Wednesday, June 27, 2012
Sunday, June 24, 2012
Yet Another Tale from the Wandering Fulbright: Likely the Last
A High Old Time at the Old Vic
That Fulbright year, we went to everything the
Old Vic produced: Hamlet, Twelfth Night, the three parts of Henry VI, Lear, A Midsummer Night’s Dream,
Measure for Measure, and closing with
Henry VIII. We got the Underground from Kew to
Waterloo Station on the South Bank of the Thames and hoofed it on down the
road, farther south to the beloved Old Vic theatre. All three of us, to sit up
in the gods on benches for, I think it was, five shillings. I, in my
professional zeal, sometimes went twice to see them.
Our six-year old Linnea, at the matinee intervals, got
her ice cream, and had a fine time.
Especially at the end of Hamlet, when, with John Neville, as that prince of all the princes, lying
there dead in as beautiful a pool of light as I had ever seen, I saw Linnea’s
eyes flood with tears. In a rapture she upped onto her knees on the bench,
threw her arms around me and blurted out, “O, Daddy, thank you for bringing
me”. I knew then that her education was assured.
But what I wanted to talk about is the production of Henry
VIII with Edith Evans, sovereign lady of the English stage back
then, as Queen Katherine and none other than John Gielgud, thought by many to
be the greatest living actor, as Cardinal Wolsey. It was all the talk of the
town. The opening would be a gala.
Betty and I decided, as soon as we heard of It,
that we must bust the budget, just this once, and book really good seats in the
center of the orchestra. We just could not miss this sure-to-be historic
performance.
And so, there we were, on opening night, dressed as
best we could and nearly breathless. A friendly young usher whispered to us
that everyone in the English theatrical establishment who had the night off was
in attendance to pay court to Evans and Gielgud. We shuddered a bit as we were
shown to our so excellent seats, maybe twenty feet from the stage and center.
And the performance began-- with the ritual playing of God Save the Queen.
All went well. At the interval we even splurged
on a glass of sherry in the theatre’s upper class bar and were minding our own
business…. when we began to hear this remarkable female voice behind us, warm,
refined, musical, of deep timbre-- and faintly New York American.
I sneaked a look and there she was, Maria Callas, the
diva of the century, perhaps of several centuries. She also was drinking sherry
and bantering with her companions, Lord and Lady Harewood, her closest English
friends-- and only ten feet away! I feigned an excuse to turn around. And there
the great lady stood, graceful, relaxed, beautiful, all in the grand manner.
As I dared to stare-- and it was a calamity for me--
there beneath her conservative, smart cocktail dress were… thick ankles! I recoiled inwardly and suddenly with a broken heart. I learned in
an instant that the world was indeed badly flawed. The great soprano had been
able to get rid of all her excess youthful weight except from around her
ankles, and there was nothing under the sun that she could do about it.
I had to pull myself together for the rest of the play
and, upon returning to our seats, saw that Callas was sitting in the row just
behind us and a seat or two deeper into the row! Imagine! She was in town to sing Violetta at Covent Garden in
a couple days-- to which we had tickets up in the gods of the Royal Opera. Ever
since we began listening to her recordings back in Wyoming, I had been besotted
with her-- and, I am proud to say, still am.
And so-- we managed, in the thrill of it all, to
behave ourselves. When what to my wondering eyes should appear but Ralph Vaughn
Williams just across the aisle from us. And so it went. We were surrounded.
On stage, Evans and Gielgud were coming up on the
famous scene in which the Queen begs Wolsey for his support-- which, of course,
he refuses. Everybody in the house was waiting for this great moment. When it came and the two great actors
got into it, suddenly, the stage went dead quiet. Evans and Gielgud froze up,
neither able to remember a word of their lines. The audience froze up with
them, in that wonderful terror of
the theatre when things go wrong. The Queen and the Cardinal made faint
little tries at getting back on track, but no good. They were entirely lost.
So what did Gielgud do? He offered Dame Edith his hand; she rose from her chair and
its dais, stepped down, and accompanied Gielgud, on his arm, off the stage!
Just as though that were the way it was supposed to play. They left the stage in the grand manner.
How long were they gone? Who knows? Time stood still. Until, probably under
thirty seconds, they swept back
onto the stage and tore the place apart with a performance that truly did
“ascend the brightest heaven of invention”. The audience cheered. Callas, right
behind us, applauding away like any good old American gal, just like the rest
of us. No doubt that she too, in her momentous career, had
forgotten her lines.
We are all of
us together in this great mess called life.
The theatre can be the site
of a particular sort of forgiveness.
We mused on this as we made our way home on a late train to our ancient
flat in cold and cozy Kew-- now
with this tale to tell.
~~~
Yet Another Tale from the Wandering Fulbright:
Yet Another Tale from the
Wandering Fulbright
Likely the last
A High Old Time at the Old Vic
That Fulbright year, we went to everything the
Old Vic produced: Hamlet, Twelfth Night, the three parts of Henry VI, Lear, A Midsummer Night’s Dream,
Measure for Measure, and closing with
Henry VIII. We got the Underground from Kew to
Waterloo Station on the South Bank of the Thames and hoofed it on down the
road, farther south to the beloved Old Vic theatre. All three of us, to sit up
in the gods on benches for, I think it was, five shillings. I, in my
professional zeal, sometimes went twice to see them.
