Title: Tom Stoppard
1Tom Stoppard
2I. Introduction to Tom Stoppard
- Sir Tom Stoppard (born 3 July 1937) is a
British screenwriter and playwright. He has
written plays such as The Coast of Utopia,
Arcadia, Rosencrantz Guildenstern Are Dead, and
Rock 'n' Roll. He co-wrote the screenplays for
Brazil and Shakespeare in Love. - Tom Stoppard's playwrighting career embodies a
fascinating clash of opposites. In an interview,
he once said, "I don't write plays for
discussion." Yet his writings have been the
subject of dozens of academic books and hundreds
of critical articles. He has also commented "I've
never felt . . . that art is important." Yet many
of his characters continually ponder the
significance of theater, indeed, the significance
all the arts, as part of a perpetual (forever)
search for meaning.
3- He is regarded as the most intellectual
dramatist of our time, and his works are
permeated (pervade) with cultural allusions and a
remarkable depth of scholarship in a dizzying
array of fields. Yet his formal education ended
after the second year of high school. Finally,
despite Stoppard's stature as a "serious"
playwright, his writings overflow with fun
parodies, puns, and verbal byplay across multiple
languages.
4Career
- By 1960, he had completed his first play A Walk
on the Water, which was later re-packaged as
1968's Enter a Free Man. Stoppard noted that the
work owed much to Robert Bolts and Arthur
Millers Death of a Salesman. Within a week after
sending A Walk on the Water to an agent, Stoppard
received his version of the "Hollywood-style
telegrams that change struggling young artists'
lives." His first play was optioned, later staged
in Hamburg, and then broadcast on British
Independent Television in 1963. - From September 1962 until April 1963, Stoppard
worked in London as a drama critic for Scene
magazine, writing reviews and interviews both
under his name and the pseudonym William Boot
(taken from Evelyn Waugh's Scoop). In 1964, a
Ford Foundation grant enabled Stoppard to spend 5
months writing in a Berlin mansion, emerging with
a one-act play titled Rosencrantz and
Guildenstern Meet King Lear, which later evolved
into his Tony-winning play Rosencrantz
Guildenstern Are Dead. In the following years,
Stoppard produced several works for radio,
television and the theater, including "M" is for
Moon Among Other Things (1964), A Separate Peace
(1966) and If You're Glad I'll Be Frank (1966). - On 11 April 1967 following acclaim at the
1966 Edinburgh Festival the opening of
Rosencrantz Guildenstern Are Dead in a National
Theatre production at the Old Vic made Stoppard
an overnight success.
5- Over the next ten years, in addition to writing
some of his own works, Stoppard translated
various plays into English, including works by
Slawomir Mrozek, Johann Nestroy, Arthur
Schnitzler, and Vaclav Havel. It was at this time
that Stoppard became influenced by the works of
Polish and Czech absurdists. He has been co-opted
into the Outrapo group, a far-from-serious French
movement to improve actors' stage technique
through science. - "Stoppardian" has become a term used to refer
to works in which an author makes use of witty
statements to create comedy while addressing
philosophical concepts. - Stoppard was voted the number 76 on the 2008
Time 100, Time magazine's list of the most
influential people in the world.
6- Personal life
- Stoppard has been married twice, to Josie Ingle
(19651972), a nurse, and to Miriam Stoppard (née
Stern and subsequently Miriam Moore-Robinson,
19721992), whom he left to begin a relationship
with actress Felicity Kendal. He has two sons
from each marriage, including the actor Ed
Stoppard and Will Stoppard, who is married to
violinist Linzi Stoppard.
7TheatreStoppards plays deal with
philosophical issues while presenting verbal wit
and visual humour. The linguistic complexity of
his works, with their puns, jokes,
innuendo(?????), and other wordplay, is a chief
characteristic of his work. Many also feature
multiple timelines.
- One place to begin with Stoppard, however, is
to recognize that after he left school at the age
of seventeen, he worked for a few years as a
journalist, including several months as a drama
critic. This career seems to have inspired in him
an almost scientific curiosity about people's
behavior, a fascination with how they attempt to
maintain personal, emotional, and intellectual
balance as they wander through the uncertainties
of life. Indeed, the main characters in virtually
all his plays conduct a perpetual struggle to
affirm their beliefs and values in a bewildering
world.
8- Works
- Nowhere is this theme more evident than in
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead (1967),
Stoppard's first international success. Here he
dramatizes the plight of two peripheral
characters from Shakespeare's Hamlet, as they
meander in and out of the turmoil that ravages
the Danish court of Elsinore. The two men are
unaware that Prince Hamlet has been ordered by
his father's Ghost to revenge the murder of this
father, the King, at the hands of Claudius, now
ruler of Denmark and husband of Gertrude,
Hamlet's mother. Nor have they any sense of the
social, political, religious, and sexual
implications of this crisis. All they know is
that they have been summoned to discover why
Hamlet, their old school chum, seems so
distressed. Stoppard weaves scenes from
Shakespeare with his own sparkling dialogue,
creating a memorable portrait of two little men
who seek to understand a world hopelessly beyond
their ken.
