Julian's Choice as the Sacrifice
When Tiny Alice opened in New York in December 1964, the theatergoing
world was immediately abuzz. At once complex and simple, graphic and
understated, abstract and concrete, the play challenged viewers to find a true
meaning, but for the most part, they were unsuccessful at this task. In defense
of his play, in March 1965, Albee addressed the press to share his thoughts and
ideas.
A lay brother, a man who would have become a priest except that he could not reconcile his idea of God with the God which men create in their own image, is sent by his superior to tie up loose ends of a business matter between the church and a wealthy woman. The lay brother becomes enmeshed in an environment which . . . contains all the elements which have confused and bothered him throughout his life: the relationship between sexual hysteria and religious ecstasy; the conflict between selflessness of service and the conspicuous splendor of martyrdom. The lay brother is brought to the point . . . of having to accept what he had insisted he wanted: union with the abstraction, rather than [a] man-made image of it, its substitution. He is left with pure abstraction . . . and in the end . . . one of two things happens: either the abstraction personifies itself, is proved real, or the dying man, in the last necessary effort of self-delusion[,] creates and believes in what he knows does not exist.
Albee asserted that his play was ‘‘perfectly straightforward,’’ adding ‘‘it is the very simplicity of the play, I think, that has confused so many,’’ but he also noted that in order for the play to be ‘‘not at all unclear,’’ the audience needs to ‘‘approach it on its own terms.’’
Indeed, the plot sequence progresses carefully along a preordained script. The agents of Alice— Miss Alice, Butler, and Lawyer—clearly have played their parts before and will do so again. Everything has been planned, especially the selection of Julian as their sacrifice. That they have investigated him and actually chosen him is apparent in Lawyer’s reference to the report that they have on Julian. On one level, Julian has been chosen because he occupies an intermediate space—he is neither secular citizen nor religious body—yet he has excelled in the church hierarchy, becoming ‘‘the only lay brother in the history of Christendom’’ to serve as a cardinal’s secretary. Julian’s role as a layperson—one who takes on the priest’s vow of celibacy without being a priest—indicates his extraordinary faith; and his position within the church further shows the Church’s recognition of him. It is for these reasons that Lawyer picks Julian as the sacrifice. He wants to strike out at Cardinal, an enemy from childhood. When Lawyer reminds Julian of his duty to the Church and to Miss Alice’s household, he points out, that Julian has ‘‘this present job because I cannot stand your Cardinal.’’
But Lawyer also wants to strike out at the ‘‘august and revered’’ Church. Though Lawyer early in the play insists that he has learned ‘‘never to confuse the representative of a . . . thing with the thing itself,’’ he still finds Cardinal’s acceptance of money in exchange for Julian’s soul to exemplify the hypocrisy of the Church. Lawyer calls the Church ‘‘wily’’ and mocks its ‘‘inscrutable wisdom’’ in appointing ‘‘that wreckage [Cardinal] as its representative.’’ He holds no respect for institutionalized religion and enjoys holding power—via Miss Alice’s money—over it.
Not only does Lawyer succeed in gaining control of his childhood foe (and the Church), he also perverts him by making...
(This entire section contains 1779 words.)
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him become an agent of Alice, for Cardinal is complicit in the sacrifice of Julian. Although Cardinal understands right away that something important is at stake when Lawyer asks that Julian be given the assignment, the first certain indication of his knowledge comes in Act III when he points at the model and asks Lawyer, ‘‘Then it is . . . really true? About. . . this?’’ Lawyer knows exactly what is the ‘‘this’’ to which Cardinal refers, and he responds in the affirmative. A few moments later, Lawyer tells Cardinal, ‘‘You know we may have to shoot him; you know that may be necessary.’’ Although the Cardinal reacts with sadness to this news, he makes no attempt to put a halt to the plot. He initially tries to delay the inevitable, but once Lawyer announces that Julian will stay behind to his ‘‘special priesthood,’’ Cardinal goes along with everyone else. Because of all people, he knows Julian best, he is even able to remind the secretary that ‘‘it has been your desire always to serve; your sense of mission.’’ He further draws on his knowledge of Julian’s past when he tells Julian to ‘‘be glad, yes, be glad . . . our ecstasy,’’ thus referencing Julian’s ecstatic sexual fantasies of martyrdom. It is also Cardinal who initiates the chorus of voices telling Julian to ‘‘accept’’ Alice. Perhaps without Cardinal’s involvement, Julian may have escaped the plot against him. Lawyer never unearths the truth about those missing six years of Julian’s life, which indicates that he is neither infallible nor omnipotent. This secret further demonstrates that Julian has exercised choice—with whom he will share his story—even though by the end of the play his right to freely choose has been taken from him.
Miss Alice and the rest do more than take away Julian’s free choice: they
take away his very belief system. Julian chose not to become a priest because
he was ‘‘not wholly reconciled’’ to the use people make of God. As he tells
Miss Alice, ‘‘Man’s God and mine are not . . . close friends.’’ He rebels
against people’s personification of God in their own image, making a God
‘‘created by man’’ instead of allowing God to be the creator. Lawyer and Butler
role-play a conversation Lawyer would like to have with Julian. Butler/Julian
declares that there is ‘‘a true God.’’
Lawyer: ‘‘There is an abstraction, Julian, but it cannot be understood. You cannot worship it. Butler: There is more. Lawyer: There is Alice, Julian. That can be understood. Only the mouse in the model. Just that. Butler: There must be more. Lawyer: The mouse. Believe it. Don’t personify the abstraction. Julian, limit it, demean it. Only the mouse, the toy. And that does not exist . . . but is all that can be worshipped.
Lawyer is essentially describing a world without God. God is an abstraction, but since you cannot worship an abstraction, you cannot worship God. Unlike others, Lawyer does not ‘‘personify’’ God into his own image, but instead makes of God something insignificant and worthless, and even a pest: he makes God a mouse. At the end of the scene, however, Lawyer transforms God/Tiny Alice/ Mouse into a cat. ‘‘Rest easy;’’ he says to the model, ‘‘you’ll have him . . . Hum; purr; breathe; rest. You will have your Julian. Wait for him. He will be yours.’’ With the transformation of the mouse into a cat, Lawyer intimates that God/Tiny Alice/Cat is hungrily awaiting the feast of Julian.
This transformation further recalls Julian’s dreams of martyrdom in which a gladiator’s trident enters him at the same time that a lion climbs on top of him and sinks in its teeth. This fantasy is so powerful that when Julian recalls it for Miss Alice, he falls into a trance, but his fantasy inevitably merges into the sexual hallucination he had when he was in the asylum. This lapse of Julian’s conscious ness demonstrates how closely linked are his religious urges and his sexual urges. Having this knowledge makes it easy to understand why Julian’s hallucinations ‘‘were saddening to him.’’ Although he says that they were ‘‘provoked, brought on by the departure of my faith,’’ thus intimating that his sadness stemmed from his lack of faith, on a more suppressed level, they also represent his inability to subdue his sexuality despite his religious calling. As such, they indicate a personal failure. Julian’s failure is only made greater when he can’t help but give himself to Miss Alice and even decide to leave the laity in order to marry her.
