FOUR
LITTLE ESSAYS ON DRAMA
by
Edward
Bond
HOPE
Its
asked of a new play “Where is the hope?” The question
misunderstands drama. You are in a room. The curtains are drawn. You
do not ask “Where is the sky? – its gone.” The sky is always
there. You have a lottery ticket. You hope it will win. But do you
hope that the number on the ticket will change so that it will win?
The playwright must point to reality – to the number on the ticket.
The hope is the audience.
DRAMA
Drama
is the text of democracy. When the Greek audience looked at the stage
they saw themselves: “you saw you.” Later Rome took over. The
soldiers looked at you. Later the church took over. It said the great
creative fictions of Greek drama were real, were vulgar facts. Zeus
was fiction, God Almighty was a vulgar fact. Oedipus was fiction who
killed his father, Christ was a vulgar fact and God his Father killed
him. And so on through the Greek dramatic cannon and Christian
scripture. God looked at you and the Inquisition looked over his
shoulder. Then science took over. The scientist looked at you. You
were a specimen. Now commerce takes over: TV and film. The eyes on
the screen cannot look at you – they are blind. So you are blind
when you look at them. (It’s a bit difficult. It’s a mutation.
Think about it. The eyes are the organ of sight. They cannot be
touched, heard, smelt, tasted. Film is fiction in a particular way:
film is the wink of the blind.) The modern stage is parasitic on the
blindness of the screens. When it looks at the audience the blind are
winking at each other. The stage has never before been so corrupt.
There must be a new drama. In it the audience will look at the stage
and see itself. It will be revolutionary because it will be
democratic.
POLITICAL
DRAMA
A
recent article claimed “political theatre brings subjects into
public and popular debate.” The things people write in newspapers!
The opposite is true. Theatre takes subjects that are already in
public, popular debate. Its plays are not political. They are current
affairs. We have no political theatre. Yet politics is the core of
drama. Drama deals with the relation between self and society. How
each creates the other. It is how we create our humanness. Political
drama must look at the profoundest human paradoxes. Greek drama did
this for us. All Western culture and religion are founded on this
inheritance. It is our patrimony. We have exhausted it. Our theatre –
our culture and politics – are dead. Post-mortem not post-modern.
If we do not create a new drama we will be destroyed. Evolution will
wipe us out. The times have never been so serious. It is a species
crisis.
PURITY
The
Royal Court staged my second play half my lifetime ago. I was
attacked as the ultimate degenerate vicious debased playwright. Last
year the Royal Court told me my moral purity prevented me from making
contact with an audience. My first play (also staged at the Royal
Court) had a rural setting. There was a murder. The murderer was the
good man. The complexities of humanness. Last year the Royal Court
staged another play with a rural setting. In it there was a good man.
He was corrupt (and a danger to his child) but he had a heart of
gold. Mr Really-Nasty came along. He didn’t murder Mr Good but
badly beat him up. The play was written with panache. It combined
News
of the World
morality with Mills
and Boon
sentimentality. What has changed? Let us now be serious and for a
start change everything.
(September
2010, revised September 2011)
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