Johann
04-24-2007, 05:56 PM
"I'm an erupting volcano. I cannot rest until all those who rejected me are eliminated" -Antonin Artaud
This great 2-part documentary on Antonin Artaud sheds great light onto this powerful and tempestuous theatrical figure.
An almost 3-hour film by Gerard Mordillat & Jerome Prieur, this is probably the best insight you can get on Artaud anywhere. It has extensive dialogues with people who knew him, with very interesting stories, drawings, photographs, recorded speeches/performances and dramatic readings of powerful passages from his written works.
To say he had a difficult life is putting it mildly.
He was in pain throughout his entire life, spiritual, artistic, and physical.
He's written off by some who say he was categorically insane, and they prove it by pointing to his ten plus years in asylums.
But those who really admire his work know better. He read Rimbaud and Baudelaire, whose quote O Death, old Captain, it is time, let's raise the anchor, this country bores us, O death let us cast off... is something he liked to say often.
He was in deep, profound love with the theatre of the Ancient Greeks, theatre he felt was the only true theatre, the theatre of Aeschylus and Sophocles- the type that they used to put on at the original Olympic Games.
But that type of theatre was extinct to a large extent in his time. He tried to change that, and by most accounts, he failed. He was "symbolically bewitched" as it were.
I drew the conclusion that he was a fascinating man to be around, a man who did not want praise or criticism- both were slurs to him. I'll just give you some things gleaned from the film to ponder:
-A poet fatally sick with verse
-His illness was "APOCALYPSIA"
-Blasphemy as his form of love?
-Energy means LANGUAGE
-Persecution mania
-He wanted to die in front of an audience, a theatre audience
-The theatres' double was LIFE
-His importance is NOT text- it's elsewhere
-He wanted the theatre to be LIFE, like it was in Ancient Greece
-He was a true seer who formulated the essence of what we are all seeking in our own ways
Difficult. Unpredictable. Overwrought. Sullen.
Excited. Always polite and well mannered despite his wild theatrical flair. A "walker" with tremendous vitality.
Here's a passage that was read in the film from him that I love:
Do you know what cruelty is? Cruelty is extirpating, through the blood and until you bleed, GOD, the bestial hazard, of unconscious animalism of man everywhere you encounter him. Man when he is not controlled is an erotic animal. He has an inner quaver, an inspired quaver, and a kind of pulsation that produces beasts without number. Beasts which are the form that the ancient peoples of the earth universally attributed to god what is called A SPIRIT.
This is also great stuff:
Why the mind?
Why a body?
The starvation. The gasping. The degradation. The defecation. The Will. The Nil. A conscience. An ego. A soul. A duration. Why this mental life?
Untotal, humiliating, MEAN, and yet so vast that reason goes astray, that health is lost and feeling and faith.
To the gentleman who thinks he's sane:
CAN HE FATHOM THE WRETCH'S HONOR?
Whose shrieking words no dictionary knows?
Perfect delirium?
I'm in the world to protest existence.
This great 2-part documentary on Antonin Artaud sheds great light onto this powerful and tempestuous theatrical figure.
An almost 3-hour film by Gerard Mordillat & Jerome Prieur, this is probably the best insight you can get on Artaud anywhere. It has extensive dialogues with people who knew him, with very interesting stories, drawings, photographs, recorded speeches/performances and dramatic readings of powerful passages from his written works.
To say he had a difficult life is putting it mildly.
He was in pain throughout his entire life, spiritual, artistic, and physical.
He's written off by some who say he was categorically insane, and they prove it by pointing to his ten plus years in asylums.
But those who really admire his work know better. He read Rimbaud and Baudelaire, whose quote O Death, old Captain, it is time, let's raise the anchor, this country bores us, O death let us cast off... is something he liked to say often.
He was in deep, profound love with the theatre of the Ancient Greeks, theatre he felt was the only true theatre, the theatre of Aeschylus and Sophocles- the type that they used to put on at the original Olympic Games.
But that type of theatre was extinct to a large extent in his time. He tried to change that, and by most accounts, he failed. He was "symbolically bewitched" as it were.
I drew the conclusion that he was a fascinating man to be around, a man who did not want praise or criticism- both were slurs to him. I'll just give you some things gleaned from the film to ponder:
-A poet fatally sick with verse
-His illness was "APOCALYPSIA"
-Blasphemy as his form of love?
-Energy means LANGUAGE
-Persecution mania
-He wanted to die in front of an audience, a theatre audience
-The theatres' double was LIFE
-His importance is NOT text- it's elsewhere
-He wanted the theatre to be LIFE, like it was in Ancient Greece
-He was a true seer who formulated the essence of what we are all seeking in our own ways
Difficult. Unpredictable. Overwrought. Sullen.
Excited. Always polite and well mannered despite his wild theatrical flair. A "walker" with tremendous vitality.
Here's a passage that was read in the film from him that I love:
Do you know what cruelty is? Cruelty is extirpating, through the blood and until you bleed, GOD, the bestial hazard, of unconscious animalism of man everywhere you encounter him. Man when he is not controlled is an erotic animal. He has an inner quaver, an inspired quaver, and a kind of pulsation that produces beasts without number. Beasts which are the form that the ancient peoples of the earth universally attributed to god what is called A SPIRIT.
This is also great stuff:
Why the mind?
Why a body?
The starvation. The gasping. The degradation. The defecation. The Will. The Nil. A conscience. An ego. A soul. A duration. Why this mental life?
Untotal, humiliating, MEAN, and yet so vast that reason goes astray, that health is lost and feeling and faith.
To the gentleman who thinks he's sane:
CAN HE FATHOM THE WRETCH'S HONOR?
Whose shrieking words no dictionary knows?
Perfect delirium?
I'm in the world to protest existence.