汤姆·斯托帕德的《利奥波德斯塔特及其不满》

IF 0.1 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Martin Schneider
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In this brief essay I address the content of the play and discuss Stoppard's literary ties to Vienna and Austria-Hungary, an aspect of his life and career of which some of his fans might be unaware. I wish I could say that the play was an unmitigated success. The play shows all the hallmarks of Stoppard's career, that is to say, wide erudition, wit, complexity, and an appetite for ideas. Stoppard is a favorite playwright of mine, but his output since 2000 has struck me, for the most part, as not fit material for the stage, lacking the capacity to delight, astound, and move a normal audience. A characteristic story, told by the British critic Michael Billington: \"I have an indelible memory of meeting Stoppard on the steps of the London Library laden with books some time before Jumpers opened. 'What have you got there?' I innocently asked. 'My next play,' he crisply replied\" (82). For the Stoppard enthusiast, the exchange is haunting because it confronts what one [End Page 91] might term Stoppard's signature weakness, an intermittent inability to create a play that delivers the effects that every play must. To Stoppard's credit, it seems, he knows that his plays have a bookish cast—they could often be footnoted—and he is able to poke fun at himself. For the Stoppard aficionado, it is basic information that he was born Tomáš Sträussler before the war (1937) in what was then Czechoslovakia; the locality was Zlín. The young Sträussler's perambulations were complex and varied, featuring stays in Singapore and India. At some point before the war his father perished in eastern Asia. By the time World War II had come to an end, his mother had married a British officer named Stoppard. The new stepfather, a devout patriot, impressed upon young \"Tom\" that English citizenship was the most fortunate fate that could befall a person, an ethic the child seems to have gratefully imbibed (Lee 5–30). Mixed in with this was some degree of sheepish, perhaps semiconscious guilt over his own survival when his own father had not lived to see the end of the war. His early adult years were a time of considerable political tumult; when leftism among creative British persons was taken for granted, Stoppard struck a different, aloof note. The year that Margaret Thatcher became prime minister, Stoppard, at the age of 42, called himself \"a conservative with a small c. I'm a conservative in politics, literature, education and theatre\" (Nadel 297). This profile of the \"conservative\" and perhaps even \"apolitical\" playwright has haunted Stoppard's career, but the pose he struck as a younger man was not cast in amber, as we shall see. Stoppard's first major splash as a playwright came in 1966, with the premiere of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, a brilliant nugget of Ionesco- and Beckett-influenced absurdism using the nooks and crannies of Shakespeare's Hamlet to offer the audience a pleasing assortment of circuitous and self-referential japes and witticisms. Between 1979 and 1986, Stoppard, now a thoroughly established playwright, occupied himself with free adaptations of Habsburgian plays. The list of Viennese works Stoppard adapted runs as follows: Undiscovered Country (1979), adapting Arthur Schnitzler's 1910 play Das Weite Land On the Razzle (1981), adapting Johann Nestroy's 1842 play Einen Jux will er...","PeriodicalId":40350,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Austrian Studies","volume":"39 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Tom Stoppard's Leopoldstadt and Its Discontents\",\"authors\":\"Martin Schneider\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/oas.2023.a906960\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Tom Stoppard's Leopoldstadt and Its Discontents Martin Schneider Late last year I attended the New York production of Tom Stoppard's latest play, Leopoldstadt, at the Longacre Theatre. The play's original run was in London's West End in early 2020 before being interrupted by COVID. It is said that it will be the final play of his storied career. I have been the copyeditor of The Journal of Austrian Studies for more than 10 years and am the descendant of Viennese Jews, so naturally my ears perked up when I first heard the title some months earlier. For me, the performance was unusual in that it so strikingly resembled an article of JAS come to life. Hofmannsthal, Herzl, \\\"Handsome/Schöne\\\" Karl