2015 JEWELL MAINSTAGE PLAY GUIDE
Transcription
2015 JEWELL MAINSTAGE PLAY GUIDE
2015 JEWELL MAINSTAGE PLAY GUIDE WELCOME It’s springtime in Seattle and I am so excited that you are joining us for Jeeves Intervenes! This delicious comedy, based on P.G. Wodehouse’s Jeeves and the Hardboiled Egg finds Bertie and Eustace creating more trouble for themselves. Add in Aunt Agatha and Uncle Rupert’s ideas of marriage, and it only exacerbates the problem. Luckily for our young lads, Jeeves is always there for the rescue. “You can lead a horse to the altar, Jeeves, but you cannot make it wed!” In preparation to see the show, I hope you will take some time to peruse the materials in this play guide. Learn about Wodehouse, Margaret Raether, the costumes, the set and time period, the clever servant and Wodehouse’s penchant for words, new and old. Isaiah Custer Marketing Associate P.S. We would love to hear from you! Tag us on any of the social media platforms listed below. TABLE OF CONTENTS JEWELL MAINSTAGE 204 N 85th St Seattle, WA 98103 ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICES 212 N 85th St Seattle, WA 98103 THE AUTHOR & PLAYWRIGHT 4 5 P.G. Wodehouse Margaret Raether THE PLAY 206.781.9707 Box Office 206.781.9708 Group Sales 206.781.9705 Administrative Office 6 7 9 WWW.TAPROOTTHEATRE.ORG CULTURAL CONTEXT A Play Guide published by Taproot Theatre Company 11 12 13 RESEARCHER: Sonja Lowe EDITOR: Isaiah Custer PRODUCTION PHOTOS: John Ulman 14 Tracking the Clever Tracking the Clever Tracking the Clever Shakespeare Tracking the Clever 15 Tracking the Clever Servant: Now All rights reserved. With the exception of classroom use by teachers and individual personal use, no part of this Play Guide may be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying or recording, or by an information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. Some materials published herein are written especially for our Guide. Others are reprinted by permission of their publishers. Play Guides are produced by the Marketing Department at Taproot Theatre Company. Inquiries about reproducing materials may be directed to the member of the Marketing Department listed as the editor for that Play Guide. This play guide may be updated periodically with new information. Last update 5.6.2015 Synopsis Characters/Costumes Setting/Place Servant: Plautus Servant: Moliere Servant: Servant: Jeeves Intervenes THE WONDROUS WORLD OF WODEHOUSE 16 Wodehouse’s Words QUESTIONS 18 Post-Show Reflection Questions TAPROOT THEATRE COMPANY 19 20 About Us What’s Next THE AUTHOR SIR PELHAM GRENVILLE WODEHOUSE October 15, 1881 — February 14, 1975 (Pronounced Wood-house) “Wodehouse was an English humourist whose body of work includes novels, short stories, plays, humorous verses, poems, song lyrics, and magazine articles. He enjoyed enormous popular success during a career that lasted more than seventy years, and his many writings continue to be widely read. A quintessential Englishman, born during the Victorian era and spending his twenties in Edwardian London, he also resided in France and the United States for extended periods during his long life. His writing reflects this rich background, with stories set in England, France, and the United States, particularly, New York City and Hollywood. An acknowledged master of English prose, Wodehouse has been admired both by contemporaries such as Hilaire Belloc, Evelyn Waugh and Rudyard Kipling and by recent writers such as Christopher Hitchens, Stephen Fry, Douglas Adams, J. K. Rowling, and John Le Carré. Pelham Grenville Wodehouse. Perhaps best known today for the Jeeves and Blandings Castle novels and short stories, Wodehouse was also a playwright and lyricist who was part author and writer of 15 plays and of 250 lyrics for some 30 musical comedies, many of them produced in collaboration with Jerome Kern and Guy Bolton. He worked with Cole Porter on the musical Anything Goes (1934), wrote the lyrics for the hit song "Bill" in Kern's Show Boat (1927), wrote lyrics to Sigmund Romberg's music for the GershwinRomberg musical Rosalie (1928) and collaborated with Rudolf Friml on a musical version of The Three Musketeers (1928). He is in the Songwriters Hall of Fame. Wodehouse spent the last decades of his life in the United States, becoming an American citizen in 1955, after a controversy arose relating to five radio broadcasts he made from Germany during World War II. He had been imprisoned by the Germans in a civil internment camp for a year, and speculation regarding his motives led to allegations that the broadcasts were the result of collaboration and treason. Some libraries banned his books. An MI5 investigation cleared him of any such crimes, but he never returned to England… Wodehouse continued to write novels and to follow an exercise regime into his nineties. In 1975 he was appointed a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire (KBE) in the New Year Honours. Toward the end of January 1975, he developed