
Kate Plays the Game
by Peter Saccio
In the early 1980s, the distinguished British actor Antony Quayle visited a
Shakespeare class I was teaching at Dartmouth. In generous response to the students,
he shared perceptive comments on various plays, reminiscences of his artistic
directorship at Stratford-upon-Avon, and a wonderful stream of theatrical anecdotes.
Then someone brought up The Taming of the Shrew.
The genial fountain suddenly stopped flowing: he declared The Shrew to be "a hateful play" and refused to discuss it.
The Shrew has in fact nearly always been a popular play, in
Shakespeare's text or in any number of adaptations, from David
Garrick's Catherine and Petruchio to Cole Porter's Kiss Me, Kate. But Quayle has hardly been alone in
his dissent. At the end of the twentieth century, the play poses two
large problems: one of doctrine and one of action. It appears to
preach male supremacy in marriage, and it appears to humiliate its
spirited heroine by making her the victim of farce.
Male supremacy is a matter of fathers as well as of husbands. Here The Shrew is unusually realistic for Shakespeare.
There is no casket lottery or disguised twin or rushing off to the
forest. Baptista Minola, a wealthy merchant with two daughters, faces
a situation quite familiar to the propertied classes in Shakespeare's
audience. Such fathers were expected to get their daughters married
and to provide a dowry with each daughter that would entice a
suitable wooer. The prospective husband, or his father, was expected
to provide a corresponding sum, a dower or jointure, to support the
wife should she be left a widow. Marriages in such classes were
regularly matters of property, inheritance, family. This was the way
in which the income for the new couple was provided. Such people did
not earn salaries, as we now expect to do. Parents who failed to
provide for their children, who left them unendowed or unbestowed,
would be criticized by neighbors, and by the children themselves, for
parental neglect, as we would now criticize middle-class parents who
failed to provide a college education enabling their children to
survive comfortably in the world.
Under these circumstances, Baptista does a modest job. He provides
the money and he educates his daughters to make them more attractive.
Of course he doesn't understand them, he favors one of them unfairly,
and his early insistence that suitors should win his daughters' love
evaporates when moneyed men actually compete for them. But in a world
where arranged marriages were the norm, he earns perhaps a B.
In the 1590s in England, however, arranged marriage was not the
only courtship practice. Some preachers and moralists discouraged
arranged marriages, considering them largely a manifestation of
parental greed, likely to create unsuitable unions that could lead to
jealousy, infidelity, and even murder. Poets and other tellers of
romantic tales elevated the personal affections of the young couple
to an absolute: the course of true love, though perhaps not running
smooth, should finally triumph. Modern social historians such as
Lawrence Stone and Keith Wrightson have argued over the extent to
which property and personal love played roles in the choice of
spouses. Fortunately for those reading or seeing The Shrew, it is not
necessary to know how great a percentage of weddings in the early
1590s emerged from passionate attachment. At the start, clearly
Petruchio has in mind a marriage of the old kind - he wants "to wive
it wealthily in Padua." He deals with the father before meeting the
daughter. He announces at one point, when he is behaving with special
outrageousness, a doctrine of male supremacy within marriage so
extreme it amounts to ownership: "She is my goods, my chattels . . .
my horse, my ox, my ass, my any thing." At the end of the play, Kate
articulates at length the corresponding principle of female
obedience. In the other plot, Bianca and Lucentio behave with
romantic independence. She makes her own choice of mate, disregarding
her father's auction of her. She marries in secret, and the couple
gains paternal approval only after the knot is tied. Although in
later comedies Shakespeare favors romantic young lovers over
crotchety fathers, here the marriage of Kate and Petruchio, although
arranged for property reasons, is eventually the happier union of the
two, and the lovers are more interesting and attractive people. It is
difficult to argue that Shakespeare is taking a stand on the social
issue. It is easy to see that he is making a full use of the
possibilities provided by the courtship practices of his time.
Once the marriages are celebrated, however, the play does seem to
take a stand - the wife owes obedience to her husband. The play
closes with a 44-line speech in which Kate asserts that a wife should
"serve, love, and obey" her husband; that a wife owes duty to her
husband as a subject owes duty to a prince; and that this duty is
properly symbolized by the wife's placing her hand beneath her
husband's foot. That is uncompromising doctrine, and, to the late
twentieth century, most unattractive doctrine. Men are embarrassed by
it; women are angered.