Lueger, Anschluss, 2. Republik—it's all there. In this brief essay I address the content of the play and discuss Stoppard's literary ties to Vienna and Austria-Hungary, an aspect of his life and career of which some of his fans might be unaware. I wish I could say that the play was an unmitigated success. The play shows all the hallmarks of Stoppard's career, that is to say, wide erudition, wit, complexity, and an appetite for ideas. Stoppard is a favorite playwright of mine, but his output since 2000 has struck me, for the most part, as not fit material for the stage, lacking the capacity to delight, astound, and move a normal audience. A characteristic story, told by the British critic Michael Billington: \\\"I have an indelible memory of meeting Stoppard on the steps of the London Library laden with books some time before Jumpers opened. 'What have you got there?' I innocently asked. 'My next play,' he crisply replied\\\" (82). For the Stoppard enthusiast, the exchange is haunting because it confronts what one [End Page 91] might term Stoppard's signature weakness, an intermittent inability to create a play that delivers the effects that every play must. To Stoppard's credit, it seems, he knows that his plays have a bookish cast—they could often be footnoted—and he is able to poke fun at himself. For the Stoppard aficionado, it is basic information that he was born Tomáš Sträussler before the war (1937) in what was then Czechoslovakia; the locality was Zlín. The young Sträussler's perambulations were complex and varied, featuring stays in Singapore and India. At some point before the war his father perished in eastern Asia. By the time World War II had come to an end, his mother had married a British officer named Stoppard. The new stepfather, a devout patriot, impressed upon young \\\"Tom\\\" that English citizenship was the most fortunate fate that could befall a person, an ethic the child seems to have gratefully imbibed (Lee 5–30). Mixed in with this was some degree of sheepish, perhaps semiconscious guilt over his own survival when his own father had not lived to see the end of the war. His early adult years were a time of considerable political tumult; when leftism among creative British persons was taken for granted, Stoppard struck a different, aloof note. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

汤姆·斯托帕德的《利奥波德施塔特》及其不满马丁·施耐德去年年底,我参加了汤姆·斯托帕德在纽约朗埃克剧院上演的最新戏剧《利奥波德施塔特》。该剧最初于2020年初在伦敦西区上演,后来被新冠肺炎打断。据说这将是他传奇生涯的最后一部戏。作为维也纳犹太人的后裔,我在《奥地利研究杂志》(Journal of Austrian Studies)做了10多年的编辑,所以几个月前第一次听到这个标题时,我的耳朵自然就竖起来了。对我来说,这个表演是不寻常的,因为它非常像一篇日本的文章。赫茨尔·霍夫曼斯塔尔,“英俊/Schöne”卡尔·卢格,德国,2。共和国——都在那里。在这篇简短的文章中,我将讨论这部戏剧的内容,并讨论斯托帕德与维也纳和奥匈帝国的文学联系,这是他的一些粉丝可能不知道的他生活和事业的一个方面。我真希望我能说这出戏是不折不扣的成功。该剧展现了斯托帕德职业生涯的所有特征,也就是说,广博的学识、机智、复杂和对思想的渴望。斯托帕德是我最喜欢的一位剧作家,但他自2000年以来的大部分作品给我的印象是,他的作品不适合搬上舞台,缺乏让普通观众感到愉悦、震惊和感动的能力。英国评论家迈克尔·比灵顿(Michael Billington)讲述了一个很有特色的故事:“我有一个不可磨灭的记忆,那就是在《跳楼者》开馆前的一段时间,我在伦敦图书馆堆满书的台阶上遇到了斯托帕德。”“你拿的是什么?”我天真地问。“我的下一部戏,”他干脆地回答。对于斯托帕德的狂热爱好者来说,这种交流令人难以忘怀,因为它面对的是人们可能称之为斯托帕德的标志性弱点,即间歇性地无法创造出每部戏都必须具备的效果。斯托帕德值得赞扬的是,他似乎知道他的戏剧有一个书生气的演员——他们经常可以做脚注——而且他能够取笑自己。对于斯托帕德的粉丝来说,有一个基本的信息是,他出生于Tomáš Sträussler战前(1937年),当时是捷克斯洛伐克;地点是Zlín。年轻的Sträussler的漫游是复杂而多样的,包括在新加坡和印度停留。在战前的某个时候,他的父亲死在了东亚。到第二次世界大战结束时,他的母亲嫁给了一位名叫斯托帕德的英国军官。新来的继父是一位虔诚的爱国者,他给小“汤姆”留下的印象是,英国公民身份是降临在一个人身上的最幸运的命运,这个孩子似乎已经感激地接受了这种道德观念(李5-30)。他的父亲没能活到战争结束,而他自己却活了下来,这其中夹杂着某种程度的羞怯,也许是半意识到的内疚。他成年早期经历了相当大的政治动荡;当富有创造力的英国人认为左倾是理所当然的时候,斯托帕德却发出了一种不同的、冷漠的声音。玛格丽特·撒切尔成为首相的那一年,42岁的斯托帕德称自己为“一个带有小c的保守主义者。我在政治、文学、教育和戏剧方面都是保守主义者”(纳德尔297)。这位“保守”甚至“不关心政治”的剧作家的形象一直困扰着斯托帕德的职业生涯,但正如我们将看到的,他年轻时的姿态并不是一成不变的。斯托帕德作为剧作家的第一次重大成就是在1966年,他首演了《罗森克兰茨和吉尔登斯特恩都死了》,这是一部受尤尼斯科和贝克特影响的荒诞主义的杰出作品,利用莎士比亚《哈姆雷特》的角落和缝隙,为观众提供了一系列令人愉悦的迂回曲折和自我指涉的笑话和俏皮话。1979年至1986年间,斯托帕德,现在是一个完全知名的剧作家,全身心地投入到哈布斯堡戏剧的自由改编中。斯托帕德改编的维也纳作品如下:《未被发现的国家》(1979年),改编自阿瑟·施尼茨勒1910年的戏剧《雪山上的仙境》(1981年),改编自约翰·内斯特利1842年的戏剧《爱情将永远》……
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Tom Stoppard's Leopoldstadt and Its Discontents
