ADSA 2016 Conference Perennialism in Performance
ADSA 2016 Conference Perennialism in Performance
ADSA 2016 Conference Perennialism in Performance
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Jeremy Johnson
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In this paper I intend to firstly reconnect with Peter Brook and Jerzy Grotowski, not to rehash
their well-documented professional lives but to highlight their connection with deeply
traditional theatre practices not only in development upon the work of Brecht, Stanislavski
and Artaud, but in sourcing ancestral memory of their personal European heritage.
Secondly, to draw attention to a shared reverence as adherents to one of the principal spiritual
sages of the 20th century, George Gurdjieff. Lastly, to affirm Brook and Grotowski as
The Empty Space by Peter Brook and Towards a poor Theatre by Jerzy Grotowski, both
published in 1968, are widely recognized as the most influential books on theatre written in
the last 50 years. The influence of these seminal works has resonated for decades, becoming
as it were the theatre makers organon a call to arms for artists wishing to emancipate
themselves from what is perhaps conceived as the neurosis of naturalism and, as always
throughout history, the despotism of the salesman and the tyranny of deadly commercialism.
Until the emergence of Brook and Grotowski earlier 20th century theatre had been under the
sway of the Constantin Stanislavski and his Moscow Arts Theatre, and since WW2 the Epic
Theatre of Bertolt Brecht and his Berliner Ensemble. By the mid-sixties the respective
concepts of Naturalism, Alienation, and Epic Theatre had been thoroughly ploughed and
dissected by practitioners and academics alike. The Stanislavski-based system known as The
Method, introduced by Lee Strasberg and Stella Adler (The Freud and Jung of mid-century
Hospital.1 The methodologies specifically focus on character, emotional recall, action and
objective work gave actors the required observational practices for natural expression in
search of truth in initiation and response. These, however, conflicted with Brechts
perspective of discarding crude emotionalism, via the juxtaposition of forces within scenes, to
alienate the spectator from cheap sensation and initiate comprehension of themes on a deeper
level. However, this in no way contradicts Brooks statement in The Empty Space: What
Brecht introduced was the idea of the intelligent actor, capable of judging the value of his
contribution.2
Strasberg and Adler had successfully migrated Stanislavskis method from his Russian
origins making him seem thoroughly American, whereas what was received as the folkloric
Brechtian bleakness, however nuanced, could never really alienate itself from its Germanic
providence, and thus from commercial risk. American culture was strongly influenced by the
influx of liberal-minded Jewish migrs, and particularly those who had fled Eastern Europe
and Russia in the 1930s and 1940s, eager to engage in the present moment of the American
Dream (however neurotic3) confronting the European horrors of authoritarian misrule and the
plight of proletarian victimhood through the very same lens. Even if this aspect is but a
partial rendering of the complete Brechtian oeuvre of a socialist ideology4 it clashed with
commercial enterprise, suffering a lack of box office appeal until the turn of the 21st century
when Berlin again became a cultural and performance hub, and the go to metropolis for
By the late 1960s Australia had remained largely untouched by the American school of
Method acting, with the notable exception of Hayes Gordons Meissner-influenced work at
1
General Hospital is the longest running American daytime soap opera. It premiered 1 st April 1963.
2 Peter Brook, The Empty Space (New York: Simon & Shuster 1996) 76
3 Swiss psychologist, Carl Jung, described neurosis as always an excuse for legitimate suffering.
4
From 1975-2014 there was a Brecht Forum held at the New York Marxist School.
