Tamás Koltai
The Tragedies of Man
Imre Madách: Az ember tragédiája (The Tragedy
of Man) *
Paul Foster: Tom Paine; Kornél Hamvai: Körvadászat (The
Battue) * Matiné
Despite Steiner's proclamation that tra gedy is dead, playwrights do
write plays and theatres do perform them. The great classic tragedies are
still in the repertoire; leading directors seek in them valid formulations
on the mystery of human existence independent of any given time.
The classic of the Hungarian theatre is Imre Madách's Az ember
tragédiája (The Tragedy of Man). Best described as a dramatic
poem, it has always been the subject of scholarly, ideological and political
debate, as well as being constantly in the repertoire, except for a number
of years during the communist dictatorship. Since its first performance
in 1883 it has received many thousands of performances in Hungary, it has
been translated into virtually all European languages and produced in several
countries, despite the difficulties its thinking caused or the complexities
of the staging. In August this year it was put on at the Edinburgh Festival
Fringe, in Iain MacLeod's English translation, with a mixed cast of British
and Hungarian actors and directed byJohn Carnegie.
Madách finished the final version of The Tragedy in 1860. After
disappointments in both his private and public life, at the age of 37 and
in financial difficulties, he withdrew to his country estate. He could
not realistically expect to win literary recognition for his work, let
alone to see it produced on the stage. A full year later, as a newly elected
member of the Diet, he took the manuscript with him to Buda and sent it
to János Arany, the great poet, who was well known for his Shakespeare
translations (his translations of Hamlet and A Mid summer Night's Dream
are still unrivalled). Arany first saw a poor Faust imitation in The Tragedy
(as it is always referred to in Hungary). Later Arany revised his opinion
and even offered Madách help with improvements in some lines he
had thought were infelicitous, which affected about one tenth of a work
that is approximately four thousand lines in length.
The disparaging comparison to Faust was to crop up again in German criticism
in the 1930s and 40s. It stems from the fact that the first and last scenes
of the play, which frame the story, are set in Heaven and the plot starts
with an agreement made between God (The Lord) and Satan (Lucifer). In Madách's
work, the subject of the agreement are two trees in Paradise--the Trees
of Eternal Life and Knowledge--which Lucifer demands from the Lord as his
due for his role in the Creation. Lucifer is presented here as a rebel
against despotism, making him closer to Lucifer in Byron's Cain rather
than to Goethe's Mephistopheles. Once in possession of the accursed and
forbidden trees, and outside Paradise, Lucifer tries to gain control over
Adam and Eve's souls and thereby destroy them. (The interpretation at this
point has always been somewhat uncertain as to whether Lucifer intends
to destroy Adam and Eve physically or to devise the annihilation of mankind.)
Lucifer casts a spell on them in which, at their request, he leads them
through the history of Mankind--with Adam appearing in the guise of historical
personalities, such as a pharaoh in Egypt, Miltiades in Athens, Sergiolus
in Rome, Tancred in Byzantium, Kepler in Prague, Danton in Paris, etc.
As history progresses, Adam first enthusiastically embraces the ideas of
each new age, only to become disappointed in them. By the time he reaches
the present, Madách's age--which is summarized in the urban bustle
of London, English capitalism in the second half of the 19th century--he
is no more than a walk-on figure, a minor observer. Then comes the future--the
uniformity of the Phalanstery offered by contemporary utopian socialists,
a pre-Orwellian nightmare. It was this scene that caused the ban on the
play between 1949 and 1954, the ideological grounding for which was being
provided by one György Lukács. This is followed by a transcendental
experience which overcomes gravity, a trip into space, and finally, the
end of life on the Earth as the Sun cools and an encounter with the last
degenerate human survivors. All these lead Adam, now awakened from his
dream, to a decision to commit suicide, only to be frustrated by Nature's
eternal trick: a new life has been conceived. Eve, his companion throughout
the scenes in various guises, is with child. Adam submits to his family
instinct. The Lord declares Himself victorious over Lucifer, yet He also
gives Lucifer's sometimes usefully sceptical intellect a mandate alongside
the family model of the threesome: they are to go together on the road
assigned to them, with the motto "Man [...] have faith, and do your
best!"
