The Birds
The Birds
The Birds
Review: Pots, Pans, and Parasols: The Comic Genius of Aristophanes' Birds
Reviewed Work(s): The Birds by Nikos Karathanos and Yiannis Asteris
Review by: Helaine L. Smith
Source: Arion: A Journal of Humanities and the Classics , Vol. 26, No. 2 (Fall 2018), pp.
161-172
Published by: Trustees of Boston University; Trustees of Boston University through its
publication Arion: A Journal of Humanities and the Classics
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HELAINE L. SMITH
agon. They tell us that this new city of the Birds is just like
the one Pisthetaerus and Euelpides sought to leave,2 imperi-
alistic and indifferent to its inhabitants, a few of whom have
just become lunch. Human nature remains constant, Cloud-
cuckoo-land is Athens in the air, and those who would pass
through it, nothing more than a vertical reflection of the
Delian League.
Nikos Karathanos, the director of the National Theatre of
Greece’s production of The Birds that played in New York
last spring, eliminated the pots and skewers, the comic bat-
tle that deployed them, and the closing barbecue that made
them negotiating tools, and thereby demonstrated, albeit
unintentionally, how essential Aristophanes’ props are to the
play’s comic and satiric genius. He did the same to
Prometheus’ parasol.
In the penultimate scene of the play, just before the dele-
gation arrive, the Titan Prometheus appears, wrapped head
to toe in a blanket and crouching under the largest3 umbrella
or parasol he can find. He has come to warn the Birds that a
delegation are on the way and to advise Pisthetaerus to
demand Basileia, a goddess no one has ever heard of, in
exchange for unlimited passage of air traffic through Cloud-
cuckoo-land. Aristophanes’ audience knew the myth of
Prometheus and did not need it retold, and so Aristophanes
does not retell it. Formerly “friend to man” and “giver of
fire,” Prometheus is chained to a mountaintop by Zeus and
endures his liver being ripped out each day. Aristophanes
makes Prometheus “friend to bird” and “inventor of barbe-
cue.” So frightened is Prometheus that Zeus will discover
him that, when recognized by Pisthetaerus, who calls out his
name, the heroic god responds with a frantic “Shush!” and
then delivers his warning in a stage whisper. It’s a short
scene, hilarious in its contrast to the heroic figure we expect,
and requires for its humor another mundane household
object—an umbrella.
Karathanos’s Prometheus, on the other hand, entered sans
parasol and wearing a bright orange jump suit, discoursed at
length about the vulture, lifted his shirt to show his tummy
scar, ranted about hatred and ill fortune, sang a bad song,
and left. He brought neither news nor advice. Karathanos
had rendered the scene inexplicable for everyone knowing
the text and for everyone not knowing it.
In the prologue, Pisthetaerus and Euelpides consult their
crows, which caw in reply. Both men appear to understand
the cawing—though of course we don’t—“Turn right,” “Up
that trail,” “Circle left,” “Double back,” and so they travel
around the stage in circles, as their hapless slaves put down
and pick up the baggage with each changed direction, until
the group arrives at a rock face out of which a Sandpiper
with a huge beak appears.
The delegation scene makes use of the same device, a voice
on stage forming nonsense sounds, but to a different comic
end. The speaker of gibberish in the delegation scene is Trib-
allos. The scene is funny, not just for Herakles’ readiness to
trash his mission to satisfy his appetite, not even for Posei-
don’s wonderful prissiness as he constantly readjusts the bar-
barian Triballos’ tangled cloak or for his aristocratic com-
plaints that this is what democracy has yielded! but most of
all for Triballos’ having the deciding vote. Pisthetaerus’
terms are outrageous—barbecued wings in exchange for
Basileia, the “goddess who controls Zeus’ thunderbolts.”
Possessing Basileia means supplanting the power of Zeus.
The delegation put Pisthetaerus’ terms to a vote and Herak-
les, salivating at the thought of barbecue, claims that Tribal-
los’s nonsense syllables constitute a vote of “Yes,” making it
two yesses to Poseidon’s one “No.” The delegation exit, hav-
ing conceded everything, as Triballos continues to trip and
tug at his cloak. The negotiation and the vote are a brilliant
riff on Athenian democracy and on the penchant of politi-
cians to use rhetoric to distort the truth. After a brief choral
interlude and the singing of “Hymen, Hymenaios,” Pis-
thetaerus and Basileia enter as bride and groom, step onto
the mêchanê, and are raised upward, signaling Pisthetaerus’
apotheosis into a god.
to the Birds, Tereus reassures them that he’s taught the Cho-
rus “to speak Greek.” For the moment everything merges
into a glorious, dizzying comic whole.
And there is the parabasis, “the coming [downstage]
beside, or stepping over or out of.” The final lines of the first
parabasis of Birds belong to the Koryphaios, the Chorus
leader, who assures the audience “there’s nothing better“
than wings. His proofs are coarsely, deliciously funny. If
you’re at the theatre and get hungry and bored by the
tragedies, wings let you fly home, grab a bite, and return “to
see us” (that is, “to see the comedy,” which always played
later in the day). If you’re sitting in the audience and, like
Patrocleides “the shitter,” have to go, you can fly out, “blow
a fart” and come right back. Or if you’re an adulterer and
spot the woman’s husband in one of the reserved seats, you
can fly to her house, “have a fuck,” and get back before the
play is over.
