Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, October 8, 1969 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, October 8, 1969 drama - poetry and prose Kinnell: Dark stars and love wMiroommommra Whither modern drama? By ELLIOTT M. SIMON Looking over the playbill of the APA Repertory Company and the University Players, this playgoer notes the apparent lack of contemporary drama which accurately portrays human ex- perience against the backdrop of this decade. This is not to im- ply that what we shall see is archiac theatre. On t h e con- trary, APA and the University Players are capable of brilliant- ly performing quality drama "for all time." Macbeth is one of Shake- speare's most popular plays; Ghelderode, today, has become one of the commercially accep- table expressionist playwrights of the nineteen-twenties; and perhaps we really are in need of a delightful revival of the wit- ty Noel Coward. Furthermore, one may never again see a per- formance of Titus Andronicus; the Irish social criticism of O'Casey is always fashionable, if not conservatively exciting; and Genet is usually good for a stimulation of our existential- alienation affections. Thus what we see will be popular drama, well executed. But will we ex- perience anything new in t h e theatre? Regretably no. It is obvious that new plays and playwrights must be sought out by competent companies in order to provide audiences with a new dramatic statement, per- ception and experience relative to t h e nineteen-sixties. Since the turn of the century, intel- lectual theatre has become the domain of the artistic integrity of the repertory theatre and to the uncommercial interests of a university. To develop, however, a new drama which is contemporary in theme and style is not a vir- tue in itself. Drama is a fine art, and art is relevant to an edu- cated playgoer in qualitative terms of intensified and well ar- ticulated perceptions and expla- nations of shared experiences. Drama ceases to be relevant to anything when it ceases to ap- peal to one's intelligence, when it degenerates into the mindless dribble of the self indulgent in- dignation of the sociologist, or into the psychic chaos of ego Is it Art? masochism emanating from the popular "T-group" played out on stage, as in Albee's Tiny Al- ice. - New drama must not only re- flect our contemporary world, but if it is ever to transcend the role of a concave mirror, t h e socio-psychological couches of fashionable neuroses, or the popular, emotive and anti-intel- lectual pagents of pop, rock and hip subcultures, it must arti- culate intelligently a new state- ment of human experience of some value to an audience will- ing to engage not only its sens- es but also its mind in compe- tent problematic drama. The need for a new kind of dramatic experience is echoed in almost every dynamic thea- tre. But the modernizing pro- cess of expressing the "nitty- gritty" contemporary realities is most curious. The emphasis on superficial costuming seems to be the only changing conven- tion. Prformances of Shakes- peare and well-worn masterpiec- es of bygone eras in modern clothes in order to satisfy the illiterate audience's craving for packaged relevance and visual identification is a cheap arti- ficial t r i c k, evidencing a thorough ignorance of the dra- matic experience in theatre. This experience is based upon a unified relationship between the audience and what they see and hear on stage. Costuming does not make a play relevant by escaping time. Nor does it provide a satisfying vehicle for social, spiritual and physical identification between the actor, ; the action and the audience when there is a gross dispar- ity between the visual and au- ditory experlen . only t h e ideas, the intellectual, well-arti- culated statement of the play, are capable of uniting the aud- ience to the action, and t h u s become the essention vehicle for a shared experience. On the other hand, it seems that a play is contemporary if the actors wear no clothes at all. The quasi-artistic use of nudity by the so-called 1 i v in g theatre (is there a dead theatre too?) as in Dionysus in '69, or the dullness of commercial nud- ity of the Broadway thrill show Oh! Calcutta! seem to indicate a trend toward transferring a theatrical experience, normative on the old rickety stages of South Chicago burlesque and strip-joints, into legitimate a r t theatre and calling it "new soc- ial commentary." Playing in the nude for the sake of shocking the so-called middle class repressive moral decorum in order to be contem- porary fits into the same cata- gory of brainless spectacle as the burning mills, virtuous hero- ines saved in the nick-of-time, and calvary charges of sensation