It is obvious that the idea and the dramatic conception are modern,
even though the solution (or rather absolution) does not really follow
from the logic of the plot and the historical pessimism that permeates
the play. ("The ending Madách gave it is as if Shakespeare
had at the last minute taken the sword from Hamlet's hand, in case princes
coming after him learn the art of killing from him," a Hungarian poet
said in the 60s.) The problems of The Tragedy's conception, however, concern
dramatic theory and philosophy and have not much to do with how it has
fared on the stage. Strangely enough, the first commentators did not even
consider the possibility of staging the Tragedy and viewed it as a dramatic
poem. Its first peformance, in the Budapest National Theatre under the
direction of its then manager Ede Paulay, took place 23 years after it
was written, long after the author's death. Thus commenced the theatrical
history of The Tragedy, and a history of ideological explication and manipulation
and successive changes in style.
The first performance was conceived in the spirit of the Meiningen
school, then dominant in Europe. After the turn of the century, however,
the abstract, symbolic, mystery play, expressionist elements were given
priority. Directors in general go to either of the extremes of a spectacular
costume play or an ascetic philosophical play--a duality that produces
the greatest dilemma of the work in production. It has been performed on
huge open-air stages and in tiny workshops; it was turned into a film,
into a television play, a radio play and an opera. From the 70s onwards,
the Christian-mythological interpretation of the framing scenes has been
relegated to the background and the political content has been accentuated
by the metacommunication made possible by the theatre. Lucifer has ceased
to be an archetype of Evil; on the contrary, he is a friend, instructor
and guide to a human couple vulnerable in the face of the omnipotence of
the Lord; he is a dissident of sorts who urges citizens to think, be sovereign
and rebel against a received world order which they have to accept unconditionally,
in faith and with a compulsory devotion. Interestingly enough, this line
of interpretation was initiated by a magnificent guest performance in Budapest
by an Estonian company. It has proved a liberating influence, which has
urged directors to ignore fossilized traditions and tackle the Tragedy
freely in both the intellectual and the dramaturgical sense--much as Shakespeare's
plays have for long been reinterpreted in keeping with the demands of every
particular age.
With the 175th anniversary of Madách's birth due in January
1998, three Hungarian companies, one in and two outside Buda pest, have
recently put The Tragedy on their repertory. The National Theatre, on every
previous occasion except for once before the war had done this in their
principal theatre of the time, this time they used the Várszínház,
their studio theatre. Thus all three productions are in relatively small
theatres. This indicates a need for intimacy and a concentration of the
intellectual content rather than a spectacle. It also indicates a certain
skepticism on the part of the management as regards The Tragedy's popularity
with audiences; they seem to fear that audiences are bored by what is "required
reading". This also reflects how times have changed--from the mid-50s
onwards the Tragedy was for a long time a sure box-office hit.
The Budapest National Theatre production is beautiful and conventional.
Some call it bad, I'd be more inclined to say it lacks character. The historical
scenes are given as a shadow play behind a tulle curtain hanging in an
arch; the plot trudges on in respectable boredom. Talented young actors
and actresses appear in the crowd scenes, declining in pairs gracefully
(as is customary) in the danse macabre of the London scene or rattling
their tin bowls in the Phalanstery scene. Since there is no clear purpose,
intellectual vistas remain unopened. Adam recites his lines as an enthusiastic
neophyte amateur, Eve in her various guises offers minutely realistic depictions
which have little to do with Adam. That noted veteran, Dezsõ Garas
plays his customary theatrical self as Lucifer, a frustrated, destructive
grudge who looks on sneering since he knows the outcome from the start,
and gives signals to the other performers as if he were the director in
an amateur production. At the very end when, on a divine injunction Adam
and Eve repeat the enthusiastic words they had uttered in the Paradise
scene at the beginning of the play as though they had learnt nothing, he
lifts his eyes upwards, shaking his head in disapproval: not quite right,
colleagues. And this is the most original moment in István Iglódi's
direction.