Tom Stoppard's Leopoldstadt and Its Discontents Martin Schneider Late last year I attended the New York production of Tom Stoppard's latest play, Leopoldstadt, at the Longacre Theatre. The play's original run was in London's West End in early 2020 before being interrupted by COVID. It is said that it will be the final play of his storied career. I have been the copyeditor of The Journal of Austrian Studies for more than 10 years and am the descendant of Viennese Jews, so naturally my ears perked up when I first heard the title some months earlier. For me, the performance was unusual in that it so strikingly resembled an article of JAS come to life. Hofmannsthal, Herzl, "Handsome/Schöne" Karl Lueger, Anschluss, 2. Republik—it's all there. In this brief essay I address the content of the play and discuss Stoppard's literary ties to Vienna and Austria-Hungary, an aspect of his life and career of which some of his fans might be unaware. I wish I could say that the play was an unmitigated success. The play shows all the hallmarks of Stoppard's career, that is to say, wide erudition, wit, complexity, and an appetite for ideas. Stoppard is a favorite playwright of mine, but his output since 2000 has struck me, for the most part, as not fit material for the stage, lacking the capacity to delight, astound, and move a normal audience. A characteristic story, told by the British critic Michael Billington: "I have an indelible memory of meeting Stoppard on the steps of the London Library laden with books some time before Jumpers opened. 'What have you got there?' I innocently asked. 'My next play,' he crisply replied" (82). For the Stoppard enthusiast, the exchange is haunting because it confronts what one [End Page 91] might term Stoppard's signature weakness, an intermittent inability to create a play that delivers the effects that every play must. To Stoppard's credit, it seems, he knows that his plays have a bookish cast—they could often be footnoted—and he is able to poke fun at himself. For the Stoppard aficionado, it is basic information that he was born Tomáš Sträussler before the war (1937) in what was then Czechoslovakia; the locality was Zlín. The young Sträussler's perambulations were complex and varied, featuring stays in Singapore and India. At some point before the war his father perished in eastern Asia. By the time World War II had come to an end, his mother had married a British officer named Stoppard. The new stepfather, a devout patriot, impressed upon young "Tom" that English citizenship was the most fortunate fate that could befall a person, an ethic the child seems to have gratefully imbibed (Lee 5–30). Mixed in with this was some degree of sheepish, perhaps semiconscious guilt over his own survival when his own father had not lived to see the end of the war. His early adult years were a time of considerable political tumult; when leftism among creative British persons was taken for granted, Stoppard struck a different, aloof note. The year that Margaret Thatcher became prime minister, Stoppard, at the age of 42, called himself "a conservative with a small c. I'm a conservative in politics, literature, education and theatre" (Nadel 297). This profile of the "conservative" and perhaps even "apolitical" playwright has haunted Stoppard's career, but the pose he struck as a younger man was not cast in amber, as we shall see. Stoppard's first major splash as a playwright came in 1966, with the premiere of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, a brilliant nugget of Ionesco- and Beckett-influenced absurdism using the nooks and crannies of Shakespeare's Hamlet to offer the audience a pleasing assortment of circuitous and self-referential japes and witticisms. Between 1979 and 1986, Stoppard, now a thoroughly established playwright, occupied himself with free adaptations of Habsburgian plays. The list of Viennese works Stoppard adapted runs as follows: Undiscovered Country (1979), adapting Arthur Schnitzler's 1910 play Das Weite Land On the Razzle (1981), adapting Johann Nestroy's 1842 play Einen Jux will er...
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来源期刊
Journal of Austrian Studies
Journal of Austrian Studies HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
0.10
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发文量
63
期刊介绍: The Journal of Austrian Studies is an interdisciplinary quarterly that publishes scholarly articles and book reviews on all aspects of the history and culture of Austria, Austro-Hungary, and the Habsburg territory. It is the flagship publication of the Austrian Studies Association and contains contributions in German and English from the world''s premiere scholars in the field of Austrian studies. The journal highlights scholarly work that draws on innovative methodologies and new ways of viewing Austrian history and culture. Although the journal was renamed in 2012 to reflect the increasing scope and diversity of its scholarship, it has a long lineage dating back over a half century as Modern Austrian Literature and, prior to that, The Journal of the International Arthur Schnitzler Research Association.
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