the necessary remedy
by Douglas Messerli
Jane Bowles In the
Summer House (New York: Random
House, 1954)
It was the year of Queen Elizabeth’s
coronation, the year that saw the first color television set, the great flood
in the North Sea and “great” tornadoes in Michigan (the storms killing more
than 200 people). The Platters and The Four Tops began their musical careers.
The year saw the deaths of two great theater legends, Eugene O’Neill and Lee Shubert
(one of the three legendary Shubert brothers).
Broadway saw productions of Tennessee Williams’ Camino Real, Arthur Miller’s The
Crucible, and Leonard Bernstein’s Wonderful
Town. I was six years of age. Despite all these facts and my long-standing
conviction that the 1950s is today a highly misunderstood decade—more
sophisticated than we imagine it today—I am still trying to comprehend what it
must have been like to encounter Jane Bowles’ play that year of 1953, which ran
for only 55 performances on Broadway.
The play actually had a history that went back to the late 1940s.
Bowles’ friend Oliver Smith evidently had been trying to convince Jane to write
a play for several years, and in 1946 and 1947, in Vermont and Paris, she wrote
much of the play, the first act of which was published in Harper’s Bazaar in 1947. In 1951 the play was performed at the
Hedgerow Theater in Moylan, Pennsylvania, with Miriam Hopkins in the lead. Just
before the Broadway production, Jane’s husband Paul came from Morocco to New
York and wrote music for the work, seeing it through rehearsals and production.
If Paul Bowles is to be believed, it is clear that the lead actor of the
play, the great Judith Anderson, did not know what to make of the character.
“Who am I? Who am I supposed to be?” she often asked in her frustrated
interruptions of rehearsals. Evidently even the onstage psychoanalyst could not
answer her. No one seemed to understand what the play was about.
Bowles herself clearly wanted actors that could play their roles in the
grand manner of highly theatrical performance. She hand-selected both Judith
Anderson for the role of Mrs. Eastman Cuevas and the divine Mildred Dunnock for
Mrs. Constable. A young actor named James Dean was rejected for the lesser role
of Lionel because he was too “normal.”
For Bowles narrative does not function in a traditional manner. There is
no straightforward “plot” to this play, nor any of the tightly knit
interconnecting patterns of scenes and acts that make up most so-called
Broadway plays. Indeed the set changes in every scene of Act One—as it moves
from a garden in Southern California to the beach and back to the garden—and
Act Two, which occurs in the nearby popular restaurant. The characters shift
focus throughout, as the major figure of Act I disappears—along with numerous
other characters, including husband, sister-in-law, her daughter, and
servants—from the very center of the play. Casual figures such as Lionel, whom
we first encounter carrying an advertising placard displaying Neptune, become
central characters. A young girl who appears briefly in two scenes (becoming a
victim of either accident or murder) is “replaced” by her mother, who
ultimately becomes perhaps the central figure in the play. A restaurant
worker—Jean Stapleton in the original production—is later introduced, becoming
an important voice of the second act. In short, the play moves forward through
a near structureless series of “surprises,” twists, and turns in characters,
plot, and meaning.
It is the emotional states of its
figures that drive this work forward—and, at times, backward. Act One
establishes the central character’s role and symbolic position immediately as
Gertrude Eastman Cuevas stands upon the balcony of her beach home calling to
her daughter below : “Are you in the summer house?....Are you in the summer
house?” wherein her daughter indeed has sequestered herself. Although she is
front and center in the scene, Mrs. Eastman Cuevas is equally removed from all,
even from the man whom she admits she may marry, Mr. Solares, who soon enters
with sister, her daughter, and servants in tow. The comical picnic that
follows—with Solares and family in the garden, Gertrude on the balcony, and
Molly hidden away—sets the tone of the entire work: absurdity, imperiousness,
humility, and complete acceptance of all of these are its matter.
Solares, the courtier of the haughty Mrs. Eastman Cuevas, politely
attempts to present the strange scene as one of normality, while his sister,
Esperanza, crudely pokes holes in the pretense of both. When Mrs. Eastman
Cuevas expresses her love of the ocean, Esperanza declares that she “hates it.”
When Gertrude (believing her first husband was not sufficiently interested in
his job) asks Solares if he likes his work, Esperanza interrupts: “He don’t
like no business—he likes to stay home and sleep—and eat.” Later, upon
Gertrude’s disapproval of such a heavy meal in the middle of the day, the
overweight Esperanza quickly catalogues the heavy breakfasts and lunches she
and her family consume: “For breakfast: chocolate and sugar bread: for lunch:
soup, beans, eggs, rice, roast pork with potatoes and guava paste…Next day:
soup, eggs, beans, rice, chicken with rice and guava paste—other day: soup,
eggs, beans, rice, stewed meat, roasted baby pig and guava paste. Other day:
soup, rice, beans, grilled red snapper, roasted goat meat and guava paste.” So
much for normality!
Enter Lionel and friends bearing placards of Neptune and a mermaid to
advertise the local restaurant, The Lobster Bowl. Molly, called out of her
hideaway to give them water, is delighted by the marvel of their costumes, and
Lionel, clearly attracted to her, gives her a little plastic lobster as a gift.
