June 22, 2004

Odets on Chekhov and Ibsen

I always thought the following anecdote was hysterical. I suppose you'd have to give a shit about Chekhov and Ibsen and what they MEAN ... but if you do, then hopefully this will make you chuckle.

Entry from Journal

April 17, 1940

In the early evening went to Lee Strasberg's house for dinner. Paula's mother was there [Ed: Paula was Lee Strasberg's wife - an INFAMOUS individual - Marilyn Monroe's controlling acting coach - the bane of John Huston's life - there's a whole story in there], preparing the dinner, and I understood a great deal about Paula from seeing her mother's weak face. For the first time in ten years the tensions are down between Lee and myself -- so we were both able to relax.

He spoke of what he called "the blight of Ibsen", saying that Ibsen had taught most writers after him how to think undramatically. He illustrated this by an example. A man has been used to living in luxury finds he is broke and unable to face life -- he goes home and puts a bullet in his head. That, Lee said, any fair theatre person can lay out into a play. But it is not essentially a dramatic view of life. Chekhov is dramatic, he said, for this is how he treats related material: a man earns a million rubles and goes home and lies down on them and puts a bullet in his head.

Ha!!

Posted by sheila
Comments

Sadly, Strasberg stole the example from EA Robinson.

Posted by: Ken Summers, Perversion Catalyst at June 22, 2004 10:22 PM