May the Farce Be With You
MAY THE FARCE BE WITH YOU
Roger Foss
May The Farce
Be With You
OBERON BOOKS
LONDON
First published in 2012 by Oberon Books Ltd
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Copyright © Roger Foss, 2012
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Photograph on page 19: An audience at the Whitehall Theatre watching Reluctant Heroes; source unknown.
HB ISBN: 978-1-84943-151-4
EPUB ISBN: 978-1-84943-602-1
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Contents
1. LOL and the world LOLs with you
2. More Farce Please, We’re British
3. A Conversation with Cooney
4. The Man Who Made Queen Victoria Giggle
5. Comedy of Terrors
6. Let’s Farce the Music
7. Spent Farce?
8. Fifty Farces to See Before You Die Laughing
Bibliography of sources
1. LOL and the world LOLs with you
‘Laughter is a noise that comes out of a hole in your face’
– Ken Dodd
IF YOU COULD download theatre from iTunes, where would you put your farce? You’d end up having a genre crisis. Too niche to file under ‘Comedy’, too mainstream to file under ‘Classical’, farce doesn’t seem to go with a digital mindset. Even so, it’s probably only a matter of time before theatre audiences log out of real life and text ‘LOL’ to each other on smartphones rather than actually laugh out loud. Picture it: a West End theatre packed with rows of emoticon-type smiley faces watching the umpteenth revival of Feydeau’s A Flea in Her Ear, all madly sending text-speak to each other whenever the actors deliver a LOL moment. Silent comedy? No loud laughter? Unsmiley faces? Tragic.
FWIW (for what it’s worth, to non-texters), IMHO (in my humble opinion) the age-old tradition of people coming together to have a good laugh at people doing silly things is too culturally robust to surrender to the lost-in-cyberspace experience. The coupling of farce and laughter is a marriage made long ago in ancient showbiz Heaven: an arrangement that has had its conjugal (and critical) ups and downs, but was probably always destined for a laugh-out-loud ending.
When you trace the history of farce, it was Aristophanes who more than likely led the way with The Birds, and so it went on, right up to Basil Fawlty’s ‘Don’t mention the Germans’ and The Thick of It. But there’s always been a genre-slippage to farce, and it has has never been more slippy than in the past hundred years, when elements of farcicality have naturally flip-flopped between stage, film and television.
Even so, many of our major twentieth-century playwrights have adopted or explored farcical forms. Michael Frayn’s Noises Off, Alan Ayckbourn’s Bedroom Farce, Joe Orton’s Loot and What the Butler Saw, Peter Shaffer’s Black Comedy, Alan Bennett’s Habeas Corpus and Tom Stoppard’s Dirty Linen are all examples of writers taking the dramatic and the comic possibilities of farce as seriously as tragedy. More recently, a new generation of playwrights has discovered the power of farcicality. One Man, Two Guvnors, Richard Bean’s English reworking of Goldoni’s classic Italian comedy The Servant of Two Masters, owes most of its laugh-out-loud quotient to popular comedy forms harking back to the commedia dell’arte and traditional elements of farce, such as disguise, mistaken identity and slapstick. David Harrower’s Government Inspector, which premiered at the Young Vic in 2011, is another instance of a classic comedy given a broad comedic makeover, by transforming Nikolai Gogol’s classic social satire into an insane farcical nightmare.
At the mass consumption end of the spectrum of comedy, the world of the TV sitcom has thrived on farcicality. Watch reruns of I Love Lucy, Keeping Up Appearances, Rising Damp, Frasier and The Office and you’ll discover some humorous complication or other indelibly stamped with farce on the bottom.
John Cleese has acknowledged the influence of French farces on Fawlty Towers. The French, whose deep understanding of farce is probably embedded in the Gallic gene pool, are particularly adept at leaping the genre gap between farce onstage and farce on-screen. Jean Poiret’s 1973 play La Cage aux Folles began life as a stage farce. It then transferred successfully to film, and ended up back on the musical stage, with a book by Harvey Fierstein set to lyrics and music by Jerry Herman. Pierre Barillet and Jean-Pierre Grédy’s 1977-set play Potiche, with its women’s lib theme, is another example of a farcical stage situation working equally well on film in 2011.
From its earliest days, Hollywood comedians begged, borrowed or stole facets of farce they had used in vaudeville or music hall and turned them into silver screen comedy gold. In turn, Mack Sennett, Charlie Chaplin, Laurel and Hardy, The Three Stooges, Abbott and Costello and The Marx Brothers inspired the likes of Jerry Lewis, Billy Wilder and Woody Allen and the screwball capers of Frank Capra and Peter Bogdanovitch.
Nevertheless, farce is on home territory in a theatre full of people laughing out loud at other people onstage coping with unreal situations. From the fantastical farces and double entendres of Aristophanes and the scheming Roman-era slaves and libidinous old codgers of Plautus, to the contemporary domestic worlds of Ayckbourn, with the likes of Shakespeare, Goldoni, Molière, Feydeau, Arthur Wing Pinero, Ben Travers, Ray Cooney, John Chapman and numerous other expert farceurs in between, farce has made us laugh by putting a scalpel to the vices and vanities of flawed characters driven close to disaster by wonky moral satnavs.
