1 Desperate Acts
The Role of the Audience in the Process of Playwriting
Christine Roberts
Introduction
With the exception of a small group of playwrights who create their plays through workshopping techniques, most playwrights engage in this process of creation as a solitary act. Who then is the playwright writing for? Is s/he writing with a particular audience in mind or is the play driven by an exploration of themes and ideas which are then deemed more suited to a particular audience? Does the playwright write as a literary exercise or is the notion of its performative aspects taken into account at the time of writing? To a certain extent the answer to these questions clearly depends on the individual playwright, but the decisions made by a playwright are mediated by his/her access to the means of the production of these plays.
Theatre is a live, interactive medium so although plays are clearly written texts, in my opinion they should be written to be performed. It is here the first complication in the notion of audience occurs. For a play to be performed it usually means an acceptance of that play by an established theatre or theatre company. The Artistic Director of a theatre is driven not only by aesthetic concerns but also commercial ones. His or her (and as we will see later in this chapter, it is usually his) concept of audience may differ greatly from the playwrightâs. If his main consideration is to ensure a commercial success then clearly he will be looking for a particular type of play which will guarantee this. What of the playwright who is tackling themes which may not be considered âmainstreamâ? Or is writing in a style which is not easily classifiable? What happens to these texts? In this chapter I aim to explore the variety of ways in which playwrights generally, and female playwrights in particular, overcome this second perception of the concept of audience; and why, despite their considerable success as writers they continue to be under-represented in mainstream theatre. As Lizbeth Goodman points out, if âseriousâ theatre is safeguarded by men who regard women as the exception, then as they come under increasing threat from financial cut-backs and decreasing funds they revert towards safer territory.
There is a desire to see theatre as a place that is all about taking risks, as a place that is about experiment and not stasis. But clearly theatre is a place that allows for certain types of chance-taking and not others; it is possible for theatre to be a world that pushes boundaries, but leaves some intact.1
I would maintain this happens for reasons not only linked to those of gender but also because of particular themes and styles adopted by playwrights of both sexes. So, how many of these considerations is the playwright aware of during the act of writing a play? Indeed, how many of these should the playwright be aware of when writing? What happens during this process?
The Act of Writing
The most basic of questions has to be, does the text of a play stand as a literary piece of writing? If so, the writer is writing with one audience in mind â the reader â who then becomes responsible for imaginatively providing additional information such as gesture, movement, use of time and space, etc. If, however, we accept Raymond Williamsâ notion that âthe text does no more than prescribe an effect, of which the means must be worked out performanceâ2, the writerâs relationship with both his/her audience and the actual written text is a much more complex one.
Playwright Sarah Daniels describes this process of writing for theatre as getting harder, not easier, the more she becomes aware of its complexities. She cites Bryony Lavery as describing it as âa big nutty fruit cake made up of the script, the director, the designer, actors, technicians and audienceâ.3 Daniels continues to explain that when it works, it does so because everyone has invested talent and passion in it. A brilliant script, she suggests, does not necessarily make a brilliant play. Similarly, a dull script can âglowâ with brilliant direction, design and acting:
The playwright has to learn to âlet goâ to enable the process to happen. There will always be things in a production which were not how I saw them in my head. The skills and imagination which directors and actors bring can enhance a play greatly. (Although, I am sometimes left feeling like a big nutty fruit cake all on my own and, at the risk of sounding sensational, however dangerously on the edge of wanting to shout, âNo, I didnât mean it like that at allâ).4
Derridaâs explanation of how theatricality is deferred is useful here. He explains that the dramatic component is encoded âin the writing itself: the clause structures, for example remain stable, as does the order of speech â but other aspects are differently coded, between dramatic writing (always in writing for theatre) and the context- specific conditions of actualisationâ.5
Not all writers are so philosophical about letting their work go however. Arnold Wesker states in his seminar paper âPlaying with the writerâs rightsâ that âwhen I go to a theatre it is the authorâs voice, his or her perceptions ... that I want to hear, not the actressâsâ. He continues:
if the director is imposing his views in a stage production by cutting text, re-arranging the sequence of events, placing the action in a setting different from what the author has imagined: and if the actress is interpreting the unfaithful wife as a ruthless woman, then how will you know what it was that the author wanted to say?6
He also makes the case that given the many opportunities for mis-representation in the theatre, many directors are now writing their own plays, many actresses directing their own performances and many writers âsculpting their own workâ.
