7. Three years later, it’s set for a New York transfer. MacKinnon stays on, and introduces Albee to Dallas Roberts. Albee loves him as Jerry. For Peter, he goes with an old favorite—Bill Pullman, whose role in 2002’s The Goat had helped get Albee his first best-play Tony since Virginia Woolf.

(Photo: Courtesy of Barlow Hartman)

SOURCE: New York Magazine

An atmospherical song

Since this blogspot doesn`t host audio files, I am posting a link to a youtube video. It features a song I have just stumbled upon which doesn`t actually have much to do with the play I`m commenting upon here, but I thought that the overall mood is something Jerry could experience at times...When he felt at ease with the world around him.

Here`s the link:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NGykXOamGqE

Some background information

How did Albee write “The Zoo Story”?

After a period of severe depression, Albee gave up his job, and with his thirtieth birthday looming ominously he sat down to write a play. He himself explained, "I wrote 'The Zoo Story' on a wobbly table in the kitchen of the apartment I was living at the time—at 238 West Fourth Street, I did a draft, made pencil revision, and typed a second script, and that’s the way I’ve been doing my plays since. I finished ‘The Zoo Story’ in three weeks…."

The Zoo Story was read by a number of New York producers and duly rejected by them all. … Eventually it received its first performance in Berlin, at the Schiller Theater Werkstatt, on 28 September 1959—some four months before its belated American debut: at the Provincetown Playhouse.

In a way it is fitting that a play whish attacks so directly the indifference and sterility of contemporary American life should have received its first performance in Europe. It is as though Albee’s subversive nature had been instantly recognized by a theatre and a public of which he has become increasingly scornful. As he puts aptly in the play, "sometimes a person has to go a very long distance out of his way to come back a short distance correctly"

Tone of the play

The Zoo Story sets the tone for most of his subsequent plays, for his subject here, as later, is America and what he takes to be its contempt for human values. To Albee, as to those other analysts of American decay Allan Ginsberg and Randall Jarrell, the zoo has suddenly become a horrifyingly accurate image of a society where furious activity serves only to mask an essential inertia and whose sociability conceals a fundamental isolation.

There is no disguising the heavily ironical tone adopted by the play’s protagonist, Jerry, when he announces that he lives in “the greatest city in the world. Amen.” For his apartment is in a crumbling house on Columbus Avenue, an address which itself indicates clearly enough the object of Albee’s satire and the metaphorically basis of his work. But in the face of indifference and complacency Albee does not lapse into despair. He stresses the need for man to break out of his self-imposed isolation to make contact with his fellow man. What he is calling for, in other words, is a revival of love.

"THE STORY OF JERRY AND THE DOG"

Jerry lives in a large apartment building on the West Side in which the tenants are all outcasts of one kind or another. There is no contact between these tenants, and Jerry characterizes it as a “humiliating excuse for a jail.” Thus, whether the image be that of a zoo or a jail, the bars which mark human isolation seem self-evident. In the parable, the landlady is so closely identified with the dog that it must be accepted that Albee intends them to be interchangeable, as symbols. For the dog, which is as hideous as its mistress, has a permanent erection which parallels the woman’s sexual desire. It is also described as “making sounds in his throat like a woman,” while the landlady has eyes which “looked like the dog’s eyes.” Both the dog and its mistress attack Jerry in the entrance to the building, a Freudian image which links violence to sexuality in a way which foreshadows Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? The symbolic nature of this story is further emphasized by an otherwise enigmatic statement which is a perfect description of the process of symbolism. Jerry explains that "What I am going to tell you has something to do with how sometimes it’s necessary to go a long distance out of the way in order to come back a short distance correctly."

Jerry’s response to these attempts to make contact is the same in both cases. He repulses them. He sees both the dog and the landlady as a threat to himself as an invasion of the isolation which he has come to accept as the norm of human existence. He offers the animal food in an attempt to secure immunity from contact, and when this fails he attempts to kill it. Although the dog survives the poisoned food, it no longer attempts to make contact, but lapses into the simulated indifference which, Albee urges, is equally a mark of human relationships. It is at this moment that Jerry suddenly reaches the understanding which sends him out in search of someone to whom he can pass on his insight.

"An Act of Love"

Jerry recognizes that the dog’s violence had indeed been an attempt to make contact, and that, as such, it was an act of love: "We neither love nor hurt because we do not try to reach other… was the dog’s attempt to bite me not an act of love? If we can so misunderstand, well then, why have we invented the word love in the first place?" It is this message of the need for love in a world that places its faith purely in appearances which Jerry carries with him from the West Side; and it is, in effect, the ritual of Jerry and the dog that is now acted out on the stage. Peter now plays the role which Jerry had played in the rooming-house, while Jerry plays the role of the dog. So, too, Peter responds to Jerry’s intrusion firstly by kindly condescension, as Jerry had in offering the dog hamburger meat, and then finally by violence, as Jerry had in attempting to kill the animal.

Love, human contact, is an art which has to be learned. One has to begin with simple things, with a tree, a rock or a cloud. This science of love is essentially that which Jerry goes on to describe to Peter:" It’s just that if you can’t deal with people you have to make a start somewhere. WITH ANIMALS! … A person has to have some way of dealing with SOMETHING. If not with people …SOMETHING. With a bed, with a cockroach… with pornographic playing cards, with a strongbox…."

