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  • Hey there, I'm Mike Rugnetta, and this is Crash Course Theater.

  • Yorick, you are looking especially dead today.

  • How fitting!

  • Because today it's the Theater of Cruelty, a style developed by the French genius Antonin

  • Artaud—a guy who believed that theater in the West had become way too hung up on realism.

  • He wanted theater to get out of the living room and to return to its originsmagic,

  • myth, and ritual.

  • Today we'll be looking at Artaud's life, and his influential book of essays and one

  • of his playsthe show about scorpions crawling out of a wet nurse's vagina that you never

  • knew you needed.

  • Lights up!

  • INTRO Antonin Artaud was born in 1896 in Marseilles.

  • When he was four, he came down with meningitis.

  • He survived, but his health was seriously weakened.

  • Artaud was a depressed teenager.

  • He had his first breakdown at sixteen, and his parents arranged several sanitarium stays

  • for him.

  • In 1916, he was briefly conscripted into the French army but soon discharged for sleepwalking.

  • He went back to the sanitarium where his doctor prescribed opium.

  • Which is (A) not helpful for depression.

  • And (B) a really bad idea BECAUSE IT'S OPIUM.

  • He developed a lifelong addiction.

  • In his twenties, Artaud moved to Paris and hooked up with the Surrealists, acting in

  • a couple of films and writing the scenario for at least one other.

  • But the Surrealists rejected him.

  • Not cool, Surrealists!

  • Artaud is Surreal as heck.

  • Apparently they were miffed because Artaud wouldn't renounce theater as a bourgeois

  • commercial art form.

  • You tell 'em Artaud!

  • But if you consider Artaud's theories and subsequent theatrical career, this failure-to-renounce

  • the commercialism of theater is legit hilarious.

  • Because there's uncommercial

  • And then there's Artaud.

  • From 1926 to 1928, he co-ran the Theater Alfred Jarry, producing work by August Strindberg.

  • In these years, he started to develop the theories he would explain in

  • The Theater and Its Double”—more about that in a minute.

  • And he tried some of them out in his staging of Percy Shelley's incest-heavy verse drama,

  • The Cenci,” which did about as well with critics and audiences as you would expect

  • an incest-heavy verse drama staged to actively unhinge the spectator to do.

  • Then Artaud went to Mexico, took peyote, wrote some memoirs, and detoxed from heroin (though

  • he would later retox ). He returned to France, went to Ireland, and was brought back to France

  • ... in a straitjacket, literally, because he'd suffered a major psychotic break and

  • tried to attack some people.

  • He was diagnosed withincurable paranoid deliriumand underwent electroshock treatment.

  • Eventually, he was released, and his friends paid for him to stay in a private psychiatric

  • clinic.

  • He continued writing, including poems and a script for a radio broadcast that French

  • radio never aired, because it was strange and rude.

  • Diagnosed with cancer, Artaud died in 1948.

  • Okay, so he may have had a dramatic life, but why are we devoting a whole episode to

  • a guy who did a little acting, a little directing, took peyote, and wrote a play or two before

  • confronting extreme mental, and eventually physical illness?

  • Because his theories are still a huge influence.

  • Looking at the portrait we've painted over the last number of episodes, you'll maybe

  • have noticed that modern theater had a nonstop identity crisis about how to capture real

  • life.

  • Sometimes theater is like, we're going to make it as real as possible.

  • Those toilets onstage are going to flush!

  • And sometimes theater is like, heck no!

  • The only way to capture real life is with myth and magic, poetry and violence.

  • Everything on stage is a metaphor for toilets!

  • On the anti-realist side, Artaud is pretty much king.

  • In 1938, Artaud publishedThe Theater and Its Double.”

  • The book and its theories had a lot of important influences: Surrealism, Symbolism, the works

  • that he helped produce at the Theater Alfred Jarry, as well as the works of Jarry himselfall

  • super significant.

  • But maybe the strongest influence was a performance by a troupe of Balinese dancers that Artaud

  • had seen at the Paris International Colonial Exposition in 1931.

  • The dance consisted, he wrote, “of everything that occupies the stage, everything that can

  • be manifested and expressed materially on a stage and that is addressed first of all

  • to the senses instead of being addressed primarily to the mind as the language of words.”

  • Now, to be accurate

  • Balinese dance does have words.

  • And stories.

  • And specific meanings.

  • Artaud was doing the thing a lot of Western artists did where they saw what they wanted

  • to see in the art of Eastern cultures.

  • In Artaud's case, he wanted a performance style that transcended psychological realism,

  • which he calledpsychological and human stagnation.”

  • Inspired by the dance, he imagined a style that wouldrestore the theater to its original

  • destiny,” a mix of dance, song, and pantomime, “fused together in a perspective of hallucination

  • and fear.”

  • Real talk?

  • Count me in.

  • Artaud called this new form, the Theater of Cruelty, a place

  • in which violent physical images crush and hypnotize the sensibility of the spectator

  • seized by the theatre as by a whirlwind of higher forces.”

  • Now, Artaud wasn't talking about actual physical violencewell, he wasn't only

  • talking about actual physical violencebut rather a violent impulse that would rupture

  • ordinary perception and the boring normcore way that most people conduct their day-to-day

  • lives.

