There
was a time when I wrote a diary. Not every day; intermittently, for
about four years. I stopped when I realised that a) I was only
writing it when I was miserable, b) I was repeating myself, c)
writing it changed nothing.
There
was a time when I thought Chekhov, if not the most boring playwright
in the history of theatre, certainly in the top 10.
I'm
sorry if you've read these things before here.
Remember
that last sharp day of winter we had? At least, it was the last sharp
day London had: Tuesday 26 April, 2016. I stood at the kitchen window
and tried to work out if those slushy white flakes were hail or snow.
A few days later I stood in the same place and realised I was looking
at the first sharp day of spring: green leaves so defined against a
bright blue sky they seemed extra-dimensional. And I had a thought
I'd never had before: this means nothing to me. The spring, the
brightness, the green, the blue. Time turning, age grinding,
unremarkable repetition, and a slow, inexorable deadening.
This
is the emotional voice in my head that listened to Chekhov's First
Play and heard its echo.
But we
won't start with either of those.
Let's
start with Dominic Dromgoole.
In
2000 he published an “A-Z of contemporary playwrights”, The Full
Room, written with such irascible passion that with every dip I come
away scalded. On Phyllis Nagy: “I'm sure she's terrific, but for me
it always sounds like someone being a writer, rather than someone
writing about being.” On Lee Hall: “Somehow he manages to keep
many thousands of hungry mouths happy with a few loaves of a talent.”
That the witticisms emerge from a forensic scrutiny of the actual
plays gives everything he writes an air of justice, despite his
protestations in the introduction that he's not here to judge, and
regardless of whether or not I agree. But if he's ruthless in
exposing flaws or inconsistencies, he's also intemperate with
admiration: in the heat and light of his praise, his subjects glow.
He
also writes with a strong moral compass, whose true north is Chekhov.
In the entry on Anthony Neilson, he notes approvingly: “As Chekhov
could dream of a better world in time to come, without providing some
glib programme of improvement, so Neilson looks four-square into the
heart of our sexual darkness, and allows himself to dream of a better
world.” And in the entry on Patrick Marber – “a brilliant
boulevard entertainer” – he looks in vain for “a real wish for
good. With a Chekhov, with a Brecht, with a Beckett,” he explains,
“you see a brilliantly realised and brutally honest vision, behind
which there hovers the ghost of a better, fairer, more beautiful
world. With Marber … beyond what we see is a chaos filled with
violence, sexual desire and sexual disgust, and endless mutual
loathing.”
I
think about this chapter on Marber a lot, in particular for what
Dromgoole says in the final paragraph:
“Chekhov
wrote volumes of work, built schools, opened hospitals, interviewed
ten thousand prisoners on Sakhalin island, kept his family, kept his
patients alive, held hundreds as they died, spent fifteen years
coughing his own life away, and still managed to keep hope in balance
with despair, still managed to love life and its mad optimism.”
The
leaves, drunk on chlorophyll, radiant and meaningless.
*
The
“director” of Chekhov's First Play (warning: a frenzy of spoilers lies ahead) has read a biography of
Chekhov; he knows these facts and knows that, by comparison, he
himself is failing. I put “director” in quote marks to
differentiate him from Ben Kidd and Bush Moukarzel, who co-directed
Dead Centre's production, not because they didn't genuinely read the
biography, but because I left the Mayfest performance stupefied by an
adolescent crush on Moukarzel, who also wrote the adaptation and
plays the “director” on stage, that heard everything he said as
soul-dredging confession. I need the quotation marks to remind me
that this is a character, that the voice that is speaking is a
performed voice, that when the “director” begins berating himself
as “a fraud”, when he says “I don't know what I'm doing” or
that “I haven't been feeling myself lately. And by lately, I mean
ever”, what I'm hearing is a fabrication. Never mind if it's the
words I hear in my head all the time.
But
let's avoid that voice a little longer.