As if the stage were not filled enough as it was with its strange assortment of
characters, Gertrude’s new lodger, Vivian, suddenly appears. She is as
enthusiastic and excitable as Esperanza has been sarcastically honest. As
quickly as she is whisked away into the house, her mother, Mrs. Constable,
appears, worried about her overwrought daughter’s mental health.
In short, within a single scene Bowles has spilled 14 characters onto
the stage—all but one in the play—expressing their various emotional states as
if midway through a grand opera. And, in this sense, no further scenes can
quite compare with the play’s first. The rest of the work, scene by scene,
explores the various relations between these bigger-than-life figures.
Scene two presents Molly one month later, temporarily out of hiding, as
she encounters the vivacious and avaricious Vivian skillfully attempting to
take her place in the hearts of both Gertrude and Lionel. The scene ends with
Gertrude, Solares and his extended family, and Mrs. Constable in search of her
beloved “bird.” The audience can only suspect what—through her slightly
hysterical interrogations of her daughter—Gertrude clearly also suspects, that
Molly has pushed Vivian over the cliff.
Scene three, one month later, presents the aftermath (celebration is an
incorrect word) of the double weddings of Gertrude and her daughter. As the
women each prepare to leave their homes and face separation, with neither one
seeming to perceive any future with her new husband, the dramatic attention
shifts to the drunken Mrs. Constable, who, with her daughter’s death and no
other purpose in life, has stayed on in the beach community. The interchange
between these strong women, where Mrs. Constable expresses her preference for
the sharp-tongued truth-teller Mrs. Lopez over the imposing bitch-liar she
perceives in Mrs. Eastman Cuevas, presents a stunning encounter between a being
who struggles to keep in control and another who has freed herself from nearly
all constraints. It is as comical as it is shocking.
Act II, made up of two scenes, is nearly emptied of the first act’s
dramatic force. The Lobster Bowl, where Lionel works, has become merely another
“summer house” for Molly, as she passes the time with card games and reading
and rereading her mother’s letters from Mexico. The witty interchanges between
Inez, waitress in the restaurant, and Mrs. Constable are what saves these dark
and dreary scenes from bringing the play to a near standstill. Yet, the play
does begin to unwind, and Lionel, recognizing the need for change, suddenly
becomes courageous enough to demand that he and Molly move away to St. Louis,
where his brother is involved in selling barbecues. The hilarious irony of his
shift from boiler to barbie is almost lost in the darkly comic, but often wise,
discussions between Mrs. Constable and Molly, and the older woman’s attempts to
convince her to follow Lionel, to escape the dark confines of her life.
Molly, however, has word that her mother is returning, and she awaits
her arrival with joy and consternation. Her mother’s entry and her declarations
of the horrible (and to the viewer/reader, hilarious) life with the family in
Mexico merely point up her selfishness. She is happy nowhere, neither on the
balcony of the vine-covered beach house nor the highly peopled rooms of her
husband’s abode. Now nearly powerless, she is must again find someone she can
control. But just as the view of the garden was altered with her mother’s
departure, so does her mother now seem changed in Molly’s perception. As her mother
desperately tries to rein in her daughter by telling Mrs. Constable that Molly
killed Vivian (which, interestingly enough, Mrs. Constable denies), Molly
suddenly recognizes that she must escape, that she must leave with Lionel. Mrs.
Eastman Cuevas, like Mrs. Constable, is left without a purpose, almost a child
again herself, recalling some horrible unnamed event that we suspect was
probably centered around an attempt to gain love.
Without wishing to sound as if I have undergone too many viewings of The Wizard of Oz (a movie, I admit, I
saw again quite recently), I might suggest that Bowles’s characters could be
compared with the three friends of Dorothy in search of a heart (Mrs.
Eastman-Cuevas), a brain (Mrs. Constable), and courage (Lionel) in order to
save the young heroine from the mistakes of their lives. The poignant
conversation between Mrs. Constable and Molly near the end of the play point up
the problems of nearly everyone involved in Bowles’ fantastical journey.
Warned in her mother’s letters not to dream, Molly is nearly ready to
give up her life and submit again to her mother’s control. “Why shouldn’t you
dream?” asks Mrs. Constable (I can hear Mildred Dunnock’s voice in the very
question). “I used to waste a lot of time day-dreaming,” answers Molly. “Why
shouldn’t you dream? Why didn’t she want you to?” Mrs. Constable persists.
“Because she wanted me to grow up to be wonderful and strong like she is,”
responds the young girl. Mrs. Constable and we, the audience, know that her
mother—having abandoned all dreams—is neither wonderful nor strong. Like Vivian
at the cliff, the balcony is merely a height from which one can easily fall.
And so too is the ephemeral surf Mrs. Constable prefers—the foam on her face that
makes her believe, momentarily, that life is beginning once more—insufficient
to help one go on living. The needs of the heart and mind alone are never
enough. One must have the courage to act. As Lionel puts it, the longer one
puts off acting the harder it is to do so. “Suppose I kept on closing that door
against the ocean every night because the ocean made me sad and then one night
I went to open it and I couldn’t even find the door. Suppose I couldn’t tell it
apart from the wall any more. Then it would be too late and we’d be shut in
here forever once and for all.” Jane Bowles describes the necessary remedy
simply as a stage direction: Molly’s flight is sudden.
Los
Angeles, July 14, 2005