What the Dickens?
Turning Marley's Face Into a Doorknob is Just Problem Number One for Carol Adaptors
By Jerome Weeks
Seven years after his death, Jacob Marley is given one of the best-known kiss-offs in English literature: "Marley was dead: to begin with. There is no doubt whatever about that. The register of his burial was signed by the clergyman, the clerk, the undertaker and the chief mourner. Scrooge signed it...Old Marley was as dead as a door-nail."
The obituary declarations that open Charles Dickens's A Christmas Carol announce what has become a Western institution, part of the fabric of our culture, albeit a piece of fabric many feel like wiping their feet on. Any director who has staged A Christmas Carol has probably faced the charge--if not the self-accusation--of pandering. Let's face it: A Christmas Carol regularly ranks as the most-produced play among resident theatres for a reason, and it's not because of any top-tier literary value. The show is the seasonal visit to our sickly sweet, rich old aunt; it's the annual check in the bank.
As a theatre critic, I have seen dozens of Carols, a number of them marked by a degree of free-association bordering on science fiction. One touring production a number of years ago featured, at its climax, a flock of flying children. They weren't portraying any of the ghosts; they were just London urchins who...flew. The enshrining of A Christmas Carol as a sentimental perennial certainly attracts, even merits, the campy treatments--like the Dallas show that had Gomez Addams portray Bob Cratchit, and Lucy Ricardo as Mrs. Cratchit. Unfortunately, the result wasn't pop culture spoofery so much as lounge-act surrealism.
Theatres have been staging Dickens's tale since it was published in 1843. Yet if so many companies produce it--if it has been musicalized and updated and re-Victorianized and turned into 13 film versions, 17 made-for-TV movies, dozens of sitcom spoofs and one Mr. Magoo cartoon--then if anything can be said about A Christmas Carol, it is this: We know it; we know it in our bones.
Of course, one reason it still draws people is that Dickens's ideas of Christmas are very much our ideas--he gave them to us. Stephen Nissenbaum argues in his 1996 book, The Battle for Christmas, that the first half of the 19th century was a crucial turning point in the way we think of the holiday. Gone was the old, communal carnival for farmhands and servants, a near-riot of drink and food, a harvest feast that had served as a vent for class tensions since the Romans. In its place came the new religion of home and the bourgeois family--all the better for the merchants. Most of the yuletide folklore that we associate with a traditional Christmas was actually concocted by early Victorians like Clement Clarke Moore, long credited as the author of "The Night Before Christmas."
And, of course, early Victorians liked Charles Dickens. The particular genius of Dickens's Carol lies in its implication that family dinners and gift-giving with loved ones are the "true," old-fashioned ways to celebrate the holiday, ways we need to revive, ways that help us redeem ourselves. Ever since, each holiday season, people talk of recapturing the real Christmas, finding its "traditional" spirit--and often turn gratefully to Dickens, not realizing his Victorian customs were as manufactured as any Martha Stewart crèche.
Paradoxically, our very familiarity with Dickens's material is one of its strengths, claims Maggie Mancinelli-Cahill, artistic director of the Capital Repertory Theatre in Albany, N.Y., and the author of a 1998 stage adaptation. "This is our equivalent to Greek theatre," she says. "Everyone already knows the story. Everyone's heard the dialogue--'Bah, humbug' and 'Christmas? What's Christmas to me?'" The tale practically tells itself; the challenge--and the opportunity, Mancinelli-Cahill believes--is to reconnect emotionally with it. "It has to be heartfelt," she says. "It has to be real."
While that's the challenge with any classic, the surprise is how many of us don't really know the material. Directors of Dickens's novella would be well advised to take a look at those opening lines again, with Dickens hammering away at the fact of Marley's death as if there were lingering doubts, as if Marley might rise up and stroll away. (Which, ironically, he does.) A Christmas Carol is a story of spiritual rebirth, so it begins with a death. But it's also a story of guilt and human responsibility, so, like Hamlet, it's full of ghosts, those spectral spokesmen of remorse and injustice.
