Benavente--and "Los Intereses Creados" (By G. D. E.) ,with a high hand. They conduct lists, and' there is nearly always a to a rich young lady and all turns out Several weeks ago I discussed, in a tiemseves like nobles and have half sardonic man, however shabby or des- well. The roguery is forgiven and paragraph or two, Jacinto Benavente, of the city kowtowing to them before titute, who speaks the truth, who general pollyannahs are exchanged as they are exposed. But even then, Cris- pokes fun at morals, popular ideals, the play finishes. Silvia, the beautiful bearing chiefly in mind that the So- pin, the mere alert and fearless of the and current virtues. It is this constant young. lady, spouts out the last few ciedad Hispanica is shortly to give his two, does not lose his nerve and every- quality in the plays which allows us words about the divine quality of love, "Los Intereses Creados" (The Bonds thing "comes out all right in the end." to recognize the real Benavente. So, etc. The Sociedad Hispanics will do of Interest). Crispin is a most admirable char- along with the ideas which popular well to omit this address to the audi- I have read the play several times, actor, and he is Benaveite himself, at prejudice demands, Benavente has his ence by Silvia. both in English and in Spanish, and least in thought--or I have read Ben- own. say, and in spite of the twists I urge my readers to go to this play. in the main, I think that it is a very avente's own epigrams for nothing, which he must make, his products They may not be able to understand worth while production. Its shortT- Crispin embodies the artist in Bena- are works of art, and even, when they Spanish but they cannot miss the im- coming is the shortcoming of ever vente. He looks on the world with fail somewhat the artist, Benavente, port of the play, the genial roguery of Benavente play, the author's con- an eye so sharp that he can file has not changed. He himself is aloof Crispin, the timidity of Leandro, the sideration for the theatre-goer, who, every act into its motivating pigeon, in his beliefs, a trifle scornful, and al- bombast and pathos of Arlequin and in Spain, is almost as maudlin as the hole. He is disillusioned, and he has ways deep in the problems of life. the Captain, the poltroonery of Silvia's theatre-goer in America. The Span- a caustic tongue. r As the names, Harlequin and Colum- father, the cynicism of Dona Sirena. ard, as a rule, wants his piarofor blne, suggest, the play is more or less In addition, Underhill's translation, lards an r ul r,"ns his "ia," Crispin it is who compensates f fanciful, but not to any extreme. (Svribners) for all its faults, will pre- his "blood and thunder," or he wants the sentimental streak in the play. Benavente is merely indulging i sa- pare you for a delightful and ap- some sappy stuff about love and Those who would have Benavente Bnvnei nrl nugn nsr aeyufradlgtu n p i seals. bowing voluntarily before sentiment casm when he says that its person- preciable play. Even if the acting be ages are not real men and women, that bad, which I much doubt, ("Zaragueta" So one can see that Benavente has and romance will do well to consider the play is without any reality at all, was well given despite the loobiness his troubles with' the audience. Te Crispin. Says he: I have actually known persons who of theme and other obstacles) the popular. superstitions of Spain, the . "Intelligence is the conseience of have taken these statements of Bena- worth of the play-cannot be disguised. church with its medieval pishposb, truth and he who loses it among the vete seriously. I prefer anytime to see such a likewise lay, on the actor and play- lies of his life is as if he himself were Well, Crispin marries his partner (Continued on Page 7) wright with a heavy hand. But they lost, because he will never find nor are not so influential as the public know himself again but will becme. in general. There is scarcely a play in himself another lie." (This is my by Benavente but what contains some translation and naturally not a very bit of cutting satire at the religious good one, but it is a vast improve- 4G folk and the Spanish Ladies' Aids. ment on Underhill who actually in- h e re s a D ifference In spite of the verbose tootings of serts some banal statement about be- John- Garret Underhill who has trans- ing "without compass or sail." Else lated Benavente's plays into English, my Madrid edition of the play is we cannot help but see that Bena- faulty.) vente writes under a constant pres- "How did youlearn so much?" Le- Have your Clothes Cleaned and Pressed sure from outside. Underhill says andro, Crispin's partner asks. b Expert Indian Cleaners that Benavente does not write to the "I meditated for awhile in the gal- t an public. Benavente himself says that leys," answers Crispin, "where this he must compromise to a certain ex- conscience of my intelligence accused tent. me of being more idiot than- rogue. But at heart the man is an artist; he With more roguery and less idiocy, breathes irony and skepticism. Along in place of rowing I should have com -_~ with his sentimentalizers one finds manded the galleys." always a keen, alert character speak- 'In another place, Columbina, the ing thc truth with sardonic lips un- maid of Dona Sirena-both somewhat loosing the words. Such a character disillusioned-makes the statement, Cleanng PrSSing is Crispin in Los Intereses Creados, "It is as foolish to trust a man while he such a character is Don Heliodoro in lives as a woman while she loves." "The Evil Doers of Good," and thus (Here Underhill's tanslation is also ___ through nearly all of Benavente's bad but it is better than my own, so better, plays. Benavente in Germany I give his for want of something bet- or in France would be dramatist as ter). great as Ibsen. He has the same clear Then consider the delightful irony perspective of the world, of life, and in the speech of Arlequin who says, lie has the broad dramaturgical knowl- "Until today no one has dared any- HAVE IT DONE BY THE edge which Ibsen himself had. In- thing against him; today we all dare deed, Benavente himself has been an against him together. There is spirit- actor, and a good one. edness, a moral quality in the crowd." And thus, on and on, not only Hnehuo adohoanl utFd hisno faults, conem nI have said. through this play, but through nearly But I do not condemn him as does all of Benavente's work. The char- George Jean Nathan. On the other acters often shift, the theme often 426 THOMPSON ST. PHONE 2650-J hand I do not fling the marshmallow differs, but there is always the irony as does the idolating James Garret at the expense of morals and mora- Underhill, to whom Benavente appear a modern Shakespeare. This Under- hill fellow is more effusive than a pet puppy. Not only that, but I find his translations very bad, time and again, and so, in the final analysis, I see him for an almost useless fel- low, a bad ctcritic and an incompetent, translator. But to give him some small due, it must be recognized that Benavente is a difficult man to translate. In such The policy of this institution is to extend works as "The Governor's Wife" there toevery customer, regardless of the size is a constant play on words, a thing frequent enough in his other plays, of his account, the very best We have in What makes me laugh Is the manner' in which Underhill must have labored the line of courtesy and service. and sweated In trying to work them out. He might well have spared him- W e cordially invite every student in the self, for the result is almost invariably ridiculous. A footnote would - have University to open an account with us if done far better service. heh nota a done so. Nor do I insist that a translator doh a the business literally. Far from it! But there is occasion when there was utterly no use of Underhill changing", - the sense, of befogging the business. The Ann Arbor Savin sBank But back to Los Intereses Creados. The theme in general Is that of two destitute men, of half-rogues, of Resources-Over $5,000,000.00 shrewd, carefree men who, beset by poverty and creditors, carry things