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Tristan Tzara's Mouchoir de nuages

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 January 2009

Extract

Tzara's role in the Dada onslaught on the theatre is well known. His Le Cœur à gaz (1921) is often regarded as the masterpiece of that genre. It is sometimes overlooked, though, that Tzara's theatrical activity did not cease with the disintegration of the Dada movement. His fourth and final play, Mouchoir de nuages (1924), is often relegated to the status of a minor coda to his earlier experiments. It is certainly a less revolutionary work than Le Cœur à gaz or the two celestial adventures of Monsieur Antipyrine. On its own terms, though – that is, as an attempt at theatrical renewal rather than theatrical demolition – it is no less noteworthy than its more notorious predecessors.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © International Federation for Theatre Research 1989

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References

Notes

1. Œuvres complètes, I (Paris: Flammarion, 1975), p. 301Google Scholar. Subsequent page numbers refer to this edition.

2. de Massot, Pierre, ‘Avec Tristan Tzara’, Paris-Journal, 20 06 1924.Google Scholar

3. Zinder, David, The surrealist connection: an approach to the surrealist aesthetic of theatre (UMI Research Press, 1980), p. 74.Google Scholar

4. Matthews, J. H., Theatre in Dada and Surrealism (Syracuse, U.P., 1974), p. 43.Google Scholar

5. Ibid., p. 40.

6. ‘Tristan Tzara va cultiver ses vices’, Journal du Peuple, 14 04 1923.Google Scholar

8. Breton, , Manifestes du surrealisme (Pauvert, 1962), p. 48.Google Scholar

9. Tzara, , ‘Le Secret du Mouchoir de Nuages’, Integral (Bucharest) no. 2, 1 04 1925Google Scholar (text reproduced in Œuvres complètes, I. p. 689).

10. Œuvres complètes, p. 303.Google Scholar

11. ‘Ajoutons que la mise en scène révélera à notre public les ressources encore insoupçonnées du théâtre moderne (projections tenant lieu de décor, chœur antique et cependant moderne). Ce sera toute une époque’ (my italics) – Etienne de Beaumont in ‘Les Soirées de Paris’, Nouvelles littéraires, 10 05 1924Google Scholar. It is just possible, though, that there was some confusion in the Count's mind with Loïe Fuller's multi-coloured spotlights which were indeed a feature of the production.

12. Catulle-Mendès, Jane, La Presse, 21 05 1924.Google Scholar

13. Comœdia (Paris), 18 05 1924Google Scholar. Cf. the following: ‘Le Poète, ayant raté sa vie, s'élève au ciel dans une assomption assez bien réussie scéniquement’ – Gabriel Boissy, unattributed cutting, Fonds Picabia-Tzara, Bibliothèque Jacques Doucet.

14. Crevel, R., ‘Mouchoir de nuages’, Nouvelles littéraires, 24 05 1924.Google Scholar

15. de Massot, P., ‘Avec Tristan Tzara’, Paris Journal, 24 06 1924.Google Scholar

16. Galantiere, L., ‘Paris News Letter’, New Tork Herald Tribune, 22 06 1924.Google Scholar

17. Aragon, , ‘Petite note sur les collages chez Tristan Tzara’, in Les Collages (Paris: Hermann, 1965), p. 144.Google Scholar