Our six-year old Linnea, at the matinee intervals, got
her ice cream, and had a fine time.
Especially at the end of Hamlet, when, with John Neville, as that prince of all the princes, lying
there dead in as beautiful a pool of light as I had ever seen, I saw Linnea’s
eyes flood with tears. In a rapture she upped onto her knees on the bench,
threw her arms around me and blurted out, “O, Daddy, thank you for bringing
me”. I knew then that her education was assured.
But what I wanted to talk about is the production of Henry
VIII with Edith Evans, sovereign lady of the English stage back
then, as Queen Katherine and none other than John Gielgud, thought by many to
be the greatest living actor, as Cardinal Wolsey. It was all the talk of the
town. The opening would be a gala.
Betty and I decided, as soon as we heard of It,
that we must bust the budget, just this once, and book really good seats in the
center of the orchestra. We just could not miss this sure-to-be elemental
performance.
And so, there we were, on opening night, dressed as
best we could and nearly breathless. A friendly young usher whispered to us
that everyone in the English theatrical establishment who had the night off was
in attendance to pay court to Evans and Gielgud. We shuddered a bit as we were
shown to our so excellent seats, maybe twenty feet from the stage and center.
And the performance began-- with the ritual playing of God Save the Queen.
All went well. At the interval we even splurged
on a glass of sherry in the theatre’s upper class bar and were minding our own
business…. when we began to hear this remarkable female voice behind us, warm,
refined, musical, of deep timbre-- and faintly New York American.
I sneaked a look and there she was, Maria Callas, the
diva of the century, perhaps of several centuries. She also was drinking sherry
and bantering with her companions, Lord and Lady Harewood, her closest English
friends-- and only ten feet away! I feigned an excuse to turn around. And there
the great lady stood, graceful, relaxed, beautiful, all in the grand manner.
As I dared to stare-- and it was a calamity for me--
there beneath her conservative black cocktail dress were… thick ankles! I recoiled inwardly with a broken heart. I learned in
an instant that the world was indeed badly flawed. The great soprano had been
able to get rid of all her excess youthful weight except from around her
ankles, and there was nothing under the sun that she could do about it.
I had to pull myself together for the rest of the play
and, upon returning to our seats, saw that Callas was sitting in the row just
behind us and a seat or two deeper into the row! Imagine! She was in town to sing Violetta at Covent Garden in
a couple days-- to which we had tickets up in the gods of the Royal Opera. Ever
since we began listening to her recordings back in Wyoming, I had been besotted
with her-- and, I am proud to say, still am.
And so-- we managed, in the thrill of it all, to
behave ourselves. When what to my wondering eyes should appear but Ralph Vaughn
Williams just across the aisle from us. And so it went. We were surrounded.
On stage, Evans and Gielgud were coming up on the
famous scene in which the Queen begs Wolsey for his support-- which, of course,
he refuses. Everybody in the house was waiting for this great moment. When it came and the two great actors
got into it, suddenly, the stage went dead quiet. Evans and Gielgud froze up,
neither able to remember a word of their lines. The audience froze up with
them, in that wonderful terror of
the theatre when things go wrong. The Queen and the Cardinal made faint
little tries at getting back on track, but no good. They were entirely lost.
So what did Gielgud do? He offered Dame Edith his hand; she rose from her chair and
its dais, stepped down, and accompanied Gielgud, on his arm, off the stage!
Just as though that were the way it was supposed to play. They were full of
bravura and in the grand manner.
How long were they gone? Who knows? Time stood still. Until, probably under
thirty seconds, they swept back
onto the stage and tore the place apart with a performance that truly did
“ascend the brightest heaven of invention”. The audience cheered. Callas, right
behind us, applauding away like any good old American gal, just like the rest
of us. No doubt that she too, in some performances in her momentous career, had
forgotten her lines.
We are all of
us together in this great mess called life.
The theatre can be the site
of a particular sort of forgiveness.
We mused on this as we made our way home to our ancient
flat, waiting for us all cold and cozy, in Kew, supremely gratified and now
with this tale to tell.
~~~
Sunday, June 10, 2012
From the Splendors of the Past
Nugent Monck in Norwich
I was told he was old, crotchety,
and unpredictable. and who knows how he would receive me, once I got there-- to
Norwich, to visit and learn what I could from the noted Nugent Monck, who had
single-handedly established the long tradition of fine, non-professional
regional drama in England. There were those who said that Monck knew as good as
everything about staging plays. Be that as it may, he had surely known as good
as everyone in the grand old days of the late nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries. I was told that he knew
all the good old gossip-- and the dirt.
So, I took the train down to Norwich and by hook and
crook found the old man’s house. At eighty-one he was in what would turn out to
be the last year of his life: He died two months after I visited him.
