|
In the
summer of 1931,
three young
idealists,
Harold Clurman,
Cheryl Crawford
and Lee
Strasberg, were
inspired by a
passionate dream
of transforming
the American
theater. They
recruited 28
actors to form a
permanent
ensemble
dedicated to
dramatizing the
life of their
times. They
conceived The
Group Theatre as
a response to
what they saw as
the
old-fashioned
light
entertainment
that dominated
the theater of
the late 1920’s.
Their vision was
of a new theater
that would mount
original
American plays
to mirror --
even change --
the life of
their troubled
times. Over its
ten years and
twenty
productions,
they not only
met these goals,
but altered the
course of
American theater
forever.
The Group
Theatre was a
company based on
an ensemble
approach to
acting. First
seen in the work
of the Moscow
Art Theater, the
ensemble
approach
proposed a
highly personal
and cooperative
method. That
individual
actors played
individual parts
was no longer
important. The
focus was on a
cast that was
familiar and
believable as a
whole. If the
actors had
relationships
off-stage, then
the
relationships on
stage would not
only seem, but
be more "real."
As the members
of the ensemble
grew to know
each other, this
familiarity was
successfully
reflected in
their work.
Based on the
innovative
techniques of
the Russian
master
Constantin
Stanislavsky,
Lee Strasberg
came up with
"the method."
The method, or
"method acting",
as it has come
to be known,
proposed a
series of
physical and
psychological
exercises. It
held, for
example, that if
a part called
for fear, the
actor must
remember fear
and bring this
honest emotion
to the stage.
These exercises
were meant to
break down the
actor’s barrier
between life on
and off the
stage. By the
time the curtain
came down on
their first
production, "The
House of
Connelly", the
Group Theater
knew they had
succeeded. What
was important
was not simply
the enthusiastic
response, but
that the
audience and
reviewers had
recognized that
this one
performance
signaled a shift
in American
theater.
The Group
Theatre believed
what they were
doing to be of
great political
significance.
While
disregarding the
calls for
individual fame
in an embrace of
cooperation. It
was not,
however, until
Clifford Odets,
then an actor in
the group, wrote
"Awake and
Sing!" that they
found their full
voice. His
highly charged
plays, which
were often
expressed in the
language and
circumstances of
working-class
characters,
mirrored the
essence of what
the group wanted
to be and do,
fulfilling the
dream of a
theater speaking
to and for its
audience. Both
audience and
critics
responded
enthusiastically,
and such works
as "Awake and
Sing!," "Waiting
for Lefty, " and
"Paradise Lost"
were among the
most memorable
productions of
the decade.
By the late
1930’s however,
the cohesiveness
of the group
began to
crumble. The
chronic
financial
problems and
long-simmering
disputes about
"the method"
began to chip
away at their
solidarity. An
attempt to solve
their financial
problems that
sent many of the
actors to
Hollywood (where
some stayed)
ended in the
resignation of
both Lee
Strasberg and
Cheryl Crawford.
As a last
resort, Harold
Clurman decided
to take on
Hollywood stars
in an attempt to
enhance box
office appeal.
To many
long-time
members this
seemed a
compromise of
the fundamental
ideals of the
group. Even the
financial
success of
Clifford Odets’
"Golden Boy" in
1937 was not
enough to halt
the decline, and
in 1941 the
group dissolved.
Despite its
relatively short
life span, The
Group Theatre
has been called
the bravest and
single most
significant
experiment in
the history of
American
theater, and its
impact continues
to be felt. Many
of the group’s
members went on
to become
leading acting
teachers and
directors,
passing on to
subsequent
generations the
spirit and
principles that
motivated them.
Stella Adler,
Lee Strasberg,
Sanford Meisner,
and Robert Lewis
have counted
among their
students actors,
directors, and
playwrights such
as Marlon
Brando, James
Dean, Paul
Newman, Meryl
Streep, Gregory
Peck, and David
Mamet. To this
day institutions
such as the
Actors Studio,
founded by
Cheryl Crawford,
Elia Kazan, and
Robert Lewis
continue the
tradition of The
Group Theatre. |