Season fat Canada's Stratford: Audience Enthusiasm, Exciting and Original Productions The Work of National Student I By RICHARD BURKE E SEASONS AGO, the Stratford Shakespeare Festival was hailed by some as the symbol of a theatrical ren- aissance in Canada. Others predicted dis- aster for what they considered rash pre- sumption. Neither of the predictions has been fulfilled. The theatre is financially stable, and Stratford has become a national insti- tution, but the new National theatre school in Montreal is the only visible sign of a theatrical rebirth in Canada. BUT THE SUCCESS or failure of one theatre is of little concern unless an ideal or principle is at stake. The signifi- cance of the Stratford Festival goes beyond management's balance sheet. It has represented year by year, the partial realization of an ideal. A permanent theatre has been in oper- ation for five seasons, and a place where Canadian artistic talent can be developed and trained is now firmly established. The presentation of the complete Shake- speare canon is the next goal of a long range program, and it is the hope of the Festival's producers and directors that other works, especially those of the mod- ern theatre can be presented on their stage with excitement and originality. For any venture in the theatre, it is the audience which completes the dream. Unless the audience shares in the desired ideal, a theatre must wither and pass on. Fortunately, the Stratford audiences do care. They want to see the ideal realized, and they want to be a part of it. This desire to share has been evidenced not only in the generous contributions from thousands of interested people, but also in the need to expand the schedule from an initial five weeks to a full summer and early fall season. The directors of Stratford have responded to the enthus- iasm of their patrons, in a way that is uninue in modern theatre operation. They care too. During the final week of the Festival of 1958. a series of secial matinee per- formances of Henry IV, Part One. drew twelve thousand secondary school stu- dents. In the next two years, this program of matinee performances was extended, so that in 1960, eahteen thousand stu- dents were able to see thmo and Juliet. This slimmer. H nrv the Fihth was pre- CONTENTS THE SEASON AT_ STRATFORD ....... . .Page Two By Richard Burke, THE DECLINE AND FALL OF WOLGOMOT ..........Page Four By Bernard Waldrop OXFORD: THE ACADEMIC SANDCASTLE ... . ..... . . Page Five By Stephen Beal PREVIEWS AND REVIEWS.......Page Seven SYMPHONY BAND:ev THE RUSSIAN TOUR .... Page Eight By Richard Ostling STUDENT ACTION AND REACTION: A Daily Special Section THE STUDENT PEACE CORPS MOVEMENT. .. Page Ten By Judith and Alan Guskin STUDENTS AND HUAC Page Eleven By Kenneth McEldowney THE SILENT GENERATION..........Page Twelve By Peter Stuart CAMPUS CONSERVATIVES......Page Thirteen By Michael Gillman THE STUDENT REVOLUTIONS . ; ....Page Fourteen By Robert Ross Editor:-Faith Weinstein PHOTO CREDITS: Cover: Associated Press; Pages Two and Three: cour tesy of the Stratford Festival; Page Four: Daily; Page Five: top left, Michael Smyth, top right, Faith Weinstein; Page Six: top, Weinstein; Page Seven: James Keson; Pages Eight and Nine: University News Service; Page Ten: Associated Press; Page Eleven: Associated Press; Page Twelve: Giltrow, Archie Sader Page Thirteen: Associated Press; Page Fourteen: Associated Press; Page I Fifteen: World University Service, Associated Press.j other, at least once a year. At these-ses- sions which last -for about a week, the intense nationalism of the Algerian stu- dents is turned into an intense period of introspection and inspection of the state of their fight for independence: The war with France is discussed in an attempt to bring everyone up to date. The politics of their own government are dis- cussed,:to make the present policy under- stood. Finally, and as an example of their dedication, these students bring to their conferences papers on various aspects of their.-specialties. Students do projects on public health, sanitary engineering, eco- nomic problems. The conference will hear and debate their recommendations. These people are ndt playing; they are preparing themselves to govern what they say will be the best staffed government of the newly independent nations., IN LATIN AMERICA, there is a different conception of the role of the student in society: the political university. The poli- tical university is a phenomenon unique to Latin America. It is a term that is hard for a North American to understand. In a sense the political university connotes the total involvement of the student in the problems of his society. As one Latin American student leader has written: "Of course a student has to study, but he must also discuss on the plane of ideas the solutions to the problems of which he has been made aware. . . . They (students) know that if youth itself does not take an interest in these problems there can be no hope that will ever be solved." The University Reform Movement is the traditional vehicle of the asoiations of T.n+.in Amerin students. It was started in Cordloha. Arpentina. in 1918. Students. there flnnlly broke "the last chain which in the 20th Century which still attached ns to the old monarchial and monastic clnmination." The Cordoba Manifesto de- celhrxs: ".. we want to eradicate from the university orpanization that archaic and herbs-roes eoncent of authority, which in the university is a bulwark of absurd tyranny and which merely serves crimina11ty to nrotect false dimnity and false competence. Sacrifice is our best incentive; this snirit'al red.motion of Latin Ameri- can youth is our sole reward because we know that our cause is-un- hanoily--common to every country of our continent." Thus, the Latin American student acts with a tradition of vision and revolution behind him. He is seen as the carrier of the hopes of -his people; and he plays this part self-consciously.. In protest and rebellion,. the Latin American student will act with a strong feeling for national dig- nity. What is called, simplistically, na- tionalism, is really something much more than that. It is pride and assertion of nationality, to be sure, but it is also asser- tion of youth, and vision. The