<h2> <SPAN name="article36"></SPAN> The State of the Theatre </h2>
<p>We are told that the theatre is in a bad way, that the
English Drama is dead, but I suspect that every generation in
its turn has been told the same thing. I have been reading
some old numbers of the Theatrical Magazine of a hundred
years ago. These were the palmy days of the stage, when blank
verse flourished, and every serious play had to begin like
this:</p>
<p><i>Scene. A place without.</i> Rinaldo <i>discovered dying.
Enter</i> Marco<i>.</i><br/>
<i>Mar.</i> What ho, Rinaldo! Lo, the hornéd moon<br/>
Dims the cold radiance of the westering stars,<br/>
Pale sentinels of the approaching dawn. How now,
Rinaldo?<br/>
<i>Rin.</i> Marco, I am dying, Struck down by
Tomasino’s treacherous hand.<br/>
<i>Mar.</i> What, Tomasino?<br/>
<i>Rin.</i> Tomasino. Ere<br/>
The flaming chariot of Phoebus mounts<br/>
The vaults of Heaven, Rinaldo will be dead.<br/>
<i>Mar.</i> Oh, horror piled on horror! Lo, the moon----</p>
<p>And so on. The result was called--and I think
rightly--“a tragedy.” The alternative to these
tragedies was a farce, in which everybody went to an inn and
was mistaken for somebody else (causing great fun and
amusement), the heat and burden of the evening resting upon a
humorous man-servant called <i>Trickett</i> (or something
good like that). And whether the superior people of the day
said that English Drama was dead, I do not know; but they may
be excused for having thought that, if it wasn’t dead,
it ought to have been.</p>
<p>Fortunately we are doing better than that to-day. But we are
not doing as well as we should be, and the reason generally
given is that we have not enough theatres. No doubt we have
many more theatres than we had a hundred years ago, even if
you only count those which confine themselves to plays
without music, but the mass-effect of all these
music-hall-theatres is to make many people think and say that
English Drama is (once more) dead.</p>
<p>It is customary to blame the manager for this--the new type
of manager, the Mr. Albert de Lauributt who has been evolved
by the war. He existed before the war, of course, but he
limited his activities to the music-hall. Now he spreads
himself over half a dozen theatres, and produces a revue or a
musical comedy at each. He does not care for Art, but only
for Money. He would be just as proud of a successful
production of <i>Kiss Me, Katie</i>, as of <i>Hamlet</i>;
and, to do him justice, as proud of a successful production
of <i>Hamlet</i>, as of <i>Kiss Me, Katie</i>. But by
“successful” he means “financially
successful”; no more and no less. He is frankly out for
the stuff, and he thinks that it is musical comedy which
brings in the stuff.</p>
<p>It seems absurd to single him out for blame, when there are
so many thousands of other people in the world who are out
for the stuff. Why should Mr. Albert de Lauributt lose two
thousand pounds over your or my serious play, when he can
make ten thousand over <i>Hug me, Harriet</i>? We do not
blame other rich men for being as little quixotic with their
money. We do not expect a financier to back a young inventor
because he is a genius, in preference to backing some other
inventor because he has discovered a saleable, though quite
inartistic, breakfast food. So if Mr. de Lauributt produces
six versions in his six different theatres of <i>Cuddle Me,
Constance</i>, it is only because this happens to be his way
of making money. He may even be spending his own evenings
secretly at the “Old Vic.” For he runs his
theatre, not as an artist, but as a business man; and, as any
business man will tell you, “Business is business, my
boy.”</p>
<p>We cannot blame him then. But we can regret that he is
allowed to own six different theatres. In Paris it is
“one man, one theatre,” and if it were so in
London then there would be less the matter with the English
Drama. But, failing such an enactment, all that remains is to
persuade the public that what it really wants is something a
little better than <i>Kiss Me, Katie</i>. For Mr. de
Lauributt is quite ready to provide Shakespeare, Ibsen,
Galsworthy, modern drama, modern comedy, anything you like as
long as it brings him in pots of money. And he would probably
do the thing well. He would have the sense to know that the
producer of <i>Hug Me, Harriet</i>, would not be the best
possible producer of <i>The Wild Duck</i>; he would try to
get the best possible producer and the best possible designer
and the best possible cast, knowing that all these would help
to bring in the best possible box-office receipts. Yes, he
would do the thing well, if only the public really asked for
it.</p>
<p>How can the public ask for it? Obviously it can only do this
by staying away from <i>Cuddle Me, Constance</i>, and
visiting instead those plays whose authors take themselves
seriously, whenever such plays are available. It should be
the business, therefore, of the critics (the people who are
really concerned to improve the public taste in plays) to
lead the public in the right direction; away, that is, from
the Bareback Theatre, and towards those theatres whose
managers have other than financial standards. But it is
unfortunately the fact that they don’t do this. Without
meaning it, they lead the public the wrong way. They mislead
them simply because they have two standards of
criticism--which the public does not understand. They go to
the Bareback Theatre for the first night of <i>Kiss Me,
Katie</i>, and they write something like this:--</p>
<p>“Immense enthusiasm.... A feast of colour to delight
the eye. Mr. Albert de Lauributt has surpassed himself....
Delightfully catchy music.... The audience laughed
continuously.... Mr. Ponk, the new comedian from America, was
a triumphant success.... Ravishing Miss Rosie Romeo was more
ravishing than ever... Immense enthusiasm.”</p>
<p>On the next night they go to see Mr. A. W. Galsbarrie’s
new play, <i>Three Men</i>. They write like this:--</p>
<p>“Our first feeling is one of disappointment. Certainly
not Galsbarrie at his best.... The weak point of the play is
that the character of Sir John is not properly developed....
A perceptible dragging in the Third Act.... It is a little
difficult to understand why.... We should hardly have
expected Galsbarrie to have... The dialogue is perhaps a
trifle lacking in... Mr. Macready Jones did his best with the
part of Sir John, but as we have said... Mr. Kean-Smith was
extremely unsuited to the part of George.... The reception,
on the whole, was favourable.”</p>
<p>You see the difference? Of course there is bound to be a
difference, and Mr. A. W. Galsbarrie would be very much
disappointed if there were not. He understands the
critic’s feeling, which is simply that <i>Kiss Me,
Katie</i>, is not worth criticizing, and that <i>Three
Men</i> most emphatically is. Rut it is not surprising that
the plain man-in-the-street, who has saved up in order to
take his girl to one of the two new plays of the week, and is
waiting for the reviews to appear before booking his seats,
should come to the conclusion that <i>Three Men</i> seems to
be a pretty rotten play, and that, tired though they are of
musical comedy, <i>Kiss Me, Katie</i>, is evidently something
rather extra special which they ought not to miss.</p>
<p>Which means pots more money for Mr. Albert de Lauributt.</p>
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