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Milestone in theatre history
'Arturo Ui', Bertolt Brecht's political satire has been included
as one of the items of the Indo-German festival. The play is to
be staged in New Delhi, Mumbai and Calcutta, says VASANTI
SANKARANARAYANAN.
WRITTEN in 1941 during his years in exile in the United States,
Bertolt Brecht's "Arturo Ui" is a political satire about the
making of a fascist. It retells the story of Hitler and the Nazi
era. But, if one closely examines it, it is not just about
Hitler. Set in Chicago in the 1920s, Brecht modelled the plot and
characters on Al Capone's mafia rule in order to demonstrate not
only the dangers of National Socialism and Fascism, but also the
relationship between fascism, crime and capitalism. "Arturo Ui"
is also termed as the comic confluence of a gangster story and
German history, and the figure of Ui reveals a facet of political
life, topical in the contemporary world - namely the proximity of
showmanship to demagogery and modern mass politics.
The play has been produced by the Berliner Ensemble, the group
initiated by the playwright himself. The director was the late
Heiner Muller who has had the distinction of knowing Brecht and
imbibing his "Lehrstuck" (teaching plays). It has been included
as one of the items of the Indo-German Festival, but,
unfortunately, it is not coming to Chennai. Chennai does not have
a stage where "Arturo Ui' can be performed using modern
technological inputs. The production, therefore, will go only to
New Delhi, Mumbai and Calcutta.
For any lover of Brecht's plays, a visit to the Berliner Ensemble
is like a pilgrimage; situated on the banks of the Speer river,
the Ensemble theatre (or Theater Am Schiffbauerdamm) has an
elegance of its own. It is preserved as it was in the time of
Bertolt Brecht. The height and depth of the stage takes one's
breath away. Added to all this is the knowledge that this play is
the last production of Heiner Muller whose fame as a playwright,
theoretician and director is undisputed all over Germany. Last,
but not the least, what aroused my curiosity was the presence of
Martin Wuttke, a leading German actor who was chosen as "Actor of
the Year" by Theater Heute, one of Germany's top theatre
magazines.
It is not my intention to go into the details of the play or my
impressions of it in this article, for I realise it would be an
exercise in futility for readers denied the chance of seeing the
play. Sufficient to say that Martin Wuttke, as Arturo Ui, is
unforgettable. I had a chance to talk to Martin Wuttke and
Stephan Suschke, assistant director, that gave me valuable
insights into this production.
First, a synopsis of the plot. The unemployed Ui comes to Chicago
with seven thugs to bring peace to the vegetable market. While
posing as a law-abiding citizen and a family man, he is a hoodlum
intent on establishing a monopoly racket. Selling production to
legitimate businessmen against burglaries and robberies, his gang
uses violence and murder when they refuse to cooperate. Political
bribery, corrupt police, gang violence and manipulation of a
timid mass press are all the techniques that Ui uses to gain
supreme power. In creating a character such as Ui's, Brecht tries
to illustrate the relationship between fascism, crime and
capitalism.
I asked Martin Wuttke why he chose acting as a profession. With a
twinkle in his eye, he answered, "I was thrown out of school,
because I could not keep up with the strictures of the
educational system. At that point I wanted to be a sculptor.
However, the girl I was dating was keen on acting as a profession
and was studying in an art school in Dusseldorf. She went for an
audition and I went with her. I was selected and thus began my
career in acting. You could call it pure accident." Later, he was
trained at the Actors School in Bohum under Peter Zadek, a
leading director of Germany, and in Frankfurt. In Frankfurt, he
began to act small parts. In the second year, he played the role
of Hamlet.
The turning point in his life was the decade he worked with noted
director Einar Schleef. Each year there was one production. One
of the important parts he played was that of Faust. Schleef's
association with the Berliner Ensemble, enabled Wuttkee also to
came into contact with it.
Brecht was no longer important in Germany, he said. "Nobody talks
of him in Germany any more." I told him that in India, Brecht is
a major influence on playwrights and theatre activists and his
plays have been translated into several Indian languages.
Wuttke is amused. "I had a similar experience when our group
visited South America. An old actor came up to me and told me of
his visit to the Berliner Ensemble theatre in Berlin. He called
it a pilgrimage. Our theatre group was treated with such respect
and warmth.
He finds Brecht's theories on acting "boring", but his plays
fascinating.
He has never worked with Brecht. However, he has been directed in
his impersonation of Arturo Ui, by a celebrity none other than
the late Heiner Muller. Explaining why Brechtian theories are a
little outdated in the modern context of Germany he says, "Brecht
himself would today look at his theories formulated in the 1940s
and 1950s differently. They came out of the social and political
context he was living in. If these situations change, the manner
of expressions in theatre have also got to change. Brecht's
'alienation' theory has been canned. What is normal in today's
context alone can form the basis of contemporary theatre theory.
It is important to remember that Brecht developed his theories in
opposition to the Naturalist theory, which he saw as the elite or
bourgeois form. He wanted to open up theatre for people and,
therefore, initiated his theory of alienation. Brecht never said
anything theoretical during rehearsals. The actors he worked with
did not always come from his kind of training. Brechtian theory
was not a law, but a way of opening up possibilities in acting.
It would be best to remember that theory was only a manual or
instruction for acting."
