In the decade-plus that I have taught various ‘Intro to
Literature’ courses, one major hurdle I’ve constantly
had to leap—or attempt to—is getting students to truly
see the tragedy in drama. Sure, I can give lectures on
what tragedy is, and students get this for the most
part. They understand the fall and perhaps a bit on
catharsis. They follow me as I discuss the elements of
tragedy in relation to the character of Oedipus, for
instance, but I can see as the discussion goes on, their
comprehension falters. Many follow along, but even when
I try to bring in current events (the rise and fall of
the celebrity, for instance) I am still dealing with
abstract ideas in relation to characters from long ago.
It’s a matter of connection. The main issue comes when
they need to see how this applies to plays like
Oedipus or Hamlet. I mean, Hamlet has
the word ‘tragedy’ in its title. This should be easy. Of
course, as it goes with anything involving teenagers,
it’s not. The key, I’ve found, involves developing a
relationship between the concepts and the material. If
only there was a way I could bridge the material and the
students experiencing it for the first time. It turns
out the last place I would ever think to look delivered
what I needed.
It struck me as I mindlessly flipped through channels
one night, searching for something to watch. Half the
offerings fell under the blanket of reality television;
actors pretending to be real people either at the ‘top’
of society or wallowing in the murky bottom. They are
all train wrecks; they only differ in which car on the
train they occupy. One would think that shows like
Jersey Shore (which I have proudly only watched one
episode of) ended the allure of such reality TV. Once
audiences realized these weren’t real people but actors
following a script, they’d stop watching. “The shows we
watch don’t just unfold in real time while the camera
runs. Instead, writer-producers carefully craft the
story lines. They write the narrative arc of each
episode and season.” (Fenton) Despite this revelation,
the shows only fueled more of the same. People often
watch hockey for the fights, boxing for the knockouts,
and reality television for the train wrecks. There’s a
reason traffic snarls to a crawl when an accident
happens on the side of the road. We can’t look away.
Shows like Party Down South (Party) and
Celebrity Rehab (Rehab) catch the audience’s
attention with all the necessary elements of said
wrecks. And yes, there’s offense in’t. And tragedy too.
As we sit safely on our couch in front of our
television, or on the subway (fittingly) with device in
hand, we immediately feel better about ourselves when we
see the absolute depravity of these ‘fools.’ My students
laugh when I mention such shows, a laughter laced with
recognition. Now, as I watched, I wondered: How could I
use this? I mean, in a literature course? The
humanity! Or humanities. Stay awhile, I will be
faithful.
In writing my dissertation on the delusional characters
of Eugene O’Neill’s later plays, I spent much time with
The Iceman Cometh. I didn’t realize it right
away, but after I let my thoughts simmer, it all came
together. The bridge I needed appeared. O’Neill’s
tragedy of the downtrodden in the back room of a dump of
a bar had what I needed to connect my students, reality
television, and tragedy. Drunk people? Check. Improper
women? Check. Stereotypes? Check. Crooked cops? Check.
Blind men refusing to see their fate? Check. Iceman
has it all. And although, beneath its seemingly
superficial exterior of drunken failures (just like the
train wrecks on TV) the play offers a hefty serving of
tragedy not unlike Hamlet in intensity and depth.
With its relevant commentary on the cathartic offerings
of the downtrodden, Iceman comes to light as an
early exposure of the train wrecks of society. They live
in a bar together, much like the casts of Party
and Rehab live in a group environment. Larry
Slade calls the bar all these men literally live in the
‘Last Chance Saloon’ and it fits, as this appears a
perfect comparison to the lives of the people on reality
TV. The little engine that couldn’t went off the tracks
and hurtled the men of Iceman, along with their
‘questionable’ female companions, all the way to this
crash site. Once derailed, these people become
non-existent to society, both by their own doing and the
outside world. Family members do not bother searching
for the lost ones; no wreaths or shrines are placed
outside the door in mourning. They spent their last bit
of others’ understanding. No one that knows them wants
anything to do with them. Hell, two of them have been
told never to come back to their own countries.
