A Dream Play

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A Dream Play
Bosse as Indra's daughter in A Dream Play.1907.png
Harriet Bosse as Indra's Daughter
in the 1907 première of A Dream Play
Written byAugust Strindberg
Date premiered17 April 1907 (1907-04-17)
Original languageSwedish
GenreExpressionism

A Dream Play (Swedish: Ett drömspel) was written in 1901 by the Swedish playwright August Strindberg. It was first performed in Stockholm on 17 April 1907. It remains one of Strindberg's most admired and influential dramas, seen as an important precursor to both dramatic Expressionism and Surrealism.

Plot[]

The primary character in the play is Agnes, a daughter of the Vedic god Indra. She descends to Earth to bear witness to problems of human beings. She meets about 40 characters, some of them having a clearly symbolical value (such as four deans representing theology, philosophy, medicine, and law). After experiencing all sorts of human suffering (for example poverty, cruelty, and the routine of family life), the daughter of gods realizes that human beings are to be pitied. Finally, she returns to Heaven and this moment corresponds to the awakening from a dream-like sequence of events.

Interpretations[]

The use of a dream to represent a setting in a theatrical work appealed to the traditionally realist author in that Strindberg expresses realistic concerns such as materialism, class struggle, gender role struggle, and the destruction of traditional marriage in (as stated in the preface) "the disconnected but apparently logical form of a dream. Everything can happen; everything is possible and likely."

The play itself represents a change in his style, one that would have widespread influence on the development of modernist drama. Eschewing realism, Strindberg explained that he had modeled his play, not on the pattern of cause and effect that had characterized the well-made play, but on the associative links found in dreams. Locales dissolve and give way to each other; time both moves forward and backward. During the course of the play, a castle grows up in the garden, as if it were a plant. At the play's end, it burns, revealing a wall of suffering and despairing faces, then blossoms at its top in a huge chrysanthemum.

A description of the play's style can be found in Strindberg's prefatory note:

The characters split, double, multiply, evaporate, condense, dissolve and merge. But one consciousness rules them all: the dreamer's; for him there are no secrets, no inconsistencies, no scruples and no laws.  He does not judge or acquit, he merely relates; and because a dream is usually painful rather than pleasant, a tone of melancholy and compassion for all living creatures permeates the rambling narrative.[citation needed]

The play itself doesn't center around a single well-defined individual, but rather simply follows someone who seems to be a combination of different professional men, all confused. The feminine foil to these men is Indra's Daughter, a Christ-like figure.[citation needed] She was played in the original production by Harriet Bosse, Strindberg's ex-wife.[1]:59

Psychology of the author[]

Strindberg wrote it following a near-psychotic episode. During that time, he came to be extremely disturbed, thinking witches were attempting to murder him.[2][3] He later wrote a memoir about this period of his life. Eventually, though, he recovered, thanks to his mother-in-law.[4]

Previously, Strindberg had seen himself as a martyr, constantly persecuted by women. This affected his view of the overall relationship between the sexes, and of course his writing. He finally realized that he was playing a part in his failed relationships after his third marriage to Bosse collapsed.[citation needed] Bosse was behind the main character of A Dream Play.

The play, called by Strindberg "the child of my greatest pain," reflects the author's observation that life is an illusion, similar to a dream.

Notable productions[]

The Quarantine Inspector in a 2010 production of A Dream Play

The world premiere of A Dream Play was performed at The Swedish Theatre in April 1907, six years after it was written. Harriet Bosse, Strindberg's third wife (divorced by this time) played Indra's daughter. Victor Castegren directed the production and Carl Grabow was the designer. Critics at the time noted that the demands of the play made it nearly impossible to mount a satisfactory production. Strindberg himself desired to re-stage it in his Intimate Theatre, but ultimately it was not successful.

Max Reinhardt directed one of the most influential versions of the play. First staged in 1921 at the Royal Dramatic Theatre, Stockholm,[5]:38 later that year he mounted a more famous production at Berlin's Deutsches Theater.[6]

The play afterward attracted some of the 20th century's most celebrated directors, including , Olof Molander, Antonin Artaud, Ingmar Bergman, Roger Blin, Robert Wilson, Mike Dempsey, Robert Lepage and Alejandro Jodorowsky.[7] The German director Knut Ström staged A Dream Play in Düsseldorf in 1918, co-directed with Paul Henkels.[8]

Ingmar Bergman staged the play three times, filming the first production for TV in 1963. [9]

An edited version by Caryl Churchill[10] was staged at the National Theatre in London in 2005. The edited version was brought to other areas too, such as Edge Theatre Ensemble in Seattle[11] and Jobsite Theater in Tampa,[12] and was brought to Sheffield's Drama Studio[13] in February 2012.

A new adaptation by Emma Reay was performed at Oxford Playhouse in 2011.[14] Dreamplay: Asian Boys Vol. 1, playwright Alfian Sa'at's loose adaptation, premiered in Singapore in 2000 and was re-staged in 2014.[15]

Footnotes[]

  1. ^ Marker, Frederick J.; Marker, Lise-Lone (28 November 2002). Strindberg and Modernist Theatre: Post-Inferno Drama on the Stage. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-62377-3.
  2. ^ Treanor, Lorraine (21 June 2007). "A Dream Play". DC Theatre Scene.
  3. ^ Brustein, Robert (14 January 2001). "Dreaming a Dream Play". New Republic.
  4. ^ Brustein, Robert (15 January 2001), "On Theater", The New Republic, archived from the original on 26 January 2001
  5. ^ Styan, John L. (30 June 1982). Max Reinhardt. CUP Archive. ISBN 978-0-521-29504-8.
  6. ^ Berg, Klaus van den (1999). "Strindberg's A Dream Play: Postmodernist Visions on the Modernist Stage". Theatre Survey. 40 (2): 43–70. doi:10.1017/S0040557400003550. ISSN 1475-4533.
  7. ^ Schroeder, Jonathan E.; Stenport, Anna Westerståhl; Szalczer, Eszter (20 September 2018). August Strindberg and visual culture : the emergence of optical modernity in image, text, and theatre. New York, NY. ISBN 9781501338007. OCLC 1043147459.
  8. ^ von Rosen, Astrid (2019), "Dream-Playing the Archive: Exploring the 1915-18 Düsseldorf production of A Dream Play", August Strindberg and Visual Culture: The Emergence of Optical Modernity in Image, Text and Theatre, Bloomsbury Visual Arts, pp. 141–146, ISBN 9781501338007, retrieved 10 June 2019
  9. ^ "Ett drömspel (TV Movie 1963) - IMDb".
  10. ^ Strindberg, August. ed, Churchhill, Carol (2005) A Dream Play, Nick Hern Books, London. ISBN 978-1-85459-851-6
  11. ^ Dream, Edge Theatre, archived from the original on 7 February 2012, retrieved 30 April 2007.
  12. ^ Dream Play, Jobsite Theater, archived from the original on 18 May 2008, retrieved 16 June 2008.
  13. ^ http://sutco.wordpress.com/archives/spring-2012/a-dream-play/ (retrieved 20-7-2012)
  14. ^ McPherson, Martha (13 February 2011). "NEW WRITING: Interview with A Dream Play adapter Emma Reay". Oxford Theatre Review. Archived from the original on 20 May 2011. Retrieved 8 August 2011.
  15. ^ "Theatre review: Dreamplay Asian Boys Vol. 1 is a messy affirmation of gay lives". Singapore Press Holdings. The Straits Times. 8 July 2014. Retrieved 29 September 2014.

References[]

External links[]

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