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Jonathan Miller Directs Chekhov
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 January 2009
Abstract
David Allen's sequence of features for NTQ on modern British approaches to directing Chekhov began in No. 8 (1986) with a documentary study of Mike Alfreds's productions, and continued with a reconstruction of David Jones's production of Ivanov for the RSC in No. 15 (1988). Here, he explores the approach to Chekhov of Jonathan Miller (currently artistic director at the Old Vic), mainly through an analysis of Miller's production of Three Sisters, first seen at Guildford in April 1976, and subsequently transferred to the Cambridge Theatre, London, on 22 June of that year. This is complemented by original interview material with the director, and David Allen also draws on Miller's Chichester production of The Seagull in 1973, which was revived for Greenwich Theatre in January 1974. The analysis focuses especially on Miller's sense of the ways in which Chekhov perceived and dramatized human passions, his presentation of the nuances of personality, and of the changes wrought by passing time.
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1989
References
Notes and References
1. There had been two performances by the Stage Society in 1920.
2. Ackland, Rodney, ‘From Komisarjevsky to Jonathan Miller’, The Spectator, 18 09 1976Google Scholar.
3. Ibid. [my italics].
4. Spurling, Hilary, The Observer, 27 06 1976Google Scholar.
5. Stanislavsky, Constantin, My Life in Art, translated by Robbins, J. J. (Geoffrey Bles, 1924)Google Scholar.
6. Nemirovich-Danchenko, Vladimir, My Life in the Russian Theatre, quoted in File on Chekhov, compiled by Worrall, Nick (Methuen, 1986)Google Scholar. [My italics.]
7. Stanislavsky, op. cit.
8. Grey, Malcolm, Newcastle Evening Chronicle, 1 06 1976Google Scholar.
9. Morley, Sheridan, Punch 7 07 1976Google Scholar.
10. ‘When another style is introduced…mundane about life’: these remarks are taken from Subsequent Performances by Miller, Jonathan (Faber and Faber, 1986)Google Scholar. In transcribing my interview with Miller, I have taken the liberty, as here, of interposing certain phrases from the chapter on Chekhov in Miller's book, where I have felt that this would help to clarify his point.
11. ‘A play should be written in which people arrive, go away, have dinner, talk about the weather, and play cards. Life must be exactly as it is; and the people as they are – not on stilts’. Quoted by Fen, Elisaveta in her introduction to Chekhov: Plays (Penguin, 1959)Google Scholar.
12. ‘Chekhov says somewhere…like real life’, from Subsequent Performances.
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22. All quotations from the play are from Fen's, Elisavetatranslation (Penguin, 1959)Google Scholar, which was used for the production.
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30. Irving Wardle, op. cit.
31. Hilary Spurling, op. cit.
32. David Magarshack, op. cit.
33. Irving Wardle, op. cit.
34. Subsequent Performances.
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43. Interviewed by Robert Cushman in First Night Impressions.
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47. ‘The plays float … brought out’ from Subsequent Performances.
48. ‘All these little characteristics … social reality’, from Subsequent Performances.
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52. John Elsom, op. cit.
53. ‘In a similar way’, Miller suggests, ‘there was a canonical viewpoint from which to look at scenes in European painting, up to the Impressionists’ encounter with Japanese art. As a result of that encounter, coupled with their experience of photography, artists started to recompose scenes. The experience of seeing Degas's painting for the first time, in which a horse is cut off at the edge of the frame in a scene of longshot, must have been quite startling. People thought of it as a distancing effect, but in fact it was a way of refocusing their attention on aspects of the scene to which they had not previously attended.'
54. ‘The plays are designed … almost every page’, from Subsequent Performances.
55. Subsequent Performances.
56. Hilary Spurling, op. cit.
57. ‘It spins, slows … to a standstill’, from Subsequent Performances.
58. Michael Billington, op. cit.
59. ‘Things are soon forgotten … that's all there is to life’, from Subsequent Performances.
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