crowds of students in the streets of Lima, chanting anti-American slogans, and raising pictures of Fidel are acting both in protest and assertion. They pro- t'est the power and influence of the United States. But they also assert their desire for a different kind of world; for a world in which the "new man"-the recon- structed man-may walk with dignity, enjoying that mystical but revolutionary quality, "social justice." Social justice in Latin America carries this revolutionary mystique with it. It means equality; it means the enjoyment of a certain minimum of material things; more often, it is a term hurled at the privileged to tell them what they are not giving the people. Fidel, in Latin America, represents social justice; that is why his followers are -so numerous. That is why the imagination of the students has been captured by the appeal of what they see as Latin American revolution. * * * THERE ARE two main classes of stu- dent action. One is action that relates to social reconstruction, and is derived from the new nationalism of the under- developed countries. The other seems to be actually reaction. That js the complex of activities with which students have responded to the issues of the Cold War. These activities have been largely con- cerned with the arms race, and the grow- ing fear of thermonuclear war. In Janan, students of the Zengakuren act to create a new order, but respond in the Pecrity Pact riots to the Arms Race. Besides Japan, English young people have been among the most active in dem- onstrating against the arms race. The Committee for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) has been able to effectively organ- ize mass rallies to demonstrate peacefully aeainst missiles, testing, and bombs in general. But it is not really a social reform movement. In Algeria, West Africa,: and Latin America. on the other hand, students were taken un by nationalism and the urge to reform the structures of their societies. This distinction is not clear at all. In TLatin America. for example, the Cold War response is nart of the drive for social revolution. Students' resentment against the United States partly stems from their feeling that our policy is more anti-Com- munist than pro-social reform. In their eyes, and unfortunately, in U.S. actions, there comes to be an equation between the demand for "social justice" and anti- Americanism., * * * SURVEYING STUDENT ACTION and thought, whatever its aim, one thing seems dominant. The student activist- the revolutionary, the radical, or the re- former-is not content to take the world as a given quantity and then to accept it. Wherever students act and react, where- ever there is afticulation of their opinions, there is restlessness and rebellion. In some countries, like the newly inde- pendent nation of Guinea, students do not necessarily have a hostile government with which to deal. Their outlets of action and protest then spread to larger prob- lems, larger concerns. The ills of the Cold War world become a focus for them. This does not mean that in a nation in which students disagree with their government's policies they will not concern themselves with international issues; it does mean in certain places there are reasons for explaining specific student concerns. In using Japan, Algeria, West Africa, and Latin America just as examples of student thought and action, the unique features of each educational and political tradition have shown their influence on the mode of student expression. On the other hand, there have been common factors that permit comparison. World revolution, at least from the student viewpoint, is no longer a fruitless Marxist-Leninist dream; students are act- ing on the assumption that they can reach a better order of things, and a better relationshi'p with men. Slowly, and with great soul-searching, American students are becoming aware of the trends of the international student community. The very fact that students in this country are able to cite student action in Turkey, Korea, Japan and Cuba, is an indication of a growing sensitivity to international student action. WHAT PLACE do American students ° have on this world scene. What rel- evance do their actions have? What makes the American student different? No longer the silent generation, Ameri- can students have been heard from con- cerning the rights of the American Ne- gro, concerning civil liberties, concerning disarmament, and concerning the plight of migratory and farm labrers. In sit-ins, of migratory and farm laborers. In sit-ins, Freedom Rides, anti-HUAC demonstra- tions, and direct action projects with migrants in California, a part of the student community has begun to develop a sustained and radical concern with problems facing our nation. But there is not a developed perspec- tive; there is not an ideology; more sig- nificantly, there is not a great number Douglas Campbell and Kate Reid played Henry and Katherine in "Henry VIII" with the force and control typical of the Stratford group's tradition of complex and competent productions. THE sented for two full weeks of student mati- nees. During the first two seasons, occasion- al afternoon concerts were presented, and in 1955, these were expanded to form the first season of the Stratford Music Fes- tival. Opera was introduced in 1956, and that same year, the Film Festival was inaugurated, to bring to the public a renresentative cross-section of the world film industry's achievements. Photo- graphs, slides, and recorded excerpts of the plays are available for loan to the schools, and the annual exhibitions of books and art, are always available t(V jn+nrcd visitors. Their regard for the comfort of visi- tors is remarkable. People who arrive without advance reservations, are en- couraged to wait for cancellations, and every effort is made by the box-office people to secure tickets for them. These theatre people are proud of their ven- ture, and they are well aware that the public is pleased and flattered by these considerations. * * ASIDE from these tangible aspects of the audience - theatre relationship, there is a mutual desire to share on a more profound level. It is most evident in the spirit of expectancy which over- takes the audience as the house dims, ande