The fourth wall is never breached by Aristophanes with
aggression directed toward his audience. Conflict, physical
and/or intellectual, is written into these comedies, but it
exists solely among the characters themselves. In addition,
antagonists are relatively harmless and easily routed—Frogs
(by farting), Wasps (by smokepots), Birds (by pots and
pans)—or specific characters are mocked, or get their come-
uppance—Socrates and the Sophists (Clouds), Cleon, who
doesn’t even appear (Wasps), Euripides (Women at the Thes-
mophoria), Penury (Wealth)—or dead playwrights battle
each other with lines from their scripts weighed in balance
pans (Frogs), and so on.
The relationship of Karathanos’s The Birds to his audience
was the opposite of Aristophanes’ relationship to his. Aristo-
phanes pokes fun at actual persons and exposes foibles we
all share, but is never condescending, never seeks to épater la
bourgeoisie. Directly or by implication, comically or seri-
ously, Aristophanes offers solutions, however fantastical, to
social and political problems—to litigiousness, war-monger-
ing, acquisitiveness, factional division. Characters are urged,
cal context of 414 BC, that means the empire which the Athe-
nians created out of the Delian League and the local popula-
tions they subjugated. Actors in feathers are lovely to look at
and exotic. Actors in Hawaiian shirts and sneakers are nei-
ther. They are familiar figures, people with bad taste on
vacation, and most decidedly, consumers of culture, not cul-
tural critics.
Other costumes were equally ill-considered, their “mes-
sages”—if such a word can be applied to costumes—both
out-of-sync with the original script and internally inconsis-
tent. For example, Epops (played by Christos Loulis)
appeared all in black, with black laced boots, black skirt,
and a white bra worn on the outside of his/her shirt. If trans-
gender dressing was meant to replicate the man/bird nature
of Tereus, why add a hump back? What does that suggest if
not physical abnormality? It’s inconceivable that the produc-
tion meant to denigrate the idea of transgender, and yet
that’s what it may, to many, have seemed to do. And why
dress Prometheus, who is desperate to fade into the back-
ground, in bright orange?
Then there was the oddness of the set itself. Karathanos
placed his performers on a dark stage in an angled corner of
the lower performance area of St. Anne’s Warehouse. Trees
of all climates—palm, pine, deciduous—took up a good por-
tion of the playing space and were not only dimly lit, but
played upon by garish yellow and green light. The effect was
something like that which marked the grounds of the
Fontainebleau and other luxe hotels on Collins Avenue in
Miami Beach in the ’50s. Presumably Karathanos intended
the darkness to increase the sense of menace, and it did, but
there is no menace in Birds, only delight and glee. That the
trees remained onstage after the action moved to the sky, to
Cloud-cuckoo-land, meant that Karathanos chose to trade
meaning for menace. Of all Aristophanes’ extant comedies,
Birds is most about air and space, light and freedom—even
more so than Clouds. Not only is bright space Pisthetaerus’
inspiration for building a city in the air, but air is what
notes
1. My debt here, and for much else, is to Jeffrey Henderson. His inspired
comic translation of telmasin as “puddles” (Aristophanes III, Loeb Classi-
cal Library, Cambridge ma 2000) appears at line 1594.
2. William Arrowsmith, in “Aristophanes’ Birds: The Fantasy Politics of
Eros” (Arion, Spring 1973, 119–67), writes: “Cleruchies or colonies com-
posed mainly of these uprooted peasants and yeomen at Attica were the
obvious social and military consequence of Periclean strategy. At one stroke
Athens succeeded in getting rid of part of her own surplus and discontented
population and employed it to imperial advantage by resettling it in the ter-
ritories of restive subject-cities or strategic military sites . . . They [the
cleruchies] offered the uprooted yeoman the chance to transplant himself to
a less urban though alien environment where he might recreate his old cul-
ture on new ground—a vita nuova, a possible renewal of the old world of
rustic physis [nature] and hēsychia [rest, stillness, quiet]. . .” (122) and
likens these cleruchs to Pisthetaerus and Euelpides.
3. Or under the smallest—either prop is funny onstage.
4. By the time of Wealth (388 bc), direct address to provide the audience
with essential background is replaced by dialogue between characters, as
when, in the prologue, Cario insists his master Chremylos explain to him
why, ever since leaving the shrine, they are tracking a blind man.
5. Though entirely appropriate to Peter Weiss’s play, The Persecution and
Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as Performed by the Inmates of the Asy-
lum of Charenton under the Direction of the Marquis de Sade, such an
approach is entirely inappropriate to Birds, which is about neither revolu-
tionary madness nor social dissolution.
6. Jeffrey Henderson, The Maculate Muse: Obscene Language in Attic
Comedy, second edition (New York and Oxford 1991).