These are men who have pushed the limits of sympathy.
These men embody the roles ‘actors’ play on reality
television. Lindsay Lohan has little on them in terms of
self-destructions. Yet, these men can elicit enough
cathartic sympathy from readers and views to make them
useful. The characters played on shows like Party
can represent the men in Iceman when younger, and
thus the cathartic connection between this play and
reality TV can be made.
That catharsis, the purgation, comes more for the
audience than for the characters in Iceman as the
men only briefly come up for air to experience the
truth, but not long enough for it to have a lasting
effect on them. The message revealed within deals more
with purgation for O’Neill, who had drank right
alongside those men, and the audience reading and
watching, as they see how far these men have fallen and
recognize similar, smaller traits in themselves that
require suppression. Only though watching characters
take such mistakes so far can the audience sense the
message that living in an alcohol-fueled fantasy world
can terminate any potential in the real. This mirrors
the experience with reality television, where the
audience watched merely for the disasters. The
characters on these shows present various stages of
self-destruction—staged more often than not—and this is
where the drama exists. The very illusion of
self-destruction put forth on train wreck TV leads to
this final resting place in Iceman. Though many
might feel better about themselves by watching others
far worse off, the relevance lies in that they can see
the dangers of such habits. Iceman offers an
advice through avoidance, something I can present to my
students. Train wreck reality television can help build
that bridge. The cathartic purgation actually exists
deep under the surface of reality television. And yes,
this realization initially caused a purgation reflex in
me.
Shows like Party and Rehab represent a
form of purgation more like that, for sure. It usually
takes place in parking lots and bathrooms after the
party. Still, the literary mechanisms of tragedy lie
deep within even something as superficial as these young
adults partying (Party) or older actors
recovering from a lifelong soiree (Rehab). The
common excuse for watching train wreck television
explains that by watching people so screwed up, the
average person feels better about their lives. “The
results suggested that the people who watched reality
television had above-average trait; motivation to feel
self-important and, to a lesser extent, vindicated.”
(Reiss 363) For the longest time, television shows did
the opposite, presented perfection to their audiences.
So many TV shows illustrated the lives of the rich and
powerful, or merely people living lives that far exceed
ours in scope and contentment. This is not unlike how
tragedy originally dealt with the great people, the
kings and princes, and then, through the efforts of
Ibsen and Strindberg, the tragedy of more common people
came about. O’Neill, heavily influenced by those two
modern drama pioneers (Diggins), attempted to meld Greek
tragedy and commoners. In a reverse of the concept of
the tragic hero, where the Greek playwrights used the
highest of people to relate the common tragedies of man
on a grand scale, O’Neill shows how the lowest can bring
about the same sense of catharsis. Where an Oedipus
shows us the magnified versions of our faults, O’Neill’s
denizens in Iceman illustrate the microscopic
cracks in our behavior. Still, he maintains the sense of
Greek tragedy within his play. He had often wondered,
“Is it possible to get [a] modern psychological
approximation of the Greek sense of fate into such a
play?” (Working Notes and Extracts from a Fragmentary
Work Diary 530) Yes, I believe this can be achieved, and
O’Neill’s vision can be illustrated with the help of a
more common form of entertainment.
Yes, many can learn lessons from the men of high places
like Hamlet or Oedipus, yet there is only
so much to relate to for the common man. Ay, it is
common, one might think, perhaps believing I mean
country matters. For train wreck TV, yes, it usually
breaks down to that lowest common denominator, but I
think it unfair to corral everyone into easiest
category. We all have our sensibilities and, though some
may elevate to the fine arts while others choose prime
time TV, the train wrecks interest all of us. Where the
tragedy of the great ones does offer relevance, the
audience needs to scratch beneath the surface to get to
them. People lower on the rungs of society, ones below
the average, can elevate tragedy from the bottom to the
middle better than it flows from the top down. O’Neill
had long brought the common person to the stage in plays
ranging from The Hairy Ape to Emperor Jones
and others, where he illustrated the plight of the
average Joe. However, his play about the men he
encountered in the bowels of society as a young man, the
deluded drunks of Iceman who haunted the same
bars he did, bring to the audience the purely
downtrodden. In their hopeless despair, these characters
remain recognizable to all of us. They are not princes
lamenting life’s difficult decisions, forcing us to look
from below to experience with him. The men—and shady
women—of Iceman do not portray magnified
greatness but, instead, extreme versions of our common
despair. In some cases, they are our worst fears
realized, much like those we see on train wreck TV.
