You might have guessed that I did not run out to see the
Public Theatre’s new production of Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar in Central Park. And not because I don't like Central Park. As a general rule, if you want to see Shakespeare done well you go to London,
or to some place where they actors are trained in diction. You cannot mumble
and emote your way through Shakespeare.
Worse yet, American productions have been contaminated by
political correctness and want to turn Shakespearean tragedy into a leftist morality
play.
Apparently, that’s what happened in Central Park when director
Oskar Eustis, in an act of consummate moral cowardice, turned Shakespeare’s Julius
Caesar into a Donald Trump effigy and had him murdered by a suitably diverse
Senate.
The moral of the story was that Caesar was killed for crimes
against political correctness. To Eustis this meant that Trump/Caesar had
committed crimes against democracy. Everyone else knows that Rome was not a
democracy and that neither Caesar nor the Senators who killed him were elected
democratically, but don’t bother with the facts when you are promoting an
ideology.
Naturally, the director and his satraps in the media are
kvelling over their moral courage for speaking truth to power. Ann Althouse
exposes them for the cowards they are. In her words:
It
seems to me that theater should disturb, upset, and provoke the audience in the theater, not show
them the things they already
firmly believe are disturbing, upsetting, and provoking. So I'd say
you are not doing
your job. You're presenting hatred of Donald Trump in the center of Manhattan.
Don't preen, and don't bring God into it. You've got "the mirror."
Look at yourself.
In another context, it’s called preaching to the choir.
Coming fast upon Kathy Griffen’s posing with a severed head,
covered in blood, that resembles President Trump, some have suggested
that the Public Theatre production is in bad taste. In truth, it’s beyond bad
taste. It borders on a death threat.
Killing someone in effigy is not merely an expression of a
wish. It’s not an attempt at good natured humor. If you hear that someone has
stabbed a voodoo doll-- one that looks like you -- through the heart you are not likely
to think it’s funny. Murdering an effigy is not a joke. It is not a bad joke.
It’s a death threat. We will say that it’s covered by the first amendment, but
it’s appalling nevertheless.
However much those who portray the death of Donald Trump
believe that they are not really promoting such acts, members of the general
public might hear things differently. When the audience stands and applauds the
murder of Caesar/Trump, for all I know, some crank out there might come to
believe that he will be applauded for shooting some Republican Congressmen.
To return to Shakespeare, the director’s political correctness
has also made the play’s hero Marc Antony into a woman. One assumes
that the director thinks that Marc Antony was a woman trapped in a man’s body,
but since the play is an historical tragedy, it is profoundly offensive to play
gender politics with the central character.
Perhaps the director imagined that male and female were
interchangeable, in which case he’s an imbecile. Or else, he imagined that the
audience would not notice or care, in which case you’re the imbecile. Otherwise
he is trying to see whether the New York theatre audience has been sufficiently
brainwashed to believe anything that is presented as advanced political correct
thinking.
By changing Marc Antony into Marcia Antony the play now says
that murdering of the patriarchal oppressor led to the advent of feminism and
girl power.
Like much of modern art, the joke is on the audience. It must
count as what the French would call: une
bande d’abrutis. (The term, abruti, you see, comes to us from one Brutus.]
Even Daily Beast columnist Janice Kaplan declares that the feminized
Marc Antony is whiny and weepy. Duh? For those who want to see the character
done right, I recommend the non-Shakespearean HBO series Rome where Marc Antony is played to perfection by James Purefoy.
The Public Theatre sacrificed Shakespeare to the gods of political correctness.
Critic Kenneth Burke argued cogently that Marc Antony is the
play’s hero, the manifestation of a Caesar principle that lived on after the
death of Caesar. And no, the assassination was not the equivalent of gender reassignment surgery.
But, what did Shakespeare think? What does the play say? Is it
a paean to a lost democracy or is it something else? Did Shakespeare believe
that the assassination was justified? Did he portray Brutus and Cassius as
heroic figures trying to defend democracy by the wrong methods?
For the record Marc Antony’s funeral oration is one of the
great speeches in English literature. By contrast, the oration offered by
Brutus is worthy of a thug and a brute. Where do you think that the word “brute”
comes from? Where do you think the notion of brutality comes from? Saying that
Antony is brute for avenging the murder of Caesar is to miss the point entirely.
One notes, in passing, for those who care about such things, that Caesar’s killers, especially Cassius and Brutus were consigned by Dante to
the lowest circle of the Inferno. They were going to live out eternity in Satan’s
anus, sharing the space with Judas Iscariot himself. The Roman senators gained their eternal damnation for being traitors, for having betrayed civil authority.