3
enterprises; still in the thrall of ready-to-wear J.C Williamson imports from the West End. A
steady stream of washed-up stage and screen luminaries took one last spin around the block
by touring the colonies to maximize the last few squirts of their star power before the heading
off to the great Drury Lane in the sky. Locally, theatre consisted of small theatre companies
with repertoires of comedy, farce and Gilbert and Sullivan predominantly performed for the
purpose of social engagement. NIDA was still in its infancy as a globally recognized faculty
for the training of actors. As Katherine Brisbane noted in her platform paper The Arts and
the Common Good quoting Colin Ballantine, Adelaides post war maven of theatre culture
When The Empty Space and Towards Poor Theatre were published both Peter Brook and
Jerzy Grotowski were already celebrated directors, known for their innovative approach to
traditional theatre. The challenge, as they saw it, was not to eliminate tradition itself but
smash the meaningless shell in which it had been mummified:5 tradition devoid of life. The
very word tradition as noted by Basarab Nicolescu in his essay Peter Brook and
Traditional Thought derives from the Latin Tradere meaning to restore to transmit
The actor searches vainly for the sound of the vanished tradition, and critic and
audience follow suit. We have lost all sense of ritual and ceremony.6
Brook developed his practice on the heels of Brecht as much as Grotowski7 built upon the
foundations laid by Stanislavski. In essence these two men were two faces on the same coin:
both motivated to awaken the awareness of the actor as a protean being, full of wonder,
rigorously reimagining the human as a truthful presence. In this enterprise they shared a
5
Basarab Nicolescu, "Peter Brook and Traditional Thought." Peter Brook and Traditional Thought. Web. 17 Aug. 2015.
http://www.gurdjieff.org/nicolescu3.htm
6 Peter Brook, The Empty Space (New York: Simon & Shuster 1996)
7 Grotowski quote on Stanislavski
4
common influence and experience, as sincere acolytes of the Armenian mystic and teacher
George Ivanovitch Gurdjieff. The impact of Gurdjieff and his teachings on theatre
practitioners and actors over the last half century has been severely neglected by academics
and critical analysis within the performing arts. This is what my paper is aiming, as a first
step, to readdress. While Brook is regarded as a pioneer adherent to Gurdjieffs Fourth Way
teachings, both playwright, Sam Shepard, and actor, Bill Murray, are amongst other well-
While Brook is quite transparent about his relationship through the direct teachings from one
of Gurdjieffs close pupils, Mme De Saltzmann, who co-authored the script for Brooks film
Meeting With Remarkable Men.9 Grotowski was far less forthcoming in acknowledging
Gurdjieff as a source of influence publicly, or even to his students who spent years with him.
Though Grotowski only became familiar with Gurdjieff after writing Towards a Poor
Theatre he stated that he was: struck by the similarities in the terms he used."10
During the course of their lives all three men initiated centres of research into the human
condition or in Grotowskis case, a laboratory, from where they attempted to develop a richer
understanding of our spiritual, mental and physical capabilities, and more importantly his
relationship with the world and the living organisms which inhabit it. While Gurdjieff was
not specifically a theatre director working with actors, there is no question that the Prieur
Chateau in Fontainebleau where he ran his Institute for Harmonious Development, was
perhaps as radically shocking in its transformative effect on people in the two years of its
operation (1922-24) as was Grotowskis laboratory in Poland in the 1960s and 1970s. They
each applied non-linear techniques in training their respective students in physical, mental
8
Sam Shepard, Lie of the Mind.
9
George Gurdjieff, Meetings With Remarkable Men
10 Sacred Theatre: Ralph Yarrow and Franc Chamberlain -" Scribd. Web. 26 Sept 2015.
<https://www.scribd.com/book/19159979/Sacred-Theatre. 182
5
and spiritual exercises which to a casual observer and even to those who participated seemed
at times pointless, like digging giant holes for no apparent reason or exposing themselves to
extreme physical exertion. As Carol M Cusack writes in her essay: An Enlightened Life in
Text and Image: G. I. Gurdjieffs Meetings With Remarkable Men (1963) and Peter Brooks
Meetings With Remarkable Men (1979) In the Gurdjieffian universe everything is alive
and seeks to feed itself to achieve a higher level of being which is exactly what Brook and
Grotowski were attempting to do with their respective actors. These demanding physical
trials supervised by Gurdjieff were interwoven with disciplined dance movements to piano
music scored by Russian musician and aristocrat, Thomas De Hartmann, a great friend of
painter, Wassily The Spiritual in Art Kandinsky. De Hartmann and his wife Olga fled St
Petersburg with Gurdjieff after the Bolshevik revolution and lived at the Prieur where De
Hartmann and Gurdjieff composed music based on ancient hymns from the Orient and Slavic
folk songs.