No matter how much a writer wishes to control the interpretation of her/his work when writing for production s/he must be prepared for the encoding and decoding of the text which take place at many different levels. These stages are clearly indicated in Aston and Savonaâs Theatre as Sign System. They set them out as follows in four stages:
âą The dramatist encodes the text in terms of her/his perception of its function as a blueprint for theatrical production.
âą The director decodes the text, initiates a process of commission or collaboration with a production team and arrives at a mise-en-scene.
âą The designer re-encodes the text to develop a portfolio of designs, within a predetermined or negotiated brief and subject to interpretative, spatial and budgetary constraints.
âą The spectator decodes the production, works upon and is worked upon by the visual dimension as an integral aspect of the reception process.7
From the playwrightâs perspective the important point here is the awareness that the writing is a âblueprint for productionâ. A playtext may stand on its own as an outstanding piece of literary text (Shakespeare and Beckett bear testament to this), but essentially a playwright writes texts to be physically realized. This factor alone dictates viewing not only the prospective audience differently, but the very act of writing. The objective is to construct an informed performance text.
As Aston and Savona point out, the concept of time (present, chronological, plot, and performance) is an important consideration when constructing a text for performance.8 How time is used in the text is dependent on the style and intentions of the writer; how it is interpreted in performance is largely dependent on the director and actors. But this consideration alone dictates a very different process of creation. The very use of the word text also needs to be considered in that two very different forms of dialogue are employed. Ingarden employs the terms Haupttext (âprimary textâ) and Nebentext (âancillary textâ) to differentiate between the dialogue of the characters and the stage directions which frame that dialogue.9 In performance the spoken word may not always be paramount; theatre is essentially symbolic and other visual or aural elements may acquire equal if not more importance. Similarly the role of stage directions varies in importance depending on both the individual writer and the style of performance. Some writers consider them important not only to give added information but also as an attempt to retain some autonomy over their work. They can also be viewed in more creative terms when the primary text of dialogue gives way to physical or visual dimensions of the performance. Essentially they provide a starting point for those involved in the production of the piece but once in production, they can also be totally disregarded.
The director Deborah Warner failed to realise the authority of Beckettâs stage directions and, in choosing to disregard them in 1994 when directing Footfalls at the Garrick Theatre, brought the wrath of the Beckett Estate on her head. As a result the production was abruptly terminated and she has since been banned from producing any of his work. These are general considerations; obviously emphasis is placed according to the individual playwright. Sarah Daniels believes that style is often given more credence than content. To her the importance of the writing is paramount:
Iâm afraid Iâm old fashioned enough to think, I donât care how beautiful, ritzy, glitzy, dazzly or weird anything looks, I want to be intellectually and emotionally involved in it. I want to engage with it on a gut level.10
Whereas Debbie Isitt, having trained as an actor, places emphasis on the role of the actor in creating the relationship between audience and play:
Without the actorâs influence, correct interpretation, creativity, contribution, the dramatic experience wouldnât exist. Thatâs how the art form of theatre works.11
She would certainly be supported by the actor Peter OâToole who in a recent article in The Observer (11 July 1999), cited the rise of the directorâs role, as personified by Trevor Nunn and Peter Hall, as one of the main reasons he has given up theatre-acting. He saw their role as interpreters of text as an affront to the professional actor who had been trained and had honed his craft. Ironically OâTooleâs long-standing friend Richard Burton held a very different view. He was outspoken in his condemnation of the profession of acting, seeing it as a mindless activity, referring to the writer as the only creative person in the process.12
Structure, for Phylis Nagy, is the major influence on her writing. She states that, âI actually think that plays are structured the way certain forms of music are structured.... I couldnât write anything without bearing in mind the principles of musical compositionâ.13 She is also very sceptical when writers explain how in the process of writing âthe character took overâ and suddenly the play was âwriting itselfâ. âIt isnât some mystical process,â she says, âwhereby no one knows what theyâre doing.... Weâre not mediums.â14
Helen Edmundson writes very much with the actor in mind, to the point that her texts have been accused of âlooking slightly oddâ. She believes that knowing how an actor acts means she can cut the words back:
I do that naturally and I do it even more when we get into rehearsal. Theyâll be playing a scene and Iâll think, âThatâs just so obvious. He really doesnât need to say it because heâs doing itâ.15
Without losing sight of the power of the written word, some playwrights write with a very clear visualization of images and how they will work physically and symbolically on stage. Symbolism happens when elements become more significant than their tangible meanings, and this is why, when effectively harnessed, theatre becomes such a powerful resonator of meaning. It is ...