Saturday, July 18, 2020

223. "HAPPY DAYS" and "ACT WITHOUT WORDS." From my (unpublished) ENCYCLOPEDIA OF THE NEW YORK STAGE, 1970-1975

Hume Cronyn, Jessica Tandy.
HAPPY DAYS and ACT WITHOUT WORDS [Dramatic Revivals] A: Samuel Beckett; D: Alan Schneider; S: Douglas W. Schmidt; C: Sara Brook; L: John Gleason; P: Repertory Theatre of Lincoln Center; T: Forum Theatre (OB); 11/20/72-12/17/72 (16)

Jessica Tandy.
These short Beckett works were staged as part of a Beckett festival at the Forum, when that lovely theatre (now the Mitzi E. Newhouse Theatre) was threatened with destruction to make it over into a movie theatre/museum. The conversion never took place, largely because of the public outcry. The plays were smoothly staged there by Alan Schneider, then America’s foremost Beckett director. They seemed, under the circumstances, a fitting tribute to man’s indomitable will to survive in the face of life’s brutal realities.

The minimalist character of Beckett’s dramaturgy, as well as his power to convey great truths in a devastatingly understated way, was highly regarded by the critics. John Simon expostulated that Beckett’s “is a drama reduced beyond the absurd to the molecular structure of our condition, to atoms of suffering and laughter. Beckettian man is laughing through his cursing and weeping; cursing God, bewailing his birth, laughing at himself.”

“Happy Days” was first seen locally in 1965 at the Cherry Lane Theatre. It quickly become a lodestone for leading character actresses seeking a challenging role. Winnie (Jessica Tandy) is an aging lady buried up to her waist (and, later, her neck) in a mound of sand. The image is of death creeping up on her as she blithely speaks on and on, surrounded by her few necessities and a similarly failing, flailing old husband, Willie (Hume Cronyn, Tandy’s real-life spouse).
Hume Cronyn.
Winnie is intended for a tour de force performer. The critics took pains to compare Tandy to her predecessors in the role. They showed great respect for her work, although several spoke of an uncomfortable stridency in her pitch. Hers was not, perhaps, the definitive interpretation but it was masterful nonetheless, “lean with the frustrations of memory,” said Clive Barnes. She made Winnie “a gentle woman with a lightness of touch, sensibility, gallantry, and a clear, fluty voice that barely covers panic.”

The second piece, “Act without Words,” was a 10-minute, one-man pantomime for Hume Cronyn in which, dressed in a white suit, a man grapples valiantly with a frustrating series of blows, kicks, and deprivations from powers outside himself until he seems to lie on death’s doorstep. Cronyn’s agility was applauded, but the piece failed to maintain continued interest. Cronyn also acted "Krapp's Last Tape" during the Beckett festival.

Tandy won a Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Performance, which included her work in Beckett’s “Not I” on the bill with "Krapp's Last Tape."