Talking of Arturo Ui specifically, Wuttke said, "The play was
written while Brecht was in Finland waiting for his visa to the
United States. Even in 1941-42, he had a naive way of looking at
Hitler. This is questionable. He did not know about the
concentration camps and other such realities connected with
Hitler. He should have related to it better. It is very clear
that the play was written for an American audience. That is why
the mechanical image of Hitler emerges. Brecht wanted to show
that Hitler could not have become what he was without the active
support and participation of the industrialists and capitalists.
Viewing the play with a German perspective changes the play
considerably. First, we have to demystify Hitler as a person and
show him as a figure we could laugh at. We have to work against
making him a figure larger than life. For somebody growing up in
Germany, there are so many different ways of encountering Hitler
as a phenomenon. The totality of this phenomenon cannot be fitted
into the role of Arturo Ui. In the production, I have tried to
keep the historical figure in mind.
"When we did the play we thought we would broadly follow the
script and plot of the play as it is. But a mere reproduction
would have resulted in a didactic interpretation of the play. We
consciously tried to make some scenes difficult. We also
introduced emotional heat into the play through music and acting.
In fact this is something Brecht would have liked. Brecht had a
mechanical idea of what was going on in Germany. He thought that
Hitler was just a toy in the hands of big industrialists. That is
why it does not become clear who Hitler was as a historical
figure. Through the doubling of the actor and the historical
figure, Arturo Ui holds a fascination for the audience then and
now. It is also looking at Hitler as a Pop figure with the gap of
50 years. He becomes an artificial, comic figure. The task of the
actor donning the role of Arturo Ui is very fascinating, because
he has to present a figure that constructs himself. The idea of
the "self made man" is what is projected. The central idea is
that of puppet that was a puppet in the beginning but in the end
became a puppet master.
"Another topic debated is the relationship between politics,
criminality and entertainment. This is relevant even in the
contemporary world scenario. This is the aspect which gives it
universal appeal. So I have tried to keep that in mind when I do
the role of Arturo Ui. Political demagoguery is related to
personal charisma. This is the aspect of the play which is easier
to take up. Forget Hitler. Even if you do not realise fully that
Hitler is the figure Arturo Ui represents, by himself, Arturo Ui
is an interesting character to impersonate. There is an Arturo Ui
in every part of the world - a mixture of politics, criminality
and entertainment. "Demagoguery comes out of entertainment.
Entertainment creates politicians; politicians turn criminals.
These are all interconnected. So, this is the aspect which I have
tried to highlight in Arturo Ui. There is one piece of dialogue
that gives a clue about Arturo Ui (Hitler)'s character which is
"I do not want political power, but I want to be recognised". It
is this yearning to be recognised that makes human beings "power
crazy". In some, it would remain as striving for excellence, but,
in others it would turn out to be schizophrenic frenzy. If
recognition does not come through straight paths, they resort to
illegal and criminal means. Power becomes the operative word. In
order to understand Arturo Ui (the phenomenon that was Hitler)
one has to go into the psychological analysis that would be
relevant in this case.
The discussion then turned to the director, the late Heiner
Muller. Muller, according to Wuttke and Suschke, was not just a
director or a playwright . When the Wall came down, he was a
social commentator of significance. Born in 1929, his first
noteworthy experience was watching his father being transported
to a concentration camp in 1934. There was a sense of betrayal
when his father was deported. His father wanted to bid farewell,
but, he hid under the bedclothes. From then on, this realisation
that he is an outsider goes on all the way to the 1970s. Being
grounded in German history and literature, he stayed on after
1945 in East Germany. He was interested in it as a project. He
published his first play in 1956 and with difficulty. He was
prohibited from staging his plays for political reasons. He
focussed on tragic stories using a great deal of antique
mythology. All his plays reflected the pain he felt about Germany
and its plight. The first play he directed freely was in 1982. He
understood theatre in a different way.
The first play in which Wuttuke and Muller worked together was
"Forest". He always welcomed improvisations and inputs from the
actors. Every disturbance, every diversion was welcome; these he
tried to integrate into his play. He worked on the dramaturgy,
conception and the frame of a play. But, he never interfered with
the process of an actor developing a role. "When I first met him
he was narrating anecdotes and stories to put the actor (me) on
the right track. From then on, we just started to get acquainted
as an actor and a director. It was a very important orientation
in my acting career."
On whether theatre should be given back to the actor in an age
when technology has tended to overwhelm the actor, Wuttuke was
very clear. "Theatre should be open to all kinds of influences.
To shy away from what technology can offer to improve theatre
would not be a good idea. It is there to enhance his own acting
to give better visibility to him. But an actor on stage has to
try and forget these apparatuses and not hold on to the
mechanisms internally."
Wuttke said he was against "realistic" acting. In fact, both of
us agreed that there is no such thing as "reality". As each one's
reality is different from another's, using the term in acting
becomes meaningless. Improvisation, being an important tool in
acting, how can one think of imitating reality? At best, it would
only be an abstraction of each one's reality. Wuttuke smiled and
added: "I wish you had come with us to Los Angeles, where the
people used to the Hollywood style of realistic acting were
stunned with my kind of acting." I observed that even if one
cannot follow the language of the script of "Arturo Ui", one can
still appreciate the theatrical quotient; This, I feel is mainly
due to Wuttke's acting which is very visual and therefore paints
a picture of Ui succinctly. Of course, if one can follow the
language, the theatre experience becomes more meaningful.
There will be six performances of the play between January 16 and
February 1, 2001.
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