The director of the Debrecen production, György Lengyel, was still
at secondary school when he first directed The Tragedy in 1954 with his
schoolmates as actors in a production that won them considerable acclaim.
He clings to The Tragedy's interpretation as a mystery play. Mysteries
have tended to be divested of their transcendental content. Lengyel builds
up his production from elements of the ritual theatre. The actors are clothed
in uniform, neutral robes, with various complementary elements, primarily
masks, serving to indicate the successive scenes, and what they perform
is a mystery of existence juxtaposing man's "tiny life span",
the conflict of the individual, in the dialectic of eternal annihilation
and renewal, in eternal movement and eternal rotation. The Angelic Host
and the Spirits praising the Lord are but masked idols with human qualities,
and Adam and Eve too, their historical consciousness awakened, eventually
stand in humankind's endless line of masks--which is also a dance of death.
All through the actors criss-cross the auditorium, while some of the audience
is seated amid the sets widened towards the rows of seats, on a "historical
stand", in a Lebens raum shared with the actors.
Rather than unequal rivals in the myth of creation, Adam and Lucifer
are the thesis and antithesis in a dialectic of ideas; Eve, instead of
the eternally changing sexual servant, is a woman fired by a single passion,
with an autonomous personality and many a hidden face. Lucifer is refined,
a university lecturer who gives his dispassionate addresses; he has not
much to do with the Creator and is not really bothered when, in the end,
he is made part of the system. Adam does not seem to have acquired manners
in Paradise, he could have been raised in the streets or in a reformatory.
He is of solid build and has a pure, questing mind, strength and faith;
one believes he longs for knowledge and is born to struggle.
The Miskolc production is the one which goes farthest in reinterpreting
Madách and theirs is the most exciting too. Director András
Schlanger does not concern himself with any (pseudo) reverence due to the
classics. He takes the play out of the museum showcase and gives us Madách
our contemporary. This version is about what "the struggle in itself",
as Madách puts it, entails today. Adam lives in a prefabricated
block of flats, with a bookshelf, a sofa, a kettle and a coffee cup around
him--"these are mine", he could no doubt rightfully say, "outside
Paradise" where he has to face everyday life. The Adam of the Miskolc
production lives in the present. If he goes out, he sees "wild capitalism"
in the street, with the bustle of beggars, money changers and vendors--Madách's
present time in the London scene. The performance then starts in "London",
with a closing-down sale of ideas and values. Body and spirit are for sale,
entertainers at the fair parrot the romantic rhymed epitaphs of the original
context; the Bible is turned into opera. The hosannas for the Lord in the
opening scene are a put-on, the Lord with his cotton beard bellows out
his report on the conclusion of Creation, and timid little angels place
their hands on their ears when the devil as bogeyman growls. The scene
in Paradise is a cheap puppet-show: Madách too refers here to the
commercialization of Christian ideas. Lucifer steps from behind his own
puppet figure and follows an intellectually fatigued Adam to home and puts
him to sleep--only to wake him up to his fate.
The dream scenes, the anxieties of an intellectual, become really engaging
from the medieval Prague scene onwards. This is only predictable for a
modern Adam who in the earlier historical heroic roles merely recites his
lessons as though taking part in some intensive course, and the director
facilitates this by adding a few stylized motifs. However, Kepler's problem
is already a personal and modern one--the plight of a scientist kept at
bay by the powers that be and by financial exigency. The Danton of the
French Revolution is a disillusioned revolutionary toing and froing with
black sarcasm between faith and cynicism--surrounded by flags with the
holes cut out of their centre, a reference to the 1956 Hungarian Revolution.
