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Acts of Warby Kyle Brenton Few narratives have been adapted for the stage as often as the legend of Antigone. Each generation reinvents the myth to fit its own circumstances; the last century alone has produced scores of Antigone plays, operas, and films. At the center of Sophocles' original play is a struggle to reconcile personal beliefs with the needs of society. At no time is this question more relevant than in periods of war, so it is not surprising that new adaptations of Antigone cluster around times of national conflict. The first Antigone of the twentieth century was born from the horror of the First World War. The poet and dramatist Walter Hasenclever was fighting in the German army when he suffered a wound that kept him hospitalized for a year. While recuperating he wrote several political plays, including an Expressionist Antigone that still reverberates with outrage at the grotesque injustices of the war. Hasenclever replaced Sophocles' monolithic Chorus with a cacophony of individual voices, identified only by such labels as "Citizen," "Youth," and "the Man of the People." This Chorus of Everymen is passionate but weak, and is easily swayed by the arguments of Antigone and Creon. Towards the end of the play, Hasenclever's broken Creon willingly relinquishes his power to the people of Thebes, but his democratic gesture is subverted when a supernatural voice announces that God has already passed judgment upon the city. The play ends with a vision of the apocalypse as thunder and lightning merge with a chorus of anguished screams. Helene Weigel and Hans
Gaugler as Antigone and Creon in Bertolt Brecht's
1948 production at the Stadttheater von
Chur. Bertolt Brecht first produced his version of Antigone in Switzerland in 1948. Performed in a neutral country after the end of the Second World War, Brecht's Antigone is a vehement and uncompromising attack on tyranny. His Creon is a consummate manipulator, who ordered the two brothers to mount an attack on Argos, during which Polynices deserted and was killed by Eteocles. Brecht uses the Antigone myth as a platform for his economic philosophy. His Chorus expresses concern for the wartime metal shortage in Thebes, and repeatedly asks when the treasure-wagons from Argos, led by Creon's firstborn son Megareus, will arrive. Creon's final downfall is magnified by the news that Argos has launched a counterattack, and that neither Megareus nor his the treasure-wagons will ever pass through the seven gates of Thebes. Judith Malina and Julian Beck
as Antigone and Creon in The Living Theatre
production. More recently, Croatian playwright Miro Gavran has produced an Antigone that dramatizes the tyranny and political corruption of the war-torn Balkans. In Creon's Antigone (1990), a modern despot, Creon, is holding a timid and confused girl, Antigone, prisoner in an underground bunker. He plans to force her to participate in the production of a play - remarkably similar to Sophocles' Antigone - that will end in her onstage death. Antigone reads the script and is so inspired by the bravery of her fictional counterpart that she refuses to take part in Creon's drama and commits suicide. Creon exits chuckling, pleased that his true goal, the removal of this girl who challenges his regime, has been accomplished. Though these twentieth-century adaptations of Antigone differ widely in style and theme, they all have their source in Sophocles' play. The text of the original Antigone is like a prism - turn it one way or another and different colors shine through. The ancient war between Argos and Thebes has developed an archetypal quality in this age of international conflict, where our domestic lives are so frequently disrupted by events on the global political stage. Kyle Brenton is a first-year dramaturgy student at the A.R.T. Institute for Advanced Theatre Training. |
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