Norman A. Bert
Theatre is
Religion
At
the beginning of a recent introduction to theatre course, one of my
general education students posed the question, "Is theatre an art
or is it just entertainment?" In its naïve way, this query
raised a broader question, one that has been asked and answered repeatedly
ever since Socrates: Just what is theatre, any way? How we answer this
question impacts the way we think about theatre and the way we practice
it. I'd like to propose an answer.
Before doing so, however, I'd like to point out that this question doesn't
seem to trouble my colleagues in the "pure" artsvisual
art and music. Oh, they may wonder where art ends and craft begins,
but what art itself is doesn't come up. No one, for instance, asks if
art is really a form of poetry or if it, instead, is a kind of music.
At least not until words become a part of the visual or aural artifact.
Then it becomes a problem. Which may suggest that theatre's constant
identity crisis may come from theatre's hybrid nature.
Regardless of the reason for the persistent question which seems to
side-step any permanent solution, I would like to argue that theatre
is religion and that it is as religionnot as poetry, rhetoric,
or entertainment but as religionthat theatre is best understood,
practiced, and criticized.
Before developing this thesis, I'd like to survey, briefly, other answers
that have been given to the question of theatre's identity. Aristotle,
to begin with, considered theatre to be a form of poetry. Productive
as this concept was for those of us who make it our business to analyze
scripts, it led Aristotle (and his disciples) to separate the dramatic
and theatrical elements of the art to the considerable disadvantage
of the latter. His statement that "Spectacle . . . of all the parts
[of drama] is the least artistic"(1) continues, understandably,
to offend designers, technicians, directors, and actors and to embarrass
those of us who otherwise admire Aristotle.
Horace further fouled the waters by his utile dulce formula that set
theatre wobbling unsteadily on the two legs of rhetoric and entertainment,
two legs that seem eternally bereft of a [page
2] unifying pelvis. The idea that theatre exists to teach
and to please raises more problems than it solves: What does theatre
teach, and how does it do so? Does a play exist for its themes? Because
of them? And how does theatre entertain? And is entertainmentdiversion
a worthy goal?
Medieval and early renaissance theorists, balancing precariously on
one of Horace's legs, treated theatre as a subspecies of rhetoric. In
this understanding, theatre's message was usually perceived in discursive,
moralistic terms, and the message came to be valued overand at
the expense ofthe medium. It would eventually become the fate
of Thomas Rymer and his fellow neo-classicists to demonstrateby
their insistence upon the rhetorical nature of dramahow ridiculous
this viewpoint could be.
The nineteenth-century realists reconceptualized theatre as sciencea
branch of sociology, medicine for human society. In their pursuit of
medicinal theatre they attacked middle-class values and raised the fourth
wall between the stage and the auditorium, with the result that they
alienated their primary audience and drove them into the open arms of
movie producers.
Meanwhile, Americans opted for Horace's other leg and pursued theatre
as commercial entertainment. By so doing, we made escapism a virtue
and treated theatre as a market commodity rather than an art form.
None of these understandings of theatreas poetry, as rhetoric,
as entertainment, education, scientific investigation, or industryprovided
a suitable basis for the understanding, practice, and criticism of theatre.
Realizing that theatre is actually religion does provide such a basis.
Let me explain what I mean by "religion." Simply defined,
religion is the creation and reenactment of myth for the purpose of
realizingin both senses of that word as "perceiving"
and "making actual"and celebrating the relationship
of human beings with supra-human, spiritual forces. In this sense, the
human endeavor we call "religion" parallels two other major
human endeavorswork and philosophy. Each of these three endeavors,
philosophy, work, and religion, contribute importantly to human life.
Philosophy (in both its pure form and its younger incarnation as science)
understands and explains nature and human experience; work [page
3] manipulates nature and creates and distributes goods;
and religion relates human beings to spiritual forces beyond their control.
A word about those super-human, spiritual forces: They certainly include
the deity or deities, those spiritual personages or forces that transcend
time and space. But they should also be understood as including more
temporal and immanent entities such as the Zeitgeist, the organizational
power we call natural law, the world-wide network of consciousness that
Teilard de Chardin called the nousphere, and perhaps even national and
ethnic "spirits" such as "el Raza." These forces
form the context for our lives, and from the beginning of human consciousness
we have used religion to relate to them. For some two thousand years,
we've used theatre as a tool in this religious endeavor.