As Adrian Hall says, "Overshadowing everything in the story is death," which is why the former artistic director of the Dallas Theater Center begins his 1977 version with Marley's funeral--grimly remembered by Scrooge as he works. The co-adaptation by Hall and Richard Cumming has been a favorite with many theatres, perhaps because, as Hall puts it, "A Christmas Carol doesn't have to be pastel colors and cute chimney tops. It isn't about quaintness. Many productions don't really reach the emotional climax of the story because they don't reach the depths. A Christmas Carol is about how you find joy in life after you've stared into your own grave."
While those opening lines are important in establishing a slyly morbid tone--plus a dour background of death and economics--they also pose a problem: Who speaks them? For that matter, who speaks the entire book?
There's this narrative voice that controls A Christmas Carol, this voice that everyone hears in their heads when they read it. To be sure, there are the famous tag lines spoken by individual characters, like Tiny Tim's "God bless us all." But what sets the tone is this confident, empathetic voice that no character speaks. It's this voice that, if anything, is the real spirit of the book, the voice of the 31-year-old Dickens talking to us, his readers, drawing us in to the sooty old beloved London that he creates from memory and wish fulfillment.
"If you cut out the narrative," claims Capital Rep's Mancinelli-Cahill, "you're left with Dickens's characters lacking any detail or color. It's his narration that provides us with that rich sense of humanity. In fact, I believe that it's more powerful to hear that narrative voice in a theatre than it is to see anything on screen in a movie." Mancinelli-Cahill's solution was to create a Greek-like chorus who help relay the story. Hall, on the other hand, apportioned bits to Dickens's own characters, each setting a scene, effecting transitions. Many adaptations follow one of these two paths, but the point is that all of these narrative and tonal dilemmas are raised just by the first paragraphs. Adapting A Christmas Carol with any care, with any sense of character or ear for Dickens's language, is not as easy as it seems.
Several years ago, in collaboration with two actors, Ted Davey and Chamblee
Ferguson, I wrote a new-vaudevillian, mime-clown adaptation called Dr.
Hamm's Traveling Christmas Carol. At one point, frustrated by our inability
to translate some Dickensian imagery into physical action, we had a comedic
epiphany: just shoot the damned thing. On stage, Ted and Chamblee become
so incensed trying to mime one of Dickens's sumptuous descriptions that
Chamblee grabs the book from the narrator (played by Edmund Coulter), pulls
out a gun and blasts the book dead. Of course, overcome with remorse, the
two clowns immediately try to resuscitate it: pounding on the book's "chest,"
they try to puff some air into it. A little biblio-CPR. That response,
I believe, is probably universal among theatre companies--both the frustration
and the desire to breathe life into this shopworn tale. Just consider these
other staging headaches presented by Dickens:
In full view of the audience, how do you make a doorknocker turn
into Marley's face?
Having ghosts fly around is easy enough, but an onstage transformation
is another trick entirely. It's like the Ghost in Hamlet; it requires
the right jolt of gothic surprise. (Dickens even mentions Hamlet's ghost--he
knew the traditions on which he was drawing.) One solution--that of designer
Douglas Schmidt at Houston's Alley Theatre--is displayed on the cover of
this issue.
How do you portray the Ghost of Christmas Past?
While often played by a child of indeterminate sex, many people have
no firm image of the Ghost. He has no firm appearance. He's a shape-shifter:
"The figure itself fluctuated in its distinctness, being now a thing with
one arm, now with one leg, now with 20 legs, now a pair of legs without
a head, now a head without a body." Just try putting a "thing with 20 legs"
on stage.
What does Scrooge do for
a living?
We know that Bob Cratchit is a clerk--one of the hordes of working-class
sorts who kept London's offices filled with paperwork in the days before
photocopiers. But what exactly does his boss do? We see him in a
"counting-house," but that's just his back office where he safely adds
up the proceeds of the business. What is that business? Come to think of
it, what does Fezziwig do?
With that last question, you may wonder what difference knowing Scrooge's career choice makes to an adaptation. Probably little, in terms of sets or acting. But the question highlights a central fact about Dickens's story: As much as A Christmas Carol is about spiritual redemption, it's about money and poverty and work. Indeed, for many theatregoers, A Christmas Carol is their chief exposure, however cursory, to Malthusian principles of political economy. ("If they would rather die," Scrooge says of the starving poor, "they had better do it, and decrease the surplus population.")