Literary critics and theatrical artists,
when confronting something they dislike, often reinterpret it. For the past
half-century, critics and directors have regularly attempted to revise the plain
doctrine of Kate's final speech under the all-saving name of irony, claiming
that Kate doesn't mean what she says. For two reasons this doesn't work very
well. The first is a theatrical problem. The actress may undercut the sense
of what she says - either crudely, by winking at the audience, often over Petruchio's
shoulder in the final embrace, or more elegantly, as Edith Evans once did, by
playing the whole speech as if she were a heroine in Congreve or Wilde, going
through a highly mannered performance, saying the things men want to hear, but
making it clear to the audience by the stylized exaggeration that she doesn't
mean a word of it. A third, post-modern possibility has recently surfaced: complete
cognitive dissonance. The Kate in a Wild West Shrew of the
1980s said the conciliatory words while holding the wedding party at gun point.
Aside from turning Kate into the sly sort of person her sister has been, these
methods are simply cheating. Such subversion can be practiced, according to
talent, by any performer on any passage in Shakespeare. It's a familiar form
of theatrical humor, delightful at cast parties. In an actual production of
a playwright whose liars and deceivers regularly alert the audience to their
plots, some sort of textual basis must be sought for supposing Kate does not
mean what she says here. The second problem, encountered when we look for such
textual basis, lies in ignoring the difference between local verbal ironies
and a vast irony of intent extending for 44 lines. There certainly are moments
of irony in this speech. When Kate observes that a husband "commits his body
to painful labor both by sea and land," recent Petruchios have rightly looked
startled. Petruchio is a country gentleman whose wealth comes from his estates,
and perhaps he has invested in Mediterranean trade, but managing an estate and
backing voyages do not amount to digging the ditches and caulking the ships.
Kate's contrasting reference to the wife who "lies warm at home" is full of
private irony for herself and her husband, but not for the wedding guests who
do not know that Petruchio has kept her cold and sleepless. This verbal playfulness
(which she has learned from Petruchio - at the start of the play she could only
sputter with anger) enriches what would otherwise be an intolerably long oration,
but it does not contradict the doctrine that the speech expounds or the gesture
with which it ends. Moreover, verbal irony is far less important in drama than
irony of event. Long doctrinal speeches in Shakespeare are often subject to
ironic examination by subsequent events - see what happens to the fable of the
belly in Coriolanus, Ulysses' speech on degree and obedience
in Troilus and Cressida, and the divine-right speeches of Richard
II. But Kate's speech is the only such sermon in Shakespeare that occurs
in the final lines of the play, when no further event can contradict or qualify
it.
Shakespeare is not as anti-feminist as he can be made to sound.
The taming is less violent and abusive than it is in
pre-Shakespearean shrew stories. In one of the sources, the husband
beats his wife senseless and then wraps her bleeding body in the
salted hide of a newly flayed horse. Further, Kate's speech justifies
the submission of wives as a political arrangement, not as a
theological tyranny. Husband and wife have distinctive roles in a
cooperative and companionate union, whereas in the parallel place in The Taming of a Shrew (an anonymous play that is
either a source or a rip-off of Shakespeare's The
Shrew), Kate produces the medieval argument that woman is
the crooked rib, the source of evil to her husband, and thus to be
ruled absolutely by him. At least Shakespeare broke away from that
oppressive piece of mythology. But all the learning and industry of
admirable feminist critics in rescuing Shakespeare from the bleaker
reaches of male chauvinist piggery cannot convincingly turn him into
a proto-feminist. The feminist movements of the past two centuries,
varied and sometimes contradictory, ultimately derive from the
doctrine of natural rights propagated by philosophers of the
Enlightenment, first put into halting practice in the American and
French Revolutions. No such doctrine was available to earlier western
history. The ruling assumptions of Shakespeare's time were not
egalitarian but hierarchical. St. Paul explicitly endorsed the
authority of husbands, and it would have been hard for people who
believed in the literal inspiration of the Bible to argue against
that. The natural order on heaven, on earth, everywhere, was
vertical: the wife called her husband "my lord." Occasionally the
order might invert itself; the courtly Petrarchan lover professed
himself the servant of his mistress and called her "my lady." The
great marriage debate in Chaucer concerns which sex should hold the
mastery - the Wife of Bath has it, Patient Griselda yields it - but
no one suggested that marital mastery should be altogether abolished.
One accepts this, or re-writes the play, or leaves it on the shelf.