  • Society, he thought, had become sick, complacent, lulled by bourgeois illusion.

  • People needed ceremony and ritual—“a magic exorcism”—to heal.

  • Artaud believed that the theater had learned all the wrong lessons from Aristotle, with

  • his emphasis on plot and language, and his meh attitude toward spectacle.

  • The Theater of Cruelty was going to be all spectacle, all the time!

  • It would use music, dance, and certifiably bananas lighting design that would wake up

  • the audience to how bizarre and violent real life actually is.

  • He wanted a theater that wouldleave an ineffaceable scar.”

  • In his words: “The Theatre of Cruelty has been created

  • in order to restore to the theater a passionate and convulsive conception of life, and it

  • is in this sense of violent rigor and extreme condensation of scenic elements that the cruelty

  • on which it is based must be understood.

  • This cruelty, which will be bloody when necessary but not systematically so, can thus be identified

  • with a kind of severe moral purity which is not afraid to pay life the price it must be

  • paid.”

  • Catharsis!

  • Let's book a babysitter and go!

  • Artaud called for a style of performance that would emphasize the mise-en-scenesound,

  • lights, costumes, basically everything that isn't text.

  • And yet, he didn't really believe in sets or props.

  • He wanted actors who would operate not from a place of psychological realism, but from

  • a place of emotion, sensation, and pure physicality.

  • He called these actorsAthletes of the Heart.”

  • He envisioned a theater in which the audience would sit in the center, helpless, and the

  • play would surround them in an act oforganized anarchy.”

  • Take that, proscenium arches!

  • Oh, and what's the Double afterTheatre and its...”?

  • That's tricky and not completely articulated in the essays, but the basic idea seems to

  • be that it's life, or what life could be if we allow theater to work on our senses

  • and awaken us to something better, truer, stronger, and way more intense than life as

  • we know it.

  • To Artaud, good theater should actually be morerealthan boring everyday life.

  • Let's put these theories into blood-spattered practice by looking at Artaud's early play

  • The Jet of BloodorThe Spurt of Blood.”

  • I guess it all depends on how you like your high-velocity blood flow.

  • The play was written in 1925—maybe in a single day.

  • Help us out, ThoughtBubble: A young man and a young girl, who may be brother

  • and sister, are being all lovey-dovey.

  • Then a hurricane arrives, and here's a fun stage direction: “Two stars are seen colliding,

  • and from them fall a series of legs of living flesh with feet, hands, scalps, masks, colonnades,

  • porticos, temples, alembics, falling more and more slowly, as if falling in a vacuum:

  • then three scorpions one after another and finally a frog and a beetle which come to

  • rest with desperate slowness, nauseating slowness.”

  • Then a knight comes in, pursued by a wet nurse who is holding her swollen breasts.

  • The knight eats some cheese and chokes.

  • Night falls, the earth quakes, lightning flashes, and an enormous hand comes out and grabs a

  • prostitute by her hair and shouts, “...look at your body.”

  • The prostitute shouts, “Leave me alone, God!”

  • And she bites him.

  • Cue enormous jet of blood.

  • That title was not a metaphor!

  • More lightningbecause God does not like to be nibbled upon!—and then everyone is

  • dead except for the prostitute and the young man.

  • They fall into each other's arms . The wet nurse, who doesn't have breasts

  • anymore, re-enters, dragging the corpse of the young girl.

  • Scorpions crawl out from underneath the wet nurse's dress and here's another fun stage

  • direction: “Her vagina swells up, splits and becomes transparent and glistening like

  • a sun.”

  • The young man and the prostitute run away, at which point the young girl sits up and

  • says, “The virgin!

  • Ah that's what he was looking for.”

  • And scene.

  • Thanks, Thought Bubble.

  • A lotgoing on there.

  • And it all happened in about three pages of text!

  • The whole history of the universe, from the Garden of Eden to the apocalypse, in three

  • gonzo pages.

  • I'm gonna go ahead and say, yup, that's the Theater of Cruelty.

  • I don't know about you...

  • I definitely feel fused together in a perspective of hallucination and fear.

  • The Jet of Bloodwas scheduled for the Theater Alfred Jarry season of 1926–1927.

  • But it was never produced in Artaud's lifetime.

  • Artaud spent a lot of his life in various institutions, and various states of mental

  • discombobulation.

  • His writing and art, especially in his later years, is cryptic, strange, and sometimes

  • gross.

  • Still, he's been a huge influence on theater-makers and theater companies who feel let-down by

  • realistic writing and Stanislavski-style acting.

  • Jean Genet, Jerzy Grotowski, Peter Brook, the Living Theaterall big fans.

  • Also John Cage, Merce Cunningham, and even Jim Morrison.

  • As legacies go, not too cruel.

  • Thanks for watching!

  • We'll see you next time, when we explore yet one more way to give the theatrical finger

  • to realism.

  • We're going to meet the mostly Marxist, totally dialectical, often smelly theatrical

  • mastermind Bertolt Brecht.

  • It's going to be epic.

  • But until then...Curtain.

Hey there, I'm Mike Rugnetta, and this is Crash Course Theater.

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