It's
hard to avoid the “director's” voice in this production. Once
he's delivered his pitch-perfect introduction – light as a meringue
and yet ominous, not just because he wields a gun, but because he
makes visible something I (and likely others in the room) had never
contemplated before: the audience member's temporary legal ownership
of their theatre seat, its status as “private property” – he
retreats to the wings and talks around, across and over his actors,
commenting on their performances, his own choices, the themes and
subtexts of the play. Of course, some of his own text has a subtext:
when he says, close to the beginning, “I love real life. The
detail”, there is an underlying irony that is quickly exposed when
he begins to berate the actors for moving in the wrong way and
forgetting their lines, in other words being real people, but also an
undertow of pathos whose emotional pull operates more slowly.
What
he particularly wants to draw our attention to is the reflection –
no, continuation – of Chekhov's world in our own. Some of that is
to do with unchanging human nature: as he notes in his introduction,
all Chekhov's plays “ask the big questions: who am I? What kind of
a society do I want to live in? What do I want?” But some of it is
to do with the ways in which Chekhov thought about “the kind of
society” that surrounded him, his attitudes towards privilege and
work, property and debt, social stagnation and the possibility or
imminence of change. These attitudes, compassionate, socialist and
challenging of orthodoxy, have a pliability that the best directors
(and playwright-adapters) seize as gleefully as children do playdoh.
I
didn't think any of this until I watched Benedict Andrews' production
of Three Sisters (Young Vic, 2012): it spoke so precisely to the
frustrations of my own life, and to the stuckness I've been able to
name since reading the Ann Cvetkovich book on depression, that I
heard more vividly the play's address to society at large. I felt the
same wonder and excitement watching Katie Mitchell's production of
The Cherry Orchard (Young Vic, 2014): as adapted by Simon Stephens,
it wasn't a play about privileged (albeit poor) people for whom I
felt no sympathy, but the complex relationship between class,
capitalism and environmental devastation. Robert Icke's Uncle Vanya
(Almeida, 2016) was the least convincing of the three, in that a lot
of the staging choices were fucking annoying even if they did make intellectual sense, but as a portrait of people damaged by the basic condition of
being alive, holding down the lid on their hopes, desires,
frustrations and anger before inevitably boiling over, it was
exemplary.
I'd
seen all of these plays before, sometimes in pretty good productions,
but my general idea of Chekhov was sealed early on by a Cherry
Orchard played in a wealthy suburb of London, by actors with plummy
accents wearing white lace and linen suits, that left me wanting to
punch every person on stage, for their entitlement, apathy and
mediocrity. This was the problem of Chekhov's First Play for me: when
the curtain rises, it looks like just such a traditional, tedious
production. And that's a lie. The directors, Kidd and Moukarzel, know
that it's a lie: they know they're working within a “German
theatre” aesthetic, but they pretend not to be for dramatic and
comic effect. To be fair, it works: the jokes teasing conservative
theatre, in which the “director” complains about the actors and
lets slip the sexual shenanigans going on behind the scenes, easily
win the laughs they chase. OK, I sound like a miserabilist. But
Chekhov's First Play does something incredibly powerful politically,
and for me that could have been more potent still if Dead Centre
hadn't settled on the chocolate-box image of a sprawling country
house as the site for that action: an image that distances more than
it implicates.
In
other ways, Chekhov's First Play is rigorous in implicating. It makes
explicit reference to Ireland's recent history, first with jokes
about its flaccid economy, but gradually becoming more serious about
the spiritual effect of debt. (Something about the way it compacted
gravity and sickly unease into comedy reminded me of John McDonagh's
film Calvary.) It talks about the central character of Platonov as
someone “over-educated but useless, unnecessary”, typical of a
generation who have “let go of ideals”: people who know that
there is social inequality, rising poverty, ecological catastrophe
taking place, but are comfortable enough themselves never to do
anything more serious to challenge it than mouthing off on social
media. (I'm very much describing myself here.) It spends its entire
first half insistently arguing that we can't wait for someone else to
save us. And then. And then.
Two
months on, I still feel giddy and breathless just thinking about it.
Because the hinge point of Chekhov's First Play unleashed all my
wildest fantasies of what I'd like to do in the political world. It
drops a wrecking ball from the flies and proceeds to demolish
everything: the physical set, but also the metaphysical structures
that hold the characters – and us, the audience – in place. That
wrecking ball smashes at property, at family, at propriety and
expectation. When it falls, the women stop talking in a vaguely
dissatisfied way about lacking a sense of purpose and start naming
their specific hatred of “my marriage and capitalism and my student
loan and how the modern consumer society separates us from ourselves
… normality and monogamy and gender normative privilege”. Being
idealistic about wanting these things to change isn't enough. You
have to get out there and actively fight them. You have to live the
difference you want to see.