As we watch the men of Iceman take in drink after
drink, we cannot help but wonder how they keep their
ambition at bay. One cannot truly wish to spend all
their time drunk. No, the eternal drunks have either
given in to addiction or use the alcohol as escape.
“Fortunate indeed are those who have escaped ‘the truth’
by virtue of booze, ‘pipe dreams,’ or death.” (LaBelle
442) The common person may never understand the
difficulty in leading others, as Oedipus speaks of and
Creon swears off, but he knows the feeling of proximate
despair. We may dream about success and riches and power
but rarely sniff it. The common person surely does know
the stench of failure more intimately. The characters of
Iceman ooze this scent from their pores, and it
becomes a much simpler conversion to understand the
tragedy of complete failure than relate to even the most
perfectly crafted tragic fall. I say this only in
reference to the uninitiated of the theater. Students in
a second semester composition class, as a whole, are
just learning the depth of characterization versus the
identity of characters. Tragedy, for most of them, is a
new concept, and to have to apply it to someone they see
no common ground with makes the task all the more
complicated. This is where the bridge of train wreck
television to train wreck theater (Sorry, Eugene, but I
assume you get my context) can help mitigate this
concern.
On the surface, it can appear people watch train wreck
TV to have something to make themselves feel better, or
worse, to have a motivation/excuse to exonerate their
own questionable behavior. There's no escaping that
drinkers can feel better watching the alcoholics in
Iceman, seeing men in far lower on the substance
abuse scale. Still, partiers can look at the cast of
Party and immediately feel vindicated as the Reiss
study suggests. We find the tragedy compelling. Though
it pains me to make this leap, but looking at such a
show for what it is, actors playing roles, one with a
keen eye for drama can see cathartic opportunity amidst
the mess. With that, we can find the tragedy of the
train wrecks, even outside of the accepted arts. This
connection, between the oft-horrible, sigh inducing
train wreck TV and perhaps the second-best work produced
by America's greatest playwright, can be made for
students more easily than relating to the tragedy of
Oedipus. Though many of us don't know people from high
places intimately, we know people close to the ones
portrayed on Party and in Iceman. There
may not be a Julius Caesar or even a Torvald Hellmer
within these, but there exists a connection. Perhaps
during the time period of Ibsen commoners could find
someone just like that in our midst, but the students of
today struggle to understand the dynamics of bourgeois
culture from such a distant past. It’s not so much the
bridge of time preventing understanding but instead
simple concepts. The Hellmers try to navigate the gender
politics of the day while appearing to struggle over
money concerns. Yet, what concerns them may be above
what most common people worry about. The Hellmers seem
well-off, and even though Nora has worked hard to bring
them to a place of peace, her actions (working) have no
surprise element for today’s audience. The play does
illustrate the cost of independent thinking in a world
not ready for it and can serve as an illustration of
where society has been. It does not, however, inform
students on elements of today’s society. It lacks that
sort of punch because, thankfully, we’ve progressed
enough from that place. Iceman, however, with its
drunken delusional, acts as a timeless reminder of what
happens when bad habits lead one astray. And this is
something we see in our current society, magnified on
the screens in our living room through train wreck
television.
