Uncle Vanya
Anton Chekhov
24th - 26th April & 29th April - 3rd May 2003
Directed by Nichola Scadding
“One of his four masterpieces that would change forever the nature and
possibilities of drama”. (Michael Frayn)
This summer is unsettling for a
family living in a Russian backwater. There are disturbing guests; heat and
alcohol; enforced indolence; quarrels; sexual proximity; awkward love affairs;
bungled seductions; emotions and lives turned topsy-turvy. Summer ends in
storm-will family tensions end in violence?
Chekhov's most individual contribution to drama is the originality with which
he exposes the emotional web that lies beneath the surface of ordinary events
while maintaining a delicate balance between comedy and tragedy, pain and
absurdity. As he once commented, “People dine, simply dine, and at that moment
their happiness is decided or their lives shattered”.
Born on January 29, 1860, in Taganrog, Russia, on the Sea of Azov, Anton
Pavlovich Chekhov would eventually become one of Russia's most cherished
storytellers. Especially fond of vaudevilles and French farces, he produced some
hilarious one-acts, but it is his full-length tragedies that have secured him a
place among the greatest dramatists of all time.
Chekhov began writing short stories during his days as a medical student at
the University of Moscow. After graduating in 1884 with a degree in medicine, he
began to freelance as a journalist and writer of comic sketches. Early in his
career, he mastered the form of the one-act and produced several masterpieces of
this genre including The Bear (1888) in which a creditor hounds a young
widow, but becomes so impressed when she agrees to fight a duel with him, that
he proposes marriage, and The Wedding (1889) in which a bridegroom's
plans to have a general attend his wedding ceremony backfire when the general
turns out to be a retired naval captain "of the second rank".
Ivanov (1887), Chekhov's first full-length play, a fairly immature
work compared to his later plays, examines the suicide of a young man very
similar to Chekhov himself in many ways. His next play, The Wood Demon
(1888) was also fairly unsuccessful. In fact, it was not until the Moscow Art
Theater production of The Seagull (1897) that Chekhov enjoyed his first
overwhelming success. The same play had been performed two years earlier at the
Alexandrinsky Theatre in St. Petersburg and had been so badly received that
Chekhov had actually left the auditorium during the second act and vowed never
to write for the theatre again. But in the hands of the Moscow Art Theatre, the
play was transformed into a critical success, and Chekhov soon realized that the
earlier production had failed because the actors had not understood their roles.
In 1899, Chekhov gave the Moscow Art Theatre a revised version of The Wood
Demon, now titled Uncle Vanya (1899). Along with The Three Sisters
(1901) and The Cherry Orchard (1904), this play would go on to become one
of the masterpieces of the modern theatre. However, although the Moscow Art
Theatre productions brought Chekhov great fame, he was never quite happy with
the style that director Constantin Stanislavsky imposed on the plays. While
Chekhov insisted that his plays were comedies, Stanislavsky's productions tended
to emphasize their tragic elements. Still, in spite of their stylistic
disagreements, it was not an unhappy marriage, and these productions brought
widespread acclaim to both Chekhov's work and the Moscow Art Theatre itself.
Chekhov considered his mature plays to be a kind of comic satire, pointing
out the unhappy nature of existence in turn-of-the-century Russia. Perhaps
Chekhov's style was described best by the poet himself when he wrote:
"All I wanted was to say honestly to people: 'Have a look at yourselves and
see how bad and dreary your lives are!' The important thing is that people
should realize that, for when they do, they will most certainly create another
and better life for themselves. I will not live to see it, but I know that it
will be quite different, quite unlike our present life. And so long as this
different life does not exist, I shall go on saying to people again and again:
'Please, understand that your life is bad and dreary!'"
During Chekhov's final years, he was forced to live in exile from the
intellectuals of Moscow. In March of 1897, he had suffered a lung haemorrhage,
and although he still made occasional trips to Moscow to participate in the
productions of his plays, he was forced to spend most of his time in the Crimea
where he had gone for his health. He died of tuberculosis on July 14, 1904, at
the age of forty-four, in a German health resort and was buried in Moscow. Since
his death, Chekhov's plays have become famous worldwide and he has come to be
considered the greatest Russian storyteller and dramatist of modern times.
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Chekhov's originality is in the way he exposes the emotional web that lies
below the surface of ordinary, unromantic events. He said, "People dine,
simply dine, and at that moment their happiness is decided or their lives
shattered".
He was enormously influential. most major modern playwrights - such as
Miller, Mamet, Beckett, Pinter, Friel, Frayn himself - owe him an enormous debt
for inventing a dramatic form that gives them the freedom to experiment.
"Uncle Vanya" is an observation of ordinary people who are comically inept at
managing their own lives. They don't understand their emotions and
impulses, they can't relate to each other; they squander their
opportunities; they dream, they talk but hardly ever do.
It deals with the impact of newcomers on a family living in a Russian
backwater. Add to this intrusion heat and alcohol; enforced laziness;
family quarrels; sexual proximity' awkward love affairs; bungled
seductions; emotions and lives turned topsy-turvy and we have all the
ingredients for - well, farce or tragedy?
Chekhov keeps a delicate balance between comedy and tragedy. The play's
sly; ironical; sexy; funny; farcical and it's serious; painful; compassionate;
poignant; something more ambiguous that pure tragedy.
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