From Rejection to purgation of illusions

Peter’s response to the parable is that of a man who can no longer find arguments, but who still wants to cling desperately to his creed. Peter shouts out "I DON‘T WANT TO HEAR ANY MORE" and gets up to leave. This parody of contact stimulates a momentary understanding on Peter’s part of the nexus which Jerry has been trying to establish between the zoo and the nature of contemporary life. Peter admits that he had his own zoo there for the moment. But Jerry adopts the same strategy which the dog had used-- violence. He provokes Peter into a defense of his bench-- a mock battle in which e is seen absurdly defending the privacy and property rights which are clearly the basis of his values. But Jerry is determined that this violence will not revert to the casual indifference which had been the result of his encounter with the dog. Accordingly he throws a knife to Peter and then impales himself on it. The "middle-class" Everyman, then, has finally been released from the solitude which he had taken as a necessary and even desirable aspect of the human condition. As Jerry insists, he has been "dispossessed." Peter, at the end of the play, has been liberated from his false assumptions and is finally purged of his illusions. Never again, as Jerry insists, will he be able to retreat into solipsism; never again will he be able to repeat the frantic cry of the alienated and the disengaged, “leave me alone.”

Source: http://www.eng.fju.edu.tw/iacd_2001F/asynchronous_drama/zooandsandbox.htm

 

среда, 14 ноября 2007 г.

Good evening




I thought I would post a photo of myself here, just so that people can see who is working on the project)

вторник, 6 ноября 2007 г.

A preliminary suggestion (also premature idea)

It troubles me greatly that I still haven`t laid my hands on the English text of the play. I still haven`t read it, therefore the idea I`m going to put forward may turn out to be a completely bizarre one. But here`s what I think. Since the theme I`m going to tackle while analyzing the play is called " The Theatre of Absurd ", it would be interesting to try to incorporate a comparison with a concept of the same name in Hesse`s "Steppenwolf". Just a brief slide-over, a mentioning would perhaps add a twist to my project.
It could just be so that such a comparison is a highly irrelevant one. I would definitely appreciate advice. Thanks in advance.

Yet another plot summary; a fuller one written in a clearer language


This one-act play concerns two characters, Peter and Jerry. Peter is a middle-class publishing executive with a wife, two daughters, two cats and two parakeets who lives in ignorance of the world outside his married life while Jerry is an isolated and disheartened man who is very troubled. These men meet on a park bench in New York City's Central Park. Jerry is desperate to have a meaningful conversation with another human being. He intrudes on Peter’s peaceful state by interrogating him and forcing him to listen to stories from his life including "THE STORY OF JERRY AND THE DOG" and the reason behind his visit to the zoo. The action is linear, unfolding in front of the audience in “real time”. The elements of ironic humor and unrelenting dramatic suspense are brought to a climax when Jerry brings his victim down to his own savage level.
The catalyst for this shocking ending transpires when Peter announces, "I really must be going home;..." Jerry, in response, begins to tickle Peter. Peter giggles, laughs and agrees to listen to Jerry finish telling "what happened at the zoo." At the same time Jerry begins pushing Peter off the bench. Peter decides to fight for the bench and becomes incredibly angry. Unexpectedly, Jerry pulls a knife on Peter, and then drops it as initiative for Peter to grab. When Peter holds the knife defensively, Jerry charges him and impales himself on the knife. Bleeding on the park bench, Jerry finishes his zoo story by bringing it into the immediate present, "Could I have planned all this. No... no, I couldn't have. But I think I did." Horrified, Peter runs away from Jerry whose dying words, "Oh...my...God", are a combination of scornful mimicry and supplication'.

Some bits and pieces of information on Albee`s play for everyone to get at least a vague idea of what "The Zoo Story" deals with


Synopsis
". . . [A]s described by Oppenheimer, Newsday: ‘A man sits peacefully reading in the sunlight in Central Park. There enters a second man, the antithesis of the first. He is a young, unkempt and undisciplined vagrant, where the first is neat, ordered, well-to-do, conventional. The vagrant is a soul in torture and rebellion. He longs to communicate so fiercely that, when he does make the attempt, he alternately frightens and repels his listener. He is a man drained of all hope who, in his passion for company, seeks to drain his companion. With ironic humor and unrelenting suspense, we see the young savage slowly but relentlessly bring his victim down to his own atavistic level and initiate a shocking and horrible ending.’
Comment
• "A New York and European success. ‘This is good theatre, period.’ — McClain, N.Y. Journal-American. . . . ‘Mr. Albee can make his narrative seem ominous and his climax chilling while writing with unhackneyed vigor, observing with humor, insight and sympathy, and drawing character with vividness and force.’ — Watts, N.Y. Post. . . .
• "Extremely simple set and props. . . .
• "Following instructions from the author of this play, it may be released only for amateur performances at which the audience is unsegregated."
• Subsequently rewritten into a full-length play.
Themes
alienation, anger, arbitrariness, Central Park, compulsion, conventionality, dominance, violence, wanderer.