9- From time to time, Rosencrantz and
Guildenstern encounter some Players who entertain
at Hamlet's court, and at those moments, the two
lost souls tend to regard themselves as actors on
the stage of life. This theme is developed
further in one of Stoppard's most successful
short plays, The Real Inspector Hound (1968), in
which two theater critics, casually reviewing a
preposterous thriller, are drawn reluctantly into
the conflict onstage. On one level, Hound is a
delightful spoof of critical jargon and the
pomposity that characterizes Stoppard's former
profession. Yet more subtly it suggests how any
of us, thinking ourselves safe from the hubbub of
the world, may nonetheless be whisked unwillingly
and even fatally into the chaos.
10- Stoppard's next major play, Jumpers (1972),
accomplishes the seemingly impossible task of
bringing the world of contemporary philosophy to
the theatre. Throughout the play, the
protagonist, who shares the name of
twentieth-century British philosopher G. E.
Moore, prepares for an academic debate on the
nature of moral values. His ruminations are
frequently interrupted, however, by the
shenanigans of a troupe of renegade
gymnast/philosophers who, believe it or not, have
seized the British government. Part of the
background to these bizarre goings-on is the 1969
landing on the moon, and the way that this event,
so Stoppard suggests, altered humanity's
perception of itself. The play is ultimately a
reaction against the modern denial of values, and
an affirmation that something inherent within us
makes us human, and allows us to maintain faith
in goodness and beauty.
11- Stoppard's first attempt to create historical
drama was Travesties (1974), which uses as a
starting point the coincidence that novelist
James Joyce, Russian revolutionary Lenin, and
Dadaist poet Tristan Tzara all lived in Zurich,
Switzerland during World War I. No historical
evidence indicates that the three ever
encountered one another, but in Stoppard's
imagination they do so. The text is complicated
by the use of an elderly narrator, whose frazzled
memory muddles details of plot beyond
description. In the midst of the confusion,
though, we may discern parallels between the
goals of the artistic revolutionary and those of
the political revolutionary, as well as the need
for all individuals to establish a purpose for
their existence.
12- These brief outlines suggest some of the themes
that have buttressed Stoppard's extensive
dramatic output. In more recent works, he has
moved through a great range of political, social,
religious, and scientific issues, many of which
may be found in Arcadia, along with perspectives
on Time, Poetry, Love, and other subjects too
numerous to elucidate here. Perhaps the most
important point to remember, though, is that no
matter how intellectually daunting the material,
Arcadia is, in fact, a "play," and that at its
foundation lies a joy and creative energy to be
found uniquely in the magic of theater.
13II. Analysis of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are
Dead
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, Tom
Stoppard's best-known and first major play,
appeared initially as an amateur production in
Edinburgh, Scotland, in August of 1966.
Subsequent professional productions in London and
New York in 1967 made Stoppard an international
sensation and three decades and a number of major
plays later Stoppard is now considered one of the
most important playwrights in the latter half of
the twentieth century.
14- Recognized still today as a consistently clever
and daring comic playwright, Stoppard startled
and captivated audiences for Rosencrantz and
Guildenstern Are Dead when he retold the story of
Shakespeare's Hamlet as an absurdist-like farce,
focusing on the point of view of two of the
famous play's most insignificant characters. In
Shakespeare's play, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern
are little more than plot devices, school chums
summoned by King Claudius to probe Hamlet's
bizarre behavior at court and then ordered to
escort Hamlet to England (and his execution)
after Hamlet mistakenly kills Polonius. - Hamlet escapes Claudius's plot and engineers
instead the executions of Rosencrantz and
Guildenstern, whose deaths are reported
incidentally after Hamlet returns to Denmark. In
Stoppard's play, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern
become the major characters while the Hamlet
figures become plot devices, and Stoppard's
wildly comic play becomes the story of two
ordinary men caught up in events they could
neither understand nor control. Stoppard's play
immediately invited comparisons with Samuel
Beckett's Waiting for Godot and also brought to
mind George Bernard Shaw, Oscar Wilde, and Luigi
Pirandello. "Stoppardian" is now a recognizable
epithet that suggests extraordinary verbal wit
and the comic treatment of philosophical issues
in often bizarre theatrical contexts.
15Themes of the Play
- 1. Language and Communication
- In Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead, the
two title characters often play with words. They
pun off of each other's words without much
intention of moving their dialogue toward a set
purpose. Instead, they are simply goofing around,
like two kids throwing a ball back and forth. At
the same time, however, the consistently poor
communication in the play seems to hint at a
broader breakdown in understanding between the
characters that may help send the play into its
tragic spiral. Language is sometimes seen as an
empowering way of writing one's own fate, but for
Ros and Guil it often seems like an impotent
tool, best suited for idle speculation.