pemphigus, a persistent skin rash, brought on by the strain of extra work, answering fan mail and recording the introductions to the Wodehouse Playhouse TV series. In early February, he entered Southampton Hospital, where he died of a heart attack on February 14, 1975 at age 93. His last novel, Sunset at Blandings, was unfinished at his death and was published posthumously in 1977.” http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P._G._Wodehouse Who are some of your favorite authors? TAPROOT THEATRE COMPANY: PLAY GUIDE What are some of your favorite movies adapted from books? PAGE 4 THE PLAYWRIGHT MARGARET RAETHER “Margaret Raether first encountered P.G. Wodehouse in the form of a battered secondhand paperback of The Code of the Woosters when she was in college. This, as Bogart once famously observed, was "the beginning of a beautiful friendship." A founding member of Artists' Ensemble Theatre, most of Ms. Raether's plays have debuted either at AE or at New American Theater, where she spent two seasons as Playwright in Residence.” www.playscripts.com/playwrights/bios/1274 Plays by Margaret Raether: Jeeves in Bloom Jeeves Intervenes Jeeves Takes a Bow “It was just a chance conversation,” says playwright Margaret Raether about the idea of writing a play about Bertie and Jeeves. “I was chatting with another Wodehouse fan and I suddenly wondered if any of the Jeeves stories were in public domain.” The end result of that thought was AE’s world premiere of Jeeves Intervenes, followed three years later by Jeeves in Bloom and, three years later, Jeeves Takes a Bow. The earlier plays have gone on to productions in Chicago, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, and Lincoln, Nebraska. “I’m thrilled that some people are being introduced to Wodehouse for the first time, while lifelong Wodehouse fans seem to enjoy the plays as well.” “Generally, I write late at night in my bathrobe, peering around a cat that likes to sit in front of the monitor,” confesses Margaret. “The biggest challenge is the character of Jeeves. It is tricky writing for a character who is never flustered, never at a loss, who fears nothing and always knows precisely what to do.” “Jeeves does have, I believe, a certain inner amusement as Bertie’s dilemmas entertain him. And he takes justifiable pride in being the premier puppet master. I always strive to make Jeeves the eye of the hurricane as those swirling about him are maneuvered (or outmaneuvered, as the case may be).” Which book series would you want adapted into a play or movie? Marianna de Fazio as Madeline Basset and Kim Morris as Dahlia Travers in Taproot Theatre Company’s production of Jeeves in Bloom. Photo by Erik Stuhaug. the Jeeves Trilogy from ArtistsEnsemble.org TAPROOT THEATRE COMPANY: PLAY GUIDE PAGE 5 THE PLAY SYNOPSIS Bertie Wooster is a wealthy, goodnatured young man living in London in the late 1920’s. He’s not too bright, but that’s alright because his faithful servant Jeeves is a genius who can always be depended on to pull his master out of scrapes. The one thing that Jeeves can’t do, however, is get rid of Bertie Wooster’s terrifying aunt, Mrs. Agatha Spencer Gregson. Aunt Agatha doesn’t approve of Bertie and is determined to get him married to a good woman who will “make something of him.” At the beginning of our play Bertie has been summoned to visit Aunt Agatha at her country home. Bertie suspects that Aunt Agatha has also invited the Honourable Gertrude Winklesworth-Bode, a wealthy heiress and a very serious girl who reads German philosophy and loves “improving” people. Bertie doesn’t want to be improved and can’t stand the idea of marriage to Gertrude, but he also finds it hard to say no to Aunt Agatha. While Jeeves and Bertie are discusses ways to thwart Aunt Agatha’s matchmaking plans, Eustace BassingtonBassington arrives to visit Bertie and ask for help. Eustace and Bertie went to school together and have been friends for a long time. Eustace is in trouble because his uncle, Sir Rupert Watlington-Pipps is coming to visit him in London. Eustace has been lying to his uncle—telling him that he is a successful business man living in a nice flat in London. David Roby and Chris Ensweiler. Photo by John Ulman. Jeeves, Bertie and Eustace concoct a plan. Eustace will stay at Bertie’s flat while Bertie is away visiting Aunt Agatha. Then, Sir Rupert will think that Eustace is rich and Eustace won’t have to go to India. But their best laid plans get extremely complicated when Aunt Agatha decides to come to London herself (bringing Gertrude with her). Then Sir Rupert arrives a day earlier than expected and all of them show up at Bertie’s flat for dinner. Bertie’s flat is becoming very crowded, everybody is getting angry at everybody else and nobody is sitting down to eat their soup. Sir Rupert thinks that Eustace owns the flat and doesn’t like Eustace’s odd friend, Bertie. Aunt Agatha thinks that Bertie owns the flat and can’t understand why he’s also invited his odd friend and