This may seem obvious--A Christmas Carol concerns Scrooge's redemption, and that redemption is demonstrated by his newfound sense of charity. But it's an issue of tone or emphasis that many stagings miss. If Dickens bequeathed us a consoling vision of Christmas, he also bequeathed us an image of urban poverty. When we think of the working poor in a city--the evictions, the health problems--the image that haunts our minds is essentially one that Dickens first vehemently brought to public attention.
Before Dickens, depictions of the working poor were mostly the occasional comic or terrifying figure in the works of William Hogarth or Henry Fielding, or they were destitute criminals in the popular press. Upon reading the first chapters of Oliver Twist, Lord Melbourne told Queen Victoria, "I don't like those things. I wish to avoid them ... and therefore I don't wish them represented." After Dickens (and the reformers he helped inspire), the working poor, as individuals, may still have been treated as "poignant" or "picturesque," but they also were an issue, a cause, a measure of the failure or success of society. Forcing his society to reconsider its treatment of the poor was a "supreme act of moral imagination," writes neoconservative historian Gertrude Himmelfarb in The Idea of Poverty. Dickens "brought the poor into the forefront of the culture." We still label heartless politicians "Scrooges"; we still conceive of the poor as deserving or not (the transformation of welfare to workfare). "The common man," George Orwell wrote in a 1939 essay, "is still living in the mental world of Dickens."
In fact, when the Cornerstone Theater's A Community Carol was produced in Washington, D.C., in 1994, the updating--which reconceived Scrooge as a black entrepreneur who had lost touch with his community's poorer members--received national attention. Newt Gingrich, just beginning his right-wing revolution then as Speaker of the House, had helped to open what Time magazine dubbed "the season to bash the poor." He had speculated about orphanages for poor children, so Washington audiences caught the immediate relevance, the Gingrichian echo, in Scrooge's famous rejection of charity: "Are there no prisons? Are there no workhouses?"
Even so, it's surprising that so many Christmas Carols skimp on these social issues.Or perhaps not: Poverty and hunger and crippling diseases don't make for the kind of festive holiday fare that delights subscribers. You can see directors inching away from these, wishing for pageantry and place settings and hoopskirts. The perfect, dementedly show-biz example of this is the annual Carol at the Paramount Theatre in Madison Square Garden--a splashy, $12-million musical extravaganza about a family sinking into poverty. The disconnect between Broadway form and Dickensian content seems especially ludicrous when you see how the Cratchits nearly vanish. If you blink, you'll miss them--they're the ones without a kick line.
Sometimes, even the best-intentioned adaptations can shift Dickens's emphasis--unwittingly. Gerald Freedman shrewdly handled Dickens's narrative when the former artistic director of the Great Lakes Theater Festival developed his own Carol. He relocated the story to a Victorian household where the family is reading Dickens aloud. The butler, the children, the parents: All of them take on roles as the play-within-a-play unfolds. But what weakens the impact of Dickens's social vision here is the fact that poverty is now a charade. It's a matter of the characters putting on a show, donning some threadbare costumes for a moment.
On the other hand, the misplaced emphasis can lean in the other direction--turning Dickens into an overtly political radical. We get, for example, the simplistic replacement of British class antagonisms with American racial ones: Scrooge as white boss, the Cratchits as suffering African-Americans. In his 1939 essay--still one of the most insightful pieces on Dickens--Orwell makes an important distinction. Dickens may excoriate Scrooge's capitalist heart. He may plead for better treatment for the working class--for humanity in general. But none of that makes Dickens a particularly political thinker.
"Dickens's criticism of society," writes Orwell, "is almost exclusively moral." He has no plan to change society; his target is "human nature." And his only real lesson is "that capitalists ought to be kind, not that workers ought to be rebellious." Hence, Scrooge's transformation into the Dickensian cliché, the Good Rich Man, and the Cratchits into the Good Honest Poor. Hence, too, Dickens's lack of concern over Scrooge's line of work: Dickens is after a moral lesson, not an expose of business practices.
