Saturday, October 5, 2024

Stefan Brecht | The Theatre of Visions: Robert Wilson / 1978 || Queer Theatre / 1986 || Poems / 1978 || 8th Avenue Poems / 2006

stage and street

by Douglas Messerli

 

Stefan Brecht The Theatre of Visions: Robert Wilson (New York: Suhrkamp Verlag, 1978)

Stefan Brecht Queer Theatre (New York: Methuen, 1986)

Stefan Brecht Poems (San Francisco: City Lights, 1978)

Stefan Brecht 8th Avenue Poems (New York: Spuyten Duyvil, 2006)

 

Theater historian and poet Stefan Brecht died, at the age of 84, on April 13th of this year. The son of German playwright Bertolt Brecht and actress Helene Wiegel, Stefan was born in Berlin, and came to the United States at the age of 17, when his family escaped Nazi Germany by moving to Santa Monica, California, where they joined the growing German émigré community. When his family returned to Germany after Bertolt Brecht was forced to testify before the House Un- American Activities Committee, Stefan remained in California, attending UCLA and, later, Harvard, where he received his PhD in Philosophy.


     In 1966 he moved to New York City with his wife, Mary McDonough Brecht and his two children, quickly becoming involved in the burgeoning experimental theater groups in Lower Manhattan. Brecht performed with the theatrical performance artist Robert Wilson and Charles Ludlam in his Ridiculous Theatrical Company.

     In 1972 Brecht published a book detailing several of Wilson's performances titled The Theatre of Visions: Robert Wilson, printed in English by the German publishing house of Suhrkamp Verlag, thus beginning what was to have been a nine-volume series of presentations of what he described as "original" theater: The Original Theatre of the City of New York: From the mid-60s to the mid-70s. The mind boggles just thinking about Brecht's grand project, outlined as follows:

 

            Book 1. The theatre of visions: Robert Wilson

            Book 2. Queer theatre.

            Book 3. Richard Foreman's diary theatre. Theatre as personal phenomenology 

                          of mind.

            Book 4. Morality plays. Peter Schumann's Bread and Puppet theatre.

            Book 5. Theatre as psycho-therapy for performers.

                 A. Joe Chaikin's Open Theatre. The Becks' Living Theatre.

                 B. Richard Schechner's Performance Group. Andre Gregory's

                      Manhattan Repertory Company. With notes on Grotowski and 

                      Andre Serban.

            Book 6. The 1970s hermetic theatre of the performing director. Jared Bark. 

                      Stuart Sherman, John Zorn, Melvin Andringa. With appendices 

                      on Ann Wilson,Robert Whitman and Wilford Leach.

            Book 7. Theatre as collective improvisation. The Mabou Mines.

            Book 8. Black theatre and music. With notes on the Duo Theatre and 

                      M. van Peebles.

            Book 9. Dance. Merce Cunningham, Yvonne Rainer, Meredith Monk, 

                      Douglas Dunn. With a note on Ping Chong.

 

One can only imagine, had he accomplished this project, how much richer would be the history of our cultural heritage. As it happened, Brecht was able only to complete three of these volumes, The Theatre of Visions: Robert Wilson, Queer Theater, and Peter Schumann's Bread and Puppet Theatre. At the time of his death his was working on the Richard Foreman study.

     To call these books "studies," however, would be inappropriate. Each of the volumes differ from the others, but all combine painstaking detail with an often irritating style that frequently overwhelms the works he is attempting to describe.

     The Robert Wilson book, for example, consists of minute-by-minute descriptions of the performances, along with charts and maps, and Wilson's own notes that takes us through each production. These detailed descriptions, moreover, share each page with long footnotes describing events in even greater detail and explaining variations in the text.

     Brecht's description of Wilson's renowned Einstein on the Beach, for example begins:

    

 K 151  

 18.31

On the horizontal grey rectangle of the drop, (ft 52: American premiere of Robert Wilson's and Phil Glass' Einstein on the Beach: November 21, 1976, at the New York Metropolitan Opera. I am here describing the second performance, in the same place, the following Sunday, Nov. 28th, but include data re the first), doubly framed in black, enormous, at the lower right a smaller, fatter, almost square rectangle, pasted to it, projector light that seems to spill over, a white rug, on the floor beneath the two women seated in front of its, a Caucasian 9the dancer Lucinda Childs) and a Negro (Sheryl Sutton, a Wilsonian performer),the latter immobile, hands in lap, the former, within the maintained pose, shifting: contrast of self-contained quietude in concentration to tension imperfectly imposed on nervous agitation. (ft 53: Wilson has maintained them in this contrast, analogous, relative to light, to that of back to white, through the play except for the concluding >knee< (tho' act IV is such as to preclude its being in evidence). Self-contained black is to Wilson not negative. It is his own color.) A sustained organ note, the space-filling sound of a present awareness, accompanies it (in the pit, by pale-green lights, the console awareness of an electric organ is visible).

 

All that in the very first moment of the work! After 59 pages of that kind of writing, on some of which there is only one line of text, the rest given over to footnotes, one feels utterly exhausted, although perhaps one can conjure up the "vision" at the heart of Wilson's piece. Yet Brecht's conclusion to all his attentive description is a simple thumbs down dismissal of the work:

 

                 Wilson failed to find images for what was on his mind. The themes he

                 hit on do not relate to the content. He changed his style to divorce

                 the spectacle from its content. Watching it, we see the meaningless

                 alteration of meaningless themes, and perhaps the theme of failure.

 

     Arguably, it may be beneficial to have such a thorough-going historian treat his work with a kind of love-hate relationship. For all of his obvious devotion to the experimental theater on which he writes, Brecht never makes easy assumptions.

