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Bertolt Brecht
1898 - 1956

The German author Bertolt Brecht is probably the greatest German
playwright of the first half of the 20th century. His works were
often considered controversial because of his revolutionary
dramatic theory and his political beliefs.
Bertolt Brecht was born on Feb. 10, 1898, in Augsburg. The son
of a Catholic businessman, Brecht was raised, however, in his
mother's Protestant faith. In 1917 he matriculated at the
University of Munich to study philosophy and medicine. In 1918
he served as a medical orderly at a military hospital in
Augsburg. The unpleasantness of this experience confirmed his
hatred of war and stimulated his sympathy for the unsuccessful
Socialist revolution of 1919.
Early Works
In 1919 Brecht returned to his studies but devoted himself
increasingly to writing plays. His first full-length plays were
Baal (1922) and Trommeln in der Nacht (1922; Drums in the
Night). In September 1922 Drums in the Night was presented at
the Munich Kammerspiele, where Brecht was subsequently employed
as resident playwright.
Brecht's early plays, including Im Dickicht der Städte (1923;
Jungle of the Cities), are works in which he gradually frees
himself from the expressionist conventions of the avant-garde
theater of his day, especially its idealism. He parodies and
ridicules the lofty sentiments and visionary optimism of his
predecessors (Georg Kaiser, Fritz von Unruh, and others) while
exploiting their technical advances. Baal portrays the
brutalization of all finer feeling by a drunken vagabond. In
Drums in the Night, a drama on the returned-soldier theme, the
hero rejects the opportunity for a splendid death on the
barricades, preferring to make love to his woman. Such cynicism
recalls Frank Wedekind, Brecht's most revered model. Jungle of
the Cities decries the possibility of spiritual freedom and
reasserts the primacy of materialistic values. In these two
plays Brecht emphasizes the artificiality of the theatrical
medium and disregards conventional psychological motivation.
In 1924 Brecht moved to Berlin and for the next 2 years was
associated as a playwright with Max Reinhardt's Deutsches
Theater. His comedy Mann ist Mann (1926; A Man's a Man) studies
the social conditioning that transforms an Irish packer into a
machine gunner and shows a development toward a terser, more
intellectual style. By 1926 Brecht had begun a serious study of
Marxism. Also during this period the director Erwin Piscator was
teaching him much about the techniques of experimental theater
(for example, the use onstage of films, projections, and
slides).
Plays with Music
Brecht collaborated with the composer Kurt Weill on Mahagonny
(or Kleine Mahagonny), a play with music written for the
Baden-Baden festival of 1927. They then wrote Die
Dreigroschenoper (1928; The Threepenny Opera), which was
triumphantly performed in Berlin on Aug. 31, 1928. This was the
first work to make Brecht famous.
Brecht based The Threepenny Opera on Elisabeth Hauptmann's
translation of The Beggar's Opera (produced 1728) by the English
dramatist John Gay. While adapting and modernizing Gay's balled
opera, Brecht retained the main events of the plot but added
topical satirical bite through his own lyrics. In this work he
develops to its first high point his own special language - that
peculiar amalgam of street-colloquial, Marxist-philosophical,
and quasi-biblical diction laced with cabaret wit and lyrical
pathos and bound together with the unrelenting force of parody.
Brecht borrows freely from many sources - among them François
Villon and Rudyard Kipling - but his undisguised plagiarism
generally supports sharp parody.
Brecht wrote several more plays with music in collaboration with
Weill and with Paul Hindemith. Notable are Aufstieg und Fall der
Stadt Mahagonny (1929; The Rise and Fall of the City of
Mahagonny) and Das Badener Lehrstück vom Einverständnis (1929;
The Didactic Play of Baden: On Consent). The latter deals with
the issue of "consent" - consent to the extinction of the
individual for the sake of the progress of the masses. In Die
Massnahme (1930; The Measure Taken), for which Hanns Eisler
composed the score, Brecht publicly espouses Communist doctrine
and concedes the necessity for the elimination of erring party
members. The playwright's love of parody is well illustrated in
Die Ausnahme und die Regel (1930; The Exception and the Rule)
and in Die heilige Johanna der Schlachthöfe (1932; St. Joan of
the Stockyards), in which a Salvation Army girl strives to save
the souls of Chicago capitalists.