But what is farce? American drama critic John Mason Brown once aptly described farce as ‘comedy written with a slapstick rather than a pen. Its business is to make us accept the impossible as possible, the deranged as normal, and silliness as a happy substitute for sense.’
According to actor-producer Brian Rix of Whitehall farce fame, the whole point of farce is that it is broad comedy teetering on the edge of tragedy: ‘It always threatens ultimate catastrophe, and this is what sustains the dramatic tension,’ Rix writes in his autobiography, Farce About Face, ‘but by a slight twist it makes people roll about with laughter. It is tragedy with its trousers down.’ Or as John Mortimer famously describes it in relation to Feydeau’s farcical adventures into adultery: ‘Tragedy played at a thousand revolutions per minute.’
Actor turned farceur Ray Cooney, who developed his craft as a writer in Rix’s Whitehall company, agrees with the tragi-comic connection: ‘What I write about as farce could easily be treated as tragedy in other hands. What Shakespeare does with kings, I do with taxi drivers.’
Today, many people would probably sign up to the idea that farce is tightly plotted comedy of bad manners, with protagonists (mostly men, rarely w
omen) caught in potentially disastrous situations (usually in or near the bedroom) and employing split-second exits and entrances (invariably involving lots of door-slamming) that rev-up into a kind of face-saving relay race – low comedy based on human frailties with physical action that almost belongs to a race apart.
But before running away with the idea that farce is simply frantic fun with sexual overtones, as in Feydeau’s farces, it’s worth remembering that, over the years, farce meant different things at different times.
The French and the Italians first coined the word farci, or farcie, not in the theatre but in the kitchen and the medieval church. The term is derived from the Latin farcire, ‘to stuff’ meat or other foods. Originally the vernacular ‘stuffing’ inserted between passages of Latin liturgy or during the more serious parts of seasonal mystery play cycles, by the sixteenth century the ‘farce’ had evolved in France and in Italy into loose playlets designed to create laughter, often performed by the travelling troupes from which Molière emerged. The farcical influence was felt in puritanical England too, where tomfoolery, buffoonery and clowning had always been a part of medieval and Tudor drama.
By the Restoration, when the word farce was coined in England, it was not generally used to refer to a special type of comic stage technique at all, but to short, crude humorous plays which were becoming popular at the time. In 1667, Samuel Pepys was recording how a farce, The Feigned Innocence, or, St Martin Marr-All, made him laugh: ‘It is the most entire piece of mirth, a complete farce from one end to the other, that certainly ever was writ. I never laughed so in all my life’.
By the eighteenth and the nineteenth centuries ‘comedy’ and ‘farce’ could mean the same thing. The same play might be described as a ‘comedy of manners’ on one poster, a ‘farce’ on another. It was common practice to label any short piece opening or closing a bill as a ‘farce’, even if there was nothing farcical about it. The French constantly got their comedy knickers in a twist describing some farcical comedies as farce, but others as petite comédie or précieuses ridicules.
The Oxford English Dictionary definition of farce includes: ‘a dramatic work (usually short) which has for its sole object to excite laughter; an interlude.’ I’ll go with the laughter. At its heart, farce employs its theatrical ingenuity to make people laugh out loud. It’s a communal experience. And in good farces you’ll always find a subversive side lurking somewhere behind the funnies, whether it’s in Joe Orton’s What the Butler Saw or Ray Cooney’s Run For Your Wife. As Sir Peter Hall has noted, farce ‘allows us to watch the sort of bad behaviour that we could never publicly endorse, but which we secretly know we might be capable of.’ But farce’s prime purpose is to create characters, situations and action that tickle funny bones – a fun-poking experience that critic Laurence Kitchen, in his book Drama in the Sixties calls, rather snootily, ‘The pop art of canteens and seaside piers’.
For me, the cathartic experience of crying with laughter at a farce is every bit as potent as sniffling into a Kleenex during a romantic weepie. Laughter is as natural as breathing. We all arrive on the planet crying out loud first and laughing out loud next. Laughter is in the human DNA chain long before we learn to talk and toddle. Comedians die without it. Theatre audiences roll in the aisles doing it. Beauticians claim it loosens facial wrinkles.
Is laughter really all down to a chemical reaction within our pituitary glands? Does it simply rely on beta-endorphins triggering a humorous high? Has it evolved in humans over millions of years, or have the God-fearing creationists got it right when they claim that laughter simply comes direct from the Almighty. ‘Let there be laughter’… ‘and lo, Adam’s Rib was tickled pink.’ But then the Old Testament never was known for its jokes.
Lofty thinkers such as Aristotle, Kant, Darwin, Bakhtin and Bergson have pondered deeply on the nature of humour. Joke analyst Sigmund Freud even imagined the id, ego and superego as a sort of Three Stooges of the unconscious. Personally, I’ve always had trouble swallowing any of the various titter theories put forward by neuropsychologists, anthropologists and sociologists, because nobody has come up with a more definitive account of the true nature of laughter than Ken Dodd: ‘Laughter is a noise that comes out of a hole in your face. If it’s from anywhere else you are in trouble.’
