Postcard from Berlin [2]
The Story of Berlin/Theatertreffen
(2): The Unmarried Ones/Tacita Dean: Event for a Stage
On Wednesday morning I visit ‘The Story of Berlin’: a rather
cheesy interactive museum for tourists and school-groups located in a shopping
arcade on the Kurfürstendamm. Its biggest drawcard is an underground nuclear bunker
which was built in the 1970s and ostensibly meant to house 3,600 people and
provide them with shelter, food, water and air until the immediate effects of
radiation had abated. I join a group of French, American and Japanese tourists
led by a cheerful young student. We follow her into an underground carpark,
squeeze into a tiny elevator and descend several floors to emerge into a vast concrete
underworld. Our guide conducts us through a labyrinth of corridors and chambers
filled with wash-basins (no mirrors), showers (no curtains) and toilet-cubicles
(no doors), culminating in a cavernous space filled with row after row of
narrow bunks tightly stacked four layers high. I can’t help wondering how long
people would have survived down here, in what conditions, or to what ultimate
end. In fact the whole set-up makes me think of a subterranean concentration
camp; at best, a clumsy exercise in propaganda; at worst, a grim extension of totalitarianism
– and this, be it noted, in the so-called ‘free zone’ of the former West
Berlin.
The rest of the museum (located in the upper floors of the
shopping arcade) is a little more kitsch, with stairways and
room-displays leading chronologically through the city’s history, and featuring
costumed mannequins, theatrical sets, furniture, props and sound-effects. When
we get to the Weimar Republic, there’s even a miniature cinema screening
excerpts from the heyday of the silent and early sound era, when German films
briefly led the world. Then comes the Depression, political chaos, and things rapidly
go downhill: a long winding staircase literally descends to a basement level with
room after room documenting the successive catastrophes of Nazism, the Second
World War, the Holocaust, the Allied destruction of Berlin, and the subsequent
decades of Communism and the Cold War.
I re-emerge into the thriving bustle of modern-day Kufürstendamm
with its fashion outlets, chain-stores and advertising billboards an hour later
with the sense that no comparable European capital city witnessed such reversals
of fortune, whether self-inflicted or externally imposed (which is not to
minimize the devastations of Dresden, Tokyo, Hiroshima or Nagasaki). In
the case of Berlin, a thoroughly modernized avant-garde metropolis that rivalled
London, Paris or New York once went through the same whirwind as Baghdad or
Damascus now. It’s a sobering reminder for those of us who’ve grown up
associating such images of destruction with the underdeveloped world, from Vietnam
to Iraq – and somehow brings such contemporary zones of war and conflict closer
to home. Further down the Kufürstendamm I pass the bombed ruins of the Kaiser
Wilhelm Memorial Church flanked by its 1950s brutalist concrete, steel and glass
successor and matching bell-tower. Past and present co-habit uneasily in this city of scars
and memories.
*
That night at the Haus der Berliner Festspiele I see a
classic example of what might be called the contemporary German-language
trauma-play. In fact it’s one of two productions from Vienna by the Burgtheater
in Akademietheater that have been selected by the jury of the Theatertreffen. Die Unverheirateten (‘The Unmarried’) is
a new play by Ewald Palmetshofer, directed and designed by Robert Borgmann. The
story concerns a woman, ‘The Old One’ (played by famous Viennese stage veteran
Elisabeth Orth) who reported a soldier to the Nazi authorities for talking
about desertion during the closing months of the war. Her ‘betrayal’ led to his
execution, and after the war she was herself tried and imprisoned by the Allied
authorities for being a Nazi informer. However, she had also fallen pregnant to
the same soldier, and given birth to a daughter, ‘The Middle One’ (Christiane
von Pöllnitz) – who in turn subsequently had a daughter of her own, ‘The Young
One’ (Stefanie Reinsperger), again without acknowledging the identity of the father. All three
generations of women keep secrets from each other, and needless to say have
failed to find permanent partners or have stable relationships. Now the
grandmother has been hospitalized with a stroke; her grandaughter visits her; and
the truth about the past begins to emerge.
