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Wednesday, 3 January 2024

Chekhov called The Seagull ‘a comedy’. The Sydney Theatre Company seems to forget it was a tragedy, too

Prudence Upton/Sydney Theatre Company Alexander Howard, University of SydneyWhat is comedy?

This is the question I kept coming back to while watching Andrew Upton’s adaptation of Anton Chekhov’s The Seagull, which opened to warm applause – and a touch of controversy – at the Sydney Theatre Company on Saturday.

Theatre scholar Eric Weitz notes that comedy is a genre “with characteristic features”.

Laughter, humour, distraction. These are some of the terms associated with comedy.

Comedy is also restless. As Weitz acknowledges, comedy “embraces a range of subgenres” and often “cross-pollinates with other genres to form the likes of tragicomedy”.

These cross-pollinations can often confuse.

Consider the very first performance of The Seagull, subtitled “a comedy in four acts”.

The notorious performance at the Alexandrinsky Theatre in Saint Petersburg on October 17 1896 was an unmitigated failure. The audience jeered; the reviews were scathing.

Chekhov reads The Seagull with the Moscow Art Theatre company, 1898. Wikimedia Commons

In a letter sent to the publisher Aleksey Suvorin the very next day, a wounded Chekhov declared he would never again “write plays or have them acted”.

The reason why the premiere went so badly has to do with audience expectations. As essayist Janet Malcolm explains, there were special circumstances on the night in question.

The performance was part of a benefit event for E. I. Levkeeva, a popular Russian comic actress, “and so the audience was largely made up of Levkeeva fans, who expected hilarity and, to their disbelief and growing outrage, got Symbolism.”

Primed for broad comedy, the audience didn’t know what to do with Chehkov’s groundbreaking spin on the genre, which broke with established realist modes and placed emphasis on metaphorical imagery and allegorical tropes.

While the play, which speaks to the themes of art and desire, has many funny moments, it simultaneously foregrounds discussions of mortality and depictions of madness. And it ends with a suicide.

Moreover, Chekhov’s play is one where, as the academic James Loehlin writes

the old win out over the young, where hope and the impulse for change are crushed, in part through their own fragility and lack of conviction, but in part by the proficient ruthlessness of the seasoned old campaigners, their elders.

I mention this because the serious and subtle aspects of The Seagull – many of which continue to resonate today – can get lost in modern takes on Chekhov’s play.

This is true of the Sydney Theatre Company’s production. Adapted by Upton and directed by Imara Savage, this version showcases the sound work of Max Lyandvert and features a meta-theatrical set designed by David Fleischer.

This version is set in contemporary rural Australia. Prudence Upton/Sydney Theatre Company

The adaptation is set in contemporary rural Australia and uses anglicised character names. Upton and Savage stick with Chekhov’s formal structure, but privilege the comedic at the expense of pretty much everything else when it comes to delivery.

This has ramifications for how the adaptation pans out.

Success beckons, tragedy befalls

The play comprises four acts and centres on four characters who mirror each other.

Constantine (Harry Greenwood) and Boris (Toby Schmitz) are writers. Boris is famous. Constantine – a college dropout who fancies his chances as an avant-gardist – is most definitely not.

Irina (Sigrid Thornton) and Nina (Mabel Li) are actors. Irina, who is Constantine’s mother and Boris’s lover, is a renowned stage star. The ingénue Nina, who is dating Constantine, desperately wants to make it.

Success beckons, but tragedy eventually befalls Nina – who leaves Constantine for Boris – in the two year gap between the play’s third and fourth acts.

These characters are joined by several others, including Irina’s ailing landowner brother Peter (Sean O'Shea), and a depressive young goth, Masha (Megan Wilding). With the exception of one, every character in the play is morose.

With the exception of one, every character in the play is morose. Prudence Upton/Sydney Theatre Company

The first act is structured around an abortive performance of an experimental theatre piece Constantine has worked up. Nina and Boris grow close in the second, while Irina holds court. At the start of the third act, it is revealed Constantine has tried to take his own life. Boris threatens to leave Irina for Nina. Hilarity ensues as Irina tries to win him back.

The atmosphere that the Sydney Theatre Company creative team establishes in each of these acts is lighthearted and largely humorous. Indeed, there are some moments, as when a gravely ill Peter convulses on the ground in the third act, when the onstage action almost tips over into outright farce.