The betrayal on Miss Alice’s part—and her ability to make Julian change his mind about something so important to him—foreshadows the end of the play. Left alone and dying, Julian is forced to confront and question his most basic religious tenet: that humans should not personify God in their own image. Who was real, he wonders, Miss Alice with ‘‘warm flesh’’ or Tiny Alice ‘‘THE ABSTRACT.’’ He understands that if Tiny Alice is real and Miss Alice is the illusion, as she claimed, he has betrayed himself. He looks at the phrenological head that wears Miss Alice’s wig, but since it is not real, it represents Tiny Alice and not Miss Alice. He speaks to the head as if it were Alice. ‘‘Is thy stare the true look? . . . And her eyes . . . warm, accepting, were they . . . not real? Art thou my bride?’’ He realizes that he has brought this lonely situation upon himself: ‘‘It is what I have wanted, have insisted on. Have nagged . . . for.’’ He at last understands the human need to create something solid and graspable out of something that is wholly abstract.
Julian makes his final demand: ‘‘IS THIS MY PRIESTHOOD, THEN? THIS WORLD? THEN COME AND SHOW THYSELF! BRIDE? GOD?’’ The heartbeats and breathing become louder. The light in the bedroom of the model goes out and begins to move across the upper story, indicating that someone or something is moving across the upper story of the mansion at that very time. Julian becomes fearful. ‘‘You . . . thou . . . art . . . coming to me? . . . ABSTRACTION? ABSTRACTION!’’ Julian is ‘‘sad’’ and ‘‘defeated,’’ for he now actively seeks the personification of God to save him from his solitude. ‘‘How long wilt thou hide thy face from me? . . . Consider and hear me, O Lord, my God,’’ he cries, desperate for a God who can share this moment. Right before Julian’s death, a momentous occurrence happens: he sees ‘‘a great presence filling the room.’’ It is either the personi- fied God or Julian’s hallucination of a personified God. Either way, Julian’s ending shows his rejection of his earlier contentions. What could be seen as defeat, however, has a positive twist, for in losing his former faith, Julian has gained a new, more sustaining faith.
Source: Rena Korb, in an essay for Drama for Students, Gale, 2001. Korb has a master’s degree in English literature and creative writing and has written for a wide variety of educational publishers.
Won’t you come home, Edward Albee?
The much-besieged playwright defies conventional critical wisdom with a dazzling new play and a Broadway revival.
This oblique aphorism, about obliquity, was first uttered on a Berlin stage in 1959. One year later, when The Zoo Story came home to inaugurate the new Off-Broadway, the New York Post trumpeted Edward Albee as the ‘‘next Eugene O’Neill.’’ For decades afterward, critics scorned him for trying to live up to the title. Jerry’s insight proved to be an uncanny forecast of Albee’s career in the American theatre. Albee has gone a long distance out of the way from that two-character one-act over the past four decades; his short-distance, four-year ‘‘comeback’’ seems, at age 70, correctly on track. Albee’s 1994 Three Tall Women earned him his third Pulitzer; a fine-tuned revival of A Delicate Balance won three Tony awards in 1996; and now, after his 1964 Tiny Alice was widely praised last year at Connecticut’s Hartford Stage Company (and is currently gearing up for a Broadway stint this spring), it seems that, in typically indirect fashion, Albee is asserting himself as one of the greatest living American playwrights. Suddenly, it seems, everyone’s asking: ‘‘Where has he been for so long?’’
Of course, Albee’s been here the whole time, but Americans had gotten used to treating him like the unwelcome guests that populate so many of his plays. After a long career that began with a burst of breathless praise, followed by denunciations and even downright excoriation, we may now be ready to sit up, take notice and, as Albee once implored in an interview with the Dramatists Guild Quarterly, bypass our ‘‘conscious barriers’’ and let the plays seep into our unconscious minds, uncensored.
I, too recently traveled a long distance—to London—to see the world premiere of The Play About the Baby, Albee’s newest, consistently funniest and, to my mind, best play yet. Without giving too much away, the plot concerns—as Albee explained it to me—‘‘a baby who ceases to exist.’’ Even more than in Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, the baby (to be more accurate we might call this absent presence ‘‘the baby’’) is endowed with a powerful symbolic valence. In fact, George and Martha’s illusory baby from Virginia Woolf almost seems to haunt the new play’s opening moments: The character named the Girl announces to the Boy, ‘‘I’m going to have the baby now,’’ and we hear an otherworldly Lamaze class of heavy breathing, then water breaking. The ‘‘baby’’ is born, and the frisky young couple goes on to tickle, taunt and play (note the pun) with their bundled-up offspring. The Play About the Baby is a pared down, more perfect Virginia Woolf as well as its onstage deconstruction: Two intruders, named the Man and the Woman, arrive to take away both the baby and the younger couple’s rose-hued view of the future.
As he did with Zoo Story, Albee has taken the showbiz tradition of opening out of town to trans- Atlantic extremes. No matter: He is busy making plans to produce his short, sharp shock of a play stateside. When that happens, The Play About the Baby should go a long distance to erase any doubt that Albee has always been one of this country’s greatest playwrights.
Last summer Albee and I discussed the European dramatists who are often cited as his influences. I asked him to name his favorites. He rarely hesitates when asked a question (there’s none of Jerry’s obliquity in his conversational manner), and the answered directly: ‘‘Beckett, Genet, Ionesco. In that order.’’
Those three words—‘‘in that order’’—intrigued me more than the three names, which any barely attentive undergrad could have guessed. Following the success of his early one-acts, Albee was often called the ‘‘American Ionesco.’’ He explained: ‘‘I intentionally made The American Dream an homage to Ionesco. And anybody who’s bright enough could realize what I was doing. But critics were saying, ‘Oh, he’s just imitating Ionesco.’ Idiots!’’
It occurred to me that this was when the trouble all began for Edward Albee in America—a country that likes its fourth wall left intact. The label of absurdist stuck too soon and too well. If this freshfrom Europe arriviste was not going to write realism, most Americans felt, he should stick to doing Ionesco: Keep us laughing with nonsensical language, with incontinent old people and babbling bourgeois couples, a la Bald Soprano. Martin Esslin’s embrace of Albee in the 1968 second edition of his landmark book The Theatre of the Absurd—tying Albee’s assault on the ‘‘foundations of American optimism’’ to Ionesco’s lampooning of the French middle class—only exacerbated the problem.
Critics took their brickbats to Tiny Alice for not providing the easy earmarks of Ionesco-styled Absurdism. But it wasn’t meant to be clear-cut Absurdism. Nor was the 1966 A Delicate Balance (which Albee calls ‘‘naturalism’’)—Gerald Gutierrez’s realistically nuanced production, winner of the 1996 Tony for best revival, proved that the play is in fact a ‘‘delicate balance’’ of the real and the symbolic. When Agnes and Tobias are visited by their frightened longtime friends, Harry and Edna, they are met by terror that is not only metaphysical but also mundane, the existential anguish of life’s prosaic moments—like when we are shooing out guests, not when we are reading Cainus. Clearly, Albee was moving in new directions.