I suspect that the people of Shakespeare’s day would have
connected the assassination of Julius Caesar with the crucifixion of Christ. They would have seen it as a precursor of the crucifixion. We have two murders, of two people with the same initials, whose
unjust deaths gave rise to different forms of salvation, whether through a republican
Europe or through Christianity.
Surely, people who took seriously the Biblical injunction: “Render
unto Caesar that which is Caesar’s; render unto God that which is God’s” would
not have missed this obvious point. As Bernard Lewis once pointed out, the
Biblical statement forms the basis for the separation of Church and State.
When Marc Antony keeps the Caesar principle alive, he enacts
a secular resurrection. That is, a return to the Republic.
In the Central Park production Cassius and Brutus are
presented as heroes, but not completely as heroes. The director has not problem with their effort to overthrow a tyrant—sic semper tyrannis, says Brutus—but they apparently did it the
wrong way. They did it by an assassination, not by the ballot box. Thus, the director has chosen to be duped by the lead conspirators, clearly not the point Shakespeare was trying to make.
Anyone who believes in the noble intentions of
Brutus and Cassius has misread the play completely. It’s almost as bad as
thinking that Rome was a democracy.
Brutus was not an honorable man. As Janice Kaplan suggests,
the ending of the play, with the death of the conspirators and the return of
Marc Antony renders a meaning that Eustis missed completely:
But
Marc Anthony, fighting to continue what Caesar started, has the big speech and
the triumphant ending. Anthony’s forces win and take over Rome—so Caesar (in
effect) lives on.
The play’s director and his defenders believe that the play’s
message is that you should not try to overthrow a democratically elected leader
with violence.
They tell us that they are not promoting the assassination
of the president. Did the audience that stood up and applauded the death of
Caesar/Trump have the same sentiments?
As for the merits of assassination, would these great
thinkers have expressed the same sentiment if the victim of the assassination were
named Adolph Hitler?
Of course, the play has nothing to do with the facts. The
director imagines that Rome was a democracy and that Caesar was a democratic
leader who was trying to assume despotic powers. In truth, Rome was not a
democracy and the Senators were not elected democratically.
The notion that Brutus and Cassius—by deposing Caesar the
wrong way--put an end to democracy for two thousand years is rank silliness. Does anyone really believe that lowlifes like
Cassius and Brutus, in rank defiance of the will of the people, were defending
democracy?
Has anyone pointed out the obvious point, namely that Caesar
was a conqueror, a man who created an Empire. He was not a demagogue and did
not lead by making eloquent speeches.
People who win wars tend to be popular and much loved by the
people. Such was the case in Rome. In modern parlance, of course, he becomes an
imperialist who oppresses certain groups of people—the people who are placed by
the director in the Roman Senate and who murder him for his crimes against
diversity.
Is the following description of Caesar as buffoon consonant
with Shakespeare or with history?
From Variety:
[Trump-Caesar
is presented as a] preening Goldilocks who wears embarrassingly long ties,
makes triumphal hand gestures and knows how to work the crowds. Our own crowd
of complicit theatergoers roared with delight when he lowered himself into a
golden bathtub. Here the hero was joined by his wife Calpurnia, deliciously
played by Tina Benko in the slender, beautifully draped (by costumer Paul
Tazewell) figure of a professional model speaking in the unmistakable accents
of a native-born Slovenian.
This works on only one plane. It affirms the prejudices of
the audience and shows that New York theatre-goers live in an echo chamber
where they yearn for nothing other than to hear their own thoughts played back to them. They are
open to anything that affirms their dogmatic beliefs and reject anything that
does not.
For those whose brains have not been completely addled by
political correctness, Shakespeare was not expressing an opinion about the
current political scene. His or ours. He was not telling us how to think about the current
political scene. He was telling a story, a story that was of extraordinary
importance in the founding of Western civilization.
13 comments:
"The moral of the story was that Caesar was killed for crimes against political correctness."
But it'll be okay to shoot political opponents (who are not correct) while they are at baseball practice. Nothing to see there.
To Ann Althouse's point, I can't wait for the corporate-sponsored politically correct Central Park theatre company to do their production of "Macbeth" using the Clintons. That would sufficiently "disturb, provoke and upset the audience." But they won't do that, will they? And that connects directly to the cowardice Althouse points to.
I'm reminiscing about the reverberations after a rodeo clown wore an Obama mask. The media set their collective hair on fire.
And, lest we forget, this was a viral meme not so long ago:
https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-gKt-dcnWa3Q/WSA-XlGyL3I/AAAAAAAASBE/aMdCYvQcXpIVkQaglluzw3sKjLRzEYlYwCLcB/s1600/unnamed%2B%25285%2529.jpg
"Killing someone in effigy is not merely an expression of a wish. It’s not an attempt at good natured humor. If you hear that someone has stabbed a voodoo doll-- one that looks like you -- through the heart you are not likely to think it’s funny. Murdering an effigy is not a joke. It is not a bad joke. It’s a death threat. We will say that it’s covered by the first amendment, but it’s appalling nevertheless."
