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  • Hey there!

  • I'm Mike Rugnetta, this is Crash Course Theater, and today's episode will take place

  • in one location, in one revolution of the sun, and involve only one plot.

  • Because we're in early modern France.

  • And if there's one thing the French love, it's raw milk cheese, and rules.

  • [[YORICK DROPS IN WEARING A PROFOUNDLY AHISTORICAL BERET]] OH, right, and fashion.

  • Good one, Cue Ball.

  • Today we'll be looking at the French embrace of neoclassicism, the playwrights who rocked

  • it, and Le Cid, the play that scandalized France by following neoclassical rules in

  • weird, absurd and possibly immoral ways.

  • Allons-y!

  • INTRO The Renaissance arrived pretty late in France.

  • After political upheaval and religious wars, the country finally settled down in the late

  • sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries with the help of the boy kings Louis XIII

  • and Louis XIV alongside their ministers, Cardinal Richelieu and Cardinal Mazarin.

  • All were enthusiastic proponents of the theater.

  • Yay!

  • Still, French playwriting had a slow start.

  • Editions of Terence appeared late in the fifteenth century, followed by translations of Greek

  • tragedies and Aristotle's Poetics.

  • A few playwrights tried out some Latin dialogues, and a couple of Seneca adaptations began to

  • circulate.

  • Turns out, authors and intellectuals needed about a century to think about Classical Drama

  • before they began writing Neoclassical drama.

  • And the result of all that thinking?

  • That's right: rules.

  • The French framework for neo-classical drama first arose around 1550, when a group of seven

  • French authors called Le Pleiade set up some rules for writing.

  • Many of their ideas were absorbed by the Academie Francaise, founded in 1636, which created

  • more rules.

  • Following Le Cidwhich we'll talk about in a momentthe Academy standardized their

  • system, and articulated five main rules for plays, allegedly based on classical models.

  • Here are your neoclassical must-haves: Number One: Verisimilitude.

  • This means that the action onstage must be believable.

  • No gods cruising through to solve everything, no ghosts, no monsters, or satyrs with enormous

  • phalli.

  • And Yorick, I hate to break this to you, but no soliloquies.

  • Breaking the fourth wall and talking directly to the audience?

  • That is UNBELIEVABLE.

  • So instead we start getting a lot of friends and maids as sounding boards.

  • Plays are still in verse, though and still depict some pretty outrageous situations.

  • But they don't violate spectators' sense of what should happen.

  • Which brings us to NUMBER TWO, Decorum.

  • From Horace, the Academy takes the idea that drama has to teach and please.

  • And not from Horace, that plays should uphold and promulgate French morals.

  • Good people have to be rewarded.

  • Bad people have to be punished.

  • No defaming people a la Aristophanes.

  • And no violence.

  • It's tacky.

  • NUMBER THREE: No mixing of dramatic styles.

  • Comedies are funny.

  • Tragedies are sad.

  • That's that.

  • No fools for comic relief.

  • No somber moments in the middle of some celebration.

  • Shakespeare: I'm looking at you.

  • Serious plays have to be about serious people, which basically means: the nobility.

  • And comedies about unserious middle class and lower class people falling in love.

  • Just stay in your lanes, everybody.

  • NUMBER FOUR: Unities.

  • The French rulemakers decided that what was good enough for Aristotle was good enough

  • for France.

  • So plays had to embrace the three unities: Unity of time, unity of place, and unity of

  • action.

  • Plays had to take place in one revolution of the sun.

  • In a single location.

  • And follow only one plot.

  • To be clear, though, Aristotle only makes a big deal about unity of action.

  • He does say in the Poetics that when compared to the epic, “tragedy tends to fall within

  • a single revolution of the sun or slightly to exceed that,” but he's just making

  • an observation.

  • And unity of place, he doesn't mention that one at all.

  • The French were out-Aristotling Aristotle!

  • But in a country that finally had a strong centralized monarchy after a long stretch

  • of ugly religious wars, it isn't hard to imagine why unity was attractive.

  • And Number FIVE: Five acts.