Or trying to. For many, Albee’s move up that three-tiered ladder of playwrights he mentioned had him breathing air too rarefied. Early on, when critics noticed that Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? may actually have been the beginning of something else—when they detected French whiffs of (gulp) Jean Genet’s game-like rituals—a handful of them begrudgingly allowed him this dalliance. It soon became clear, though, that Americans simply do not do Genet on Broadway; perverted rituals were fine as Greenwich Village fare, but they were not serious mainstream theatre. Virginia Woolf became famous for, among other things, not winning the Pulitzer prize in 1962, when committee member W. D. Maxwell deemed it ‘‘filthy,’’ causing a flurry of protests and resignations.
And what of Beckett, the first name on Albee’s list? Beckett was usually mentioned as a writer he should not emulate, lest he embarrass himself. (One noteworthy exception was Clive Barnes’s review of Seascape, a rare instance of a favorable comparison between Albee and Beckett in the popular press.) Even Esslin’s lapidary study, generous enough to mention Genet vis-a-vis Virginia Woolf, resisted calling Albee and Beckett theatrical bedfellows (despite noting that The Zoo Story and Krapp’s Last Tape shared a bill at Provincetown Playhouse in 1959).
So what has Albee been up to all these years, and how do Americans usually make a narrative out of his remarkable career? Until his sudden reappearance in 1994 with Three Tall Women, the story often went like this: After The Zoo Story and his absurdist one-acts (The American Dream, The Sandbox), Albee dipped into social protest with The Death of Bessie Smith. Then, despite a blip (albeit a revolutionary blip for American theatre) called Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, it was a steady slope downward. There were occasional successes—Tiny Alice and A Delicate Balance were generally perceived as last gasps—but mostly a mess of halfbaked adaptations of other authors’ work. He got a lot of bad reviews for his 1975 Seascape, yet, despite the critical carping, managed to put Frank Langella in a lizard suit and walk away with his second Pulitzer. The ’70s were the beginning of the end, mostly: plays like Counting the Ways, All Over and Listening are all but forgotten. And the ’80s? Well, John Simon called The Lady from Dubuque ‘‘one of the worst plays about anything, ever.’’ Albee was either experimenting too wildly or repeating himself too cravenly. His last desperate experiments—The Man Who Had Three Arms (1983), for example—only proved that he was a charlatan from the start, and that he had merely capitalized on a wave of Sartre-struck sentiment in this country in the early ’60s. If he exists at all, he’s a mere shadow of his former Woolf.
To anyone doing the math, however, this account would never add up. After all, Albee is mentioned, without hesitation, by American playwrights Terrence McNally, Christopher Durang and Tina Howe as a primary influence, and several upand- comers of the next generation—Nicky Silver and David Ives jump immediately to mind—have also sung his praises. The roster of dramatists Albee has assisted financially includes Adrienne Kennedy, Sam Shepard and John Guare. And his years of teaching at the University of Houston, where he was named distinguished professor of drama in 1988, have turned out a profusion of Albee-mentored one-acts and full-length plays. Still, even though his presence in American drama is redoubtable, the trajectory of his career has been narrated as a gradual diminution, Beckettian only in its slouching toward absence.
Some might say that Albee has been Protean to a fault, refashioning his style so much that his imprint keeps disappearing. The problem has been that critics have not kept up with him. While other major American playwrights have been allowed room to grow, granted laissez passer to mix genres within plays or jump from genre to genre as they develop, Albee was issued a moving violation. Suspicious of his every move, critics kept up a weary and wary vigilance throughout the years, responding to Albee’s dramaturgical gauntlets as if they were deceptive gambits.
In language typical of so many reviews, Robert Brustein lamented of Virginia Woolf, ‘‘Albee is a highly accomplished stage magician, but he fails to convince us that there’s nothing up his sleeve.’’ Albee, it seems, was only out to dupe us.
One explanation for critics seeing chicanery instead of innovation may rest on Albee’s own explication—or lack thereof—of his own work. As one of three regnant living American playwrights— Miller and Mamet being the only others with similar stature and longevity—Albee is the member of this troika who resists theorizing about himself. He has written cogently about art, including an excellent 1980 article on Louise Nevelson in Art News, and, not content to merely adapt their works for the stage, penned critical essays on Carson McCullers and James Purdy; his early poetry relied as much on philosophy as it did on musicality. But there has never been Albee’s version of Miller’s Tragedy and the Common Man or even Mamet’s Uses of the Knife or True and False. (Even O’Neill, never a great theoretical mind, hashed out his own confused aesthetic project in Memorandum on Masks.) While these authors have written their separate works to (even if only on the strategic level) justify the plays they like to write, Albee has rarely been more programmatic than to ask us—with his typically acerbic wit—not to think about where we parked the car upon leaving the theatre.
A rare defense came after Tiny Alice, when, at a press conference, he was just beginning to fight charges of obfuscation that would dog him for decades. ‘‘Tiny Alice is a fairly simple play, and not at all unclear, once you approach it on its own terms,’’ he said, following with a step-by-step plot development, no more, no less. Albee didn’t quote Kierkegaard or offer any apologia for his new type of drama. He didn’t dub Julian the existential Loman—though he certainly could have. Instead, he concluded: ‘‘It is, you see, a perfectly straightforward story. It is the very simplicity of the play, I think, that has confused so many.’’ Albee was in effect telling the audience to stay awake and pay attention.
The question audiences seemed to throw back was: Pay attention how? Without the clues and confines of a single genre, we don’t know whether we’re watching a doomed love story about a defrocked priest and an heiress, or a Pirandellian puzzle about Platonic forms. The characters seem to be real—well, most of the time. Still, they’re named Butler, Lawyer, Cardinal—earthly symbols for the abstract forces they represent, right?
But Tiny Alice had already been the last straw in many critics’ long-suffering wait for Albee to come clean. Now he was not only playing tricks with an audience’s enjoyment, he was offending their psychosexual values. Deviously, he was floating gay content past unsuspecting men and women. Philip Roth’s outraged review of Tiny Alice ended by asking: ‘‘How long before a play is produced on Broadway in which the homosexual hero is presented as homosexual, and not disguised as an angst-ridden priest, or an angry Negro, or an aging actress, or worst of all, Everyman?’’
Of course, Albee had heard a lot of that before, especially around Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, the play where he first supposedly bamboozled Broadway houses by smuggling in a covert homosexual relationship. As Stanley Kauffmann complained in a 1966 New York Times Arts and Leisure article that became notorious, Albee’s first play about ‘‘the baby’’ reeked of ‘‘disguised homosexual influence.’’ Albee—who is never directly named by Kauffmann but is called one of those ‘‘reputed homosexuals [whose] plays often treat of women and marriage’’—was ‘‘streaked with vindictiveness toward the society that constricts and, theatrically, discriminates against them.’’ In that article, the unnamed Albee was compared to Genet, but unfavorably, as Genet ‘‘is a homosexual who has never had to disguise his nature.’’ (Albee told me with a rueful laugh that he was never in the closet and, since boarding school, has always been very happy being gay—a point that evaded Kauffmann’s analysis.) Not only the journalists but the academics were lifting the veil: In The Drama Review, Richard Schechner inveighed against Virginia Woolf’s ‘‘morbidity and sexual perversity, which are there only to titillate an impotent and homosexual theatre and audience.’’ Already, a mere three years into this wunderkind’s career, Schechner was ‘‘tired of Albee.’’