Palmetshofer uses a heightened poetic language (I had to
rely heavily on the English surtitles) which tumbles out mostly in monologues
delivered either directly to the audience or to one of the other women as silent
interlocutors. Borgmann’s staging is similarly abstract, dynamic, metaphorical
and even visceral: the floor is covered with earth with which the actors smear
or bury themselves (and even at one point shove into their mouths); wooden furniture
is hacked with axes; billowing walls of cloth repeatedly rise and fall like
huge curtains. There’s also a slightly camp cabaret chorus of four younger
women who intermittently (and somewhat gratingly) comment on the action (I
found these sections the least persuasive in the show). The three central performances
however are gripping, especially the mostly immobile and impassive figure of Orth
as the grandmother. All in all, despite some welcome leavenings of humour
(mostly from Reinsperger as the accordion-playing, wisecracking, self-degrading
grandaughter), it’s a relentlessly grim two hours of trauma-theatre, even if
there’s a sense of reconciliation and healing at the end. I’m reminded a little
of Bernard Schlink’s novel The Reader,
another parable of guilt, betrayal, secrets, misunderstandings, recrimination
and (perhaps) forgiveness. The Unmarried however
comes across more like an all-female post-war Oresteia. Once again, German theatre reaches back to its Greek
antecedents.
*
On Thursday afternoon I catch up with an Austrian friend who
lives and works in Berlin as an actor, singer and teacher. We meet in
Schöneberg and have lunch (Spargel, the
huge, white and deliciously sweet asparagus that are currently in season and
dominate every street vendor’s stall and restaurant menu). Then we wander the
streets of her neighborhood, and she tells me about living and working here.
I’m envious of all the permanent ensemble companies; but as she points out, not
every actor is suited to that kind of employment regime; and I sense the same old
conflict between job security and creative freedom that bedevils actors everywhere. Oh, well. At least in Berlin you have a choice.
She walks me back to the Festspiele, where I’m seeing the
premiere screening of English visual artist Tacita Dean’s Event for a Stage. Dean is an artist I admire, especially for her
work in (and advocacy for) the medium (and materiality) of film as an
endangered species (as opposed to video, which is rapidly displacing it).
Invited to make a work of theatre for the first time in 1994, she approached
the English actor Stephen Dillane (perhaps best known for his TV work in John Adams and Game of Thrones, but previously a stage actor renowned for his
Hamlet and one-man Macbeth) and
invited him to collaborate with her on a project, without knowing exactly what
it would turn out to be.
In the 'event', so to speak, four consecutive public performances by Dillane were
staged in the round at Carriageworks in Sydney and filmed by two roving cameras
circling the actor (and each other). This in turn provided the raw material for a 50-minute film based on shots spliced
together from all four performances (Dillane wore a different wig each night and varied his facial hair). The text (which also appears to be at least partly
by Dillane) is based on conversations with Dean, reflections on acting and
performance, revelations about recent family losses, a speech from The Tempest by Prospero to his daughter,
and extracts from Kleist’s famous essay ‘On the Marionette Theatre’ –which
among other things outlines a kind of natural history of consciousness and posits the ultimate supercession
of the live performer by the marionette (and perhaps more generally of the human by the
machine).
Beneath the text and performance one senses a testiness
verging on hostility from the actor towards the artist and the
project itself. Some extracts from the published script (which tellingly is credited to Dean alone without acknowledging the evident role of Dillane as at least its co-author) illustrate this
tension, which for me animated the work with a sense of drama (and indeed
dramatic irony, to refer again to Kleist) and raised it above
the level of conceptual art or mere dissertation:
The artist told me she
has filmed people before…but this time she is trying to film a process, a
craft, a profession. She is interested in what she calls
‘self-consciousness’…It is something she doesn’t like to see in her films, she
says, her subjects being aware of themselves, aware of themselves being
watched…
She – the artist –
asked me to play the role of an actor, the role of the actor being filmed on
stage. She said she wanted to make a portrait of an actor on context, in his
natural habitat, like a beast in its lair.
I said I don’t really
do stage acting anymore.
‘Don’t you?’ she said.
‘Well, why did you agree to come?’
Dillane delivers all this with barely disguised irritation – occasionally breaking off to snatch pages of script from the artist, who is sitting in the front row. At one point he drops the script and exits, banging the fire door behind him. The theatre audience (and
we, the cinema audience) sit there waiting uncertainly for what seems like minutes, before he finally returns and finishes the performance, with a final moving revelation about the family tragedy that preceded him coming here.
I find Dillane a compelling presence onstage and onscreen:
in fact I can’t imagine anyone else pulling off a similar double-act. Watching
him endlessly pacing, circling and weaving like a prisoner, I’m reminded
of Rilke’s great poem about the panther: ‘His gaze has become so tired from going over and over/ The bars of his cage that he sees nothing more. / It seems to him as if there
were a thousand bars; / And beyond those thousand bars, no world.’
*
Humph’s third and
final Postcard from Berlin will be posted next week.
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