As Chekhov himself insisted, different types of comedy – including farce – had roles to play in The Seagull. However, the overarching tonal emphasis in this adaptation causes problems in the play’s last act, which is set indoors during the Australian winter.

Peter, not long for the world, spends his time talking about how he regrets his entire life. The other characters fob him off. Constantine has made headway as a writer, but is deeply unhappy. He pines after Nina, who dropped off the radar somewhere between acts.

Mabel Li gives one of the standout performances. Prudence Upton/Sydney Theatre Company

Time passes, and trivialities exchanged. A bedraggled Nina reappears. The story she tells is one of sorrow and woe. A genuinely moving moment, the speech is delivered with real affective intensity – undoubtedly the high point of the production.

However, the tonal chasm between the final act and the preceding three is simply too great.

In keeping with Chehkov’s original, comedy ultimately gives way to tragedy, but something seems to have been lost along the way.

The Seagull is at the Sydney Theatre Company until December 16.

If this article has raised issues for you, or if you’re concerned about someone you know, call Lifeline on 13 11 14.The Conversation

Alexander Howard, Senior Lecturer, Discipline of English, University of Sydney

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Monday, 13 July 2015

‘Romantic comedies are difficult to write’

He wrote his first novel Just Friends at the age of 17. And now, at 22, Sumrit Shahi has written his third novel Never Kiss Your Best Friend. He is one of the youngest scriptwriters in the Indian television industry and currently writing the shows, Sadda Haq and Million Dollar Girl on Channel V, India.
  • Which genre draws you the most as a reader and a writer? Broadly, the genre of relationship drama. Relationships and emotions intrigue and I’m a sucker for such writings.
  • Does inspiration strike you at the oddest of moments and places?  I’m pretty much the coffee shop voyeur, overhearing conversations and issues being discussed, you’ll find me lurking in the smoking lounge in a club as unfiltered stories and smoke flow around. Yes, inspiration does strike me at odd places, like one night a friend of mine drunk-dialled me at 3 am and told me about how he had kissed his best friend and it was going to be all super awkward now. Instead of consoling him, I cajoled the story out of him, I had the idea for my next book.
  • A fictional character close to your heart... Sutter Keely from the novel The Incredible Now. The character is so real, charming yet so painfully flawed. He’s a 17-year-old alcoholic who wants everyone around him to be happy and live in the moment even as he escapes his own battles. He’s definitely not the ideal hero but he’s so real and that’s what is important. 
  • Who among the pantheon of writers (past/present) would you like to have coffee with?  I really want to meet this young adult writer called David Levithan. He co-writes with John Green and has a terrific sense of plot and flawed characters. Also he writes in this zone of quirky, witty, romantic comedies, which I believe is very difficult to write. 
  • What is your antidote for writer’s block? Just stop thinking about writing for a bit. Don’t be too hard on yourself. Go out. And then just dive back into writing again. Has worked well for me, till date. And oh, reading helps too.‘Source: The Asian Age

Friday, 8 March 2013

Johansson 'more tigress than kitty' in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof

Critics praise Scarlett Johansson's performance but complain that she is drowned out by the soundtrack
SCARLETT JOHANSSON has impressed critics with her first return to theatre since her Tony-winning performance three years ago as Catherine in A View From the Bridge. Johansson stars as Maggie the 'cat' in Tennessee Williams' Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, which examines the relationships within the family of a wealthy cotton tycoon in the Mississippi Delta. Johansson, who spends much of the first act of the play dressed in nothing but a slip, is expected to draw in the crowds to Richard Rodgers Theatre in New York – and they won't be disappointed, writes Mark Hughes in the Daily Telegraph. Like Elizabeth Taylor in the 1958 film version of the play, Johansson delivers "a charismatic, if at times slightly breathless, performance", says Hughes. "Affecting a very passable Southern accent, [Johansson's] Maggie flits between rage at the fact her husband no longer seems even to like her, and sorrow that she cannot force him to. In between, there are moments of genuine comedy that drew loud laughs and applause," he adds. The New York Times says Johansson "seems to possess a confidence that can turn raw nerves into raw power", while Bloomberg describes her Maggie as "more tigress than the kitty so often portrayed in this role". But critics have warned that the actors risk being drowned out by the play's soundtrack. The creative team has added a soundtrack of fireworks, cap guns, the sound of crickets, chiming clocks, thunder crashes and nine songs. A mention of glory days on the football field prompts the eerie echo of a cheering crowd, while talk of a fateful phone-call triggers a ghostly ringing. "Somebody spayed the cat," says David Rooney at the Hollywood Reporter. And it wasn't the "hard-working" main attraction Johansson. "The star and her similarly marooned fellow cast members are all at the mercy of Rob Ashford, a director out of his depth and reaching for any flotation device he can grab in this sinking Broadway revival, which manages to be both thunderously emphatic and curiously flat." The production's "cluttered audio" means the actors are forced to compete against busy sounds and music cues, says Rooney. "As a result, the humour often doesn't land and the dramatic peaks tend to fly by unnoticed." Johansson is "cerebral, angry and proud" says the Washington Post, but asks "who can hear any of the actors through this din?" ·Source: The Week UK