And Georges-Michel Sarotte, in the book Like a Brother, Like a Lover, wrote that Virginia Woolf ‘‘is a homosexual play from every point of view, in all its situations and symbols. It is a heterosexual play only in outward appearance, since in 1962 it had to reach the mass public, and also because Albee does not want to write a homosexual work.’’.
This attack on Albee did some damage. Coupled with his infuriating genre-bending, people began to think he was now pulling one over on us because he was sick and couldn’t admit it. It has taken 25 years to see the irony in the fact that it was disguised homophobia that accused Albee of disguising homosexuality.
Autobiography is the last refuge of a baffled critic. In 1978, Foster Hirsch wrote a book-length study of the ‘‘evasions’’ of Edward Albee’s personal life (titled Who’s Afraid of Edward Albee?), which the author believed to be the question to pursue now ‘‘at this diminished moment in the career of an enormously gifted writer.’’ Albee couldn’t pull the wool over Hirsch’s eyes: ‘‘The answer, in the evidence of his progressively claustrophobic and indirect plays, from which his biography is carefully omitted, is—Albee himself.’’
After all these critical jabs—with kidney punches outnumbering the fair hits—it’s small wonder that Albee seemed down for the count through the ’80s. In one respect, he was on the mat for a while, spending a lot of time directing—including a Los Angeles revival of Virginia Woolf with Glenda Jackson and John Lithgow in 1989 and plays by Shepard, Mamet and Lanford Wilson at the English Theatre in Vienna in 1985. But his career was resuscitated. He premiered two of his own new plays, again way out of town, in Vienna: The Marriage Play in 1987 and an intriguing play in 1991 that was frankly autobiographical—Three Tall Women. When it made its U.S. premiere in 1994, Three Tall Women won not only the Pulitzer but a spate of other awards. Even Albee was surprised. He told me that Three Tall Women was, after 35 years of writing plays, his first ever to receive unanimous critical praise, adding, ‘‘Just wait. I’ll be out of fashion again soon enough.’’
But I’m not so sure. In 1994, he was the featured playwright at New York’s Signature Theatre and won an Obie award for sustained achievement, and in 1996 he received Kennedy Center honors for his lifetime contribution to the nation’s culture.
Albee recently showed me a notebook that included his new play, The
Goat (he claims to never use a computer because he delivers plays nearly
complete in longhand, direct, it seems, from the unconscious—storing fragements
on a hard drive would defeat this method). Albee calls the play the most
‘‘politically involved’’ he’s ever written, and he may finish another he’s
‘‘threatened to unleash for several years now, about Attila the Hun.’’ So, in
fashion or not, Albee has more to write.
‘‘Define your terms. Honestly, the imprecision!’’ Leslie in Seascape
What many have perceived as Albee’s long disappearance from the stage, a vanishing act akin to, well, that darned ‘‘baby’’ in the play, may be a signal to critics that he will not follow their directions. But The Play About the Baby may finally force us to acknowledge Albee’s presence, even adopt him as our own. By evoking what must be by now his invisible theatrical signature—the nonexistent baby—Albee answers back to the charges of subterfuge that have followed him since Virginia Woolf. At the end of the new play, the Man, who has threatened to take ‘‘the baby’’ away, performs a bit of legerdemain: He unrolls the blanket to reveal— presto!—there’s no baby there. The moment is terrifying, an absurd coup de theatre and, at the same time, Albee’s showing of his hand to the critics. You see, Albee might be saying, you believed in the illusory baby, despite the fact that I told you it doesn’t exist. The trick, in other words, is no trick at all. There was never anything up my sleeve.
More than hocus-pocus, though, Albee has written a harrowing and hilarious four-character play, pristine in structure, pure in intent, even Beckettian maybe his Godot. The Play About the Baby combines playful self-reflexive commentary with wicked humor while tapping the existential terror of lost youth and passion’s inevitable demise. Imagine the demons of Rosemary’s Baby enacting their rituals in the manner of Vladimir and Estragon, and you begin to get a sense of the vaudevillian theatre of cruelty that surrounds the play’s action.
At one point in The Play About the Baby, the Man asks the audience if we’ve ever noticed that, when we take a trip, the journey back always seems much shorter than the time spent headed to our destination. The moment, of course, echoes Jerry’s insight in Zoo Story, but it’s classic Albee for other reasons, too: a question about home and belonging, delivered across the footlights to an uneasy-because- they’re implicated audience, fusing mundane speculation with metaphysical possibility. It’s that possibility that Albee has teased us with for decades now - the possibility suggested by the first playwright on his favorites list, Beckett, when Endgame’s Hamm speculates, ‘‘We’re not beginning to . . . to . . . mean something?’’
As this 70-year-old comeback kid keeps writing, will American audiences finally believe that Albee means something, and isn’t just up to something? Even if they don’t, let’s hope the pedants and pundits have him to kick around for many more years. The ‘‘next Eugene O’Neill’’ doesn’t show up every day.
Source: Steven Drukman, ‘‘Won’t you come home, Edward Albee?,’’ in American Theatre, Vol. 15, Issue 10, Dec, 1998, p. 16.
Production Review of Tiny Alice
Hartford Stage continues to carry the flame for Edward Albee’s rarely produced 1964 enigma Tiny Alice, its current revisitation being the play’s first major revival since Hartford Stage mounted it in 1972. It was well worth a second visit, for no matter how much of a puzzlement the play may be, there’s no denying that it contains some of Albee’s most gleamingly coruscating dialogue. Has Albee ever written anything more brilliantly, bitingly vicious than this play’s opening scene between a lawyer and a cardinal who have utterly loathed each other since they were at school together?
And since one of the greatest pleasures of theatergoing is hearing and seeing accomplished actors exploring and reveling in splendid dialogue, this production is undoubtedly one of the highlights of the New England theater season, not the least because of its excellent cast, direction and setting.
If the play’s third act (to which the playwright has restored some cut material) doesn’t truly deliver on the promises of its two preceding acts, Tiny Alice is still one of Albee’s most endlessly fascinating creations, not the least because it is such a tantalizing puzzle.
As the play’s central character, a lay brother who has survived a major loss of faith, Richard Thomas gives one of his most admirable performances. Robed and bespectacled, he performs with tremendous technical skill in the service of a portrayal of potent simplicity and humility. He’s superb.
But so is the rest of the cast, beginning with Gerry Bamman and Tom Lacy as the opening scene’s antagonists. They are glorious sparring partners, Bamman a viciously cruel lawyer, Lacy a plumply pompous prelate. And in what is in a sense the play’s comic-relief role (except for the fact that the whole play is shot through with comedy), John Michael Higgins is deliciously sly and wry as the butler named Butler whose casual insolence is so playful.