It should be noted that Gurdjieff is a significant support character in the great cultural
blossoming of Hemmingways Paris during the 1920s. Margaret Anderson and Jane Heap
publishers of The Little Review who were the first to publish James Joyce Ulysses were
members of Gurdjieffs Ladies of the Rope11 a group of women who formed around him
after his car accident in 1924 that spelled the end of the Prieur and initiated a new octave in
his teachings which he conducted in Paris. After meeting Gurdjieff for the first time,
...a messenger between worlds, a dark man with an oriental face, whose life
seemed to reside in his eyes. He had a presence impossible to describe because I
had never encountered another with which to compare it. In other words, as one
would immediately recognize Einstein as a 'great man,' we immediately
recognized Gurdjieff as the kind of man we had never seena seer, a prophet, a
messiah?... What philosophers have taught as 'wisdom,' what scholars have
11
William Patrick Patterson and Barbara C. Allen. Ladies of the Rope: Gurdjieff's Special Left Bank Women's Group.
(Fairfax, CA: Arete Communications, 1999)
6
taught in texts and tracts, what mystics have taught through ecstatic revelation,
Gurdjieff would teach as a sciencean exact science of man and human
behaviora supreme science of God, world, manbased on sources outside the
scope, reach, knowledge or conception of modern scientists and psychologists.
In the decades since his death in 1949 many of Gurdjieffs techniques were appropriated by a
cavalcade of the sincere and the sham in the instruction of Eastern mysticism.12 Gurdjieff
himself had his detractors. D. H Lawrence wrote I have heard enough about that place in
Fontainebleau where Katherine Mansfield died to know it is a rotten, false, and self-
The times in which these men appeared were fertile for radical cultural and social change:
Europe in the 1920s was recovering from the devastation of WW1. The psychedelic 60s
were witness to an escalating war in South East Asia countered by a peace and love
movement which spread worldwide from California as far as the hippy trails of Kathmandu to
the socialist student movements fermenting at Melbourne and Monash University. These two
decades of the 20th century provided the conditions necessary for societal readjustment,
mercantile warriors. It is fortuitous in its coincidence that The Empty Space and Towards a
Poor Theatre. were published the same year as the student riots in Paris, Andy Warhol
getting shot, and Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King both assassinated.
What is truly extraordinary is the effect Brook and Grotowski had on the first and second
generation of baby boomers at the forefront of the revolution in the Australian theatre of the
late 60s and early 70s. A revolution which happened directly from the seminal texts of these
directors not from the experiential influence of actually witnessing productions of their work.
It wasnt until 1973, when Brook toured his legendary production of A Midsummer Nights
12
Osho, Scientology, New Age, the Enneagram, many Fourth Way schools and teachers who appeared in the decades after
Gurdjieffs death in 1949.
7
Dream, that Australia experienced his work live, and the following year when Grotowski
came to hold workshops and present his acclaimed Apocalypsis cum Figuris in the crypt of
St Marys Cathedral in Sydney. The textural methodologies of Brook and Grotowski had
been influential before, now the effect of these productions was enormous on the dynamics of
theatre nationally, as director, John Bell, says in his autobiography of Brooks Midsummer
Nights Dream: real theatrical magic could be created by words and by actors rather than
Unlike manifestos in the visual arts, (Surrealism, Dada, Impressionism etc ) Brook and
while appearing at the outset anti-traditional, were anything but.14 Brook and Grotowski
engaged the ancestral memory of their Eastern European heritage: For Grotowski the
orthodox Eastern Church and Polish Catholicism; and Russian Jewish heritage for Brook to
vernacular for the times. In Towards a Poor Theatre Grotowski describes a simple
hand/finger exercise: During the exercise one hand is continuously in full action. Thus the
left hand is the protecting one, and the right hand, the active grasping one. This is identical
to the rules understood by actors in the Middle-Ages when the left hand acted as a shield
protecting the heart while the right was used as the sword of action and demonstration.15
Brook and Grotowski served as antidotes to an onslaught of theatre excess as Brecht had
done for German theatre of the 1920s. Poor meant for each man to employ only what was
necessary in the service of stage narrative.16 Or as Brook writes Grotowski makes poverty
13
John Bell, John Bell: The Time of My Life (Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin, 2003)
14
Basarab Nicolescu, "Peter Brook and Traditional Thought." Peter Brook and Traditional Thought. Web. 15 Mar. 2015.
http://www.gurdjieff.org/nicolescu3.htm.