his odd friend’s uncle. And to make matters even more complicated Gertrude thinks that Bertie is in love with her and Eustace is falling in love with Gertrude! Now Sir Rupert is coming to visit and when he finds out that Eustace has no business and no money he will send Eustace off to India to learn the jute business and “improve himself.” Eustace doesn’t like the jute business, doesn’t want to go to India and doesn’t really want to be improved. Will Sir Rupert learn the truth and send Eustace to India? Will Bertie avoid Aunt Agatha’s match making schemes? Will Eustace and Gertrude fall in love? Will the soup course ever get served? Yes! But only Jeeves can make it happen. TAPROOT THEATRE COMPANY: PLAY GUIDE PAGE 6 THE PLAY CHARACTERS/COSTUMES One of the key characteristics of P.G. Wodehouse’s writing is his talent for describing characters and most of these descriptions come from Bertie’s point of view. Below are Bertie’s descriptions for some of the characters in Jeeves Intervenes. After reading these, try writing your own character descriptions for this play. How would you describe the characters below and on the next page? Bertie Wooster: A young man about town Jeeves: Bertie’s manservant Agatha Spencer Gregson: Bertie’s aunt Aunt Agatha “You’ve never met my Aunt Agatha, so it’s rather hard to explain. But she’s a sort of human vampire-bat…. She’s the kind of woman who comes and rags you before breakfast, don’t you know.” Gertrude Winklesworth-Bode: A wealthy heiress and a very serious girl Eustace Bassington Bassington: Bertie’s friend Sir Rupert Watlington-Pipps: Eustace’s uncle Gertrude “The thing is, Gertie is the sort of girl who expects a fellow to carve out a career and what not. I know for fact that I’ve heard her speak favourably of Napoleon.” TAPROOT THEATRE COMPANY: PLAY GUIDE Eustace “The thing one has to understand about Bassy is that, although a perfectly decent chap, he has only just enough intelligence to open his mouth when he wants to eat.” PAGE 7 THE PLAY CHARACTERS/COSTUMES Authors of novels or short stories will often include character descriptions as part of the story. In a play, the costume designer is responsible for creating the first impression of a character. As soon as an actor walks out on stage you can guess something about their character. Are they old or young? Are they rich or poor? Are they from another time period or dressed in modern clothes? Jeeves “Now, touching this business of old Jeeves — my man, you know ... The man’s a genius. From the collar upward he stands alone. I gave up trying to run my own affairs within a week of his coming to me… Right from the first day he came to me, I have looked on him as a sort of guide, philosopher, and friend. He is a bird of the ripest intellect, full of bright ideas.” Bertie “I’m a quiet, peaceful sort of bloke who has lived all his life in London, and I can’t stand the pace these swift sportsmen from the rural districts set. What I mean to say is, I’m all for rational enjoyment and so forth, but I think a fellow makes himself conspicuous when he throws soft-boiled eggs at the electric fan.” Uncle Rupert Bertie doesn’t describe Uncle Rupert. What do you think Bertie would say? Visit our Pinterest Page to see inspirations for these costume designs. @Taproot Theatre Company TAPROOT THEATRE COMPANY: PLAY GUIDE PAGE 8 THE PLAY SETTING/PLACE BRIGHT LIGHTS AND BRIGHT YOUNG THINGS As the Jazz Age advanced to full swing in 1920’s London, a group of young and wealthy socialites set in motion an era of irresponsibility and gilded fun. Known as the “Bright Young People”, this set was a mixed bag of aristocrats, middle class adventurers and bohemian artists who partied hard, lived for excitement, and furnished the press with a steady stream of scandal for the gossip columns. The Bright Young People essentially invented London’s first “celebrity” youth culture. These are the kind of people that Bertie hangs out with. Below is a brief description of the 1920’s London that Bertie and the Bright Young People would have known: London—1920’s “The lifting of war time restrictions in the early 1920s created new sorts of night-life in the West End. Entrepreneurs opened clubs, restaurants and dance halls to cater for the new crazes: jazz and dancing. The capital began to feel less traditional and more modern. 