Unless you are living in a permanently tragic state of the glums, we know from our own experience how that noise from a hole in the face is powerfully contagious, socially beneficial and utterly universal. In a theatre, you can’t beat laughing alongside others during those endorphine-rush moments in a farce when the entire house erupts as if a mighty mirthquake is shaking the foundations.
I can pinpoint the light bulb moment when I first discovered the ability of farce to create knockout laughter. This was not a theatre laugh out loud moment, but a television moment at our home in the East End of London during the summer of 1955. I was just turned ten when my hard-up parents scraped enough money together to rent a black and white television receiver. For me, the box-shaped telly in our front room immediately became a window on another world where brightness and laughter reigned; a world that I barely knew existed beyond the greyscale streets of Cockneydom.
The goggle box became my own private giggle box, from out of which came the likes of Richard ‘Mr Pastry’ Hearne, Charlie Drake and I Love Lucy. Here was a ten-year-old’s comedy escape route from the very unfunny reality of a large family coping with post-war poverty. I had already discovered a parallel universe of radio fun. But now, through the medium of the telly, I really could immerse myself in other worlds bubbling with laughter: more fun here, I thought, than cheering yourself hoarse when Old Mother Riley films came on the screen at the Saturday morning pictures. At home, watching comedy shows on the flickering screen, I could roll around laughing on the lino, whilst secretly imagining myself being part of the warmth of the mysterious studio audience that you heard but could never see.
Then, one summer evening, I stayed up late to see Dry Rot. I had no idea I was watching the live broadcast of Act Two of a rollicking stage farce, written by John Chapman, which had been packing the Whitehall Theatre for nearly a year. Actually, I had no idea that such things as ‘farce’ or even theatres existed. Apart from the annual trip to the London Palladium pantomime, theatre-going wasn’t for the likes of us. So this transmission must have been the first live play I ever saw.
Dry Rot’s fast and furious plot revolving around a racehorse swindle and three dubious crooks who are forced to take increasingly desperate measures to avoid being nabbed, sent continuous gales of laughter across the theatre footlights that seemed to woosh though the television screen and into our front room like laughing gas. If only I could be there at the Whitehall to breathe in the roar of that crowd…
This was the moment when the overwhelming atmosphere of people laughing out loud together in a theatre captured my schoolboy imagination. It has never let go. From then on, I’ve never been able, or willing, to get farce out of my system.
Of course, I did not have a clue that Dry Rot, presented by and starring young actor-manager Brian Rix, would go on to run at the Whitehall Theatre for another three years. I had no idea that one of the critics had described its horse-nobbling plot as ‘doubtless intended for an audience of donkeys’. All I knew was that, together, a live audience and a team of actors doing the most extraordinary things on a stage could transform an auditorium into a mighty laughter machine. Sadly, Dry Rot is rarely revived. Yet to this day, I can still recall the hilarious Act Two tea-pouring scene.
Decades later, I discovered critic Eric Bentley’s comment about the liberating experience of farce: ‘Shielded by delicious darkness and seated in warm security, we enjoy the privilege of being totally passive while onstage our most treasured unmentionable wishes are fulfilled by the most violently active human beings that ever sprang from the human imagination.’ But the perfect description of farce’s laughter effect is by Michael Frayn. In his introduction to Volume One of his Collected Play
s, Frayn sums up precisely how I felt when, as a young teenager, I went with a coach party to see Simple Spymen (also written by John Chapman) at the Whitehall Theatre, by then established as the home of British farce: ‘You begin to warm to what you’re seeing; your warmth warms the people around you; their warmth warms you back; your corporate warmth warms the performers; you all warm to the performers’ warmth.’
Worth thinking about next time you are compelled to text a cool LOL?
2. More Farce Please, We’re British
‘I didn’t know you could laugh in the theatre.
I thought it was like going to church.’
AT FIRST GLANCE it’s just a black and white photograph of a theatre audience taken more than half a century ago. But look a little closer. Hilarity is written across the face of every single person. Mouths are gaping. Eyes are gleaming. Tears are flowing. Cheeks are glowing. Sides are splitting. Endorphins are rushing. Nobody is physically rolling around in the aisles. Another click of the shutter might catch them doing just that.
This roaring crowd is perched somewhere up in the Circle at the Whitehall Theatre in the early 1950s, enjoying a farce written by a member of a bright new acting company, Colin Morris, entitled Reluctant Heroes, a comedy of military life as lived by a motley crew of National Service recruits.
The uncredited photo appears in My Farce From My Elbow, the first of two autobiographies written by actor-manager Brian Rix (now Baron Rix of Whitehall and President of the Royal Mencap Society), who, at the age of 23, produced Reluctant Heroes and starred in it too as gormless recruit Gregory. As well as capturing that precise moment in a theatre when an explosion of shared laughter is about to go ballistic, this snapshot has always fascinated me because it evokes the mostly ignored post-war world of popular West End theatre-going.