16- 2. Isolation
- In Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead, main
characters Ros and Guil, when left alone in the
play, often suffer from feelings of isolation. In
the opening and closing scenes of the play, it is
just Ros and Guil alone on stage. One wonders if
it is the degree to which these two are isolated
that has led to their constant idleness and
passivity, or if things worked the other way
around. From the very start of the play, however,
it does seem as if Ros and Guil are marked, as if
they are moving toward their deaths, simply
passing through the action of the play. The sense
of isolation reaches its highest pitch, perhaps,
when it is just the two of them in the dark on
the boat in the last act. It is, in a sense, a
premonition of death, or a fear of what death
might be bodiless nothingness, with only the
mind working.
173. Manipulation(??)
- People use each other quite a bit in
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead, and part
of the reason the main characters, Ros and Guil,
are never in control of their situation is
because they seem naively incapable of using the
people around them. Manipulation, in many ways,
is compared the act of directing a play it's
the ability to control the course of events. A
play is explored as something that manipulates
the audience something that attempts to affect
the way that they think and feel.
18- 4. Fear
- In the opening of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern
are Dead, there is a long string of coin flips
that come up heads, which frightens Guil, one of
the main characters. He later attempts to reason
through how the laws of probability could
seemingly be suspended, and at one point
concludes, "The scientific approach to the
examination of phenomena is a defence against the
pure emotion of fear" (1.73). What Guil means is
that we fear the unknown (such as death).
Science, by trying to make things comprehensible,
attempts to reduce this fear. By coming to know
things about our world and the laws by which it
works, we try to feel more at home in it, more
like we have a handle on what is happening. The
alternative recognizing just how little we know
about the world around us causes fear.
19- 5. Foolishness and Folly
- In many ways, in Rosencrantz and Guildenstern
are Dead it is the title characters' fault that
they die. They are easily, and, at times,
willingly manipulated. Not to mention, Ros and
Guil spend a good portion of the play messing
around swapping names, misunderstanding each
other, playing at games of their own devising.
Their foolishness is, in part, a source of
comedy, but it also seems a natural way to stay
entertained when one has as little to do.
20- 6. Passivity
- Ros and Guil may be at the center of the action
in Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead, but
they certainly don't drive it. It can be seen
most clearly in Act II how they are just left to
sit around and wait unless someone else crosses
the stage or tells them what to do. Another main
character, the Player, seems to suggest that they
should be more active and that Guil shouldn't
waste so much time questioning things, but Guil
is less concerned with action than with freedom
of action. Yet, in the end, the fact that Ros and
Guil betray their friend Hamlet makes their
passivity morally significant their failure to
act may play a role in their own fates.
21- 7. Versions of Reality
- In Shakespeare's Hamlet, the play-within-a-play
is packed within a clear context and is used by
Hamlet to send a message to Claudius. For us as
the audience of Stoppard's play, however, the
distinctions between a play and reality get
totally jumbled. First, Rosencrantz and
Guildenstern is nothing but a play on the stage.
Secondly, it is a play that interacts with the
action of an earlier play, Shakespeare's Hamlet.
Third, it is unclear to what extent the Player
and his Tragedians are driving the action of the
play and to what extent the "real" characters are
in control of what is happening. The difference
between drama and reality is called into
question, most explicitly in the arguments
between Guil and the Player.
22- 8. Fate and Free Will
- This theme is introduced in the very first
scene of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead,
where the long string of coins tosses coming up
"heads" seems to suggest that the laws of
probability have been suspended. The way that
fate operates in the play is largely through the
words of William Shakespeare. Since Stoppard's
play works within the framework of Shakespeare's
Hamlet, his characters are bound to undergo a
certain series of events their fate was
"written" in 1600. Main characters Guil and Ros
have the most freedom when they manage to get out
of the action of the Hamlet storyline, but in
these times they often find themselves bored and
listless. The relationship between Stoppard's
play and Shakespeare's allows Rosencrantz and
Guildenstern are Dead to ask the question to
what degree do fate and chance control our own
lives?
23- 9. Morality
- So, you probably noticed that the word "dead"
in the title Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are
Dead, and that there is a lot of discussion of
death in the play. Stoppard's play is intensely
aware of the fact that we will all, one day, die.
It is also aware of the fact that death simply
cannot be captured in art. The main character,
Guil, sees death as the negative, as a blind spot
in the mind something that humans are incapable
of thinking about. As a result, he sees acted out
deaths in plays as pretense claiming to put
something on stage that one cannot. In contrast,
Guil's rival, the Player, thinks that no one can
tell the difference between an acted death and a
real one, and he thus decides to give his
audiences the sort of entertainment they want
death, and lots of it.
24Shakespeare in Love
Written by Tom Stoppard