'Wireless' radio was the technological marvel of the decade. As London lightened up at its centre, so it began to spread at its edges. Electric railways opened up new suburbs for commuting. Local councils and private house builders both redoubled their efforts to build new estates on green-field sites in outer London. Those Londoners who could afford it moved out of the unhealthy inner city. London's docks resumed their role as the engine of London's wealth. The volume of imports and exports rose with the opening of the King George V docks complex in 1921. In central London new office jobs were created by a new generation of British corporations and banks: ICI and British Petroleum both built large head offices in central London . Firms continued to move out of inner city, particularly to West London. More factories were built at Park Royal and along the new arterial roads. The Firestone Tyre factory on the Great West Road, the Wrigley factory at Wembley and Lyons food processing works at Hammersmith were typical of the new generation of London's light industry They had smart modern buildings and used modern, electrically-powered automated machinery.” http://www.20thcenturylondon.org.uk/timeline/1920-1929 London Events 1922 first radio broadcast of the British Broadcasting Company (later, the British Broadcasting Corporation) from premises in the Strand 1924-5 British Empire Exhibition at Wembley 1926 The General Strike lasts for 10 days in May 1928 The Thames floods central London 1928 London's first automatic telephone exchange opens at Holborn “London Theobalds Road” by Ben Brooksbank. A section of apartment buildings being rebuilt after World War I. TAPROOT THEATRE COMPANY: PLAY GUIDE PAGE 9 THE PLAY SETTING/PLACE In a novel or a short story the setting is usually established by the author’s description indicating time and place. At most theatrical productions the program will briefly list the setting and time period of the play, but after that it’s up to the set designer to create a visual representation of the location that the story is set. A good set designer will create a set that gives the audience clues about the story even before the actors come on stage. Visit our Pinterest Page to see inspirations for this set design. What can you guess about the setting (location and/or time period) of this play by looking at the set design above? @Taproot Theatre Company TAPROOT THEATRE COMPANY: PLAY GUIDE PAGE 10 CULTURAL CONTEXT TRACKING THE CLEVER SERVANT When Wodehouse created his Jeeves and Wooster characters in the 1930’s he was drawing on a long established comedic tradition. The motif of the “clever servant” is one of the longest running jokes in history! To trace it through history we have to go all the way back to the Romans. Titus Maccius Plautus 254 BC - 184 BC Born in Sassina, Umbria “Plautus was a comic playwright in the time of the Roman Republic. The years of his life are uncertain, but his plays were first produced roughly between 205 BC and 184 BC. Twenty-one plays survive. Plautus' comedies, which are among the earliest surviving intact works in Latin literature, are mostly adaptations of Greek models for a Roman audience. His most typical character is the clever slave who manipulates his master, reversing the master-slave dynamic expected of such relationships in the Roman world.” http://www.crystalinks.com/plautus.html FOUND ONE! The clever servant in Plautus’ Pseudolus: “The Roman playwright Plautus addresses the issues of class consciousness and status in his works. This is clear throughout his play, Pseudolus. Pseudolus is the main character of the play, and, as a slave, represents a low social status in Roman society. He is cunning and is against authority, even his own master. For all that he is a trickster, Pseudolus does not manipulate the upper classes for his own advancement. He does it to help others, although often twisting his plans to benefit himself at the same time. Plautus uses Pseudolus as a means of creating a comic hero whose worth is not based on his status and class in society. Plautus was attempting to show his audience that human worth is not based merely on wealth and social position. Pseudolus is not of a powerful status, but his intelligence and kindness to those he loves makes him a great and essentially good character.” http://www.cornellcollege.edu/classical_studies/comedy/pseudolus.htm For Example Calidorus is the son of Pseudolus' master, and he is a lovesick and naïve young man. Calidorus represents the higher class, which should put him in a position of power, but he defers his problems to Pseudolus, becoming dependent on the slave. He even lets Pseudolus boss him around: CALIDORUS: I'm tortured! PSEUDOLUS: Toughen up! CALIDORUS: I can't. PSEUDOLUS: Well, force yourself! CALIDORUS: How can I? PSEUDOLUS: Try to control your emotions, man! / Concentrate on constructive thoughts; / When things go wrong, don't pander to passion . . . CALIDORUS: Pseudolus, let me be silly. Please! PSEUDOLUS: I'll let you, if you let me leave. CALIDORUS: Wait! Wait! I'll be just the way you want me. THINK ABOUT IT: Read Act I, Scene I of Pseudolus by Plautus. How is the relationship between Pseudolus and Calidorus similar to that between Jeeves and Bertie Wooster? How is it different? TAPROOT THEATRE COMPANY: PLAY GUIDE PAGE 11 CULTURAL CONTEXT TRACKING THE CLEVER SERVANT The French playwright Molière 1622 - 1673 Born in Paris, France “Moliere whose real name was Jean Baptiste Poquelin, composed 12 of the most durable and penetratingly satirical full-length comedies of all time, some in rhyming verse, some in prose, as well as six shorter farces and