  • Each drama had to follow a five-act structure.

  • Why?

  • Because that's how Seneca did it.

  • And do you know better than Seneca?

  • Didn't think so.

  • In the late 1500s and early 1600s, there were some popular playsearly attempts at secular

  • tragedies and a lot of nymphy, shepherdessy pastoral comediesbut no truly great works.

  • Maybe the mystery play and medieval farces were still strong influences; maybe playwrights

  • didn't have the hang of neoclassicism yet.

  • Maybe all those rules make playwriting a little weird and unwieldy.

  • But by the middle of seventeenth century, two men had done it: Jean Racine and Pierre

  • Corneille.

  • Also Molière, but we're going to get to him next time.

  • Let's start with Racine, because he follows the rules scrupulously and elegantly.

  • He was born in 1639, orphaned young, and educated by Jansenists who taught him a lot of Greek

  • and Latin.

  • Like most classical French playwrights, Racine wrote in a metrical line called an alexandrine,

  • a twelve-syllable line of iambic hexameter.

  • That's a dodecasyllabic line if you're feeling fancy.

  • And I mean, this is French theater so you probably are.

  • The line has a pause, called a caesura, right in the middle.

  • So a perfect twelve-syllable line is composed of linked six-syllable thoughts.

  • As lines of verse go, the alexandrine is just two syllables longer than Shakespeare's

  • iambic pentameter, but it's a lot less hurtling.

  • It feelsstately.

  • But, a genius like Racine can harness that stateliness and turn it into something awesome,

  • and pure and furious.

  • Racine's diction is formal and his vocabulary much narrower than Shakespeare's, but this

  • gives his plays a feeling of concentration and force.

  • Most of Racine's plays are simple stories focused on tormented women.

  • They include long, wrenching speeches where women explain to their maids just how tortured

  • they are.

  • And not much else happens: they're about intensely observed feelings that overwhelm

  • the characters.

  • Racine's characters feel compelled to act on their feelings even when they know better.

  • They can't escape their emotions or their fates.

  • Other playwrights twist themselves into knots trying to observe the unities, but Racine

  • makes it look easy.

  • He sets his plays right before an emotional crisis and most of his conflicts are internal,

  • so upholding the unities of time, place and action isn't a struggle.

  • Voltaire called himindisputably our best tragic poet, the one who alone spoke to the

  • heart and to reason, who alone was truly sublime without being overdone.”

  • Man these guys REALLY knew how to compliment one another.

  • Racine's most famous play is the five-act tragedy Phèdre, from 1677, based on the Greek

  • myth of, well, Phaedra.

  • Phaedra is married to the great hero Theseus.

  • But while Theseus is away, she develops an overpowering passion for her stepson, Hippolytus.

  • She would rather die than act on it, but when she gets word that Theseus is dead, she confesses

  • her love.

  • Hippolytus is freaked out, because duh, but also in love with another woman.

  • So he rejects her.

  • Phaedra wants to die.

  • She wants to die even more when it turns out Theseus is alive and almost home.

  • Trying to save Phaedra's life, her maid makes up a story that Hippolytus tried to

  • rape Phaedra.

  • Theseus banishes Hippolytus and curses him.

  • He dies, offstage, with some help from a sea monster.

  • Phaedra's maid kills herself.

  • Phaedra confesses everything and then kills herself.

  • Theseus adopts the woman that Hippolytus loved.

  • So maybe that seems like a lotbecause it isbut in Racine's hands, the compressed

  • action works, and actually doesn't seem ridiculous.

  • The unities of time and place feel like natural choices.

  • Racine has an incredible gift for entering into extreme psychological states.

  • And Phaedra's long speeches about her passion, horror and self-disgust are breathtaking.

  • But when Phèdre first premiered, it wasn't a success.

  • Probably because audiences were so hyped up about Racine's rival Corneille.

  • Born in 1606, he trained as a lawyer before moving on to playwriting.

  • Corneille had his first successes with comedies before moving into tragedies.

  • While he was aware of the neoclassical rules, Corneille never adhered to them as carefully,

  • or as elegantly, as Racine did.