the play is about to begin. The viewers sense that they are going to be partici- pants in this ritual, rather than passive and docile guests. This is theatre of an- other and better time-a time when the audience felt itself necessary to the pro- duction. It is theatre of grandeur, pomp, and majesty. The characters are going to be bigger than life, they are going to do things of great import, and they are going to do them with flourish. The players are unhampered, by the stifling conventions of 19th century realism. They are going to treat the audince as collaborators in the artistic experience. These are actors who are not afraid to display their art to its fullest capacity. Their training in the repertory system has instilled a confidence in them which comes only after years of training in the proper use of the voice and body. They are constantly in practice from beginning of the season, to the last performance. Day after day, there are classes in voice and diction, stage movement, fencing, scene study, and interpretation. The younger members of the company are required to participate in understudy rehearsals which not only insures quali- fied replacement in the case of emergen- cy, but is even more valuable as a learn- ing and developing process. Without this intensive training, the lifeline of fresh talent would eventually be sapped of its strength. It has its more immediate mer- its in, the overall unity which it guar- antees for each production. The players with half a dozen lines, or perhaps none at all, are just as enthus- iastic over their contribution as the lead- ing players. There are none of the glar- ing inadequacies so frequently encount- ered in productions with large casts. There are none of the incoherent mum- blers so often found on the American pro- fessional stage. The performers have played and train- ed together over the years, and they have come to know their own neculiarities of style, as well as those of their colleagues. They can anticipate moods and actions, which lends a sense of cohesiveness and mutual understanding to the perform- ance. This is a system devoted to the playwright. There are stars in the company, but they are not stars in the worst commercial sense, where the play is tailored to fit the personality of one or two performers. An actor may be the star of one produc- tion, and play a minor role in another. The artistic goals of the group take precedence over any selfish desires for fame and personal recognition. They attack their work with dedication and purpose, fully realizing that only in this way can a level of perfection be achieved. Some of the actors and actresses have been with the Festival since its in- ception in 1953. Many have played three, four or five seasons, while others have played intermittently over the years. It is this devotion to an ideal which has helped to make Stratford a tradition, rather than an isolated example of the successful theatrical enterprise. . * * * BUT THEATRICAL TRADITION in theatre is one thing, and a traditional approach is something quite different. -The traditional approach "to the staging of Shakespeare is often the safest path to follow, but it is not. always the most meaningful, or exciting. The season of 1961 is a splendid example of flexibility in concept. Michael Langham, who directed Love's Labour Lost and Coriolanus, approached the first play from a relatively tradition- al point of view. His attitude toward Coriolanus, however, revealed fresh in- sights into the work, and developed new meanings and new values. George Mc- Cowan staged Henry VIII with a subtle balance of the traditional and the exper- imental. LOVE'S LABOUR LOST represents Shakespeare in a light and playful -mood. It is the work of a man who was amused by the foibles of the idle rich, and the pretenses and indulgences which they allowed themselves. It was written to ridicule the exaaaerated attitudes' of aristocratic society, but the attack is not bitter or malicious, nor can it be said to have the same sienifieance now that it h-e in the slyteenth century. Surely Shakespeare must have intend- ed a delicate balance between humor and romance, but this is a play that is more likely to suffer from changing attitudes, than mnny of his other works. The an- ties of the moonstruck lovers may have been spicy fare for an audience of an- other'time, but the concoction now seems incninld. A lively young cast gallops through these interminable love scenes, but only the humor of Costard the clown, together with occasional flashes from Holofernes,; Sir Nathaniel, and Don Armado save the play from being a very long two hours. Sincethe play needs its humor so bad- ly, it seems strange that the director ap- proached the Don Armado-Moth scenes as he did. These are the scenes which depend heavily on the witty exchange of barbs and repartee. It is the humor of the comic and his foil, but Paul Scofield'% characterization of Don Armado made this approach difficult. His concept of the Spanish fantastico may be a perfectly valid one, but it never seemed to fit the overall pattern of this particular production. He tended to lean Armado in the direction of old age and infirmity, whereas a more lusty ap- proach would have been more effective. It might have helped too, if they had selected an older actor for the part of Moth, Armado's page. The boy could have been no more than ten or eleven, and al- though he already has a good deal of polish and presence, he simply wasn't able to attain the rank of full partner in the scene. Pruning some of the schoolmaster's pedantic inanities might have helped too, but Love's Labour's Lost would still have. been a long two hours. * * * HENRY IRVING, the great actor-man- ager of the late nineteenth century. dismissed Coriolanus with four short words: "Not worth a damn." This is a strange attitude for a man who was con- stantly in search of starring vehicles. Few of Shakespeare's plays afford a better opportunity for the leading char- acter to thoroughly dominate the action.- HE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE of people student ac tionale. Ir apart from tions. The vision. If it is t is no long this leads It is clear are not co them. 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