comedies. Moliere was also the leading French comic actor, stage director, and dramatic theoretician of the 17th century. In a theatrical period (the early baroque) dominated by the formal neoclassical tragedies, Molière affirmed the potency of comedy as a serious, flexible art form. The strongest influence on Molière's theater came from the Italian commedia dell'arte troupes -- with their stock characters and situations -- that he encountered during his travels as a young man. The zanni (comic servants) are among the many stock characters from the commedia dell’arte tradition that often appear in Moliere’s plots. Zannis are usually clever servants who are often called upon to help get their masters/mistresses out of trouble.” http://www.discoverfrance.net/France/Theatre/Moliere/moliere.shtml FOUND ONE! The clever servant in Moliere’s Tartuffe: In Moliere’s Tartuffe, the master of the house, Orgon, is being hoaxed by a clever con-man who poses as a religious teacher. Orgon plans to force his daughter, Mariane to marry Tartuffe. Dorine, the servant girl, speaks up for Mariane and tries to give her mistress the courage to resist Orgon. DORINE: Well, have you lost your tongue, girl? Must I play your part and say the lines you ought to say? Faced with a fate so hideous and absurd, can you not utter one dissenting word? MARIANE: What good would it do? A father’s power is great. DORINE: Resist him now, or it will be too late. MARIANE: But… DORINE: Tell him one cannot love at a father’s whim; that you shall marry for yourself, not him; That since it’s you who are to be the bride, it’s you, not he, who must be satisfied; And that if his Tartuffe is so sublime, he’s free to marry him at any time. MARIANE: I’ve bowed so long to Father’s strict control, I couldn’t oppose him now, to save my soul. DORINE: Come, come, Mariane. Do listen to reason, won’t you? THINK ABOUT IT: Read Act 1, Scenes 2 and 3 of Moliere’s Tartuffe. How is the help that Dorine offers Mariane different from the advice that Pseudolus offers his master? How are the two scenes similar? TAPROOT THEATRE COMPANY: PLAY GUIDE PAGE 12 CULTURAL CONTEXT TRACKING THE CLEVER SERVANT William Shakespeare 1564-1616 Born in Stratford-upon-Avon, England `The Bard of Avon', was an English poet and playwright who wrote the famous 154 Sonnets and numerous highly successful oft quoted dramatic works including the tragedy of the Prince of Denmark, Hamlet. While Shakespeare caused much controversy, he also earned lavish praise and has profoundly impacted the world in areas of literature, culture, art, theatre, and film and is considered one of the best English language writers ever. A common character that often appears in Shakespeare’s script is the “wise fool.” http://www.online-literature.com/shakespeare FOUND ONE! The clever servant in Shakespeare’s King Lear: Shakespeare’s “wise fools” differ slightly from the clever servants in Moliere and Plautus. Rather than using their cleverness to come up with tricks and strategies that solve their master’s problems, Shakespearian fools more often use their wits to tell their masters when they are making foolish decisions. Like the traditional clever servants, fools are not in awe of prestige and power. They have the courage to speak the truth to powerful people. FUN FACT: Similar to Wodehouse, Shakespeare created many words that appear in common vernacular today: Advertising, bedroom, birthplace, champion, critic, discontent, dwindle, elbow, eyeball, fixture, gnarled, gossip, hobnob, impede, jaded, lonely, majestic, ode, puking, scuffle, skim milk, swagger, unreal, zany. For Example When King Lear gives up his crown and divides his lands between his two daughters, the king’s Fool has no hesitation in criticizing his master’s plan. FOOL: Dost thou know the difference, my boy, between a bitter fool and a sweet fool? KING LEAR: No, lad; teach me. FOOL: That lord that counsell'd thee To give away thy land, Come place him here by me, Do thou for him stand: The sweet and bitter fool Will presently appear; The one in motley here, The other found out there. KING LEAR: Dost thou call me fool, boy? FOOL: All thy other titles thou hast given away; that thou wast born with. THINK ABOUT IT: Read Act 1 of King Lear (particularly Scene III). Who is the wiser character, King Lear or the Fool? Why do you think King Lear tolerates criticism from his Fool when he won’t tolerate it from anyone else? TAPROOT THEATRE COMPANY: PLAY GUIDE PAGE 13 CULTURAL CONTEXT TRACKING THE CLEVER SERVANT The Clever Servant in Jeeves Intervenes Now that we’ve followed the clever servant motif through some historical plays, let’s look at one of the best clever servants: Jeeves in our play Jeeves Intervenes. In the scene below Jeeves must unscramble the tangled love lives of Bertie and Eustace. Gertrude has announced that she’s engaged to Bertie. Eustace is in love with Gertrude. Bertie is definitely NOT in love with Gertrude. How can they get Gertrude to fall in love with Eustace? For