  • And sometimes that got him into trouble.

  • Corneille's most famous play is the 1636 tragicomedy Le Cid.

  • Remember how Racine is sublime but not overdone?

  • Well, Corneille has overdone on lock.

  • Le Cid is based on the youthful adventures of a medieval Spanish military figure, and

  • hoooo boy did it cause some controversy.

  • Before it pops off, let's take a look at the action in the Thoughtbubble:

  • Chimene, a noblewoman in medieval Seville, likes Rodrigue.

  • Rodrigue likes Chimene.

  • Unfortunately, their fathers quarrel: one slaps the other, and Rodrigue is forced to

  • duel Chimene's father.

  • Rodrigue kills him.

  • WHOOPS.

  • Chimene is understandably upset.

  • Oh, and also: the Moorish navy is about to attack.

  • There's a lot going on.

  • Crushed, Rodrigue goes to Chimene's house and tells Chimene's maid, Elvire, that he

  • wants Chimene to kill him.

  • Elvire tells him to chill out, and he hides while Chimene confesses that she both loves

  • and hates him.

  • Her plan: Kill him and then kill herself.

  • French neoclassical drama is real big on suicide.

  • Rodrigue reveals himself and is like, great plan, here's my sword.

  • But Chimene can't do it, and Rodrigue has to leave to go defeat the Moors.

  • Which he does.

  • Offstage.

  • Very quickly.

  • Even the Moors are impressed, naming him Le Cid, or the Lord.

  • But Chimene's likehey, great, way to save Spain, but hello?

  • We both still have to kill ourselves?

  • The other nobles are like, nuh-uh, and they set up another duelhave they learned nothing!—and

  • force Chimene to agree to marry the winner.

  • Rodrigue tells her he's not even going to try to win.

  • But Chimene's like, I know I keep saying you have to die, but I really don't want

  • to marry the other guy, so make it happen my dude.

  • The other guy comes back all bloody, and Chimene believes that Rodrigue is dead.

  • She tries to become a nun, but it turns out that he's alive!

  • And now she can marry the man who killed her dad!

  • After he kills some more Moors.

  • Thanks, Thought Bubble.

  • So all of that supposedly happens in twenty-four hours!

  • That is one busy day.

  • Right away we can see how Corneille is different from Racine.

  • Corneille focuses on men with free will; Racine is interested in women doomed by fate.

  • Racine likes simple plots and complex characters, and Corneille is the other way around.

  • Le Cid was an immediate success and an immediate scandal, launching a thousand angry pamphletsthe

  • seventeenth-century equivalent of a tweetstorm.

  • This play betrays the unities!!!!”, the cranky pamphlets said.

  • The battle is too short, they griped.

  • There are multiple locations in Seville, they groused.

  • It's mostly about Rodrigue and Chimene, but other action happens!

  • It ends happily!

  • A woman can't marry the man who killed her dad!

  • French intellectuals were in a pamphleteering uproar.

  • So Cardinal Richelieu turned to the newly created Academie Francaise and asked them

  • for a verdict.

  • The Academy said look, we know people really like this play, but it violates pretty much

  • all of our rules.

  • It's implausible, it's immoral, it takes a bunch of shortcuts with the unities.

  • But Corneille was like, also look: I've created awesome, virtuous characters and I

  • made the audience feel pity and fear just like Aristotle wanted, so back off, Academy.

  • Mic drop.

  • But then he stopped writing plays for four years, and, when he returned, he followed

  • the rules pretty closely.

  • So I guessmic pick back up.

  • Neoclassicism in France held sway for more than a century, and its austere style helped

  • make France the dominant European cultural center of the day.

  • Neoclassicism is persnickety, and it's hard to adhere to.

  • But when it's done well, the plays are incredibly forceful.

  • And if all you're reading from this period are the plays of Racine and Corneille, you'd

  • be forgiven for thinking the French Renaissance had no sense of humor.

  • But, ah ha mon cher, you'd be mistaken as well..

  • Next time: jokes, but French.

  • Until thencurtain.

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