In the difficult title role of Miss Alice, apparently a multibillionairess offering a gift of multibillions to the Catholic Church—who may or may not be a stand-in for God—Sharon Scruggs performs with considerable panache and does not let the production’s high acting standards down. She is not, however, helped by Constance Hoffman’s costumes, and she may not be ideally cast, lacking the cool, ladylike elegance Irene Worth gave the role in its original Broadway production.
Thomas, on the other hand, may be better cast than John Gielgud was originally as Brother Julian. In any case, Scruggs and Thomas work wonderfully together, especially in the second act’s still-shocking seduction finale.
Mark Lamos, in a return to the theater of which he was artistic director for so many years, has directed at the top of his form. And set designer John Arnone has given the play’s various locales a chilly minimalist grandeur that suits Albee down to the ground. The model of the elaborate castle in which Miss Alice lives (shipped stone by stone from England by her father) dominates the stage as it should, and there very well might be a Tiny Alice living in it. Or is it a mouse?
Much of the play could well be said to be a comedy of manners, its dialogue quite up to the quality of Shaw and Wilde. There are also suggestions of theater of the absurd, notably Beckett, of T. S. Eliot and even of Tennessee Williams in his lush Suddenly Last Summer mode as it explores ‘‘the relationship between sexual hysteria and religious ecstasy,’’ to quote Albee.
But at the same time, Tiny Alice is pure Albee, and at the Hartford Stage it’s receiving a production that really should be seen beyond Hartford in order for the play to be seen and reassessed more widely.
Source: Markland Taylor, ‘‘Tiny Alice,’’ (review) in Variety, Vol. 371, no. 4, June 1, 1998, p. 52.
Albee’s Great God Alice
Critics who have grappled with Edward Albee’s Tiny Alice have conjectured about its possible sources. These range from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland to the plays of Noel Coward, T. S. Eliot, Jean Genet, and several other European playwrights. Surprisingly, no one has mentioned Eugene O’Neill. Albee himself has repeatedly admitted being ‘‘an enormous admirer’’ of ‘‘late O’Neill.’’ ‘‘By late O’Neill, do you mean Long Day’s Journey Into Night?’’ asked an interviewer. ‘‘Yes,’’ replied Albee, ‘‘and The Iceman Cometh and those of that period when he started writing good plays.’’ The interviewer: ‘‘Do you mean after he got over his gimmicky period?’’ Albee: ‘‘Yes.’’ Yet it is precisely the O’Neill of the ‘‘gimmicky period’’ who seems to have influenced the Albee of Tiny Alice.
Tiny Alice, said Albee at a press conference, was ‘‘something of a metaphysical dream play which must be entered into and experienced without predetermination of how a play is supposed to go.’’ Since Albee was not so much explicating his play as lecturing the New York critics, his warning about ‘‘predetermination’’ in all probability referred to thinking conditioned by the conventions of theatrical realism. For by calling Tiny Alice ‘‘a metaphysical dream play,’’ Albee placed his own play in the tradition of dramatic expressionism that goes back to Strindberg’s dream plays and eventually became naturalized, as it were, with the experiments of O’Neill. Thus we are justified, I think, in approaching Tiny Alice as an expressionistic objectification of Brother Julian’s nightmare or hallucination. Further external evidence to support this contention is found in Albee’s statement that ‘‘Brother Julian is in the same position as the audience. He’s the innocent. If you see things through his eyes, you won’t have any trouble at all.’’
‘‘Things’’ are seen through the eyes of the protagonist also in O’Neill’s expressionistic plays, where the action on the stage is distorted in order to capture a character’s subjective view of the world. In The Great God Brown, the most complex and imaginative of O’Neill’s experimental plays, the most salient expressionistic device is the mask. Masks are worn by all the major characters, thus objectifying the duality between their outer and inner selves, between illusion and reality. Most of the characters in Tiny Alice from time to time don metaphoric masks, Butler refers to the Cardinal as having to ‘‘wear a face,’’ and when Julian first meets Miss Alice, she appears in a matted wig as well as the mask of an old hag. By removing both mask and wig, Miss Alice is suddenly transformed into an attractive woman. Yet this is not her real identity, either. For as we discover later in the play, she is the symbol of the abstraction Tiny Alice. The transformation of Miss Alice from an old crone into an attractive woman—an action that has puzzled critics—suggests that all is not as it appears to be on the surface and foreshadows the stripping away of illusions that Julian must undergo in order to confront the abstraction, or Alice, which derives from the Greek word for truth.
Miss Alice’s seemingly surreal transformation brings to mind Strindberg’s ‘‘expressionist manifesto’’— his preface to A Dream Play—in which he proclaims that in a play governed solely by dream logic, ‘‘Characters divide, double, redouble, evaporate, condense, float out of each other, converge.’’ Albee’s debt to Strindberg has been investigated by Marion A. Taylor and Robert Brustein, in his New Republic review of Tiny Alice, has suggested parallels between that play and Strindberg’s A Dream Play. Yet Miss Alice’s unmasking is also reminiscent of the action in scene ten of O’Neill’s The Fountain, where an old woman appears to Juan. ‘‘In a flash,’’ read the stage directions, ‘‘her mask of age disappears’’ and the beautiful Beatriz stands before the hero. More indirectly, Miss Alice, masked and unmasked, brings to mind the objectification of the split personality of John and the masked Loving in O’Neill’s Days Without End. And like Billy Brown in The Great God Brown, who at times wears the mask of Dion Anthony, Butler and the Lawyer in Tiny Alice assume for a while the personae of Julian and the Cardinal.
Related to the mask as an expressionistic device in Tiny Alice is the castle, which contains an infinite number of proportionately smaller models of itself. The castle can easily be related to the more traditional House of God, thus forming yet another link with The Great God Brown. In Tiny Alice the Lawyer suggests that the very foundation of the castle is ‘‘a wreck’’. As Butler phrases it, ‘‘Something should be done about the wine cellar. I’ve noticed it—as a passerby would—but Brother Julian pointed out the extent of it to me: bottles have burst, are bursting, corks rotting . . . something to do with the temperature or the dampness. It’s a shame, you know’’. The connection between the house of mouse-god Alice and a more conventional if similarly metaphorical House of God is established by the Lawyer, who says: ‘‘When Christ told Peter— so legends tell—that he would found his church upon that rock. He must have had in mind an island in a sea of wine. How firm a foundation in the vintage years.’’ The parallels between the rock of Peter in a sea of wine and Dion’s cathedral, into which he has concealed a blasphemous, wine-loving Silenus, are equally apparent.
