Drama and Democracy: An Exploration of Democracy in Arthur Miller's Plays on Pilsen Stages
Date issued
2011
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Západočeská univerzita v Plzni
Abstract
The aim of this article is to analyse the rendition of democracy in Miller's plays performed
on Pilsen stages in terms of the signifi cant social and political events and developments in
the second half of the 20th century. Not long after World War II, the formerly tense wartime
atmosphere seemed to come back to life on the stage. To state a particular instance, All My
Sons, produced on September 25, 1948 under the direction of Zdeněk Hofb auer with Ota
Ornest's translation, not only mirrored the wartime era, but, in some respects, also anticipated
the era that was to come. The next production of a play by Miller, A View from the
Bridge, under the direction of Jiří Dalík using Jan Grossman's translation, had its premiere
only in 1962. It was staged during the directorship of Václav Špidla (1959–1963), whose
version of Macbeth (1963) established a short, new theatrical era in Pilsen Theatre. During
Jan Fišer's directorship (1963–1969), two productions of Miller's plays were staged: Incident
at Vichy (1965) and The Crucible (1967). With respect to the socio-political climate,
both interpretations might have anticipated the loosening of the political atmosphere towards
the late 1960s, which was nevertheless disrupted by “normalization”. It is thus
possible to suppose that democracy might have constituted a distinguishing feature of both
Description
Subject(s)
drama, demokracie, druhá světová válka, politické procesy, divadelní inscenace, Divadlo J. K. Tyla v Plzni, Arthur Miller
Citation
Acta Fakulty filozofické Západočeské univerzity v Plzni. 2011, č. 3, s. 14-25.