15
Joseph R. Roach, The Players Passion (Michigan: University of Michigan. 1993)
16
Jepke Goudschmit Interview Grotowski
8
an ideal and in doing so remained true to the words of St Augustine: The artist may see
The theatre is so to speak the most human and universal art of all, the one most
commonly practiced, ie. Practiced not just on the stage but also in everyday life. The
theatre of a given people or a given time must be judged as a whole, as a living organism
which isnt healthy unless it is healthy in every limb.18 Bertolt Brecht
While Gurdjieff, and his Fourth Way19 practices (based on esoteric Eastern mysticism)
Gurdjieffs influence was expanded through Brooks engagement with the artists and living
mythologies of non-European societies. Performers from all over the world in Brooks
company contribute particular cultures and traditions to assist in his unique and detailed
theatrical discipline. Brooks intention was techniques that enables this collaborative
presence actively in every cell of their bodies in performance, and informs their approach to
the text.20In the 1970s Brook famously undertook an extraordinary sociological and cultural
experiment by taking an ensemble of actors into Africa to tour his production of Ibn Attars
Conference of the Birds where they defined the stage by carpets set in the dusty squares of
the tribal villages.21 By far though, Brooks most significant intercultural production was the
staging of his epic 9-hour Mahabharata in the mid-80s. These symbiotic interactions with
concepts and techniques of foreign origin were instrumental in the awakening of actors and
values and relative ethics. Grotowskis application of Yoga asanas as described in Towards
17
Ananda K. Coomaraswarmy, The Essential Ananda K. Coomaraswarmy (Bloomington Indiana: World Wisdom Press
2004)
18
Bertolt Brecht, Brecht on Theatre The Development of an Aesthetic (London: Methuen Drama 1974) 152
19
P. D Uspenskii and Georges Ivanovitch Gurdjieff. The Fourth Way; a Record of Talks and Answers to Questions Based on
the Teaching of G.I. Gurdjieff (New York: Knopf, 1957)
20
Yoshi Oida and Lorna Marshall, The Invisible Actor (London: Methuen Drama 1997)
21
John Heilpern, Conference of the Birds (Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill. 1978)
9
a Poor Theatre were then repealed by Grotowski as noted in The Grotowski Sourcebook by
Richard Schechner: ... we began by doing yoga directed toward absolute concentration. Is it
true, we asked, that yoga can give actors the power of concentration? We observed that
despite all our hopes the opposite happened. There was a certain concentration, but it was
introverted."22 Yoga is a complete system unto itself with its own centre. Common to our
concept of multiculturalism and dangerous in the hands of the ill prepared, this selective and
and Jaholkowski. Grotowski drew ideas and techniques from a vast ocean of resources, for
his system lived in a perpetual flow of change.23 Were anyone a living example of In Search
of the Miraculous24 it was Grotowski. His work with actors was in a constant state of
evolution like a climbing scale, when one octave was completed he commenced the next
phase. First came his Laboratory work, then the Para-theatrical, then his so-called bee hives
with actual productions serving as the monument to what was already finished. Yet, as with
so many innovators, it is the power of their presence, as much as their practices, which drives
the chariot of a particular zeitgeist. For those who follow there is a treasure chest of
shifting point of centre. This is where disagreement and discord between old and new
acolytes begins and often overlooks foundational traditions within the practices of the
revolutionary or avant-garde. The urgent question therefore arises: How can people (who
have not lived with traditions other than their own, in whatever state of ripeness or decay)
understand these methods except on a superficial level? The physical and mental conditions
which existed in 1960s Wroclaw [the contextual realities of Polish history compromised by
the horrors of WW2 and further eradicated by Communist rule] produced a body of actors
22
Lisa Wolford and Richard Schechner, The Grotowski Sourcebook (London: Routledge, 1997) Google Books. Web. 10
Feb. 2016.
23
Kerry Dwyer Interview on Grotowski 8th April 2015
24
In search of the Miraculous by P.D Ouspensky who was Gurdjieffs right hand man until their final break in 1924
10
like Ryszard Cieslak that we cannot expect students of performance studies in the 21st century
to replicate.