Example: JEEVES: Once Sir Rupert is out of the way, it will be your task, gentlemen, to persuade Miss Winklesworth-Bode to end her engagement to Mr. Wooster. BERTIE: Yes! EUSTACE: Absolutely! BERTIE: How exactly are we going to do that again? JEEVES: By presenting Miss Winklesworth-Bode with an irresistible alternate. (He points at Eustace.) BERTIE: What, Bassy—irresistible? How in the name of all that’s holy are we going to pull that off? JEEVES: Miss Winklesworth-Bode is a young lady who reveres intellect. BERTIE: Jeeves, have you met Bassy? EUSTACE: (in protest) I say! JEEVES: Some small deception may be required. If Mr. Bassington-Bassington could express an interest in, say, German philosophy… BERTIE: Jeeves, that is a perfectly splendid and by no means unripe idea! JEEVES: Very kind, sir. BERTIE: Sheer genius! EUSTACE: What is? BERTIE: Bassy, all you have to do is bone up on—JEEVES, who’s that chappie with the peculiar name that Gertie is always raving about? JEEVES: Nietzsche, sir. BERTIE: The very bloke! EUSTACE: Who? BERTIE: Some sort of German philanthropist. JEEVES: Philosopher, sir. BERTIE: Yes, yes. Bassy, look. All you have to do is pass yourself off as a student of German whatever and Gertie will go absolutely dippy over you! EUSTACE: She will? That would be ecstasy! O, Gertrude!—in passing, don’t you think Gertrude is a musical name? BERTIE: No. EUSTACE: No? BERTIE: No. EUSTACE: You don’t think it sounds rather like the wind rustling through the treetops? BERTIE: No. EUSTACE: Bertie, you are a fathead worm without any soul. BERTIE: Do shut up, Bassy. Now, there’s a book around here somewhere—(Jeeves produces the book.) Ah, thank you, Jeeves. EUSTACE: Types of Ethical Theory—Oh, Bertie, I don’t know… BERTIE: You needn’t commit the thing to memory for heaven’s sake. JEEVES: If you could just glance over one or two high points. BERTIE: Then, tonight when you’re chatting up Gertie just, you know, casually toss out the old phrase or two at appropriate moments. EUSTACE: Do you really think I can pull this off? BERTIE: It is a guaranteed certainty! Tell him, Jeeves! JEEVES: We shall simply have to rely on Mr. BassingtonBassington’s cool head and thespian skills. THINK ABOUT IT: Compare the character of Jeeves to that of Pseudolus, Dorine or the Fool. How is Jeeves similar to these other servants? How is his relationship with his master different from theirs? Notice that in three out of the four of the plays that we’ve looked at so far the problems are about love and marriage. Why do you think that is? TAPROOT THEATRE COMPANY: PLAY GUIDE PAGE 14 CULTURAL CONTEXT TRACKING THE CLEVER CLEVER SERVANT TRACKING THE SERVANT The Modern “Clever Servant” The master/servant relationship is less common in American culture. This means that American comedians and writers have found different ways to interpret the “clever servant.” In our modern comedy we often find “underdog” characters who aren’t supposed to be in charge but who are actually smarter than the people around them. For example, kids who are smarter than their parents, pets who are smarter than humans or employees who are smarter than their bosses. Think About It How are the characters below similar to the “clever servants” that we’ve been reading about in Plautus, Moliere, Shakespeare and Wodehouse. How has the comedy changed over time? Can you think of other examples of books, comics, television shows, or movies that use versions of the “clever servant” comedy motif? TAPROOT THEATRE COMPANY: PLAY GUIDE PAGE 15 THE WONDROUS WORLD OF WODEHOUSE WODEHOUSE’S WORDS P.G. Wodehouse loved to play with words, slang and abbreviations; and his characters (especially the younger set) were always on the cutting edge of slang and improvisational language. Many times his characters were the first or at least among the first to use these words and phrases, most likely rendering them ridiculous and incomprehensible to any older people. Here are some examples of 1920's words and slang that you may encounter in P.G. Wodehouse’s stories. Do your best to match the words with their definitions! 1. __________: trans. To harass, to bedevil; to snub. (Only in P. G. Wodehouse.) 1923 P.G. Wodehouse Inimitable Jeeves iii. 30 “My Aunt Agatha..wouldn’t be on hand to _____ me for at least another six weeks.” 2. __________: A dollar. "Can you spot me a few _____?" Other slang for money: cabbage, kale. 3. __________: A form, freq. in modern times, of cup o’. Also used as an abreviation for ‘cup o’ tea’. 1925 P.G. Wodehouse Sam the Sudden vi. 42 “Come and have a _____ coffee.” 4. __________: Intoxicated, drunk. 1927 P.G. Wodehouse Meet Mr. Mulliner vi. 191 “Intoxicated? The word did not express it by a mile. He was oiled, boiled, fried..______, sozzled, and blotto.” 5. ___________: Nonsense. (Related: baloney = piffle). 6. __________: Money, lettuce. Word Bank Bounder Dewdropper Jake Oojah-cum-spiff Right ho Soup job Voot Zing Clam Egg Noodle juice Phonus balonus Ritzy Tell it to Sweeney Wet blanket Corker Fire extinguisher Know one’s onions Plonk Shimmy Unscramble Whiffled Cuppa Gruntled Ossified Pottines Snooter Upchuck You slay me Answers are on page 17. 