Thursday, 28 February 2013

'Journey to the West' smashes box office records

Stephen Chow's fantasy comedy "Journey to the West: Conquering the Demons" is poised to become the highest grossing domestic film in China. It has earned 1 billion yuan (159 million U.S. dollars) in just half a month, becoming one of only two domestic films to generate more than 1 billion yuan in box office revenues on the mainland, China Film News said Monday. It took 20 days for "Lost in Thailand," the current box office record holder, to bring in the same amount of money. "Lost," a low-budget comedy, has earned gross revenues of more than 1.2 billion yuan since it debuted last December. But many believe the film's record will soon be usurped by "Journey to the West," as the latter will stay on Chinese theaters' "hit films" list for at least another 15 days. Following the popularity of Chow's 1994 two-part film series "A Chinese Odyssey," the film is a retelling of the classic Chinese tale "Journey to the West." "Journey to the West" debuted on Feb. 10 and took in 80 million yuan on its first day, the biggest opening ever for a domestic film, according to figures from the film's producer, the Huayi Bros. Media Group. It also reset the mainland's single-day box office record after taking in revenues of 122 million yuan on Valentine's Day. The previous single-day record was 112 million yuan earned by "Transformers III: Dark of the Moon" in 2011. China is the world's second-largest film market. Its 2012 box office sales hit 17.07 billion yuan, surging 30.18 percent year on year. Source: China.org.cn

Wednesday, 16 January 2013

Charlie Chaplin exhibition in Moscow

Charlie Chaplin exhibition in Moscow
An exhibition honoring English comic actor Charlie Chaplin is opening in Moscow on Friday.
Visitors will see photos, posters and videos from Chaplin’s archive and film studio collections. The exhibits, which feature the actor wearing his brand bowler hat, moustache, and showing his funny gait and his ever-present cane, make it possible to trace his transformation from a slap-stick comedy actor into a clumsy and touching romantic, Charlie the Tramp. Charlie Chaplin directed, produced and composed music for many of his films, including The Circus, City Lights, Modern Times, The Great Dictator and Limelight. Source: Voice of Russia

Thursday, 20 December 2012

Comedy 'Lost in Thailand' sets box office record

Xu Zheng and Wang Baoqiang (bottom) are seen in a still photo from the comedy film "Lost in Thailand". Xu Zheng is also the film's director. [Photo: douban.com]
Domestic comedy "Lost in Thailand" has made a new record at the Chinese box office. It has become the first Chinese movie to gross over 300 million yuan in its first week of release. Viewing numbers last Saturday alone 
Actress Fan Bingbing makes a cameo appearance in the comedy film "Lost in Thailand". [Photo: ent.sina.com.cn]
reached over 2.5 million, surpassing records set by "Titanic 3-D" and "Transformers 3". The film stars Xu Zheng, Wang Baoqiang and Huang Bo, whose characters meet on a trip to Thailand, where a series of funny events unfold on their journey. Director Xu Zheng also invited popular actress Fan
Bingbing to guest in the film as a astonish to viewers. The director explained, "Everybody thinks Fan Bingbing is just a symbol in the film. But when she actually appears at last, it will highlight the movie. This is also unexpected to
Huang Bo in the comedy film "Lost in Thailand" [Photo: douban.com]
the audiences.""Lost in Thailand" is a sequel to an earlier film, "Lost on Journey", which was directed by Wai Man Yip in 2010. Source: China.org.cn