In Iceman, as we watch the characters ramble on
about their elusive dreams, it becomes readily apparent
that they have no intention to carry them out. They
engage in high hopes. The dreams are used only as an
excuse, keeping responsibility a day away. Willie Oban,
the youngest of the downtrodden, exemplifies the train
wreck perhaps better than the rest. He hopelessly denies
that his father’s wrongdoing has destroyed his career
prospects and has exited life in order to keep himself
drunk enough to deal with the pain of failure. Because
he has so much more potential ahead of him, he struggles
to sleep like the others, who drift in and out
throughout the long play. Oban must down copious amounts
of whiskey to pass out, and in the process acts much
like the drunken revelers on train wreck TV. He harkens
back to his college days, singing the songs of Harvard,
lost in a past before his fall, his restoration point.
Oban can elicit the most sympathy from audiences, as it
appears, unlike McGloin, the grafting police officer
caught for taking his corruption too far, he has been
victimized by another’s actions. What makes him the
perfect train wreck is that, underneath the stories and
cries of wrongdoing by his father, we discover he drank
far too much in college to excel anyway. Train wrecks
love to blame the world instead of themselves, unless
enough alcohol is applied to reveal the truth
underneath. The tragedy lies in the destruction their
habit causes. They find a way to excuse their behavior,
and the audience realizes the mistake in deferred
realization.
The same can be said for Party, which is the
highest rated show on its network. (O'Connell) Like
Iceman, viewers watch these characters down alcohol,
as most of the show revolves around drunks and their
mishaps. The first episode’s title ‘Black Out’ and
Season Two’s opener ‘Hot Mess Express’ give indication
this is certainly train wreck television. The
booze-filled adventures of Matti Breaux, Tiffany Heinen,
Josh Murray, and Ryan ‘Daddy’ Richards mirror those of
Iceman in their obvious drunken mayhem. Of
course, these are young characters not yet at the age of
wanting nothing but sleep and escape, so the actions
differ wildly, yet the root cause of their problems
appears to be self-inflicted, much like their O’Neill
counterparts. Like those men, the cast often drinks
heavily at night and then slowly recovers the next day,
only to repeat the drinking and the bad behavior. While
audiences wonder how the men of Iceman could live
such desperate, empty lives of drinking and escape,
those who view Party anticipate drunken hookups
and accidents and the disaster that follows them.
Neither group live lives worthy of any respect; the
characters actually play out exaggerated versions of
ourselves, no different than the magnification we see in
the tragic hero. No, we do not live in the back room of
a bar, but we may seek out alcohol as an escape. We may
not party so hard or so often that we jeopardize our
careers on a regular basis, but some might walk close to
that line, or at least know those who do. By viewing
such extreme versions of the downtrodden, we can see the
message for the rest of us. Just as we don’t have a
horrible, tremendous mistake we overlook in our lives
like Oedipus, we walk away from the play wanting to more
closely analyze our lives for something smaller we may
be missing. The message in Iceman and train wreck
TV may be to stop escaping, to stop trying to be
something we are not. The men in Iceman spend
their days drunk in order to escape what they know they
are. “All of the characters in Iceman pretend to
be one thing, but are truly something else.” (Brietzke
73) The actors on Party and Rehab pretend
to be something else, as well. The tragedy of these
train wrecks lies in their inability to truly be
themselves, that they need to exaggerate their bad
behavior for attention. Students can easily relate to
this in the television characters, and this
understanding can feed a deeper tragic realization in a
play like Iceman.
TWTV and plays like Iceman are not the polar
opposites some may think. Worlds apart artistically,
what lies beneath both is an easily made connection
between tragedy and everyday human life. The men sitting
in Harry Hope’s backroom, downtrodden and without
potential, may very well have started out just like the
Lebeauxs and ‘Big Daddy’s’ of Party, celebrating
youth and life with drink, with little consideration for
consequences. At the core, even a show like Rehab
attempts to illustrate man at his basest level, the
bottom. O’Neill wanted to show the same in Iceman.