"Dickens sentimentalizes poverty," says Bill Rauch, artistic director of the Cornerstone Theatre and one of the authors of A Community Carol. "Just as he sentimentalizes the disabled with Tiny Tim--you know, 'pity the poor cripple.'" Yet that treatment of poverty is "part of why the story remains so well-loved," Rauch says. "Dickens got to the personal more than the political."
"He's more generous than political," agrees Cahill. "But I really admire that ability to say to an audience, 'Do something. One person can make a difference.'" In fact, Orwell's approving term for Dickens's reformist approach is "generous anger." He is a classic 19th-century liberal, unconcerned about theory or ideology or religion but deeply concerned that we examine our consciences, that we--well, that we do good.
When Providence's Trinity Repertory was in serious financial trouble in 1977, it was suggested that Adrian Hall try staging A Christmas Carol as a solution. Hall was incredulous: "But isn't that a children's play?"
He continues: "But when I took a look at it, I saw Dickens's social anger. It's really an extraordinary moment when Scrooge learns to give freely of his heart." And then Hall saw his audience respond eagerly to that: "I never knew the power of it,'' he says.
"A Christmas Carol is really pretty dreadful in its simplicity,"
says Hall. "All it says is that you, too, can be generous and kind instead
of vicious or greedy. That's a little thought--a little bitty
thought." He pauses. "But boy, it has ramifications--the kind that we cling
to in the middle of the night." AT
Jerome Weeks writes about books and theatre for The Dallas Morning News. He is currently adapting George Orwell's Homage to Catalonia for the stage.
An Alternative Christmas
The great appeal of the holiday season is the overwhelming number of traditions that shape and color it. But there are moments when tradition needs a bit of shaking up. Just in time for this Yuletide (and next season's last-minute planning session), we've assembled (with the assistance of the Literary Managers and Dramaturgs of America on-line discussion group) a few alternatives to Dickens's classic, the name of which need not be cited here. In no particular numerical order, here are American Theatre's top 20 holiday-slot options for those willing to ignore that great ghost of Christmases past.
# 20 It's an outside favorite, but a Hanukkah classic--the musical Bubbe Meises by Ellen Gould and Holly Gewandeter. A theatre in Skokie, Ill., commissioned the play because no one in its audience wanted to spend one more night with Scrooge.
# 19 Certainly the most inflamed title of the season: Holidaze: A Christian, a Jew and a Ho-Ho-Ho-Homo, Too, written by the three actors who perform it: Bobbie Stienbach, Robert Saoud and Kathy St. George. For three seasons the Lyric Stage Company of Boston has presented this cabaret-style send-up of Christmas and Hanukkah because audiences love it--and, according to producing director Spiro Veloudos, that traditional cash cow "doesn't do well for us."
# 18 The ever-popular and timely adaptation of O. Henry's short story The Gift of the Magi wags a kindly finger at Dickens. There is also a musical adaptation of O. Henry's Christmas stories called An O. Henry Christmas--Adam Versenyi of PlayMakers Repertory Company has seen the latter play twice at the North Carolina theatre. He could see it there again this year, at California Repertory Company at Edison Theatre in Long Beach, Calif.
# 17 Building upon the Christian symbolism in C.S. Lewis's The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, the musical Narnia might prove appealing especially for theatres catering to young people. This season the Prince Music Theater of Philadelphia will present Narnia, with Jules Tasca's book and Thomas Tierney and Ted Drachman's score.
# 16 The Alabama Shakespeare Festival and Alaska's Eccentric Theatre Company encourage you to come in and sit by the fire for Russell Vandenbroucke's adaptation of Truman Capote's short story Holiday Memories, a child's-eye view of Christmas in the South.
# 15 A new musical with a book by Deborah Baley Brevoort and music by David Friedman, King Island Christmas is based on actual events on an island off the coast of Alaska in the 1950s. This year it's being produced by the Human Race Theatre Company in Dayton, Ohio, and Edyvean Repertory Theatre in Indianapolis, Ind.; it premiered at Perseverance Theatre in Alaska in 1997.