This is why hangman's nooses left around get the reactions they do.
"When the audience stands and applauds the murder of Caesar/Trump, for all I know, some crank out there might come to believe that he will be applauded for shooting some Republican Congressmen." This just happened this morning: https://twitter.com/ben_childers/status/874950294660157440 (IAC's first comment)
We'll see whether this shooter today was a crank, or just an enraged Democrat. Tough to tell the difference these days.
Seems the lefty newspeople are desperately trying to find some connection between today's shooter and mental illness. They believe mental illness is the source of human evil. Instead of Trump supporters being mentally deranged, it appears diehard Dems are. Another crumbling narrative.
Start: Coming fast upon Kathy Griffen’s posing with a severed head, covered in blood, that resembles President Trump, some have suggested that the Public Theatre production is in bad taste. In truth, it’s beyond bad taste. It borders on a death threat.
Agreed, 100%. And even if not a "death threat" itself, it can motivate others.
And now we have a new shooting, not Islamic terrorism, but it could be called left-wing terrorism, a supporter of angry Bernie Sanders shot Republican congressmen.
http://www.cnn.com/2017/06/14/homepage2/james-hodgkinson-profile/index.html
And less than 3 months ago he wrote this on Facebook.
"Trump is a Traitor. Trump Has Destroyed Our Democracy. It's Time to Destroy Trump & Co." he posted on his personal Facebook page on March 22. And "Republicans are the Taliban of the USA," in February.
Sanders denounced the shooting, but also has to consider whether his campaign rhetoric is partially responsible for encouraging this.
"I have just been informed that the alleged shooter at the Republican baseball practice is someone who apparently volunteered on my presidential campaign. I am sickened by this despicable act. Let me be as clear as I can be, violence of any kind is unacceptable in our society and I condemn this action in the strongest possible terms."
But Kathy Griffen's publicity stunt stands much higher than vigorous campaign rhetoric. She has to understand that her bloody severed head can be seen as a call to arms to any person with nothing to live for, and looking for a way to go out in glory.
White lonewolf terrorism, Left or Right, might be easier to call mental illness than Muslim terrorism, but the results are very similar.
We are entering a dangerous world, and one where hateful or threatening Facebook posts now must be taken as serious threats. Free speech isn't free when it inspires violence by others, and since none of us can control what others do with our words, there is no clear line we can identify when we've gone too far.
And while we condemn Griffen and others, we can also remember people used to think a lynched image of Obama was also considered free speech only recently.
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2012/6/8/1098558/-Lynching-Obama-yes-they-ve-gone-there
Such things can be rationalized away as harmless, until someone else takes things to the next level. I wasn't alive to see the 60s assassination of John and Bobby Kennedy and MLK, and its almost surprising that madness has been largely kept at bay in my lifetime.
p.s. I see Ross Douthat commented also, considering 3 other stories, the last seeing Trump as something smaller himself, but the start of a downward path of the republic.
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/06/14/opinion/the-trumpiest-roman-of-them-all.html
---
The problem with staging a “Julius Caesar” in which Caesar clearly resembles Donald Trump, the culture-war controversy du jour thanks to Shakespeare in the Park, isn’t that doing so encourages the president’s assassination. ... No, the problem with a Trumpified Caesar is that the conceit fails to illuminate our moment the way a good classical allusion should.
...Julius himself is a relatively poor analogue for Trump. Our president is a different sort of character, in need of a different sort of script.
... Then consider a third possibility: “Crassus,” the story of how a sordid real-estate speculator made a vast fortune as a Roman slumlord, rode both slave labor and the fear of slave rebellions to political influence, and leveraged his wealth to a share of power alongside his more dashing frenemies, Pompey and Caesar.
...when the full story of our era is written, I would bet on Trump being remembered more like a Crassus than like a Caesar — as an important but not decisive player in our march toward an ever-more-imperial executive, notable for his greed and pride and folly, but eclipsed by even more dangerous figures yet to come.
---
AO: You've reached a new low. Sickening comments.
Anonymous said... AO: You've reached a new low. Sickening comments.
Really? It is a sickening topic no doubt. But which part? I thought I was being solidly against violence, threats of violence, violent rhetoric and symbols of violence.
"However much those who portray the death of Donald Trump believe that they are not really promoting such acts, members of the general public might hear things differently. When the audience stands and applauds the murder of Caesar/Trump, for all I know, some crank out there might come to believe that he will be applauded for shooting some Republican Congressmen." - SS
The juxtaposition of arguments in this case and that of Michelle Carter are intriguing.
At what point do words matter enough that they do, in fact, become a crime?
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