I knocked at his door and in due time this
shriveled, awful looking, little old man, 100% frontally naked, opened the door and, with
not the slightest sign of interest or enthusiasm, ushered me in. With no
preliminaries; he thrust into my hand an old, worn text of King Lear and a fresh Penguin copy of it, saying that some
“dreadful man” wanted Harley Granville-Barker’s cutting of the play, and I was
to sit right down there in the hallway of his quite ordinary middle-class
English domicile and transfer Barker’s cutting to the new copy. Me! standing
right there, holding in my hand the great Granville-Barker’s own prompt book
for one of the most important productions of Shakespeare in all the modern
movement!
Well, I usually do as I am told, and so sat at a small
table in the hallway and went to work, line by line, while old Monck went
upstairs to put himself together (put some clothes on) for our visit.
By the time he came down, I was almost finished
with the first act and shocked at how heavily Barker had cut the text. It was a
revelation. And Monck somehow
owned the prompt book of that storied production!
He took me to dinner at a good hotel and seemed to be
enjoying himself, even with me. I mused on the slightly salacious turn in his
conversation on a young woman and her young gentleman at a nearby table.
When he had outlined our next
day’s tour of Norwich, it was back to his house where he had a comfortable room
ready for me. I believe I was a little afraid of him….
Next day, we were off to his famous Maddermarket
Theatre that he had founded in 1921. The old hall in which the theatre had been
built, Monck told me, was on the site of a medieval oratory where a bad priest
had been murdered by his inamorata right in the middle of his mass. And since a
mass may never be left unfinished, the ghost of this rotten cleric keeps coming
back, “appearing” on the stage, over the site of the altar, trying to finish his mass. Monck and all the people of his theatre
swear by this: their bona-fide, residential ghost. It really was spooky.
Then Monck wanted me to see the exact spot in
the square where tradition has it that Will Kempe, Shakespeare’s famous actor
of fools and clowns, after his break up with the company, dazzled all
England by Morris dancing,
non-stop, from London all the way to Norwich. He ended his dance, “right
there!” Monck said, pointing at a marker in the cobbles. As I love lore like
this, I fell for this juicy bit, imagining that famous funny man with a moving
mosh-pit, pressing en masse, behind him, raucous and obscene, following him to
the end, to see him drop to the ground in the grand manner, in performative
triumph.
I think I was most seduced (and I must be
careful with that word when in reference to Monck) when I learned that Monck
had spent ten days in jail in Birmingham, in, I think it was 1919, for the
crime of blasphemy. Think of that! He had dared, for the first time ever, to
show on stage, one of the medieval mystery plays, the Nativity Play from the
beautiful York Cycle. Just think, he sat in jail, doing time, for presenting a
piece of medieval religious drama!
What could be more distinguished!
On my own, I prowled around town a bit, went in awe of
the cathedral with its gray-black flinty façade, and felt that I was coming to
like Norwich, way out there, facing the eastern fens and the North Sea beyond.
Cold, wet, and dark by definition..
Monck insisted on our having a cab to the station and
there he put me on the train back to London. He seemed reluctant, almost
tender, to let me go-- poor old guy, so valiant, so brilliant, and now so
alone-- and soon, so very soon, dead for all his pains.
He had even cooked breakfast for me.
~~~~
By the way: Some yeas later in London, in Covent Garden, a
performance artist took an empty store-front space, painted it from top to
bottom in bright, flat, featureless white, then spread white sand over all the floor and swept clean an
oval race course track around the fairly large room.
Dressed
in black pants and shirt, his face whitened, he proceeded to walk
continuously, with an absolutely unchanging pace and without the least expression,
for seven days and seven nights. How he solved the problems of his biology, I
have no idea. I know only that he walked continuously and steadily.
He was compelling, beautiful, meaningful to watch in
his perfect composure. People came in off the street to watch a bit; some
looked in from the sidewalk (pavement) outside.
I went to see
him three times during the week. On the last day. I
stood up close to the track. When, in his trance-like concentration, he passed by me, I whispered at him, “Thank you.”
He flinched with the faintest suggestion of a smile and went on. He had heard me!
At the end his work of art, there was to be a
party to which anyone might come. I’ve always regretted that I did not, but on
the other hand, the lovely spell of his work might have been wrecked. As it is,
I have remained thankful for what he had shown me of the human creature.
Much as a woman, four years ago, walked home from
Denver to Powell, Wyoming-- 520 miles. She was and is still dear to me. I
regard her long walk as a work of art that, like the performer’s In London. It thrills
and illuminates. I should have thought of Will Kempe.
Saturday, June 2, 2012
BREAKING NEWS: A BIG DINNER EVENT
JUST TO LET YOU KNOW WHAT WE ARE UP TO.
WE HOPE IT WILL BE AN HISTORIC EVENT
IN A MYTHIC AMERICAN SETTING.
AT THE VERY LEAST IT WILL BE AN IMMENSE PLEASURE
FOR US CLUB MEMBERS ON THIS SIDE ATLANTIC
TO GET TOGETHER, THINK HARD ABOUT OUR BELOVED
SPORT,
AND TOAST THE QUEEN.
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