# 14 In its 1994-95 season, Minneapolis's Children's Theatre Company premiered a sure-fire kid-pleaser: Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas, with book and lyrics by Timothy Mason and music by Mel Marvin. Lynn Thomson calls this musical rendering a "great adaptation and just swell." San Diego's Old Globe Theatre expects a Grinch visit this month.
# 13 Doug Armstrong, Keith Cooper, Maureen Morley and Tom Willmorth of Chicago's Illegitimate Players have fashioned a truly unique experience in the contradictions of lusting after food (Oliver Twist) and family love (that Scrooge tale) by splicing the two classics together. The result: Christmas Twist.
# 12 California's El Teatro Campesino offers a new and spectacular pageant of color, music drama and dance that recounts the "miraculous events that inspired the religious rebirth of indigenous Mexico." La Virgen del Tepeyac is a religious retelling of the four apparitions of Our Lady of Guadalupe, sung and performed entirely in Spanish.
# 11 Playing at no fewer than five theatres, a tale that any parent would be willing to attend with child and camcorder in tow: Barbara Robinson's The Best Christmas Pageant Ever.
# 10 William Gibson's rarely produced and humorously irreverent look at the story of the first Christmas has a title almost as long as its script: The Butterfingers Angel, Mary & Joseph, Herod the Nut & the Slaughter of 12 Hit Carols in a Pear Tree. No one's taken up the challenge this year...but it's a real crowd-pleaser.
# 9 Not to be outdone, David McGillivary and Walter Zerlin have come up with a similarly outrageous title, Farndale Avenue Housing Estate Townswomen's Guild Dramatic Society's Production of A Christmas Carol. Contemporary American Theatre Company in Columbus, Ohio, and Washington's Tacoma Actors Guild expect great things from this play, which contains "frighteningly original songs, side-splitting physical humor and probably the worst presentation of a stage classic ever seen."
# 8 A play whose title tells us that at least one scene will take place in the school cafeteria: A Tuna Christmas by Ed Howards, Joe Sears and Jaston Williams. This season the play will be served up at five theatres across the country.
# 7 Another great Christmas possibility is a musical that joins two masters--;Duke Ellington and William Shakespeare--;without the help of the Ghost of Christmas Past. Washington, D.C.'s Arena Stage will present Cheryl L. West and Sheldon Epps's Play On!, a retelling of Shakespeare's own seasonal offering, Twelfth Night.
# 6 California's South Coast Repertory makes an annual offering of Octavio Solis's retelling of the Holy Family's journey, La Posada Magica. With music by Marcos Loya, the play was commissioned seven years ago and (according to faithful fans) gloriously reinforces the true meaning of Christmas.
# 5 Honolulu Theatre for Youth has assembled a playwriting cast-of-thousands (well, 11) to create a collection of short plays all rolled into one: Christmas Talk Story. Music in the show includes Louis Armstrong's 'Zat You Santa Claus? and a traditional Hawaiian song, Mele Kalikimaka.
# 4 Not to be outdone by all the theatre artists who have adapted Dickens to their own purposes, former Seattle Repertory Theatre artistic director Daniel Sullivan created a monster hit with his hysterical adventure Inspecting Carol, about a financially troubled theatre company attempting to mount you-know-what. This season Ft. Myers's Florida Repertory Theatre and Boston's Lyric Stage Company hope it will provoke laughs and fill their houses.
# 3 Black Nativity, Langston Hughes's classic tale of a Christmas pageant, replete with song, dance, words and poetry, is as much a staple in some cities as that Dickens play is in others.
# 2 Dallas's Core Performance Manufactory Theatre Company and its artistic director Elizabeth Ware are convinced that the Dickens chestnut is nothing more than an archetypal experience of a man whose life is changed by a series of unimaginable events. They decided to cross this tale with another that they found to have a similar theme--;Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness. The piece debuts this year, and two titles are in the running: Heart of Christmas and A Darkness Carol.
# 1 It's a modern classic
as well as a humbling, heartwarming and occasionally obscene tale of life
as an elf in Macy's: Joe Mantello's adaptation of David Sedaris's The
Santaland Diaries. Because elves are people, too. ---Lenora Inez
Brown
Dr. Seuss: Courtesy of the Children's
Theatre Company
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