Dramatic Theory
Brecht uses the term "epic theater" to characterize his
innovative dramatic theory. His new type of drama is
non-Aristotelian - that is, his aim is not to purge the
audience's emotions but to awaken the spectators' minds and
communicate truth to them. In order to achieve this end, drama
must not hypnotize or entrance the audience but must continually
remind them that what they are watching is not real, but merely
a representation, a vehicle for an idea or a fact.
Brecht uses the word "alienation" (Verfremdung) to describe his
method of helping the audience to be receptive to his dramatic
intentions. His technique of alienation includes elimination of
most conventional stage props, use of charts, slides, and
messages flashed on screens, direct involvement of the audience
through characters who step out of their roles to function as
commentators, and many carefully planned incongruities. Finally,
Brecht requires that actors work in a new way: they must not
identify with the dramatic characters but, on the contrary, must
always demonstrate that they are playing a role. Alienation is
Brecht's fundamental dramatic device, and his parody is of
course closely dependent on this technique.
Major Dramas
From 1933 to 1948 Brecht was an exile, first in Scandinavia,
then in the U.S.S.R., and after 1941 in the United States. In
1933 his books were among those publicly burned in Berlin. He
continued to write in exile, and in 1936 he completed Die
Rundköpfe und die Spitzköpfe (The Roundheads and the Peakheads)
and Furcht und Elend des Dritten Reiches (Fear and Misery of the
Third Reich), which directly attacked Hitler's regime.
In 1939 Leben des Galilei (Galileo) opened the sequence of
Brecht's great plays; there followed Mutter Courage (1939;
Mother Courage), Der gute Mensch von Sezuan (1941; The Good Man
of Szechuan), and Der kaukasische Kreidekreis (1943; The
Caucasian Chalk Circle). Other important works belonging to this
period are Herr Puntila und sein Knecht Matti (1941; Puntila and
His Man Matti) and Der aufhaltsame Aufstieg des Arturo Ui (1941;
The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui).
These plays demonstrate that Brecht's power and depth as a
dramatist are to a high degree independent of, and even
override, his theoretical principles. They display an
astonishing capacity for creating living characters, a moving
compassion, technical virtuosity, and parodic wit. Mother
Courage, a series of scenes from the life of a camp follower
during the Thirty Years War, is often misunderstood because the
overwhelmingly vital portrait of the central character arouses
the audience's sympathies. But Brecht's actual concern was to
demonstrate the self-perpetuating folly of Mother Courage's
naive collaboration with the system that exploits her and
destroys her family.
Other Works
In 1948 Brecht settled in East Berlin, where he remained until
his death. He and his wife, the actress Helene Weigel, founded
the Berliner Ensemble in September 1949 with ample financial
support from the state. This group became the most famous
theater company in East Germany and the foremost interpreter of
Brecht. He himself devoted much of his time to directing. He
wrote no new plays except Die Tage der Commune (1949; The Days
of the Commune) but adapted several - among them Molière's Don
Juan and Shakespeare's Coriolanus. There is some evidence that
he modified his austere conception of the function of drama and
conceded the importance of the theater as a vehicle for
entertainment.
The lyric poetry Brecht wrote in these years shows a concern for
personal rather than universal or mass experience. Recent
criticism has increasingly recognized Brecht's eminence as a
lyric poet. His verse of the 1920s, in particular Hauspostille
(1927; Domestic Breviary), is iconoclastic balladry of a
savagely satirical kind. However, his keen interest in Chinese
and Japanese poetic forms led through the Svendborger Gedichte
(1939) to the austere delicacy of the Buckower Elegien (1954).
Brecht also wrote The Threepenny Novel (1934), which is based on
TheThreepenny Opera, and some skillful short stories,
Kalendergeschichten (1949; Tales from the Calendar ). He died of
a heart attack in August 1956.
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This web page was last updated on:
09 December, 2008
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