Man and Superman and Three Other Plays (77 page)

 
—
George Bernard Shaw: His Plays
(1905)
 
A. B. Walkley
The stage-presentation of
Candida
adds nothing to what is the chief delight of the play—the chief delight of every one of Mr. Shaw's plays—its brilliant dialectic. And in one respect the spectator is actually deprived of a pleasure enjoyed by the reader. The book gives characteristic fragments of exegesis which necessarily disappear on the stage. One example is the account—as good as any “portrait” of La Bruyère—of the father-in-law, Mr. Burgess. Another occurs at the fall of the curtain. The stage direction is “They (husband and wife) embrace. But they do not know the secret in the poet's heart.” On the stage the actors can, and do, embrace; but they have no possible means of telling the spectator, by their actions, whether they do or do not know the secret in the poet's heart. On the whole, however,
Candida
on the stage is a capital sport. Mr. Shaw maintains that he is quite serious, an out-and-out realist; in short, that in saluting him as a merry sportsman one is like the young lady who, when Sydney Smith said grace, shook him by the hand with a “Thank you very much, Mr. Smith; you are always so amusing.” If so, one is evidently in the ignorant position of Candida and her husband when they embrace at the fall of the curtain; one does not know the secret in the playwright's heart.
—
Drama and Life (
1907)
 
P. P. Howe
 
Mr. Bernard Shaw confronts his age not so much a dramatist as a writer possessed of a philosophy and a trick of the stage, who has employed the one to expound the other. He has said so himself, on more than one occasion. At the outset of his career as a dramatist he defined the impulse which moved him as the “philosopher's impatience to get to realities,” and he went on to state, “I fight the theater, not with pamphlets and sermons and treatises, but with plays.” Now the dramatist by vocation does not fight the theater at all. It is always a pity for the artist to quarrel with his medium, for if the artist wins, he will despise the medium, and if the medium wins, he will still despise it....
Quite the most complete expression of Mr. Shaw's “philosophy” is to be found in
Man and Superman,
the “comedy” of which is a very easy-going affair. Its third act, in Hell, the “home of the unreal,” with Heaven, the “home of the masters of reality,” just round the corner, is the Quintessence of Shavianism; but it has so little to do with the theater that when the play is given there it is found necessary to omit it.
Man and Superman
, while the most characteristic product of Mr. Shaw's genius, is thus not one of the best of his plays, because it does not carry its burden. To put the case another way, its comic vision and its philosophic vision are not in alignment. The struggle between the Philosopher and the Playwright has been fearful, but the playwright has not won.
 