Dion’s cathedral, argues Doris Falk in her study of O’Neill’s plays, ‘‘is a metaphor of the neurotic process . . . which O’Neill seems to have understood thoroughly throughout the play. Man’s normal need to transcend himself, to build spires toward the infinite, is blasphemed and travestied when its energies are all diverted inward to the struggle with masks of self.’’ Professor Falk’s observation suggests an interesting point of comparison between the two plays, especially in the light of Brother Julian’s erotic hallucinations. For the castle, like the cathedral in The Great God Brown, has certain affinities with the neurotic process occurring within Julian’s mind. Hence the fire in the chapel serves as an objectification of Julian’s physical passion for Miss Alice, which threatens to destroy the tenuous order he has established for himself as a lay brother. The scene opens with Miss Alice running away from the Lawyer, telling him to ‘‘KEEP OFF ME!’’ To the Lawyer’s ‘‘Don’t be hysterical, now,’’ she replies, ‘‘I’ll show you hysteria. I’ll give you fireworks!,’’ thus linking fire and the Greek hysteria for womb. When the actual fire breaks out in the chapel, it guts the altar area, just as Brother Julian’s sexual fantasies destroy his attempts to come to grips with religious experience. For Brother Julian’s road to religious ecstasy is paved with sexual hysteria (to use Albee’s own terminology), and before he can embrace his God in a not so metaphoric marriage, Julian must be seduced. As Butler remarks at the beginning of the next scene, referring to Julian and Miss Alice, ‘‘the fire in the chapel . . . brought them closer,’’ after which the lovers go picnicking and partake of an almost O’Neillian ‘‘Montrachet under an elm.’’ (Also decidedly O’Neillian is a conversation between Brother Julian and Butler. The former states that he dislikes being left alone. ‘‘Like a little boy?’’ questions Butler, ‘‘When the closet door swings shut after him? Locking him in the dark?’’ In The Great God Brown Dion Anthony speaks similar words about his mother: ‘‘I remember a sweet, strange girl, with affectionate, bewildered eyes as if God had locked her in a dark closet. . . .’’)
The union of Brother Julian and Miss Alice is consummated in the flesh, but the fusion of their bodies is merely a further concretization of abstract states. For as in The Great God Brown, the characters in Tiny Alice are not merely individuals but rather expressionistic types: the Cardinal, the Lawyer, and Butler, the butler. The parallels between the protagonists of both plays are fairly obvious. In Dion Anthony, as his name implies, struggle ‘‘the creative pagan acceptance of life’’ and ‘‘the masochistic life-denying spirit of Christianity.’’ Brother Julian, who narrates at length his erotic experiences, has a Christian martyr complex: he has ‘‘dreamed of sacrifice’’. O’Neill’s protagonist experiences a fourway tug of war between the Christian, pagan, aesthetic, and materialistic forces within him (and within society). So Julian’s soul is at the mercy of the Cardinal, the Lawyer, Butler, and Miss Alice. Julian, like ‘‘Dion Brown’’ (as Cybel calls the composite of the Dion Anthony-Billy Brown multiple personality in The Great God Brown), who is shot by a police officer, is killed by a representative of law and order, in his case, the Lawyer. Similarly, O’Neill’s statement to the press about Brown: ‘‘in the end out of this anguish his soul is born, a tortured Christian soul such as the dying Dion’s, begging for belief, and at the last finding it on the lips of Cybele’’ could almost describe Julian’s death scene. He, too, is a ‘‘tortured Christian soul’’ begging for affirmation of his belief.
Miss Alice, in turn, displays similarities not only to Cybel but also to Margaret, both of whom represent aspects of the Ewig-Weibliche in the O’Neill play. In the fire scene in Tiny Alice, where she speaks in her ‘‘little-girl tone’’, Miss Alice approaches O’Neill’s ‘‘girl-woman’’ Margaret. When Julian is dying, Miss Alice cradles him in her arms, the two forming ‘‘something of a Pietà’’, which is one way of describing Cybel’s and Brown’s relationship at the end of The Great God Brown. And just as Brown gratefully snuggles against Cybel as he dies, saying, ‘‘The earth is warm,’’ so the dying Julian finds comfort in Miss Alice: ‘‘Closer . . . please. Warmth. . . .’’
The constant putting on and removing of masks in The Great God Brown not only objectifies the characters’ inner states but also creates a ritualistic pattern. In Tiny Alice the ‘‘ceremony of Alice’’ concretizes Julian’s distorted view of the Eucharist and combines it with a sinister rite de passage that portends Julian’s death and links him to Alice. Against a background of carefully positioned characters and considerable patterned movement, But ler, whose name derives from the Old French cupbearer, serves Julian his symbolic Last Supper. But since the God of Wrath has become literally mousy, the more substantial traditional red wine has now been diluted into a quickly staling, though deceptively bubbly, champagne.
In this scene Albee throws a little more light on the basic allegory in Tiny Alice. While Miss Alice is trying to tell Julian that she is merely an agent of the mouse that lives in the model of the castle, Butler links the mouse to God: ‘‘Do you understand, Julian?’’ asks Miss Alice. ‘‘Of course not!’’ replies Julian. Miss Alice: ‘‘Julian, I have tried to be . . . her. No; I have tried to be . . . what I thought she might, what might make you happy, what you might use, as a . . . what?’’ ‘‘Play God,’’ says Butler. Miss Alice continues: ‘‘We must . . . represent, draw pictures, reduce or enlarge to . . . to what we can understand.’’ Julian’s next speech returns us to his basic metaphysical dilemma: ‘‘But I have fought against it . . . all my life. When they said, ‘Bring the wonders down to me, closer; I cannot see them, touch; nor can I believe.’ I have fought against it . . . all my life . . . All my life. In and out of . . . confinement, fought against the symbol’’. . . .
In The Great God Brown Dion Anthony dies unmasked at the feet of his
alter ego, the crass, materialist Billy Brown. With his last breath, Dion
speaks the first two words of the Lord’s Prayer. Julian also dies at the mercy
of materialistic forces. He, too, struggles to accept the god in the model
while the Lawyer and the Cardinal banter over the two billion in the briefcase.
And here, in the final scene of Tiny Alice, we once more encounter the
mask. Dying, Julian asks of God, ‘‘How long wilt thou hide thy face from me?’’
A few moments later the Lawyer enters with Miss Alice’s wig and places it on a
phrenological head. (In William Ball’s highly acclaimed American Conservatory
Theatre production of Tiny Alice the mask was used more extensively than
the published text warrants, and it remained attached to the wig throughout the
play.) Phrenology is supposed to tell us something about the mind inside the
skull, but here is an empty mannequin. To the accompaniment of the gradual
crescendo of the audible heartbeat, an effective borrowing from O’Neill’s
The Emperor Jones, Julian notices the wig on the phrenological head,
crawls toward it, and half kneels in front of it. He is alone with this
inscrutable dummy, and he addresses it as if it were the mouse-god
Alice:
Thou art my bride? Thou? For thee have I done my life? Grown to love, entered in, bent. . . accepted? For thee? is that the. . . awful humor? Art thou the true arms, when the warm flesh I touched. . . rested against, was. . . nothing? And she . . . was not real? Is thy stare the true look? Unblinking, outward, through, to some horizon? And her eyes. . . warm, accepting, were they. . . not real? Art thou my bride?. . .
It is ironic that Julian, who has ‘‘fought against the symbol’’ all his life, should now turn to the mask, as does Margaret in the final moments of O’Neill’s ‘‘gimmicky’’ Great God Brown: having never really understood Dion, she worships his mask even in death.