To
do that
takes courage and verve. It takes a willingness to make mistakes,
look awkward, feel out-of-step with everyone else. It takes quick
thinking and attentive listening. And Chekhov's First Play shows us
how. It pulls someone out of the audience, someone prepared enough in
advance to be wearing a particular red denim jacket but no more, and
gets them to play Platonov. I've since read the playtext (THANK YOU OBERON for replacing the copy I stupidly lost) and
understand a lot more about what happened in this half of the
production, but I'm going to be truthful about the experience of
watching and say that there was much that I didn't hear or that
didn't feel clear in this section. It didn't matter: chaos was part
of the point, the necessary correlative of destruction.
Through
most of this, the “director's” voice is absent: he's silent
because he shot himself, unable to bear the disparity between what he
wanted the production to be and what he had actually made. Implicit
in his adaptation is a question – what does it take to be
extraordinary, and actually change the world? – and a recognition
that it's the wrong question, playing into patriarchal notions of
singularity and genius. Far better to be a nobody: but a nobody
genuinely dedicated to the cause of helping other nobodies, enabling
them to escape the bonds that tie them, enabling them to cast off the
pressures of keeping up with life as shaped by neoliberalism.
Platonov is that nobody: he's just a stranger, plucked from the
auditorium. It could have been any one of us. And because of that,
it's all of us.
Such
was my intense sense of identification with this Platonov that I felt
quite upset when the staging required him to point a gun at his own
head. It felt wrong, an unethical ask. Reading back over the text, I
wonder what it means to have a character repeatedly described as
useless and unnecessary, and then have him played by a member of the
audience. I worry that if I pick at the wrong thread of Moukarzel's
adaptation, the whole thing will unravel.
What
holds it all together for me, allows me to live in its
contradictions, is that voice, the “director's” voice, which is
also Platonov's, and mine. That voice caught between idealism and
pessimism, hope and depression, knowledge of the work that needs
doing and terror of actually doing it. The “director” seems so
confident when Chekhov's First Play starts, but it's all bluff. He
lacks faith not only in himself but in theatre as a medium: “It's
so aimless,” he mourns, as his characters sing People Ain't No Good
in Russian. The song returns in the final scene, when the “director”
returns, head bandaged, for a speech that devastated me:
“This
gun. At least let me explain one thing right. Chekhov's first play
had a gun in it and his second, and all the rest had guns in them in
one way or another, until in his last play … it was gone. It's like
he got over it. He wrote away the gun.
He
realised his characters have to do something even harder than dying.
They have to go on living.”
I've
lost count of the number of times I've thought those last two
sentences in the past few years. The accuracy with which they echoed
my inner voice – the inner voice that the “director” explicitly
acknowledges in his opening speech – meant that the words that
followed reduced me to a puddle. “I don't know who I am, what it is
I want, why I'm alive. But I need to have courage,” his voice, my
voice, said. “I wonder will this voice ever stop? … This
commentary, commenting on everything. Will it ever go away?” Not
just my inner voice but the voice I hear speaking to a counsellor, a
weirdly out-of-body experience. “Where would I go, if I could go,
who would I be, if I could be, what would I say...?” These are the
questions that consume me at night, lying awake in my too-hard bed.
And as I sat in my theatre seat – my own private property, which
holds me in place, in which I always behave with absolute decorum,
just as I do in the world outside – I knew exactly what was coming
next, but still felt an intense sense of gratification when
Platonov's final word is: hello.
*
For
such a basic word, hello is really hard to say.
On
Friday 1 July, I visited the South-East London Sisters Uncut occupation of a disused shop in Peckham. I'd planned to get there
early and sit with my laptop, writing about the room, but also maybe
writing this, or about Ria Hartley's work, or maybe about what it was
to grow up in Thatcher's Britain as a way of reflecting on the terror
and anxiety but also weird sense of euphoria I felt in the first week
post-referendum, when it still seemed vaguely possible that there
might be a left-wing resurgence (excuse me while I wring my hands
with despair). Instead, I found all sorts of excuses to delay leaving
home. There wasn't going to be wifi in the building. I had some
scraps of food in the house that I ought to cook for my lunch. And so
it was 1.30pm by the time I arrived, giving me barely an hour in the
space before the school run.
