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New York Post, January 25, 1926 O'Neill's Newest Play Opens at the Greenwich VillageBy JOHN ANDERSONO’Neill has ventured everything in his new
play, “The Great God Brown,” at the Greenwich Village, and has
achieved a superb failure. He has poured into
it more than the stage can hold.
His imagination has soared on wax wings too near the sun of
dramatic illusion and, though he comes tumbling from the skies, it
is a brilliant and thrilling fall, since he has dared greater
heights than any other. For here is one play
that is tow dramas about all the people in the world.
There is a drama of people as they pretend to be and as they
really are. It is a
conflict of humanity, masked and unmasked, of shifting values, of
hidden identities, of shy, frightened souls lurking behind the
frozen faces of desperate pretense. To capture these
dual implications O’Neill boldly uses masks.
They are not the stylized masks of custom, but careful
duplicates of the faces of those who wear them, as individual as
their own features but stiff with the rigidity of deathly life. These grim mummies
are put on and off throughout the play, changing its aspect when
they are changed. A
whole scene is transformed as a character slips out, his face naked
and unashamed, to startle those about him with the sudden terror of
reality. Yet the mechanics of
all this are not grotesque. It
is a convention easy enough to accept in principle, and difficult
only when the playwright carries it to an extreme of baffling
complication by allowing one character to steal the mask of another
he has killed. As long as the
personalities had demountable rims, so to speak, it was reasonable
and exciting. But when
they became as interchangeable as spare tire the whole play waded
out beyond its depth as a stage drama and drowned magnificently in
the seething theories of the playwright. Without a huge
diagram indicating when the masks are on and when they are off the
story of the action can result only in serious misrepresentation.
Yet this must be risked for the sake of even superficial
discussion. There are a woman
and tow men who love her one an artist hiding a sensitive spirit
behind a mask of reckless cynicism, and the other, unmasked until
the middle of the play, a figure of successful worship, the eternal
Babbitt. There is
another woman, a prostitute when masked, but actually the earth
mother. The artist dies and
his mask is worn by the other man, who achieves by proxy the love of
the woman the artist had married.
And when this identity grows upon him he kills himself, flees
from his own murder with the face of another, and is ultimately
killed. Thus there are four
deaths. The physical
death of the artist and the survival of his personality.
The death of the Babbitt personality and the survival of the
physical Babbitt. Then
the physical death of the Babbitt and the death of the artist
personality. Here the action is
so swift and the changing values of identity so quickened that it is
difficult to follow the turnings of the scheme.
It seems utterly mad unless we are to suppose that the two
men do not represent individual entities but merely different phases
of the same person, the Jekyll and Hyde of one man, each with its
mask. This confusion
destroys most of the dramatic effectiveness of the latter half of
the play, yet leaves its power of absorption unslackened and
undiminished. It goes
terrifically on, long after the more theatrical qualities of it have
perished. For O’Neill has
written his play with singing ecstasy and a blazing unity of vision
which burns most of the obstacles in his way.
They would have daunted a less daring poet.
Single-eyed, he aims straight, and misses only in the
inevitable diffusion of the theatre. He has managed the
play structure with amazing virtuosity.
Each line in the dialogue is definitely characterized, each
change of incident and mask copied in the nuances of the writing.
It is fluid, sensitized, delicate in detail and rising at
time to lyrical loveliness. Somehow Mr. (Robert
Edmond) Jones has managed to cast its spell completely upon the
players, and they act it with high inspiration and an almost
religious fervor. It is no slight task to make bodily gesture carry meaning
while the face, the key to all emotion, is hidden and rigid.
These actors do that and account for every shading in the
script. Mr. (Edward)
Harrigan revealed peculiar insight into this problem of masked
acting, broadening his gestures to compensate for the loss of facial
play and achieving thereby a consistent and complete effect. Mr. (Robert) Keith
scored most heavily when unhindered by the mask, since his gesturing
was weaker, but gave in these flashes of portrayals a fine and vivid
impression of the character. They were splendidly
aided by Miss (Leona) Hogarth, as Margaret, the wife, and Miss
(Anne) Shoemaker as Cybel, the earth woman, both of whom were
adroitly cast and continuously effective. To the casual majority of playgoers “The Great God Brown” means nothing at all. To the others it is the highest challenge the theatre, at the moment, has to offer. |
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