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Also known as: theatron

In the years immediately following the Russian Revolution, mass spectacles were mounted in many Soviet cities. The subjects of these spectacles were drawn from events in the Revolution and the subsequent Civil War. They were a conscious attempt to create a new form of social ritual out of the celebratory reenactment of revolutionary events. They also represent an attempt to create a new proletarian art form, and in this they arose naturally from the broader movement to utilize art for social purposes. The former Futurists and Suprematists painted the fronts of buildings and exploited the bustling atmosphere of street markets for their performances. The ideological point of such actions was that the theatres, concert halls, and art galleries had been the preserve of the privileged; proletarian artists proclaimed their allegiance by creating it in the streets.

It seemed only reasonable that St. Petersburg, which had seen so much of the high drama of the Revolution, should be the city that presented the most memorable mass spectacles. In 1920, five of these were presented, climaxing in The Storming of the Winter Palace, directed by Evreinov, with the help of the directors of the other spectacles. The performers numbered more than 8,000, and the spectators have been estimated at 100,000. A 500-piece orchestra provided accompaniment. The spectacle reenacted the events leading up to the October Revolution in St. Petersburg, on the site at which they actually happened.

The spectacles corresponded directly with the proposal by Rousseau and Diderot in 18th-century France that the theatre be made the church of the secular state. These productions were almost certainly influenced by the arguments of Romain Rolland for a people’s theatre at the beginning of the century and were the most vivid examples of the large-scale revival of pageant theatre that was very strong in many European countries and North America between the two world wars. A change of Soviet policy in 1921 phased out the mass spectacles, though they did not disappear entirely. The Bicentennial celebrations in the United States in 1976 included reenactments of the Battle of Lexington, among others. During the opening ceremonies of the Los Angeles Olympic Games in 1984, performers presented a “condensed” history of the settling of the United States. In the socialist countries the tradition was continued in more disciplined and less imaginative forms in military parades and the large athletic Spartakiades.

As Soviet society settled into a more dogmatic and defensive period after 1921 and particularly after 1928, the unrestrained release of emotion sparked by the mass spectacles, the critical satire of the Blue Blouses, and the highly imaginative and often idiosyncratic experimental work of the directors came increasingly to be seen as dangerous to the state. In direct opposition to the direction in which 20th-century art was moving—i.e., away from representation toward abstraction—the Soviet aesthetics branded any tendency toward abstraction as Formalist and established Socialist Realism, which was in effect a reduction of the older forms of Naturalism and psychological realism, as the official mode.

Developments in France

At the turn of the century, the preeminence of Paris as the centre of avant-garde theatre had declined and the lead had passed to Berlin and later Moscow. The revival in the French theatre produced a theory diametrically opposed to that of Meyerhold and Tairov. Jacques Copeau founded the Théâtre du Vieux-Colombier in 1913, arguing that the director’s job was to translate faithfully a play into a “poetry of the theatre.” Believing the actor to be the only important element in a production, he advocated the return to a bare stage. In the Vieux-Colombier he removed the proscenium arch to create a raised open platform. At the rear of the stage he placed an alcove with a balcony, a structure similar to that of the Elizabethan theatre. In a succession of productions and with great ingenuity this permanent setting could be transformed with minor alterations and adaptations to suit a whole season of varied plays.

Copeau’s reasoning was based on an assessment that the modern theatre had initiated a mass of new staging techniques but had singularly failed to find the new dramatists to maintain the literary standard of the theatre. He founded his theatre in hopes of attracting those new dramatists. This effort largely failed, and Copeau’s contribution to the history of the theatre consists almost entirely in his approach to staging. The restriction of scenic means on the bare stage placed great stress upon the actor’s ability to play in a variety of styles. In the school attached to the theatre, Copeau pursued a program of actor training very much in line with that of Meyerhold, encompassing exercises drawn from commedia dell’arte, folk theatre, masked theatre, Oriental theatre, and Dalcroze eurythmics. His actors trained with the Fratellini family, the great Italian family of circus clowns and acrobats. Copeau’s aim was to equip his actors with a wide cultural understanding and a full range of physical and vocal skills. Rehearsals were improvisational. The discipline and self-denial inherent in Copeau’s program provided an example for others to follow not only artistically and administratively but also morally. The line of influence from Copeau, his colleagues Charles Dullin and Louis Jouvet, and their students extends throughout the European theatre. The example of the Théâtre du Vieux-Colombier can be followed through many of the leading postwar European theatres, such as Giorgio Strehler’s Piccolo Teatro of Milan and the Old Vic and the Royal Court theatres of London.