Both Albee and O’Neill, like most modern writers, grapple with the meaning of life and religion in a materialistic world. Albee has said that Tiny Alice ‘‘is essentially an attack on modern institutions, modern materialism, and the illusory nature of modern life, indicating much of the evil caused by the misuse and misunderstanding of the institutions.’’ Albee’s statement brings to mind O’Neill’s widely quoted remark to George Jean Nathan about the playwright’s having to ‘‘dig at the roots of the sickness of today as he feels it—the death of the old God and the failure of science and materialism to give any satisfying new one for the surviving primitive religious instinct to find a meaning for life in, and to comfort its fears of death with.’’ These fears are comforted in both plays. Dion Brown dies, ‘‘exultantly’’ repeating the words of Cybel: ‘‘Our Father—?. . . Who art!’’ Julian accepts Tiny Alice. Albee has said that ‘‘Once Julian accepts the existence of what does not exist, his concept (his faith) exists for him. Or, if one does not accept God, then, there is nothing. Since Julian accepts Tiny Alice, his God becomes real.’’ O’Neill would probably have agreed.
O’Neill would certainly have agreed with Albee’s discarding the old implements of dramatic realism in his attempt to dig at the roots of the sickness of today. For most serious playwrights have by now grasped the more imaginative tools of expressionistic dramaturgy in order to hack through ‘‘the banality of surfaces,’’ as O’Neill put it, and penetrate into ‘‘the characteristic spiritual conflicts which constitute the drama—the blood—of our lives today.’’ The parallels between Tiny Alice and The Great God Brown suggest that in breaking away from the realistic mode, Albee has been influenced not only by Strindberg and recent European playwrights but also by Eugene O’Neill.
Source: Mardi Valgemae, ‘‘Albee’s Great God Alice,’’ in Critical Essays on Edward Albee, ed. Philip C. Kolin and J. Madison Davis, G. K. Hall & Co., 1986, p. 101.
Camping Out: Tiny Alice and Susan Sontag
. . . The best way to begin clarifying Tiny Alice is to consider the one point about which the critics agree: that it is obscure. This condition, rather than ending analysis of the play, should begin it. After all, readers have come to accept the creation of obscurity as a literary technique, especially in poetry. One should not be bothered, for instance, by the deliberate ambiguity of the stage directions, which are like those in the Theater of the Absurd. (At one point Albee describes one setting and then another that is ‘‘an alternative—and perhaps more practical,’’ and later he says that ‘‘maybe’’ some noise should be made. After one accepts this kind of obscurity he can concentrate on Albee’s reasons for creating it.)
Some explanation for this obscurity can be found in Sontag’s work. Although she has not written about Tiny Alice, her two major essays, ‘‘Against Interpretation’’ and ‘‘Notes on ‘Camp’,’’ appeared in 1964, just before Tiny Alice was first produced. Albee had read Sontag; when an interviewer mentioned that a critic’s ideas about Tiny Alice seemed similar to some of Sontag’s ideas, Albee replied, ‘‘this critic . . . what he has done is to misinterpret my attitudes, Miss Sontag’s attitudes.’’ So, there is a possibility of influence. But even if there were no influence, the similarity between Sontag’s and Albee’s ideas is worth exploring because it sheds light on the play.
Three of Miss Sontag’s essays are relevant to this play. One is her definitive description of Camp in ‘‘Against Interpretation.’’ Robert Brustein has noticed Camp’s influence on Albee’s play (and undoubtedly is the critic about whom Albee and his interviewer were talking); ‘‘Tiny Alice is a much more ambitious work than the usual variety of ‘Camp,’ but it shares the same ambiguity of motive.’’ Brustein, however, does not pursue his insight. It is necessary to go to Sontag’s essay and look for ideas that will clarify Tiny Alice. She writes that Camp was originally created by homosexuals, and homosexuality—at least in mock form—is evident in Tiny Alice. The Lawyer, in the rough and tumble conversation that opens the play, imputes homosexuality to the Cardinal and to Catholic clergymen in general. He refers sarcastically to ‘‘their vaunted celibacy . . . among one another,’’ and to the Cardinal’s supposed desire for ‘‘some goodlooking young novice, all freshly scrubbed, with big working-class hands.’’ He also jokingly exchanges a ‘‘dearest’’ and ‘‘darling’’ with Butler. . . .
According to Sontag, Camp joking eventually became self-conscious and began mocking modern culture. Much of Tiny Alice’s obscurity results from the jocular attitude Albee takes toward some of his most important themes, like sex and religion. The sexual theme provides the play’s most spectacular moment, the second act curtain, when Miss Alice opens her cloak, reveals her body to Julian and then enfolds him in the cloak. But sex is also sometimes treated comically—in a Camp manner—in, for example, the erotic puns. Brustein mentions the pun about the unused organ; other puns concern Julian’s status as a lay brother and the Lawyer’s British title of Solicitor. In her essay ‘‘On Style,’’ Sontag explains the attitude of writers who recognize the potential seriousness of certain themes yet treat them comically. This ambivalent point of view will almost inevitably cause obscurity: ‘‘‘Stylization in a work of art, as distinct from style, reflects an ambivalence (affection contradicted by irony) toward the subject-matter. This ambivalence is handled by maintaining, through the rhetorical overlay that is stylization, a special distance from the subject.’’
Albee also treats religion in the ambivalent and obfuscating manner Sontag describes. An example is his failure to clarify the source of Julian’s name. It is not clear which of two very different religious persons he is named after: Julian the Apostate, an emperor who abandoned Christianity and later persecuted its followers, or Julian of Norwich, a female medieval mystic and author of Revelations. Religion is also important in the play’s ending, when Julian assumes a crucifixion pose, but even this is burlesqued. He asks for ‘‘the sacramental wine’’ but also for his ‘‘cookie,’’ not a wafer. The frequent comic reference to wine, especially to the exploding bottles in the cellar, make this image far from serious in the play. The most ironic part of the religious theme is a macabre joke about a woman at the insane asylum who believed her womb contained Christ when it really contained cancer. Finally, inside the model and purporting to be a kind of god is Tiny Alice: a mouse, a comic kind of god indeed.
Another essay of Sontag’s that is relevant to Tiny Alice is ‘‘Against Interpretation.’’ In it she argues that art should not be mimetic and that interpretation is therefore an improper response to art: ‘‘the modern style of interpretation excavates, as it excavates, destroys; it digs ‘behind’ the text, to find a sub-text which is the true one.’’ She argues against interpretation because ‘‘in a culture whose already classical dilemma is the hypertrophy of the intellect at the expense of energy and sensual capability, interpretation is the revenge of the intellect upon art. Even more, it is the revenge of the intellect upon the world.’’ These ideas help explain the play’s most baffling feature, the model. It is a Chinese box, representing the house, and inside it is a model of the model and so on ad infinitum. Art, according to Plato, is just such an indirect representation of reality: ‘‘the tragic poet, too, is an artist who represents things; . . . he and all other artists are, as it were, third in succession from the throne of truth.’’ Thus, according to Plato, works of art are part of a Chinese box system. But Sontag and probably Albee disagree with Plato because his theory states that art is mimetic. Albee seems to mock mimetic theories of art by using a schematization of them (the model) as part of his scenery and by placing inside it, as its ultimate representation of reality, a mouse.
