PAGE TWELVE THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MAY 3, 1925 THE THEATRE IN F ERMENT ---GERMANY Prof. F 'rederick Wahr Disusses GenS cnd At DrmaissI Seod Ari I I By Prof. Frederick Wahr (Editor's Note: This is the secondI of a series of six articles by mem- bers of the faculty on the adapta- tions and reactions of the various continental countries to the present{ progressive tendencies in the the- atre.) * * * The year 1889 stands out memor- ably in the annals of the modern German stage, for it was then that the German drama took on new and vital import as an art force and the theatre in Germany began to assume the important position which it has since held on the continent. In 1889 the united efforts of several en- thusiasts led by Otto Brahm succeed- ed in founding the "Freie Buehne" in Berlin in imitation of the "Theatrej Libre" of Antoine in Paris, and in presenting Ibsen's "Ghosts," Tolstoi's "Powers' of Darkness," and Zola's "Therese Raquin." More than this, however, they introduced to the pub- lic Gerhart Ilauptmann's first drama, "Before Dawn," and tlereby inau- gurated the naturalistic drama in' Germany. Hauptmann's early naturalistic dramas-tragedy and comedy-fol- lowed at the rate of one a year, cul- minating in the "Weavers" (1892) and in "Florian Geyer" (1896). Many; plays written under the influence of Hauptmann's early successes and al-1 so under the influence of Ibsen, Tol-' stoi, and Zola, flooded the theatres. Of special interest-chiefly so because it is the work of the formulators of the doctrines of consistent natural- ism in Germany, Arno Holz and Jo- hannes Schlaf, to whom Hauptmann dedicated his first play and from whom. he learned the naturalistic1 technique-is the play "Family Se- licke," almost a perfect example of the naturalist's art. Max Halbe in "Youth" (1893) and "Mother Earth", (1898), and Georg Hirschfeld in "The Mothers" (1896) and "Agnes Jordan" (1898)--both written under the influ- ence of Hauptmann - produced dramas that were stage successes and stand out as noteworthy exam- ples of naturalism. Nor must we for- get to mention the plays of the folk by Karl Schonherr, the "Earth" (1907) which reminds one of O'Neill'sj "Deshre under the Elms" and the "Faith and Fireside" of 1910. In 1889 also appeared Sudermann's first great stage success, "Honor." Sudermann has written many plays; some of these, "Magda" (1893) for X Seirhait I auptm nin The dean of German dramaitists, who is discussed at length by Pro-} fessor Wahr in his article on the mod-I ern German theatre as the basic founder of the entire expressionistic movement. example, have become international successes. But in Germany Suder- mann's name and fame have itumiibled sadly. He is still a clever playwright and knows the tricks of his trade, of forced theatrical effects, climaxes, repartee; but his plays lack the touch of genuineness and sincerity; they; bid for sensational success and popUi- larity and make use of all the time- worn artifices of the "well-made" play of Dumas and Sardou. They seem old to us now, their problems superficially thought out, their tech- nique, clever, stagey, but not. genuine. Yet Sudermann deserves credit for. having pictured in his plays a cer- tain element in the social life of pre- war Berlin and also for his ability to write "well-made" and successful stage plays. The naturalistic movement in the drama with its emphasis upon a true and phonographic reproduction of reality lasted through the nineties of the nineteenth century and the first few years of the twentieth. But at the same time other forces were operative in German drama. In I891 'Wedekind wrote "Spring's Awaken- ing", Hofmannsthal began his series of romantic and poetic one-act play Ipieces, the "Anatol" series, thec rm any s "Green Cockatoo," "Light-o'-Love"u and his novelettes. lie has given ust the best picture of pre-war Vienua,S (JC QThe.* the lightheartedness, the gentle ironyI Series, and sweet sad mincan choly the spoil- ed, elegant dandy, the "suesses Mal - h and Schnitzler brought out "The Af- del," the ever present consciousness fairs of Anatol". Hauptmann's "Nan- of the transitiveness of all things and i nele" with its use of verse and "The of the beauty of the fleeting moment.1 Sunken Bell" appeared in 1893 and His characters are wearied, boredr 1896 respectively. and play with their emotions. are oldy So through the nineties two cur- before their time, do too little and rents ran parallel, one realistic, the chatter too much and take life tool' other ramanrtic. Just as the natur-lightly. These plays have a. simple alists aimed to reproduce external charm and grace of style, a light deli- reality in its mutsdta-hecate touch, a love of beauty and the "truth" they called it-so the neo- beautiful thing, an art that belongs aso romanticists led by Hofmnansthal much to a Vienna that is gone as thed fled from the dull monotony of every l music of Mozart, or the waltz melo-F day life to a land of beauty some- dies of Johann Strauss. where in the past, the glory color Other neo-romanticists-minor onesd of the Italian Renaissance or of Ger- are Edward Stucken, who dramatizedf man fairy and folk lore. They sought the Round Table stories, Vollmoeler, now to reproduce their moods, im- author of the "Miracle" which Rein- pressions, fancies, dreams in beauti- i hardt produced in New York and r ful verse, in a language that in its Cleveland last year; Ernst Iardtt careful arrangement and use of vowel who won several drama prizes witht and consonant sounds was as tuneful his "Trantris the Fool," a play whichc as music. The neo-romanticists loved ; enjoyed a phenomenal run in Berlin. to work over old dramas and legend-I Two other forces were working, ary themes. Hofmannsthal wrote through the nineties and the early his "Elektra"-by no means a classi- nineteen hundreds, the one an at-c cal interpretation, his "Oedipus,' tempt to bring back to the drama a '"Venice Saved" (modelled afer Ot- vigorous form-cure, a neo-classic in- way). "Everyman" (after the old me- terpretation, led by several theorists, dieval play); Richard Beer-Hofmann the other in ,the person of a unique wrote a drama, "The Count of Charo- individual Frank