     For example, in Queer Theater, he maintains that as the gay theater got better, as it more artfully organized its childish yet energized low comedy and burlesque into formal artifice, the works became more popular but less interesting, that, in some senses, although they were better structured, the plays "fell apart."

      After a description of the work of Jack Smith, notes on the earliest productions of the Theatre of the Ridiculous, an analysis of "the gesture of hatred" works of John Vaccaro, and the "gesture of compassion" works of Charles Ludlam, and a brief summary of Ronald Tavel's career, Brecht ends this fascinating work with three pieces on The Hot Peaches, a discussion of Larry Ree's Original Trockadero Gloxinia Ballet Company and Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo, and a piece on John Waters.

     In this volume Brecht has replaced his detailed scenarios with broader, but even more baroque, personal evaluations of the works he has seen:

 

               Still in the flush of his first imperfection broadcasting untellable riches,

               Charles [Ludlam] immediately without hesitation entered his Classic period,

               putting on Whores of Babylon (by Bill Vehr) and then Turds in Hell (based

               on an idea of Bill's), grandiose Christian moralities, personal pictures of

               homosexual misery in the grand format of existential maps. The party-going

               camouflage of naive fun shed, no longer in a living-out on stage, their opulent

               disorder, aristocratic crudity, unostentatious shamelessness was the adequate

               form of a content in ideal beauty, which is why i use the word >classic< in

               spite of these plays being Romantic outcries of panic anxiety and disgust.

               Their poetic despair of an awful misogyny is passionate in their images and

               their just disorder.

 

He then goes on to more specifically describe the play at hand.

    If the overlaying metaphors of the paragraph above seem to present a kind of thicket of words through which one must make his or her way to get to the heart of Brecht's observations, there are other times in his writing that one feels Brecht's academic training crowding out any heady gush of lively expression:

 

                Sentimentality is a predisposition to uncircumspect, though conventionally

                prescribed, feelings of tenderness of a mind and approving, through

                possibly compassionate sort, more indulged in for their own sake, i.e. with

                a hypocrisy, because they feel agreeable and reflect credit on oneself, 

                than stimulus to generous action.

 

More often, however, some of these impacted sentences quite brilliantly reveal the theater to which he is attending:

 

                Remarkably, this sentimental appeal of Ludlam's clean and pure sentimental

                poses, —not camped up, neither exaggerated nor twisted, nor played in

                quotational style, —was not destroyed either by their being recognisable

                derivatives from films shown at night on TV, and from old films at that,

                that is, in a style of expression gone out of style in art and in life, given up

                together with the ideal of woman as fulfilled by her sacrifice of herself to man

                and procreation, nor by their isolation in an ornate setting of stridently

                ambiguous poses of enviously competitive, ridiculing adoration of woman

                as powerful sex-object.

 

     Similarly, a comment on playwright Ronald Tavel tells the reader a great deal about most of this the author's works, including some of his early Andy Warhol movie scripts:

 

                 The dialogue [of Shower] was an exercise in the pseudo-wit of smutty puns,

                 the author's attempt to elevate the speech of the boroughs into art, an art

                 that would provide a kind of entertainment. This art, though like Oscar

                 Wilde's an art of speech, is literary rather that theatrical in that, a play on

                 language, it focusses the audience on language rather than character, and does

                 not create tension or advance action. The puns hinge on meaning, a not

                 too clever double entendre, but Tavel is stuck on sound, addicted to

                 alliteration.

 

Accordingly, Brecht sums up Tavel as a writer of "cleverness," focusing on, in place of a ridiculous theatre (a term first coined by Tavel), on what he calls a "disgusting use of language."

     In short, although one is seldom given an easy go of it, Brecht takes us through the various stages of experimental New York theater in a way no one previously has been able to accomplish. And what a joyful, if some sometimes carping, trip that is!

      One might add that what this artist attempted to do for the theater taking place mostly in lower Manhattan, in his two collections of poetry, Poems of 1975 and 1978 and 8th Avenue Poems, he attempted to capture for that same area's streets. These are not carefully sculpted poems but often raw expressions, not without their own sentimentality, of city life.

 

             a hum in the air envelops the wheeling flocks of pigeons above the gliding cars,

             as a newspaper page in the lesser format of the tabloids

             with agility slips off the sidewalk.

 

From another poem:

 

                                                                dream, befittingly disquieting,

             the morning's sea throwing the dream's transtemporal fluidity into city

                                                                street's straight line, eerily dissolves

             the night's phantom solidity of matter

             into aspect of time....

 

In a sense, through his very personal encounters, both every day and cultural, with the American scene, and despite his European upbringing, Brecht was the most American of Americans. In a poem title "Addendum" he writes:

 

             I walk here and I don't have to

             and I wasn't meant to, the houses about me always

             perfectly clear. No thread ties me to them, eyes only

             that see and they sink into me

             and the traffic too and the people

             and never become mine

             and don't touch me.

              . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

              Yet I feel perfectly at home here.

              So you see I am not even afraid

              nor merely discontent,

              but simply unnourished, myself not stirring ever

              an old man virginal.

 

              This is the truth.

 

     At the performance at Mabou Mines I describe in My Year, I introduced myself to Stefan Brecht and his current wife, Rena Gill, who were attending the play. Suffering from the progressive brain disease, Lewy body dementia, Brecht looked frail, his head and arms heavily shaking. Upon hearing of his death last month, I again mused what a great loss to the theatre world that Brecht had not been spared to complete his books.

             

New York, May 10, 2009

Reprinted from USTheater, Opera, and Performance (October 2009).

              

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