审视“历史混音”:音乐剧《六人行》中的公众记忆、伯克人身份认同和女权主义

Pub Date : 2020-12-01 DOI:10.1386/SMT_00041_1
Valerie Lynn Schrader
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引用次数: 0

摘要

音乐剧《六人行》在英国掀起了风暴,在2019年获得了五项奥利维尔提名,并于2020年春天在百老汇试映。《六人行》讲述了亨利八世的六位妻子的故事,音乐剧用他们自己的话描述了这六位妻子,其中六位妻子组成了一个女孩组合,为观众表演了一场音乐会。通过对音乐剧剧本、演员录音、钢琴/声乐乐谱和两场演出的现场笔记的修辞分析,我认为Six创造了公众对阿拉贡的凯瑟琳、安妮·博林、简·西摩、克莱夫斯的安娜、凯瑟琳·霍华德和凯瑟琳·帕尔的记忆,关注他们的个人个性和成就,而不仅仅是他们与亨利八世的关系,正如文献记载的历史所描述的那样。我建议,通过这样做,Six可以最大限度地减少地点和时间在创造公众记忆中的作用。此外,我认为这种公众记忆的创造与伯克人的身份认同交织在一起,因为剧院观众发现自己与《六人行》中描绘的一位或多位女王建立了联系。通过将21世纪的语言与16世纪女性的故事相结合,《六人行》在人物和观众之间建立了同源性。这篇文章还探讨了最后一个数字“六”是如何重塑女性故事的,如果她们生活在21世纪,她们可能会是什么样子,以及这对公众记忆的影响。最后,我建议《六人行》是一部女权主义文本,倡导团结和赋予所有妇女个人权力。
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Examining the ‘histo-remix’: Public memory, Burkean identification and feminism in the musical Six
The musical Six has taken the United Kingdom by storm, earning five Olivier nominations in 2019 and crossing the pond, previewing on Broadway in the spring of 2020. Six tells the story of Henry VIII’s six wives in what the musical portrays as their own words, with a twist ‐ the six wives form a girl group performing a concert for their audience. Through a rhetorical analysis of the musical’s script, cast recording, piano/vocal score, and field notes from two performances, I argue that Six creates public memory of Catherine of Aragon, Anne Boleyn, Jane Seymour, Anna of Cleves, Katherine Howard and Catherine Parr, focusing on their individual personalities and accomplishments, rather than simply on their relationship to Henry VIII, as documented history describes them. I suggest that by doing so, Six minimizes the role of place and time in the creation of public memory. Furthermore, I argue that this creation of public memory is intertwined with Burkean identification, as theatregoers find themselves connecting with one or more of the queens as they are portrayed in Six. By combining twenty-first-century language with the stories of sixteenth-century women, Six builds consubstantiality between its characters and its audiences. This article also explores how the final number, Six, reinvents the women’s stories as they might have been if they had lived in the twenty-first century and the impact that this has on public memory. Finally, I suggest that Six is a feminist text, advocating for solidarity and the individually defined empowerment of all women.
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