Wedekind, (1864-1 lais" modelled after the "Fatal Dow- 11918) striking out its own pat's in ut-! ry" of Massanger and Field, in almost ter indifference to contemporary matchless verse, a work that has been theory and practice. Wedekind was reproduced many times in Germany, aroused against the morals and con- even this last winter with great success ventions of the bourgeoisie. lie aim- Hauptmann in 1896 began with "The ed to reveal truths, not to mirror life Sunken Bell" the series of dramas like the naturalists whom he scorned Ibased on folk lore and legend, which and he became a merciless and cuni- contains some of his best work, now cal critic of the life about him. lie and then stopping to produce a mas- produced and acted in his own plays terpiece in the naturaxistic style, as j and did more than any other single for example "Drayman lienschell" individual to free the German drama (1898) or "Rose Bernd" (1902). from naturalism. His scenes are gro- Schnitzler, master of subtile dialogue tesque, ecstatic, lyric., Iis people are j anrd a delivery of touch, typical of part of the great, menager.e of life, the Viennese, started like Hlauptmann as he called it; in them nature's tires under the influence of Ibsen and are slumbering, ready at any provo- wrote "problem' plays during the cation to burst forth into annihilat- early nineties and then followed lof- ing flame. They are like elemental mannsthal into the romantic past of forces, super-men and women, born the Renaissance in the "Veil of Bea- out. of their 'lace and time, like their trice" (1899) and the "Young Med- creator, and doomed to be nisunder.- afdus" (1909). Doubtless he will be stood and scorned by their contem- remembered best by his shorter poraries. Wedekind is as he has been called, "a tragic moralist in an im- moral world." There is in him some- thing of Shaw and something of Stringberg. By him and by String- berg-particularly the "To Damascus" ---the younger expressionistic groupj has been most directly influenced. The dialogue of "Spring's Awaken- ing" (1891) and the "Earth Spirit" (1897) withs its almost staccato-like rapidity was eagerly imitated by the younger element. Moreover, Wede- kind's grotesque and unreal scenes, his symbolism, and use of such char- acters as the masked stranger in the churchyard scene of "Springs Awak- ening," his hostility to the establishedt order, his moments of cestacy, his' dynamic and demonic power, all ap- pealed to them. In 1912 appeared Reinhard Sorge's drama "The Beggar.". This was the first German expressionistic play. Strindberg and Wedekind were Sol- ge's masters. The expressionistc movement in the German drama runs through the second decade of the twentieth century. The war-and the downfall of the established social re- gime in Germany-first brought it to' the attention of the public; although many of the plays which yere pro- duced for the first time during the war were written before 1914. The magazines "Die Aktion", 1911, and "Der Sturm", 1910, gave impetus to the movement. Expressionism in the drama-which is but another phase of expressionism in painting, sculp- ture, architecture, nhusic, the novel,? the lyric,-was in its origin the out-I come of revolt against the literary and dramatic tendencies of the time. It marks the turning back of the time, from naturalistic and neo-romantic art and in theory it aims to directly express the inner spirit of things and not to represent or mirror their outer manifestation or so-called reality. TheI naturalist as well as the neo-romanti- cist - observed every detail of an ob- stagecraft, new lighting effects and ject, sought to catch anl reproduce I new uses of the spotlight, of colors, every varying shade of color or drops, etc. Sorge's "Beggar" is typi- sound, brought to the study of the cal in this regard. It is called a "dra- outer world or the inner self the umatic Mission." The characters are painstaking care for detail and ut- simply named, as the poet the father, mosphere that has distinguished sci- the imother, sister, girl, older friend, entific research. The poet went to three critics. There is not attempt at nature with notebook in hand so t at individualization. The dialogue s his work might be "true" to the "ori rapid and strikes one as a fitting-to- inal" as possible. The characters in gether of interrupted monologues. Hauptmann's naturalistic plays speak The expressionist places much em- a language that is really "heard" by the phasis upon elemental cries-elemen- author. He has listened for and de- tal attempts of speech, though in this tected the faintest distinctions in Hauptmann had anticipated thieni. sound and rhythm. But, the expres- The expressionist E also aims to give sionistic said, what is the sense of all new force to the German language this? The photograph, the phono- by dropping inflected articles, noun graph, the cinema can do as much and adjective endings. In the "Beg- and better. Art is not the exact re- gar" the chief character, the poet, production of the externalities of does most of the talking and the things; art is a thing of the inner , action centers entirely about him and world, an expression of the spirit, of his inner experiences, so much so ideas. One must seek to express not that most of the scenes are simply the outer physical reality of things, the symbolical presentation of his but their .inner spiritual reality. Lot own imaginings. In the production me close my eyes to the physical of the play, as with so many lof the reality of things and paint or portray other expressionistic dramas, the things as they come to me in the 'Hero poses continually in the spot- chaos of my own mind. Let mep or- (Continued from Page Twelve) tray my emotion through pictorial means, dramatic means, the stage, however you will, independent of the physical reality of the object which has impressed me. And so the expressionistic drama has departed from the old well-worn ways of the traditional theatre, and in so doing it has been aided by all the new and technical accessories of OPINION= . ! e C.. C0, I= .I- A. U 4) s.-. W) .h.J b4. Q O n 4 ..- Cl) cS. a) 4) s.. '- N Cl) 0 0 N b ic. 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