“There are moments in [Iceman] that suddenly
strip the secret soul of man stark…with an understanding
compassion which sees him as victim of the ironies of
life and himself.” (Bogard 511) The Jimmy Camerons just
illustrate the end result of what the cast of Party
pretends to illustrate with their weekly scripts. A man
like Willie Oban represents something similar to what
the casts of Rehab show, the pipe dream of
restoration after throwing away potential through
substance abuse. “Each has his own story, but all are
similar in that a past which had, or was thought to have
had, potentiality has given way to a present in which
there is nothing but drink. This drink is made both
palatable and potent by the presence of illusions or
‘pipe-dreams.’” (Driver 13) The partiers of Party
and the characters suffering from too much revelry on
Rehab show different stages of the same. By showing
students how the cast of Party represents the men
of Iceman before the train wreck and those in
Rehab the results, the bridge between the material
and the student can be built.
Shows like Rehab also incorporate the pipe dream
much like Iceman does. According to Hickey, the
pipe dream represents the tragic flaw of the men in the
room. By clinging to false hope, they prevent their own
happiness and enact their own downfall. A man like
Michael Lohan, the father of Lindsay and a cast member
of Rehab, whose fame only came from a previous
reality show, illustrates the senselessness of engaging
in train wreck TV. He, for the most part, ‘fakes’ a
substance abuse problem just to get on television so
that someone may cast him in another. Though I suspect
many in the audience believe his fiction, some should
see through the ruse and visualize a man attempting to
get back to glory days—if I may call them that—he really
doesn’t deserve. He echoes Jimmy ‘Tomorrow’ Cameron of
Iceman perfectly in that Cameron swears he can
get his job back merely by showing up, when it is clear
he drank away his prospects. The same goes for McGloin,
Iceman’s grafting police officer who feels he
deserves another chance. The drug addicts and those that
pretend to be such on Rehab don’t want sobriety
so much as they want the chance to return to glory.
These are not the high echelon actors, and those that
really do suffer from addiction got that way by reveling
during the height of their small-time careers. They can
elicit sympathy, however, much like the men in Iceman,
just as both can garner an equal amount of scorn. Much
like the men in Harry’s saloon went all-in on their
belief in the Capitalist system and its preaching of
success for anyone, the actors in Rehab tasted
fame and will do whatever they can to get it back.
McGloin, Mosher, Oban and Cameron all had a taste of
success, and even though the blame of their failure lies
clearly with themselves, they want to believe a second
chance is there merely for the asking. Most of us can
relate to wanting a second chance, much like the cast of
Rehab and Iceman. Illustrating the former
to students may make understanding the latter a bit
easier.
When students wonder how tragedy befalls either Oedipus
or Willy Loman, we can draw a line to the blind
foolishness of those on train wreck TV as the genesis
point. Delusion through alcohol starts small, much like
the delusion Oedipus crafts by ‘forgetting’ his prophecy
and his murder. As we see Willy’s hallucinations finally
crumble and reveal the truth, it remains clear he
started by avoiding the truths of life. We do not have
the heavier question of predestination versus free will
to consider there, as both the men of Iceman and
the cast of Party have been written as the end
result of free will without self-analysis. Whereas
Oedipus may have been blind to tremendous faults in his
life, these characters represent what happens when the
common man blinds himself to the smaller issues inherent
in his life. And, as Oedipus’ transgressions come to the
stage in magnified form, so do the despair and missteps
of the train wrecks. Even if the ones on Rehab
fake their pain, they still remain close to us. We are
not kings or the descendants of such. Nor are we sitting
in the cheapest seats on the express train to the
wreckage. Still, our students have closer ties to those
scraping by. The great ones just mirror the egos they
see on their screens, large and small, daily. Much like
the men of Iceman present the extreme result of
living solely for a pipe dream, the cast of Party
shows an extreme version of the current American Pipe
Dream, that living it up on the small screen can lead to
fame. “It is, I believe, the promise of sudden fame that
lures participants.” (Lam) The sad characters on
Rehab show this dream in its extreme. If only some
producer or director can see how well they can display
their pain and give them a call or send them a script.