Religion works by creating and reenacting myths. Myths, very simply,
are the complex of what we know and believe about ourselves and our
world, perceived and expressed as stories. Because they capsulize our
understanding of ultimate reality, mythsfar from being untrue
fablesare essentially true. As Christopher Vogler put it in his
Writer's Journey, "A myth, as Joseph Campbell was fond of
saying, is a metaphor for a mystery beyond human comprehension. It is
a comparison that helps us understand, by analogy, some aspect of our
mysterious selves. A myth, in this way of thinking, is not an untruth
but a way of reaching profound truth".(2)
We
honor the level of truth in myths by calling them "sacred"not
because they are connected with any specific, formal religion, because
they need not be so connected, but because they penetrate to the heart
of what we know and believe. As philosopher of religion Mircea Eliade
wrote, "Myth narrates a sacred history . . . . [M]yth . . . becomes
the exemplary model for all significant human activities . . . . The
myth is regarded as a sacred story, and hence a 'true history,' because
it always deals with realities".(3)
And
while myths may be communicated through narration, formal religions
have typically communicated them most characteristically by reenacting
them. Whether these reenactments are as simple as a Baptist communion
service, as stylized as a Catholic high mass, as imitative as a Native
American hunting dance, as sensuous as a Canaanite fertility ceremony,
[page 4] or as violent as a Santeria
sacrifice, they underline the basic dramatic nature of myth. Judaistic
scholar Raphael Patai wrote: "Myths are dramatic stories
that form a sacred charter either authorizing the continuance of ancient
institutions, customs, rites, and beliefs . . . or approving alterations".(4)
(Emphasis added.)
So, to recapitulate: Religion relates us to the supra-human forces that
surround us by creating and reenacting myths. Theatre, no matter how
"secular" its content, is in this sense of the word, religion.
The many parallels that exist between theatre and formally practiced
religion justify considering theatre as religion. To begin with, theatre
has all the parts of religion. At the core of formal religions lies
the cultus, the system of religious performance. The cultus reenacts
the myth through words or liturgy and actions or ritual.
The personnel who execute the cultus, the clergy or priests,
frequently wear specific clothing to emphasize their function (vestments),
and use various objects to perform the ritualsvessels, symbolic
weapons, wands, censers, candles, and the like. The priests execute
the cultus on behalf of, and frequently in the presence of members of
the community, the worshippers. And the cultus typically takes
place in a sacred space constructed or at least enhanced for the purpose,
the temple.
It takes no mental leap to find each of these elements present also
in theatre. The myths executed in the theatre take the form of plays,
and they are performed through spoken word and actiondialogue
and business,which parallel religious liturgy and ritual. In place
of clergy, the theatre uses actors who wear the vestments we call costumes
and utilize props in place of the tools of religious ritual. The whole
performance takes place in the presence of, and on behalf of a community,
the audience, and typically occurs in a theatre specifically constructed
for the purpose-the temple of this religious endeavor.
As the myths are central to religion, so plays are central to theatre,
and further, the manner in which plays come into being parallels the
creation of myth in religion. Religious mythsas well as liturgy
and ritualsare created, imported, lost, phased in and out, and
modified. While this mobility of myth may be less apparent in religions
of the book like Judaism, Islam, and Christianity it nevertheless functioned
in them at pre-written stages. And even these religions whose basic
myths are frozen in scriptures constantly reinterpret them in the [page
5] oral retelling. In a similar manner, each season of theatre
creates new plays while borrowing, reviving, reinterpreting, and laying
aside others. In both theatre and religion, the principles that govern
the interplay of inertia and change in material are the samethe
received tradition and the current needs of the community.
Which brings us to the matter of the community: Like religion, theatre
is practiced in a community for a community. Rarely in either religion
or theatre does the entire population of an area attend the reenacted
event; but those who do attend come out of the larger community, bring
with them a consciousness of the larger community, and return to the
larger community where, subtly or overtly, they share the effect of
their participation in the cultic event. Just as religion typically
requires or implies the presence of worshippers, so theatre requires
the simultaneous presence of performer and audience.
The degree to which the laity actually participates in the cultic eventwhether
in formal religion or in theatreshifts depending on the time,
the place, and the culture. Worshippers in present day charismatic,
African-American congregations contribute significantly to their services
both vocally and physically, while medieval Catholics might step into
the church only momentarily to observe the Elevation of the Host before
going on about their business. Elizabethan audiences participated enthusiastically
in the presentational plays they attended, but neoclassicism and realism
diminished audience participation by eliminating asides and soliloquies
and by establishing the fourth wall convention. But regardless of the
nature of lay participation, theatre parallels religion in the importance
the community plays in the artistic event.
Furthermore, theatre, like religious cultus, always takes place in the
present. In religious worship, the point of the liturgy and ritual is
to reenact the myth in such a way that it becomes part of the worshippers'
current experience. In similar fashion, regardless of the time frame
of the events portrayed on stage, the audience perceives them as occurring
in the present. As Susanne Langer pointed out, theatre differs in this
respect from fiction: In reading a noveleven one written in the
present tensewe perceive the events as having taken place in the
past.(5) Theatre has a religious immediacy. It should not be surprising,
then, when plays that [page 6] deal
with formal religious content, such as the medieval cycle plays, use
anachronism to reinforce the audience's experience of the myth as current
event.