USTheater is devoted to plays, operas, and performances, American and international, performed and published in the United States. We also are open to new plays by playwrights. All materials are copyrighted as noted. The blog is edited and much of it written by Douglas Messerli
Friday, October 25, 2013
Douglas Messerli | "Nothing on a Lecture" (on Robert Wilson's performance of John Cage's Lecture on Nothing)
Thursday, October 17, 2013
Douglas Messerli | "This One Has Been Being Very American" (on Glass, Wilson, and Child's Eistein on the Beach)

JUDGES
This
court of common pleas is now in session.
LAWYER
: MR BOJANGLES
If
you see any of those baggy pants it was huge
Mr
Bojangles
If
you see any of those baggy pants it was huge chuck the hills
If
you know it was a violin to be answer the telephone and if
any
one asks you please it was trees it it it is like that
Mr
Bojangles, Mr Bojangles, I reach you
So
this is about the things on the table so this one could he counting up.
The
scarf of where in Black and White
Mr
Bojangles If you see any of those baggy pants chuck the hills
it
was huge If you know it was a violin to be answer the
telephone
and if anyone asks you please it was trees it it it is like that.
Mr
Bojangles Mr Bojangles Mr Bojangles I reach you
The
scarf of where in Black and White
This
about the things on the table.
This
one could be counting up.
This
one has been being very American.
The
scarf of where in Black and White.
If
you see any of those baggy pants it was huge chuck the hills
If
you know it was a violin to be answer the telephone and if
any
one asks you please it was trees it it it it it it it it it it
is
like that
………………
This
about the gun gun gun gun gun...
In this remarkable piece American stereotypes are called up from the roles played by Black dancer Bill Robinson to the Bob Dylan composition referring to a white street dancer in baggy pants, while simultaneously suggesting the American cultural history of the minstrel shows, all resulting in the kind of sophistic logic of sentences such as “if you knew it was the violin to be….answer the telephone” and the wonderful closing “if any one asks you please…it was trees,” all ending in the stutter of “it it it it it it it it it,” repeated in the final result of this aspect of the American experience (“This one has been being very American”), in the violence expressed in “gun gun gun gun gun.”
Similarly, in the second Trial—also
memorable simply because it is repeated almost 40 times—Lucinda Child’s Patty
Hearst speech, performed from a large bed, is equally poetic in its effects,
calling up, as it does, Allen Ginsberg’s “A Supermarket in California,” and
expressing the wacky consumerism of a woman in “a prematurely air-conditioned
super market” attracted to bathing caps despite the fact that she has been
avoiding the beach:
I
was in this prematurely air-conditioned super market
and
there were all these aisles
and
there were all these bathing caps that you could buy
which
had these kind of Fourth of July plumes on them
they
were red and yellow and blue
I
wasn't tempted to buy one
but
I was reminded of the fact that I had been avoiding
the
beach.
Other texts are first embedded in nonsense phrases that gradually become rhythmic units that slowly turn into recognizable phrases and ultimately sentences:
Would would it. Would it get. Would it
get some. Would it get some wind.
Would it get some wind for. Would it get
some wind for the. Would it get
some wind for the sailboat?
Or
the earlier, What does he want? series of repetitions.
Visually things move slowly in time and
space back and forth, from horizontality to vertical positions. All is
relative. But also all these create narrative links, often repeated in the
intermittent Knee Plays.
Underneath, or perhaps one should say, on
top of these scenes, is the continuously pulsing beauty of Glass’ music, like
the texts, shifting in their endless repetition from simple pulses to widening
layers of melody.
So what is my problem, you might ask?
Haven’t I just described an incredible piece of art? Yes and no. For the
problem is that this work, which so purposefully resists all narrative
structures, is, as I argue, extremely narrative. Admittedly, I see narrative
(as opposed to story) in practically everything, and have long been convinced
that we inherently think in narrative patterns (at least I do). But the work’s
very resistance to those narrative threads inevitably creates a search for
deeper links between the “opera’s” parts, which is insistently and sometimes
meaninglessly denied. Had the creators of this piece been willing to simply
describe their work as a kind of Cagean “circus,” we might have all been able
to simply sit back and enjoy its various parts; but by portentously tying it to
Einstein, and purposely toying with ideas that are vaguely Einsteinian, they
merely frustrate all efforts to penetrate, while seemingly demanding that we
still attempt to make a whole of the pieces.
Why choose these certain elements of
American cultural history in the Age of Einstein, and not others? Was it merely
that the creators had already worn us and themselves out in the 4 ½ hours they
had arbitrarily determined (it was, originally, even longer)? I am not asking
for a fluid narrative rise and fall of action, nor even a kind of coherent and
binding structure, but I’m afraid, the creators seem to be, and that transforms
the work from being an enjoyable series of musical, visual, theatrical, and
terpsichorean episodes into an often frustrating endurance test.
Finally, the work does not today seem as
radical as its creators and faithful admirers describe it to be. Throughout, a
great deal of the work is simply sentimental in both its images and language: a
half moon gradually turns into a full moon as the silent lovers on a slowly
moving train briefly come together in a gentle touch. The mellow jazz tenor
saxophone solo of Andrew Sterman justifiably haunts all the urban street
walkers—as well as the audience.
Although the judge of the first Trial (the excellent Charles Williams)
brilliantly imitates a feminist from Kalamazoo who, tired of bearing babies,
wants all her kisses back, the final scene ends with an oscillation of a kiss
between park bench lovers. All right, I want love and peace as well, as I’m
sure Einstein did. But I think I might never describe the depth of my feelings
in the clichéd language of a lover, as containing more than the grains of sand
on the seashore or stars in the sky. The work seems to have much more fun when
it simply counts. And in counting it matters more than its simple-minded
solutions proffered by a bus driver in the dark.
Surely, if nothing else, this is not
radical thinking, as Tim Page argued for it beforehand. The theater of language
by writers of a decade or two later, like Mac Wellman (in Terminal Hip and The
Great Magoo, the later also with music), Len Jenkin, Richard Foreman and Eric
Overmyer, for example, are, to my way of thinking, far more radical. Let us
just agree, that in its mix of forms and thematic arches, Einstein on the Beach
is, in fact, “being very American,” at moments profoundly complex, at others,
entertainingly hollow.
Los
Angeles, October 16,
2013