This desperation echoes the men of Iceman and
their pipe dreams, and this provides yet another
connection for the classroom.
The drinking in both works—and yes, I hesitate to call
Party a ‘work’—offers an escape. These people
want to evade pain in their life, or simply, escape from
themselves. The men in Iceman drink to stay in
complete delusion concerning the mistakes they have made
in the past. On the surface, they may very well want
nothing more than the enjoyment of drinking, the feeling
of inebriation. However, to drink on such a grand scale
indicates something deeper. They want to enable
themselves to engage in their pipe dreams of
restoration, but I’ll hold off on going too far into
that here. (For those into a fabulous read on that
topic, my dissertation will satisfy.) O’Neill attempted,
over the course of his career, to illustrate how pipe
dreams were both useless and necessary to existence. In
Iceman, he took this idea further and made an
entire play about people in constant delusion. The
drinking helps them manage this perpetual state. We
watch as they beg for whiskey and indulge in copious
amounts of it to sustain their dreams. Sadly, or perhaps
happily, I am about to walk out on the plank as the only
one to find the literary reason for the drinking on TWTV.
Artistic and literary impulse may drive us to avoid such
base material as TWTV. For the most part, yes, one has
much better options for their time. Still, with students
finding interest in such entertainment, drawing a
parallel between their hobby and their study makes
navigating other drama and tragedy that much easier. We
spend countless hours attempting to show our students
how to look beyond the words of plays like Othello
and A Raisin in the Sun to find the deeper
meaning. When they simply skim over these dense themes,
it frustrates us, yet we should heed our own advice and
find the connections necessary for students to relate to
the works we so desperately want them to experience.
TWTV exists out in the ethersphere of modern
entertainment. Either it can symbolize our disgust with
pop culture or it can serve as an entry point to
something far greater. By combining TWTV with Iceman,
we make a connection, a bridge between what students see
as ‘our’ world and ‘theirs,’ and they just might realize
it is not a bridge too far.
Both those on TWTV—either the eager young actors on
Party or the has-beens of Rehab—and the
characters of Iceman show the faults in the
system within which we live. We watch the fallen as they
grasp desperately at their dreams, knowing they would
fall further if there was space below them. The train
has already wrecked, and we watch the coverage,
wondering how these people survive in such a desolate
state and listen as they try to convince themselves a
miraculous restoration awaits over each horizon.
WORKS CITED
Bogard, Travis and Bryer, Jackson, ed. Selected
Letters of Eugene O'Neill. New Haven: Yale
University Press, 1988. Book.
Brietzke, Zander. The Aesthetics of Failure: Dramatic
Structure in the Plays of Eugene O'Neill. Jefferson:
McFarland, 2001.
Diggins, John Patrick. Eugene O'Neill's America:
Desire Under Democracy. Kindle Edition. Chicaco:
The Chicago University Press, 2007.
Driver, Tom F. "On the Late Plays of O'Neill." The
Tulane Drama Review 3.2 (1958): 8-20.
Fenton, Reuven and O'Neill, Natalie. "Writers demand
'real' $$ Scribes admit reality TV scripted & want
perks." The New York Post 26 June 2014: 22.
LaBelle, Maurice M. "Dionysus and Despair: The Influence
of Nietzsche upon O'Neill's Drama." Educational
Theatre Journal 25.4 (1973): 436-442. Web. 12
December 2012. <http://www.jstor.org/stable/3205596
>.
Lam, Perry. "Realities of Reality TV Put Audience in the
Spotlight." South China Morning Post 5 September
2014: 4.
Reiss, Steven, Wiltz, James. "Why People Watch Reality
TV." Media Psychology (2004): 363-378.
"Working Notes and Extracts from a Fragmentary Work
Diary." European Theories of the Drama: With a
Supplement on the American Drama. Ed. Barrett H.
Clark. New York: Crown, 1947. 530.