7. __________: Man. "He's a funny _____." 8. __________: A dull thudding sound, as of one solid object hitting another; (also) an abrupt, hollow, resonant noise, esp. as that emitted from a musical instrument (cf. plink). Also as int. (Also reduplicated.) 1903 P.G. Wodehouse Tales of St. Austin’s 9 “There was a beautiful, mu- sical ____, and the ball soared to the very opposite quarter of the field.” 9. __________: Okey dokey. "Everything is _______." 10. __________: To put into or restore to order; to disentangle; to make sense of (something) confused; 1923 P.G. Wodehouse Inimitable Jeeves x. 104 “I collapsed on to the settee and rather lost interest in things for the moment. When I had _______ myself I found that Jeeves and the child had retired.” 11. __________: Drunk, probably from having been on a toot, or a drinking binge. Also: splifficated, fried, blotto. 12. __________: A chaperone (aka, a killjoy, an alarm clock). TAPROOT THEATRE COMPANY: PLAY GUIDE 13. __________: intr. In the work of P.G. Wodehouse: to express agreement by saying ‘______!’; to acquiesce. 1936 P.G. Wodehouse Laughing Gas iv. 41 “I had met her when she was taking a holiday at Cannes. We became chummy. I asked her to marry me. She _______. So far, so good.” 14. __________: A young, unemployed guy who sleeps all day. Alternate synonym: A lollygagger. 15. __________: The state or condition of being potty; silliness, madness, craziness. 1933 P.G. Wodehouse Heavy Weather iii. 47 “It was not primarily his ____ that led him to steal the Empress.” 16. __________: To know one's beeswax; to know what someone's talking about. 17. __________: Pleased, satisfied, contented. 1938 P.G. Wodehouse Code of Woosters i. 9 “He spoke with a certain what-is-it in his voice, and I could see that, if not actually disgruntled, he was far from being _____.” PAGE 16 THE WONDROUS WORLD OF WODEHOUSE WODEHOUSE’S WORDS 1920 P.G. Wodehouse Jill the Reckless xvi. 296 “The Duchess, abandoning that aristocratic manner criticized by some of her colleagues as ‘up-stage’ and by others as ‘___’, [etc.].” 19. ___________: Go say that to someone who'll believe your phonus balonus. 20. __________: A person of objectionable manners or anti-social behavior; a cad. 1919 P.G. Wodehouse Damsel in Distress vi. 70 “He had been marched up the Haymarket in the full sight of all London by a _______ of a policeman.” 21. __________: Tea. (But noodle on its own means head.) 22. __________: To crack a safe using nitroglycerine. (Safecrackers were yeggs.) 23. __________: Representing the sudden advent of a new situation or emotion. 1919 P.G. Wodehouse Damsel in Distress vi. 75 “The generous blood of the Belphers boiled over, and then—____. They jerked him off to Vine Street.” 24. __________: Vomit, probably after too much foot juice or giggle water. (Synonymous: to pull a Daniel Boone is to vomit.) 25. __________: A person or thing of surpassing size or excellence; a stunner; also used ironically. 1936 P.G. Wodehouse Laughing Gas ii. 25 “’I know what you mean,’ I said. ‘Nine times out of ten they're absolute washouts, of course. But this one was a ______.’” 26. __________: You're hilarious. 27. __________: Fine, all right. 1930 P.G. Wodehouse Very Good, Jeeves i. 25 “’All you have to do,’ I said, ‘is to carry on here for a few weeks more, and everything will be __________.’” 28. __________: intr. and trans. To ‘dance’ in; to transport (a person) quickly. 1923 P.G. Wodehouse Inimitable Jeeves vii. 76, “I bounded into the sitting-room, but it was empty. Jeeves _____ in.” LET’S FIND OUT! Have you ever used any of these slang terms? Which ones? How? ____________________________________ ____________________________________ ____________________________________ ____________________________________ ____________________________________ What current phrases or slang do you use now? ____________________________________ ____________________________________ ____________________________________ ____________________________________ ____________________________________ Ask an adult. ____________________________________ ____________________________________ ____________________________________ ____________________________________ ____________________________________ 29. __________: Someone who is no fun, no fun at all. Someone who does not like whoopee (to have a good time). Words, definitions and quotes reprinted from: Cuppa and Other Words First Used by P.G. Wodehouse by Abhit Nag How to Sound Like the Bee's Knees: A Dictionary of 1920s Slang by Jen Doll TAPROOT THEATRE COMPANY: PLAY GUIDE Wodehouse’s Words Answers: 1. Snooter 2. Clam 3. Cuppa 4. Whiffled 5. Phonus balonus 6. Voot 7. Egg 8. Plonk 9. Jake 10. Unscramble 11. Ossified 12. Fire extinguisher 13. Right ho 14. Dewdropper 15. Pottiness 16. Know one’s onions 17. Gruntled 18. Ritzy 19. Tell it to Sweeney 20. Bounder 21. Noddle juice 22. Soup job 23. Zing 24. Upchuck 25. Corker 26. You slay me 27. Oojah-cum-spiff 28. Shimmy 29. Wet blanket 18. __________: colloq. (orig. U.S.) Of a person: haughty, snobbish. Now rare. PAGE 17 QUESTIONS POST-SHOW REFLECTION QUESTIONS The Question: Tell a story about a time that you told a lie and got caught. If you can’t remember a story you can make something up! 1. Aunt Agatha and Uncle Rupert are both determined to improve their nephews, but neither Bertie nor Eustace want to be improved. Which side are you on? Should Bertie and Eustace get married, get jobs and stop “wasting their life”? Or should Aunt Agatha and Uncle Rupert mind their own business? 