Tuesday, 7 August 2012

"Kyaa Super Kool Hain Hum" is a complete no-no for children: Tusshar Kapoor

"Kyaa Super Kool Hain Hum" is a complete no-no for children, tells actor Tusshar Kapoor who will be seen in the adult comedy. "Kids cannot see this film. Teenagers can see it," he told and added that though the film will have an A-certificate, it won't affect its box office performance. Talking about the sexual innuendoes and jokes in the film, he told that the genre has become cool and trendy. Apart from Tusshar, the film, didrected by Sachin Yardi, also stars Riteish Deshmukh, Neha Sharma and Sarah Jane Dias and has been produced by his sister, Ekta Kapoor. "When 'Kyaa Kool Hai Hum' became a super hit, I felt that it would have been bigger had the family audience would have seen it. Everyone saw it, the ladies went with their friends and the men went with theirs. But people didn't go with their families. But now society has really changed," he said. "We had a narration and we toned it down, but everyone said that it was good but not as good as the previous one. So then we brought back all the jokes and the naughty humour," he further added. "Kyaa Super Cool Hai Hum", is being released seven years after Sangeeth Sivan directed "Kyaa Kool Hai Hum", which was released in 2005. "We are lucky that no film of this kind came in between. 'Housefulls' have come, Golmaals have come, but they are a comedy of a different kind. This is an adult comedy," the actor tells. Why the gap? "There were a lot of problems, Sangeeth wanted to do other kinds of movies. He said he was not only a comedy director so he wanted to make some actioners and thrillers. When he was ready, Ekta was not ok with the script. "Finally, Sachin came up with a script for a film called "Road Trip To Anjuna". But we liked it so much, Ekta decided to convert it into "Kyaa Super Kool Hain Hum" and make it a two hero film," he told.  Source: GaramGossips

Saturday, 25 February 2012

Freida Pinto loves Dev Patel due to his comic timing

GaramGossips, By Gahoi Ad Online Media: Freida Pinto has disclosed boyfriend Dev Patel's funny side and she tells that the 'terrific actor' is also good at making people laugh. The two have been together for three years after they acted in Danny Boyle's Oscar winning hit 'Slumdog Millionaire'. "He's not just a terrific actor - what many people don't know if they've not met him is that he has an amazing sense of comic timing," further adds. "And a comic timing that doesn't hurt people - just a very light-hearted way that keeps you laughing throughout the day," she told.Source: GaramGossips

Saturday, 18 February 2012

First Look: Housefull 2


GaramGossips, By Gahoi Ad Online Media: Housefull 2 is a forthcoming Bollywood action comedy, directed by Sajid Khan and produced by Sajid Nadiadwala. It is the sequel to the 2010 Bollywood commercially successful film Housefull. The movie stars Akshay Kumar opposite Asin Thottumkal in the lead. It also features Ritesh Deshmukh, Boman Irani, Randhir Kapoor and Chunkey Pandey from the original, whilst new additions include John Abraham, Jacqueline Fernandez, Zarine Khan, Shazahn Padamsee, Shreyas Talpade and others. It also features veteran actors such as Mithun Chakraborty and Rishi Kapoor in supporting roles. Malaika Arora Khan features in an item-number song. The music will be composed by Sajid-Wajid. Source: GaramGossips

Monday, 21 November 2011

Say What? Pamela Anderson To Play Virgin Mary

Pamela Anderson has been tapped to play the Virgin Mary in A Russell Peters Christmas Special. Pamela Anderson has appeared on Playboy, Baywatchand  now  the buxom  blonde will be  playing  the  Virgin  Mary  on A 
Russell Peters Christmas Special. The holiday special will air on Canada's CTV television network. The show will be hosted by Australian comedian Russell Peters, who will also play Joseph, and is dubbed “an irreverent twist on the Christmas special making it unlike anything viewers have seen before,” according to the network. The show will feature stand up and sketch comedy, musical performances and even animation. Anderson will be appearing alongside celebrity guests that include singer Michael Buble, comedian Jon Lovitz,The Kids in the Hall’s Scott Thompson and The Love Boat’s Ted Lange. Don’t worry, Anderson won’t be playing Virgin Mary in a tiny bikini, as photos of her in character show her wearing a long dress and a white head covering while holding baby Jesus. Now doesn’t that make you feel better? Read Full: Say What? Pamela Anderson To Play Virgin Mary - Starpulse.com