Source of book: I own this
It is hard to believe it has been
nearly four years since Stars
Playhouse (RIP) did a set of three one-act plays by Thornton Wilder,
headlined by The Long Christmas Dinner. (My wife did a read-through of
that one recently with her zoom book club.)
Since then, I have wanted to see
more short classic plays, but have had to content myself with reading them
instead. I have the complete Wilder, so I figured I would pick a few that
interested me, and read through them, each in one sitting.
I also recently did this with the
modernist classics by African American playwright Adrienne
Kennedy.
In this case, my Library of
America book organized the plays into sections. The first is “The Angel That
Troubled the Waters and Other Plays,” and these are the shortest ones - 16 in
all. Most of these plays are between three and five pages long - admittedly in
small print. The next is “The Long Christmas Dinner & Other Plays in One
Act,” and consists of longer one-act plays. The title play and Queens of
France (both of which I saw live) are in this section. Then, there are five
plays that are listed individually, including Our
Town, and The Drunken Sisters, the latter of which is
also a one-act play. I am guessing that the organization is related to how the
plays were published previously, because the length doesn’t seem to be the
determining factor.
In any case, I selected two of the
longer one-acts, and two of the shorter ones. I will discuss them in the order
I read them.
Pullman Car Hiawatha
This play is an interesting setup,
with a lot of metaphor and allegory, despite its initial surface realism. It is
set in a single Pullman car on an overnight train from New York to Chicago. In
fact, we are given this information and introduced to the characters by “The
Stage Manager” who becomes a character in the play.
As in the original setting of Our
Town, the set consists of chairs. In this case, set up so that actors can
lie down on them like a bed berth.
We are introduced to the
characters: the married couple Phillip and Harriet; the insane Mrs. Churchill;
Bill and Fred, fellow engineers; an unnamed maiden lady; an unnamed doctor; and
an unnamed stout woman in her 50s. There is also the porter.
We are allowed to see into the
thoughts of the characters, their petty obsessions and worries, all about
things that will be made moot by death. And here we get the first indication
that the journey is as much metaphoric as real.
Harriet, who has been feeling ill,
dies suddenly, while the insane woman wishes she had. This leads first to the
realistic account of what happens in the aftermath.
But then, the actors clear away,
the State Manager gives a monologue on meaning, and a series of metaphorical
characters take their place in turn: stock characters for “the workman” and
others, the hours, the planets, and the archangels. With these last, we return
to hearing the thoughts of the passengers. Only the dead Harriet and the insane
Mrs. Churchill can see the angels.
To try to describe it further than
that would be fruitless. There are obvious philosophical ideas, and more hidden
ones to be found by the observant. In the short span of this play, Wilder tries
to enfold the entire world, or at least the entire America of his time.
In an interesting touch, rather
than end the play when the train comes to its destination, Wilder includes a
final scene of the cleaning staff entering the car to clean it before the next
journey.
Of all the plays I read this time,
this might be the most daring, original, and fun to stage. I’d certainly go see
it.
Love and How to Cure It
This one is pretty dark and
disturbing, although the ending is a bit of a relief. There are only four
characters, and the action takes place in one place and in a short period of
time.
Rowena, a young dancer, consults
her aunt Linda, an actress, and their friend Joey, a comedian, about Arthur,
who has a crush on Rowena and is stalking her.
Rowena is terrified that Arthur,
with his love unrequited, will kill her when she turns him down. When Arthur
finally appears, the three of them try to talk him down off of his dark
intentions. Over the course of the intervention, a lot is said about the nature
of love and life.
As an attorney who does domestic
violence cases from time to time, this was a bit of a harrowing play, despite
Wilder’s decision to avoid a tragic ending. This is all too common, the man who
considers a woman his property, and considers killing her, himself, or both. I
mean, you see this in the news nearly every day.
Wilder’s take is more of an
examination of unrequited love than that of gendered violence. I wasn’t as
thrilled with that decision, and would consider this the weakest of the plays I
read for that reason.
Childe Roland to the Dark Tower
Came
Obviously I had to read this one.
The reference is directly to a
poem by Robert Browning, itself inspired by a line from King Lear.
The poem has inspired everything from graphic novels to a Stephen King series
to a Doctor Who episode, with plenty of literature and science fiction in
between.
The play imagines what happened
after the ambiguous ending of the poem. The gravely wounded and dying Childe
Roland finally reaches the tower, which he sees as a portal to death. But
inconveniently, two young girls bar the way and do not wish to let him enter.
Rather than tend to him, they
imagine his as first one romantic character, then the other. But ultimately,
they are disappointed in him. The last line is a doozy.
THE DARK GIRL: Take courage, high heart. How slow you have
been to believe well of us. You gave us such little thought while living that
we have made this little delay at your death.
This would be an interesting play
to stage. At least to me. I wonder if anyone else I know has read the Browning
poem, or if I would be literally the only person to get the point. Oh
well.
Mozart and the Gray Steward
This is probably the most
conventional play of the four, and one that most people will understand. Near
the end of his life, Mozart and his wife Constanze are desperate for a
commission. They need money to live on, and Mozart’s greatest works enrich the world
while bringing little to buy food.
A gray-clad steward shows up,
offering a lucrative commission: Mozart is to write a requiem, but not put his
name on it.
Mozart knows what this is about,
of course. He has composed in the past for these sorts of aristocrats who wish
to pass off a composition as their own. In this case, though, the steward
agrees to Mozart’s condition that no other name be used as author. It is
a wink and a nod.
The twist, which isn’t that much
of a twist, is that the steward comes on behalf of Death. The requiem Mozart is
to write is his own, and he will never finish it.
As I said, this one was pretty
conventional, and the topic one which has gotten more detailed treatment in
more recent years.
That said, it is well written, and
could be staged well. Mozart has a line that is pretty good:
MOZART: And his Excellency is not aware that the pages I may
compose at the height of my invention may be their own sufficient
signature?
Exactly. Mozart’s finest works are
instantly recognizable as his own, and no one else’s.
I love the Requiem, as I
have written about before. If you want to enjoy the beauty of Mozart’s
masterpiece, this
is a good version.
Wilder wrote a lot of these short
plays, so I may come back to them again in the future. Like Mozart, his works
are in a way their own signature, recognizable as his even without the
signature.
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