—
Fortnightly Review
(July 1913)
QUESTIONS
1. Is Shaw relevant today?
2. Does Shaw's socialism get in the way? Does it interfere with the action? Does it lead Shaw to create scenes and characters whose function is only to make a point?
3. The poet W. B. Yeats felt ambivalent about Shaw's work. On the one hand, he said that he “stood aghast at its energy” the way he did before certain works of modern art, that such work provoked for him a nightmare of “a sewing machine, that clicked and shone, but ... that smiled, smiled perpetually.” On the other hand, Yeats spoke of Shaw's “generosity and courage,” which he [Yeats] “could not fathom.” Does Yeats do justice to Shaw?
4. Could a case be made that Shaw's female characters are more convincing, or at least more interesting, than his male characters?
FOR FURTHER READING
WORKS BY SHAW
Collected Plays with Their Prefaces: Vols.
1—7. Edited by Dan H. Laurence. New York: Dodd, Mead, 1975.
The Collected Screenplays of Bernard Shaw.
Edited by Bernard F. Dukore. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1980.
Collected Letters. Edited by Dan H. Laurence. Vol. I, 1874—1897, New York: Dodd, Mead, 1965; Vol. 2, 1898-1910,New York: Dodd, Mead, 1972; Vol. 3, 1911-1925 New York: Viking Press, 1985; Vol. 4, 1926-1950, New York: Viking Press, 1988.
The Drama Observed.
Edited by Bernard F. Dukore. Vol. 1 : 1880-1895; Vol. 2: 1895-1897; Vol. 3: 1897-1911; Vol. 4: 1911—1950. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1993. An invaluable collection of all Shaw's writings about theater.
Shaw's Music: The Complete Musical Criticism in Three Volumes
. Edited by Dan H. Laurence. Vol. 1: 1876-1890; Vol. 2: 1890-1893; Vol. 3: 1893-1950. New York: Dodd, Mead, 1981.
BIOGRAPHICAL
Ervine, St. John G.
Bernard Shaw: His Life, Work, and Friends.
New York: William Morrow, 1956. The most sympathetic and fair biography of Shaw.
Henderson, Archibald.
George Bernard Shaw: Man of the Century.
New York: Appleton- Century- Crofts, 1956.
Holroyd, Michael.
Bernard Shaw, Vol.
1, 1856-1898:
The
Search for
Love,
New York: Random House 1988.
Bernard Shaw,
Vol.
2, 1898-1918: The Pursuit of Power
, New York: Random House, 1989.
Bernard Shaw, Vol.
3, 1918-1950:
The Lure of Fantasy,
New York: Random House, 1991.
Bernard Shaw, Vol.
4,
1950-1991: The Last Laugh,
New York: Random House, 1992. The most detailed and comprehensive biography. A condensed version is available:
Bernard Shaw: The One- Volume Definitive Edition,
New York: Random House, 1998.
Shaw, George Bernard.
Interviews and Recollections.
Edited by A. M. Gibbs. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, 1990. An indispensable record of first-hand personal views of and by Shaw.
CRITICAL WORKS
Bentley, Eric.
Bernard Shaw
. New York: New Directions, 1947.
Berst, Charles A.
Bernard Shaw and the Art of Drama.
Champaign-Urbana : University of Illinois Press, 1973.
Crompton, Louis.
Shaw the Dramatist.
Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1969.
Evans, T. F., ed.
Shaw: The
Critical
Heritage
. London: Routledge, 1976.
Meisel, Martin.
Shaw and the Nineteenth-Century Theater.
Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1963. A brilliant and delightful account of Shaw's relationship to the theater of his youth.
Morgan, Margery M.
The Shavian Playground.
London: Methuen, 1972.
Turco, Alfred, Jr.
Shaw's Moral Vision
. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1976.
Valency, Maurice.
The Cart and the Trumpet.
New York: Oxford University Press, 1973.
Watson, Barbara Bellow.
A Shavian Guide to the Intelligent Woman.
New York: W W. Norton, 1972. Still the best case for Shaw as a feminist.
Wisenthal, J. L.
The Marriage of Contraries.
Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1974.
PRESENTATION AND ANALYSIS OF SHAW' S IDEAS
Bertolini, John A. The
Playwrighting Self of Bernard Shaw.
Carbondale and Edwardsville: University of Southern Illinois Press, 1991.
Dukore, Bernard.
Shaw's Theatre.
Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2000.
Gibbs, A. M.
The Art and Mind
of Shaw
. New York: Macmillan, 1983.
Gordon, David J.
Bernard Shaw and the Comic Sublime.
New York: St. Martin's Press, 1990.
Holroyd, Michael, ed.
The Genius
of Shaw.
New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1979.
Shaw: The Annual of Bernard Shaw Studies:
Vols. 1—22 successive. General editors: Stanley Weintraub, Fred D. Crawford, Gale K. Lar son. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1981-2003.
a
Richard Whately
(1787-1863),
Anglican archbishop of Dublin.
b
Laurence Irving (1871-1914) was a biographer and the son of famous actor-manager Henry Irving.
c
Elected member of a local city council; Shaw represented St. Pancras, London, from 1897 to 1903.
d
Brandon Thomas's perennially popular farce involving female impersonation.
e
“The Prodigious Child” (French); a scenario for music by Michel Carré, co-librettist of several nineteenth-century operas by Charles Gounod.
f
Sartorius is a slum landlord in Shaw's first play,
Widowers' Houses
(written in 1892).
g
Charteris is the title character in Shaw's second play,
The Philanderer
(written in 1893).
h
For emphasis Shaw used spaced letters rather than italics, which he reserved for stage directions.
i
College for women at Cambridge University.
j
Special final examination at Cambridge; the three highest-ranking students were called “wranglers.”
k
A stern father with life and death authority over his children; here used ironically.
l
Words written to a former mistress who tried to blackmail Arthur Wellesley, duke of Wellington (1769—1852).
m
Commonly assumed name for a procuress.
n
From “My Dear and Only Love,” by seventeenth-century poet James Graham, marquis of Montrose.
o
Site in London notorious for prostitutes' suicidal jumps (as in Robert Sherwood's
Waterloo Bridge
of 1930).
p
An immoral person.
q
Unstylish, untidy.
r
Old spelling for Budapest; reflects the fact that the modern city was once two separate cities.
s
Whitewashed.
t
Green, felt-like fabric that covers billiard tables.
u
When asked to identify the words, Shaw complied with “prostitute” and “pro curess.”
v
Unanticipated problem.
w
Because Frank now knows that she is not a lady.
x
Mrs. Warren's semi-formal form of address here takes note of Frank's changed manners.
y
In later editions identified as Miss A. E. F. Horniman, a patroness of the New Theatre.
z
Those who disagree.
aa
Reflecting surface; mirror.
ab
Shaw is joking about the alleged fondness for alcohol of the people of Aberdeen.
ac
Famous violinist Joseph Joachim (1831—1907); Brahms's only violin concerto was written for him.
ad
Workers having a picnic in the country.
ae
Identified in later editions as Moy Thomas; he reviewed Shaw's early plays favorably.
af
The book
Progress and Poverty
(1879) was written by Henry George, an American and a leading socialist.
ag
The book
A Dream of John Ball
(1888) was written by William Morris; John Ball was a fourteenth-century priest and reformer.
ah
Settlements were organizations of university graduates designed to improve social conditions and help educate residents of poor sections of London.
ai
Christian.
aj
Bid, cost-estimate.
ak
Poor people who hail cabs for others in hope of a small tip.
al
Financial note that can be cashed in seven days.
am
An allusion to the Bible, Isaiah 52:7: “How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him that bringeth good tidings, that publisheth peace” (King James Version).
an
Nephew.
ao
Head.
ap
Eugene describes the Pre-Raphaelite painting
The Blessed Damozel,
by Dante Rossetti.
aq
A reference to the Bible, 2 Samuel 6:16: “Michal Saul's daughter looked through a window, and saw king David leaping and dancing before the Lord” (KJV).
ar
Every two weeks.
as
To frequent prostitutes (as used in Shakespeare's Hamlet, act 2, scene 1).
at
Strafford
and
Colombe's Birthday
are verse dramas by Robert Browning (1812-1889).
au
Verse drama by Percy Shelley (1792—1822).
av
Maurice Maeterlinck (1862-1949), Belgian symbolist playwright, author of
Pelléas
et
Mélisande
(1892).
aw
Shaw compares theater managers of his time to medieval arrangers of crude holiday entertainments.
ax
Character in Shakespeare's
Henry
IV,
Part Two.
ay
Good material (Italian); slang phrase for “prostitute.”
az
An 1896 play by Henry Arthur Jones that Shaw reviewed.
ba
Victorian playwright Tom Robertson (1829-1871)attempted to deal with social themes.
bb
Harem concubine.
bc
Minor legal official in the Middle East.

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