A Slap in the Face of American Taste: Transporting He Who Gets Slapped to American Audiences

In 1915, the author and playwright Leonid Andreev debuted his play He Who Gets Slapped at the Moscow Art Theater. In the following years, this dramatic work about a vanquished intellectual-turned-circus-clown, more than any of his twenty other plays, achieved spectacular success among American audie...

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description In 1915, the author and playwright Leonid Andreev debuted his play He Who Gets Slapped at the Moscow Art Theater. In the following years, this dramatic work about a vanquished intellectual-turned-circus-clown, more than any of his twenty other plays, achieved spectacular success among American audiences, first as a play in English translation, then when adapted for the silver screen, then as a novel and, finally, as an opera. Andreev had argued in his “Letters on the Theater” that cinema would become the place for action and spectacle, diminishing the popularity of the realist theater. Not surprisingly then, a love affair, betrayal, and humiliation are all vividly on display at the outset of Victor Sjöström's He Who Gets Slapped (1924). At the end of Sjöström's cinematic adaptation, the villains are devoured by a ferocious lion, just the type of spectacle that Andreev had predicted would be possible in the medium of film. Yet, Andreev could not have anticipated a novel adaptation by George A. Carlin (1925), which would attempt to capitalize on the play's cinematic success, or an operatic adaptation by Robert Ward and Bernard Stambler (1956), that would focus on the clown's failed search for love. In retrospect, Andreev's play was astonishingly generative and was easily transported across both temporal and spatial borders, entertaining American audiences as a play, film, novel, and opera.Of particular interest is how Andreev's panpsyche drama—a type of theater that focused on the psychological development of characters rather than on external action—could be successfully transported for American audiences in so many different forms. Most certainly, a partial answer may be found in the rich cultural tradition of the circus. As the French semiotician Paul Bouissac has written, the circus “is a kind of mirror in which the culture is reflected, condensed and at the same time transcended; perhaps the circus seems to stand outside culture only because it is at its very center.”
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At the end of Sjöström's cinematic adaptation, the villains are devoured by a ferocious lion, just the type of spectacle that Andreev had predicted would be possible in the medium of film. Yet, Andreev could not have anticipated a novel adaptation by George A. Carlin (1925), which would attempt to capitalize on the play's cinematic success, or an operatic adaptation by Robert Ward and Bernard Stambler (1956), that would focus on the clown's failed search for love. In retrospect, Andreev's play was astonishingly generative and was easily transported across both temporal and spatial borders, entertaining American audiences as a play, film, novel, and opera.Of particular interest is how Andreev's panpsyche drama—a type of theater that focused on the psychological development of characters rather than on external action—could be successfully transported for American audiences in so many different forms. 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In the following years, this dramatic work about a vanquished intellectual-turned-circus-clown, more than any of his twenty other plays, achieved spectacular success among American audiences, first as a play in English translation, then when adapted for the silver screen, then as a novel and, finally, as an opera. Andreev had argued in his “Letters on the Theater” that cinema would become the place for action and spectacle, diminishing the popularity of the realist theater. Not surprisingly then, a love affair, betrayal, and humiliation are all vividly on display at the outset of Victor Sjöström's He Who Gets Slapped (1924). At the end of Sjöström's cinematic adaptation, the villains are devoured by a ferocious lion, just the type of spectacle that Andreev had predicted would be possible in the medium of film. Yet, Andreev could not have anticipated a novel adaptation by George A. 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University Press</general><scope>BAHZO</scope></search><sort><creationdate>20160426</creationdate><title>A Slap in the Face of American Taste: Transporting He Who Gets Slapped to American Audiences</title><author>White, Frederick H.</author></sort><facets><frbrtype>5</frbrtype><frbrgroupid>cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c271t-952412ae7e2feb2cfe2ca8c71fb5d14e52a5c58734a0427203e547a54b6bf7d73</frbrgroupid><rsrctype>book_chapters</rsrctype><prefilter>book_chapters</prefilter><language>eng</language><creationdate>2016</creationdate><topic>Andreev</topic><topic>Anthropology</topic><topic>Applied anthropology</topic><topic>Applied philosophy</topic><topic>Artists</topic><topic>Arts</topic><topic>Behavioral sciences</topic><topic>Betrayal</topic><topic>Carlin</topic><topic>circus</topic><topic>Circuses</topic><topic>clown</topic><topic>Clowns</topic><topic>Cognitive psychology</topic><topic>Comedians</topic><topic>Critical theory</topic><topic>Cultural anthropology</topic><topic>Cultural 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subjects Andreev
Anthropology
Applied anthropology
Applied philosophy
Artists
Arts
Behavioral sciences
Betrayal
Carlin
circus
Circuses
clown
Clowns
Cognitive psychology
Comedians
Critical theory
Cultural anthropology
Cultural studies
Disloyalty
Economic disciplines
Economics
Emotion
Emotional states
Employment
Entertainment
Film studies
Human behavior
Humiliation
Interactionism
Labor economics
Leisure studies
MGM
Movies
Musical theater
Occupations
Opera
panpsyche theater
Performing artists
Performing arts
Performing arts events
Philosophy
Psychology
Reciprocal behavior
Recreation
Retaliation
Revenge
Revenge tragedy
Situationism
Sjöström
Social criticism
Social philosophy
Spectacle
Stambler
Theater
Theater history
Theatrical genres
Traveling shows
Variety shows
Ward
title A Slap in the Face of American Taste: Transporting He Who Gets Slapped to American Audiences
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