Title: Antonin Artaud and the Theatre of Cruelty
1Antonin Artaud and the Theatre of Cruelty
2Antonin Artaud
- Born in Marseille 1896
- At Age 4 suffered from Meningitis
- Also suffered from Neuralgia, Stammering and
severe bouts of Depression. - As a teenager spent five years in a sanatorium,
where he became addicted to laudanum. - When he was twenty years he was drafted into the
army, but was released because of mental
instability. - In his late twenties Artaud began writing and
working with the Surrealist movement - He was rejected for not denouncing theatre as
Bourgeois
3- While in Paris He began develop an interest in
cinema. - Wrote the script for the first Surrealist film Le
Coquille et la Clergyman. - Also acts in Fait Divers and Surcourt--le roi des
corsairs (1924) Abel Gance's Napoleon Boneparte
(1925) La Passion de Jeanne d'Arc (1928)
Tarakanowa (1929) G. W. Pabst's
Dreigroschenoper, made in Berlin (1930) - He also works as a costume designer.
- Founds Theatre Alfred Jarry with Roger Vitrac and
Robert Arron - In the Early 1930s wrote the Manifestos of the
Theatre of Cruelty, which outlined his theory on
Drama and how plays should be presented.
4- In 1935 presents the first play using the Theater
of Cruelty method. - Les Cenci adapted from Shelly and Stendhal.
- The play is a complete failure.
- Artaud spends most of the last nine years of his
life in mental institutions being treated for
schizophrenia. - He is released in 1948
- Returns to Paris where he eventually dies of
cancer.
5The Theatre of Cruelty
- Two Manifestos Published in 1932 and 1933
- Cruelty was expressed the discomfort it made the
audience feel rather than physical malice. - Theatre should address the audience at a
subconscious level that speaks to the divisions
within themselves and each other. - Images and sounds over spoken word
6First Manifesto -Themes
- The Spectacle
- The Mise En Scene
- The Language of the Stage
- Musical Instruments
- Lights, Lighting
- Costumes
- The Stage
- ObjectsMasksAccessories
- The Set
- Immediacy
- Works
- Specatcle
- The Actor
- The interpretation
- The Cinema
- Cruelty
- The Public
- The Program
7Second Manifesto-The Play
- The Conquest of Mexico
- Poses the question of Colonization
- Compares Christianity with ancient Mexican
religions - Four Acts
- Warning Signs, Confessions, Convulsions,
Abdication
8A civlized man judges and is judged according to
his behavior, but even the term civilized leads
to confusion a cultivated civilized man is
regarded as a person instructed in systems, a
person who thinks in forms signs and
representations-- a monster whose faculty of
deriving thoughts from actions instead of
identifying acts with thoughts, is developed to
an absurdity Artuad from The Theatre and its
Double