The
people on the door were immediately friendly but the usual shyness
consumed me so I rejected the offer of a tour and had a look round on
my own. The main room was welcoming, warm and light, despite having
few windows and no carpet on the concrete floor. It was the warmth
and light of generosity and political fervour. The occupation was
staged to draw attention to the lack of provision for women living in
Southwark who experience domestic violence, particularly black and
minority ethnic women following austerity cuts. Along one wall was a
huge banner bearing the group's slogan: how can she leave if there's
nowhere to go? Along another, lively posters detailed previous
Sisters Uncut actions, in photographs and clips from less than
sympathetic media. There were sofas and a large children's play space
with toys and a wendy house and drawing materials, and a stack of
food with an invitation to all-comers to help themselves. Scattered
around were copies of the excellently thoughtful safe space policy,
and reminders that the space was open only to people who identify as
female or non-binary. It was beautiful.
Looking
around gave me the courage to go back to the people at the door and
say hello. This is how I met Sita X. When a friend of Sita's arrived I
continued the conversation with Becca, asking about how the
occupation was going, and about Sisters Uncut generally. When I had
to leave, I felt like an idiot: I hadn't had enough time. I wished
I'd been there all day.
I
asked Becca why Southwark in particular and she patiently told me
about its appalling record of failing women who come to the council
seeking help in escaping abuse situations. We talked about the
council's bristly, patronising response to the occupation, that
“statistics don't tell the whole story”, and the blog Sisters
Uncut planned to publish in reply. I asked how they managed to get
into the building, and Becca told me about laws related to squatting
and the mechanics of the occupation, how everyone involved was taking
time off from work or study to be there. I've always been terrified
of this kind of direct action – and there was a moment when the
Sisters gathered at the door, worried that an aggressive man might be
seeking entry, that reminded me why – but talking to Becca and
Sita, it felt possible. More than that: necessary.
I
can't imagine not writing about theatre but nor can I carry on as I
am, advocating in the abstract for social change without doing
physical work to bring it about. In the time it's taken me to write
this post, I've been reading Here We Stand, a glorious, invigorating
book of interviews with and texts by female activists, that is
nourishing me and encouraging me and giving me a way forward. There's
one woman in particular, Mary Sharkey, that I'm clinging to because
she was in her early 40s before she became politically active: what a
relief to encounter her, and recognise that there's no point berating
myself for wasting time and not doing this sooner (that voice again,
commenting on everything) because – as she says in the final line
of her interview – it's never too late to start. She has an
excellent motto, too: “Behold the turtle, who makes progress when
she sticks her neck out.” Perfect.
So
I've been inhaling that, and also Kimya Dawson's album Thunder
Thighs, which I deeply regret missing on first release, if only
because it would have done me much good to hear her sing “now I'm
37 and I'm glad that I'm alive” when I was 37 and really not. There
are so many best-friend songs on this album: Same Shit/Complicated,
which trumps me for ultra-earnest expression; Utopian Futures,
which to the letter describes the place I want to live; Zero or a Zillion, a piquant fuck you to the art accountants out there. But I
think my favourite is Miami Advice, in particular the chorus that
closes it:
You
think I'm preaching to the choir
But
I am not
I'm singing with the choir
This
is such a key point made by the women of Here We Stand (a book, it's worth noting, that was recommended to me by Mary Paterson, with whom I've been working for a couple of years and in that time has taught me so much about collaboration and political engagement): the real goal
isn't individual action but collective. “What we create are
ripples,” says Liz Crow, “where the work of many peoples combines
to make change.” And collectivity starts with saying hello.
*
Five
years ago, I started writing a diary again. It's going OK: I'm doing
better at turning to it in different moods, and trying hard
not to repeat myself. I still know it doesn't change anything, not
materially. But it does something my old diary never did. It says
hello. I know this because you're reading it now.
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