melodrama. It may be visually exciting for the moment, but it is artistically impotent, intel- lectually dull and irrelevant to a serious dramatic statement about problems in contemporary life. The development of intellect- ual contemporary drama is dif- ficult for it forces the drama- tist to be creative in new dimen- sions, and it forces an audience to actively participate in that creation by using its intelligence. It obligates established acting groups to risk financial gains by turning away from popular exercises in voyeurism, brainless shoot-em-ups, and stupid situ- ation comedies, and present a contemporary view of human experience in articulate drama. Broadway, State Street, Holly- wood and Vine will never do this for legitimate theatre. The ex- citing burden of making drama an integral part of contemporary experience rests solely on the shoulders of university and repertory theatre groups. They must pick it up. BACH CLUB By LARRY RUSS Whenever I think of Calway Kinnell and his poetry I see a huge space of dark winter sky over a great plain of snow, with the dark shoulders and breasts of mountains on one side and on the other the beach, burnt, with waves like smoke coming in; and in the middle I see one man looking up at the stars, standing quiet like a tree. Not that this is just an image conjured by my imagination; more marvelously, it is from the poems, from the man. His body and spirit have been in that great solitude where the soul forgetting its supposed limits reaches out and shares the grand silent power of moun- tains, sea, the cosmos, spaces of great life and death: I come over the last summit Into a dark wind Blasting out of the darkness, Where before me the tempestuous ocean Falls with long triple crashes on the shore A last, saprophytic blossoming. It is only steps to the unburnable sea. He has had the courage to go there, and has brought us some of his dark stars. Read "Middle of the Way," among many other fantastic poems, and you will know that he is telling you something from down deep, giv- ing you one of those stars: I know that I love the day, The sun on the mountain, the Pacific Shiny and accomplishing itself in breakers, But I know I live half alive in the world, I know half my life belongs to the wild darkness. At his reading yesterday Kin- nell said that, although he speaks of terrible things, he knows that the ultimate goal is to communicate a supreme tenderness towards existence. You could hear it in his voice, see it in his eyes. Pablo Neruda has written: "Let that be the poetry we search for: worn with the hand's obligations, as by acids, steeped in sweat and smoke, .smelling of lilies and urine .. . A poetry impure as the clothing we wear, or our bodies soup- stained, soiled with our shame- ful behavior, our wrinkles and vigils and dreams . . . Those who shun the 'bad taste' of things will fall on their face in the snow." Galway Kinnell knows that to prettify our lives by leaving out the most human things is really to hate ourselves, and to kill ourselves. His love is far deeper, honest about our being's "im- perfections," and the love is more real and moving because of that. The "ugliness" has its own sensual beauty. I think this short, beautiful poem, "T h e Mango," shows it: 1 It opens in three: yellow-gold as dawn on the mudwalls of Hafez' garden, on a seagull mewing for the light, on the belly of a Chinese dancing-girl, austere, smacking of turpentine, The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $3.00 by carrier, $3.00 by mail.j .* * * ** * * *. tACADEMY AWARD WINNER! BEST ACTRESS!i BAR8RA SIREISAND a bit stringy, like the mortal flesh. 2 Under the mango limbs overfilled with flesh, a few crones squat by the whitening sea, clapping, chorusing of love. His poems have gotten better with every book, ahd in the newest book, Body Rags, beyond the fact that it is a tremend- ous book, I think that two of the poems, "The Porcupine" and (especially "The Bear," will stay with us in the centuries ahead; they are great in t he largest sense. The rhythm, the sound, the movement of "The Bear" are of the greatest mas- tery, and its scope takes in such an amazing amount of the deepest parts of our lives: our deaths, our sorrows, our creativ- ity and our destructiveness, the pain of deaths that lead to growth. The one poem merits far more space than I have for this article. My one regret is that I now know that Kinnell is working on that long poem from which he read parts. I'll probably die from anxiousness in the n e x t years. FELIX GREENE'S "INSIDE NORTH VIETNAM" Friday and Saturday 11:15 P.M. FIT- a I Tenants.Union Meeting ol All Organizers TONI6HT in SAB, 1 P.M. 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