The sudden break in the London scene, which is started for a second time
now in its proper chronological place, is a revelation--Adam wakes up to
the sound of the kettle and rushes out, quite obviously with suicidal intention,
into the same reality which had appeared in his nightmare, but not before
reciting his soliloquy on free will that defies predestination. He then
jumps into the gaping abyss. The next scene is set on the boundary between
existence and non-existence in a surgical theatre rather than in Space.
Adam is having visions in his coma and elects to die. The reply to his
defiance--the Spirit of the Earth summoning him back--is heard in the voice
of the doctor resuscitating him. The scenes in the Phalanstery and Space
are dropped; one is not yet, the other is no longer topical.
Schlanger's interpretative attempt is justified in that he confronts
us with the everyday existence of a rational man broken loose from the
transcendental. The justification, however, for Adam's statement in the
bustle of the present-day "London" scene to the effect that he
is still alone in the world is questionable. But if we discard doctrinaire
thinking and accept John Donne when he says that each man stands for mankind,
then the suicide of an individual is the suicide of mankind on a small
scale. The significance and novelty of the Miskolc production of the Tragedy
lie precisely in the direct, personal touch offered to the contemporary
viewer by an impetuous, raincoated Adam and a clever Lucifer cynically
exaggerating his disillusioned observations.
The Miskolc production of The Tragedy has not received the acclaim
due to its significance. Its director bitterly remarked that had it been
in the Budapest Katona József Theatre or in the Kaposvár
theatre the production would now be the talk of the theatre world. There
is something in this--both the audiences and the profession tend to pay
greater attention to theatres where the plays, whether classical or modern,
are always confronted with present reality with a provocative, even "subversive"
purpose.
And this is exactly what happened again to the Kaposvár production
of Tom Paine. Paul Foster's play was originally a playful persiflage, with
the figure of the 18th-century English thinker and revolutionary, a key
figure in the birth of the United States, placed in the centre of an ironic
group theatre, in order to confront the lofty ideals of the Enlightenment
with everyday reality, primarily, of course, that of the 60s, the years
of plexiglass and plastic, Coca Cola cans and Andy Warhol's pop art. The
director, János Mohácsi, has naturally brought forward the
sarcastic critique to our day. Though a good part of the original text
fell victim to this far from tender shift, a series of occasionally brilliant
improvisations are offered instead, and this is not far from the author's
intentions. Nothing is naturalistic in the tiny studio theatre. Probably
the funniest scene is the great crossing on a boat suspended like a swing
on which the actors are packed on two decks--one for the aristocrats, one
for the lower classes--only to show the absurdity of history with various
verbal and visual jokes. While we laugh at the protagonist bumbling around,
we never for a moment forget that what we see is, in a sense, a tragedy--about
the destruction of the redeeming ideas of the past.
The recent past, however, is still with us and we have our reckoning
to do with it. The Kaposvár company also produced a play about the
1956 Revolution. A competition was earlier held on the 40th anniversary
of the uprising, to which all major contemporary Hungarian playwrights
had been invited. It was a risky undertaking, for many of us still have
vivid memories of the ceremonial protocol of incidental dramas. Such fears
proved to be unfounded. The winner of the shared first prize, Körvadászat
(The Battue) by 28-year-old Kornél Hamvai, who already has a successful
first novel behind him, is a bizarre allegory on how in the 50s Communist
Party apparatchiks systematically decimated game--as well as one another.
If only because of his age, Hamvai rightfully feels himself relieved of
the obligations of either sober documentation or emotional anniversary
solemnity. Instead he surveys the fathers' acts in the past fifty years
with the shocked incredulity that those producing absurdity with their
lives deserve.
