Coriolanus
Apr. 6th, 2012 02:17 pmCoriolanus is a thin play. Faced with the problem of making a tragic hero out of a stupid bully-boy, Shakespeare loads the dice against his man's antagonists by rendering them as characterless stereotypes of mean-spiritedness (the tribunes, Aufidius) and sheeplike inconstancy (the citizens). In his best plays, Shakespeare makes sure even the walk-on parts are worth the attention of a good actor. In Coriolanus most of the cast are cyphers.
If Macbeth has too much imagination for politics, Coriolanus has too little. The one is soused in poetry and inwardness, the other never saw a butterfly he didn't want to mammock. This is a fast play, with no soliliquies to hold up the action. We open on an uprising, proceed to a war and then straight into an election. I've never seen it acted, but I can imagine it's a thrill ride.
What price honour if your fixation on it turns you into that least honoured thing- a traitor? What price patriotism when you hate the people who "are the city"? What price family values when they produce such brutes? For all its action-packed swiftness, Coriolanus is a relentlessly bleak play. Is there anything good to be said about these people, their institutions, their values?
If Macbeth has too much imagination for politics, Coriolanus has too little. The one is soused in poetry and inwardness, the other never saw a butterfly he didn't want to mammock. This is a fast play, with no soliliquies to hold up the action. We open on an uprising, proceed to a war and then straight into an election. I've never seen it acted, but I can imagine it's a thrill ride.
What price honour if your fixation on it turns you into that least honoured thing- a traitor? What price patriotism when you hate the people who "are the city"? What price family values when they produce such brutes? For all its action-packed swiftness, Coriolanus is a relentlessly bleak play. Is there anything good to be said about these people, their institutions, their values?
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Date: 2012-04-06 07:41 pm (UTC)And, yes, I want to see it. I think Coriolanus is one of Shakespeare's most cinematic texts- which makes it surprising it's not been filmed more often. I particularly regret that no-one thought to record Olivier's performance. One hears extraordinary things about his athleticism and risk taking.
I imagine Brecht would have wanted to beef up the tribunes a bit- and make them more sympathetic. I find the skimping of their parts and the characterization of the citizens as feeble-minded sheep a little lazy. It's not that I want Shakespeare to have written a left-wing play, but I could wish he hadn't fallen back on such tired stereotyping.