2. Aunt Agatha and Uncle Rupert both have a lot of (unwanted) advice for their nephews. Who are the people in your life (older or younger) that you go to when you need advice? Are there people who give you advice when you don’t want it? 3. Eustace spends most of this play pretending to be someone different than who he is. Pretending to be rich for his uncle. Pretending to be smart for Gertrude. Have you ever tried to impress somebody else by pretending to be different? Did it work? Does it work for Eustace? 4. One of the reasons that P.G. Wodehouse’s comic characters (Bertie and Jeeves) are so funny is that Jeeves is a servant who is smarter than his master. Why do you think we find this situation funny? Can you think of other stories (classic or modern) that have servants who are smarter than their masters, pets who are smarter than their owners, kids who are smarter than adults, etc.? TAPROOT THEATRE COMPANY: PLAY GUIDE PAGE 18 TAPROOT THEATRE COMPANY MISSON STATEMENT Taproot Theatre Company creates theatre experiences to brighten the spirit, engage the mind and deepen the understanding of the world around us while inspiring imagination, conversation and hope. ABOUT US EDUCATION PROGRAMS Taproot Theatre Company was founded in 1976 by six friends, five of them graduates from Seattle Pacific University. From its humble beginnings as a touring group, the company is now Seattle’s largest mid-size theatre company. Today Taproot Theatre serves over 150,000 people annually throughout the Pacific Northwest with its Jewell Mainstage season, Isaac Studio Theatre season, Touring programs and Acting Studio. In-School Residencies & Workshops From drama games to acting classes to putting on a production, Taproot Theatre’s residencies can range from several weeks to months, or an entire school year. Whether during the school day or after school as an enrichment program, let Taproot’s trained teaching artists introduce a whole new world to your students. Our theatre arts professional will visit your classroom for a workshop that will inspire and excite your students. They will develop basic acting skills and explore non-theatre curriculum using theater as a medium. STAFF CONTACTS In-School Residencies & Workshops Nathan Jeffrey, Director of Education & Outreach 206.529.3669 [email protected] Touring Productions Shelby Parsons, Associate Director of Education & Outreach 206.529.3668 [email protected] Midweek Matinees Isaiah Custer, Marketing Associate 206.529.3666 [email protected] General Box Office: 206.781.9707 Administrative Office: 206.781.9705 Fax: 206.297.6882 Taproot Theatre Company P.O. Box 30946 Seattle, WA 98113 www.taproottheatre.org TAPROOT THEATRE COMPANY: PLAY GUIDE Touring Productions The Road Company – performing plays for elementary and secondary schools focusing on issues such as bullying prevention, substance abuse, and friendship skills. Family oriented productions and improv comedy for churches, clubs, office parties and other groups. Camps & Classes Taproot Theatre Company’s Acting Studio is a year-round instructional program for theatre artists of all ages and experience levels. We are devoted to the wholeness of the artist with the goal of creating a nurturing environment to help each student develop his or her unique gifts. PAGE 19 NEXT ON THE JEWELL MAINSTAGE: GODSPELL Fresh. Free. Fabulous. Summer in Seattle. You may have heard these songs before, but not like this. Set against the backdrop of the city’s public market our talented cast sings, dances and plays their own instruments as they tell a story of loyalty, laughter and unconditional love. Let down your hair and have a good time—it’s summer in Seattle! Tickets available at www.taproottheatre.org or 206.781.9707. For group pricing: 206.781.9708 or [email protected]. Taproot’s brand new adaptation of Bram Stoker’s Dracula takes you on a chilling adventure following the unlikely allies that join forces to defeat an ancient villain. Dare to enter the crypt as light invades darkness in the ultimate battle between life and death. Tickets for the Senior and Intergenerational Matinee’s are on sale! You don’t want to miss this gothic classic. For single tickets: 206.781.9707 | For group tickets: 206.781.9708 or [email protected]
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