Exceptional cases such as Brook and Grotowski become targets for criticism, such as
missives from Indian director, Rustam Barucha25 levelled at them both in his 1990 book
Theatre and the Word: Performance and the Politics of Culture. With the post-colonial ire of
youthful insolence, Barucha castigates Brook for Imperialist hubris in the staging of the
Mahabharata, and having no internal understanding of the holy book, and traditions of a
10,000 year old culture and people while adapting it under the auspices of the texts universal
message.26 Barucha goes on to call the production a cultural salad of which Brook is the
unacknowledged chef The materials of this salad have come from all parts of the
world, but it is Brooks house dressing which gives the salad its distinct taste. He is
particularly brutal on Grotowski who arrived in India with his Theatre of Sources to conduct
classes in Khardar. Barucha ridicules him for his mystification of what to the Indian people,
and Indian actors, was commonplace and ordinary like sitting for hours in complete silence,
listening to the leaves, and telling them that grass is holy. If you had not been Grotowski,
he writes you would have been treated like a madman and probably asked to leave.
Among the visionaries of the 20th century performing arts who laid an open foundation for
practitioners to build upon, few are more significant than Antonin Artaud. Grotowskis
reference to Artaud in Towards a Poor Theatre: Artaud speaks of the cosmic trance. This
brings back an echo of the time when the heavens were emptied of their traditional
25
Rustom Barucha, Theatre and the World: Performance and the Politics of Culture (London: Routledge, 1993) 81
26
The Mahabharata was adapted by long term Brook collaborator Jean-Claude Carrire
27 Jerzy Grotowski, Towards a Poor Theatre (New York: Simon & Shuster, 1968) 119
11
Using the tradition of fire to burn a new path towards a higher objective, Artaud inspired the
art of others more than the summation of his creative output by contributing a living
manifesto within his Theatre of Cruelty to serve as a guide for others to expand into a
methodology. The actor is an athlete of the heart.28 For the heart is the centre point of all
traditions. Artaud represented for theatre what Andrei Rublev meant to religious painting.
Brook acknowledged Artaud in The Empty Space: What he wanted in his search for holiness
Brook and Grotowskis contemporary connection with theatres holy origins was shaped, in
part, by the reverence for Artauds concepts. Holy in the sense of symbols beyond words,
born of tradition, born of ritual leading back to religion, revelation, prophets and the divine
itself. Knowledge and understanding of this makes possible what Stanislavski strived for with
his concept of invisible rays between actors as an unseen emanation of creative will.30 As
Perennialist scholar Ananda K. Coomaraswamy said: What was demanded of the traditional
artist was first and foremost to be in possession of his art. That is to be in possession of a
It is that very word sentiment which has vexed theatrical innovators from Stanislavski to
Brecht to Brook and Grotowski and their peers. What is felt, or what is liked, removes
relationship to the world and the cosmos. Sentiment, in its many guises and forms, misleads,
corrupts truth, and leads to degeneration. C.E.M Joad a 20th century philosopher and
contemporary of Bertrand Russell, explains in his book Decadence: the object is dropped32
28
Antonin Artaud, Theatre and its Double (New York: Grove Weidenfeld, 1958) 133
29
Peter Brook, The Empty Space (New York: Simon & Shuster, 1996) 53
30
Constantin Stanislavski, My Life in Art (London: Penguin, 1967) 500
31
Ananda K. Coomaraswarmy, The Essential Ananda K. Coomaraswarmy (Bloomington Indiana: World Wisdom Press
2004) 162
32
Joad, C. E. M. Decadence: A Philosophical Inquiry (London: Faber and Faber, 1948)
12
that what becomes valued in a decadent society is how one feels. Opinions are what matter
and the actual subject or object is never accorded its right to an intelligent analysis of what it
actually is. For Joad, this is the starting point of degeneracy and fracture, and why knowledge
disappears as the whole is subsumed by fluctuations of time, taste and temporal passions.
Peter Brook warned: Tradition itself, in times of dogmatism and dogmatic revolution, is a
revolutionary force which must be safeguarded. Indeed, this has always been the starting
point of art.