The idyll of the surface male bonding of the communist county leadership
is clouded over in the play by the political trials of the late 40s. The
apparatchiks who till then had enjoyed their power at peaceful battues
start, at the instructions of the state security chief, shooting at one
another. Telescoping the showcase trials of the Rajk type--the systematic
decimation of cadres started with the conviction and execution of Interior
Minister László Rajk--into the great autumn shoots is not
without some philosophical and historical
piquancy. Yet this is sarcasm rather than cynicism. At the climax of the
play, when all the victims of this unending shoot--hare, deer, boar, as
well as those who have fallen in political trials or without any trial--are
laid out on a common bier, he commemorates the most successful popular
rite, an attempt at atonement, in the past forty years--the Great Hungarian
Reburial. (One of the events leading to the 1956 Revolution was the ceremonial
reburial of the executed Rajk two weeks before its outbreak. The executed
Prime Minister of the Revolution, Imre Nagy, was reburied in 1989. The
earthly remains of Regent Miklós Horthy were brought home and reburied
with semi-official pomp; as were those of the last Prince Primate, Cardinal
Mindszenty--and this list is by no means complete.)
The basic situation is allegorical, on which are built a number of
not easily compatible episodes involving meticulous realism, stand-up comedy
and the theatre of the absurd. In their content they are all equally emphatic--one
sketch has wives and lovers flirting around within the political clan according
to the dominant wind and in the final analysis they counterbalance one
another. For its thought and passion, density of metaphor and theatricality,
The Battue is not just a promising first play by a youthful writer; it
is a mature work.
László Babarczy is sober, ironic and rational enough
to direct the piece with substantial historical and theatrical experience.
The key to his production lies in the proportionate doses of objective
judgment and ironic distancing, at certain moments the mixture of the two,
which results in "painful semi-close-ups", at least to the eyewitnesses
of the original version of events. The designer has put a black astrological
chart, imitative of numerological systems, over the stage, as though the
story is taking place under the aegis of an unpredictable occultism. There
is something to it too, for the ideological shoot had a degree of irrationality
in it, indicated somewhat maliciously by the events being started by a
not quite unambiguous reading by a palmist. All these tragic-grotesque
episodes are crowned by the bizarre allegory of the great day of the burial
when the catch is laid out for public view to the sounds of solemn funeral
music.
It so happened that when I saw the play schoolchildren were present
too. They laughed at the scene - today's teenagers find it difficult to
take the blood sports of the past fifty years seriously.
A special ritualistic evocation of the past is to be seen in the avant-garde
production played in the cellar of an old house in central Budapest before
an audience of ten to fifteen at a time, no admittance fee charged. The
performers of Matiné are a couple, Miklós B. Székely
and Lili Monori, who made their name in a number of Hungarian films and
alternative theatrical productions, and their 15-year-old daughter and
a duck. The cellar is a labyrinth of adjacent corridors, brick walls, tubes,
wires and bright lights hung on hooks. The audience is received with ear-splitting
music, the marching song of the World Federation of Working Youth, first
in Hun garian, then in Russian and German. The actors wear the communist
youth uniform of white shirt, blue skirt or shorts and red tie, and fly
the duck, also in a red tie, as some symbolic "pigeon of peace".
We see unsmiling, haggard and apathetic adults whose movements are compulsive,
awkward, walking with an indifferent daughter and a duck in a basket. The
duck flaps its wings, toddles on stunted feet, then flops down, its head
is pressed into a bowl with feed and water in it.
Lili Monori's mother was in fact run over by a train when she tried
to shoo a duck off the rails. The accident is repeated here with a model
train and a photograph. The photo is buried in a matchbox, then the mother's
figure is ritualistically re-created from pieces of clothing and a letter
written to her daughter. Another ritualistic act is the eating of a grilled
chicken clad in the communist youth uniform. A short version of the text
of Samuel Beckett's Endgame lifts the social end-situation into the transcendental
sphere--the barren, hopeless situation of "the last couple" suddenly
becomes familiar, personal, strangely quasi-realistic. At the end the three
of them turn their bodies, their physical strength to labour, ploughing
the land while the marching song blares on.
As the audience emerges from the cellar into the street, they are met
by disco music blasting from the upper floor. The contrast between tragedy
and the super- ficialities of existence appears too keen.
Tamás Koltai,
Editor of Színház, a theatre monthly, is The Hungarian
Quarterly's regular theatre reviewer.