Some modern critics, feminist and otherwise, actually have deeper
objections to the mode of the play's action: farce. Tranio
exemplifies the disguise and trickery that Renaissance comedy
inherited from ancient Roman farce. Gremio and the Pedant are stock
figures out of Italian commedia dell'arte. Petruchio and his servants
display the physical knockabout that is characteristic of farce in
all ages. The verbal wit of the play is often farcical. In contrast
to the lyricism of Twelfth Night and As You
Like It, the wit of The Shrew comes near
wisecracking. The funny speeches are quick retorts and grotesque
catalogues. Above all, Kate is tamed by farcical means, by being
carried off from her own wedding and having her clothes and food and
bed thrown about, her words flatly contradicted or outrageously
reinterpreted. The psychoanalytic feminist Coppélia Kahn sees
farce as the means of male autocracy in this play, the elaboration of
a male fantasy of domination.
This has been a graver problem in literary interpretation, where
farce is often condemned as mechanical, than in the theatre, where
the virtues celebrated by farce are more evident and more enjoyable.
For farce does celebrate specific human virtues: energy, ingenuity,
and resilience. Baptista's difficulties in marrying off his daughters
have put Padua into stalemate, a condition of entropy. Energy is
obvious in the male characters who arrive in Padua and take on
problems the Paduans regard as hopeless. Ingenuity - mental
independence and resourcefulness - lies in the suitors' adoption of
unconventional methods to gain their ends, notably in Petruchio's
pretense of being a greater shrew than Kate, but also in the fertile
inventiveness of Lucentio, Tranio, and Biondello. By resilience I
mean a combination of stubbornness and adaptability. This virtue is
often overlooked in farcical characters, ready as we are to describe
farce as rigid and condemn farcical behavior as subhuman. The ability
to initiate and endure repeated confrontations, pratfalls, and
beatings can be testimony to the determination of the characters, and
the determination loses any mechanical quality when it is combined
with the ready resourcefulness displayed by Petruchio in the taming
and the variety of schemes adopted in the Bianca plot. In normal
adult life, of course, we avoid the physical activities of farce, the
shouting and the knockabout, but the energy, ingenuity, and
resilience displayed in such activities are valuable qualities. We do
not honor lassitude, mental barrenness, and defeatism.
Kate shares these virtues. In her first scenes, her verbal and
physical energy make her the interesting character she is. When she
meets Petruchio, it is she who initiates both the wit combat and the
physical brawling. Here her behavior has a strain of compulsiveness
not shared with the male farceurs. She has the energy, but her
resilience is more stubborn than adaptable, and her ingenuity relies
heavily on the use or threat of violence. Her liberation from raging
shrewishness is marked precisely by her growth in farcical range. She
learns from Petruchio to play, which she had been too angry to do
before. She plays the ingenious games of farce especially well in the
scene in which Petruchio insists that the sun is the moon. She
follows the new rules as quickly as he can change them, and even
mocks him for his revisions ("And the moon changes even as your
mind"). When they meet the old man whom Petruchio insists is a young
woman, she tops him in invention. He merely praises the supposed
damsel in conventional Petrarchan terms, calling her eyes stars and
referring to the red and white in her cheeks. Kate goes over the top:
Young, budding virgin, fair and fresh and
sweet,
Whither away, or where is thy abode?
Happy the parents of so fair a child,
Happier the man whom favorable stars
Allot thee for his lovely bedfellow.
And when Petruchio corrects her by saying the damsel is actually a
wrinkled old man, she brilliantly pulls the two kinds of pretense
together by claiming that her eyes have been "bedazzled with the
sun."
The games release her from her compulsiveness, her anger at her
father's favoritism, her misunderstanding of Petruchio's interest in
her. Game or play has a cathartic effect. In play, human beings can
master their circumstances, can gain release from bondage to
themselves and the scorn of others. For the final scene does not
simply expound doctrine; it also demonstrates marriage as a
cooperative game. Petruchio may be the quarterback, calling the
plays, but equally necessary to their success as a couple is Kate's
able catching of the pass and running with the ball. Together they
prove themselves better than the other newlyweds, and turn the jeers
of the crowd into applause.
Peter Saccio is the Leon Black Professor
of Shakespearean Studies at Dartmouth College. This essay draws in
part on his article, "Shrewd and Kindly Farce," Shakespeare Survey 37
(1984), 33-40. Full citation of other scholars can be found in that
article. |