In Tiny Alice Albee’s complaint with the mimetic theories of art is that it argues that art is related to the world, rather than holding that art is selfcontained and cut off from external reality. Albee makes his point by presenting a change in Julian’s conception of the relation between art and reality. Before the main action of the play Julian had experiences—hallucinations—that should have warned him to be skeptical about believing in a simple relation between reality and representations of it, with the latter mirroring the former. These hallucinations should have suggested to him that it is not always easy to determine precisely what is reality and what is something else, but Julian remains secure in his orthodox conceptions about reality; in fact, he holds to these conceptions throughout most of the play. Near the end he affirms the Lawyer’s statement that he, Julian, is dedicated to reality, not to appearance. It is the Lawyer who has occasionally been insinuating into Julian’s mind another possibility: that non-real things purporting merely to copy reality are not related to everyday reality at all but are themselves an ultimate—perhaps the only—reality. For example, early in the play the Lawyer says: ‘‘I have learned . . . Brother Julian . . . never to confuse the representative of a . . . thing with the thing itself.’’ ‘‘Representative’’ is of course a pun on ‘‘representation.’’ By the end of the play the Lawyer, with help from other in- fluences, prevails, and Julian decides to forsake other realities for the reality of the model, the representation.
Rather than merely copying part of the everyday world, this play itself, like the model, is in some important respects ‘‘about’’ itself. To be specific, it is a play that examines the validity of representing reality by means of plays. The first thing Miss Alice does is assume the role of an old crone. This roleplaying, according to Sontag, is characteristic of Camp: ‘‘to perceive Camp in objects and persons is to understand Being-as-Playing-a-Role.’’ Another involution is the play within the play, in which the Lawyer and Butler act out new identities. In fact, Julian—along with the more perceptive members of the audience—senses that he is the victim of a troupe of highly skilled actors. Thus the actors in Tiny Alice play characters who are actors playing roles. The result is indeed a Chinese box system, with the play moving inward toward a core of dramatic ‘‘reality’’ rather than toward a copy of reality.
Tiny Alice also has the effect of being selfenclosed and separate from external reality because it stresses that to a large extent reality is linguistic. In this it resembles the story of another Alice: Alice in Wonderland. In Carroll’s book Alice leaves the world of external reality and goes to a world that seems to be linguistically composed (i.e., figures of speech, such as ‘‘mad as a hatter,’’ are made manifest). Albee’s Alice is reminiscent of Carroll’s, particularly late in the play, when her actions become very childish and Albee says that her reaction to Julian is ‘‘surprisingly little-girl fright.’’ The many puns in the play also emphasize language’s role in forming conceptions of reality. Butler indirectly suggests to Julian that this is so when he claims that it was a semantic problem that caused Julian’s mental illness. Julian’s final acceptance of Alice is, among other things, an acceptance of the power of language; he is convinced more by assertion than by evidence. His acceptance is also his validation of drama as not only a representation of reality but as reality.
In short, both Albee and Miss Sontag are interested in Camp sensibility and the nature of art. Another way to demonstrate Albee’s interest in these matters is to set Tiny Alice into its chronological place in his work. The relevant works are Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1962), Tiny Alice (1964), and Malcolm (1965). Ballad of the Sad Cafe (1963), a dramatization of a novella by Carson MacCullers, deals with other themes.) The first of these plays develops the themes of reality, representation and the creation of fictitional alternatives to reality, particularly in its treatment of the fiction about George and Martha’s ‘‘child.’’ Albee himself mentioned this aspect of Virginia Woolf to an interviewer: ‘‘and of course, who’s afraid of the big bad wolf . . . who’s afraid of living life without false illusions.’’ Malcolm is an adaptation of James Purdy’s novel, which is a classic of Camp literature, a peculiar Bildungsroman that describes a boy becoming a Camp object, and it is full of Camp characters, rooms, clothes and other trappings. Its Camp theme is recapitulated in the motto of Malcolm’s first wife. ‘‘Texture is all, substance nothing,’’ which recalls Susan Sontag’s statement that ‘‘Camp art is often decorative art, emphasizing texture, sensuous surface, and style at the expense of content.’’ Albee’s decision to adapt Purdy’s novel immediately upon finishing Tiny Alice shows his continuing interest in Camp.
One can speculate about Albee’s reasons for creating art about art and for treating his in a Camp manner. A probable cause is the large number of critics who turn their attention on the work of contemporary writers. The most striking feature of the interview with Albee in Paris Review is his knowledge of the criticism written about him. At one point he says, ‘‘about four years ago I made a list, for my own amusement, of the playwrights, the contemporary playwrights, by whom critics said I’d been influenced. I listed twenty-five.’’ Note, too, the strained and uneasy irony of ‘‘for my own amusement.’’ His response is certainly understandable, because too much criticism can make any writer uneasy about his work and can even encourage him to fashion what Brustein called a ‘‘huge joke on the American culture industry.’’ Once again Sontag has a relevant comment: ‘‘a great deal of today’s art may be understood as motivated by a flight from interpretation. To avoid interpretation, art becomes parody. Or it becomes abstract. Or it may become (‘merely’) decorative. Or it may become non-art.’’
Tiny Alice exemplifies some of the alternatives for art that Sontag proposes. Albee’s treatment of the themes of sex and religion is parodic rather than profound, and his development of the theme of art is not immediately clear. The ending, especially in the longer printed version, is ludicrous, probably deliberately so. Julian takes longer to die than a villain in a bad western movie, and his final speech is extremely over-blown. Nigel Dennis’ complaint about some other playwrights at first seems to apply also to Albee: ‘‘when [Beckett, Ionesco and Genet] got into difficulties . . . they filled up the void with make-believe of meaningless words and stage ‘business.’ This now has become the approved way, with the difference that as the tradition grows more and more decadent, the firmness of grasp becomes feebler and feebler, and the accumulation of meaninglessness greater and greater.’’ Dennis’ complaint is over-stated, but he does sound a useful warning. This criticism should not be applied to Albee, however, since he has artistic reasons for the apparent flaws in Tiny Alice.
Tiny Alice should be considered an experiment. As many examples demonstrate, art about art can be great but unfortunately the obscurities and complexities inherent in Camp art-about-art seem to make complete success impossible. Even more unfortunate, this experiment seems to have tainted Albee, for never again has he risen to the heights of his early one-act plays and Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? But the fad of the Camp sensibility has waned since Tiny Alice, which leaves hope that Albee (and the other writers who were affected by it) will return to his previous level of accomplishment.
Source: John Stark, ‘‘Camping Out: Tiny Alice and Susan Sontag,’’ in Critical Essays on Edward Albee, ed. Philip C. Kolin and J. Madison Davis, G. K. Hall & Co., 1986, p. 162.