Hannah Miller in Soulpepper's Production of The Cruicble - Photo by Cylla von Tiedemann |
The Salem witch trials of 1692 do, at first glance, seem so awfully far away. Oh those Puritans and their superstitions! How primitive!
But American playwright Arthur Miller thought differently. In them he found what he thoughts was an apt metaphor for the ills plaguing his own day. His 1953 play, The Crucible, revisits that historic event to expose the venality of modern times. The result is an allegory about the abuse of power that still resonates with audiences some 60 years after its New York premiere. To see it on stage at Toronto’s Young Centre for the Performing Arts where Soulpepper Theatre Company is performing The Crucible now through Sept. 22, is to feel the deadly chill of those hysterical persecutions all over again.
Michael Hanrahan, Stuart Hughes & Derek Boyes - Photo by Cylla von Tiedemann |
Ostensibly about a God-fearing community of Massachusetts Puritans who get swept up in the hysteria of adolescent girls caught dancing in the woods, the play takes a spiritual journey into the human heart to show it as the seat of both godliness and evil. The young women accused of consorting with Satan in turn accuse their accusers, and ultimately anyone else who ever made their teenage hormones rage with fear and lust, upturning a society that once prided itself as being peaceful. The ruse catches fire, spreading to inflame the passions of even learned men of the law who use the letter of their profession, as well as that of the Bible, to bring down an entire village of perceived enemies of God. They strive to make the irrational rational and so end up appearing more like the devil than the devil himself. Their power mongering claims an Everyman by the name of John Proctor (Stuart Hughes) who isn’t entirely good but not entirely bad either. His one act of adultery is responsible for the conflagration of wicked deceitfulness that engulfs his society, leading ultimately to his destruction. The perpetrator is Abigail Williams (Hannah Miller) whom he seduced and then abandoned when guilt made him return to his duty as a husband and father. His private battle with sin and redemption encroaches on the war of words waging in the law courts of Salem. Proctor occupies a moral grey area within the Puritan’s starkly defined world of black and white. He is flawed but ultimately his weakness becomes a source of strength. He dies in clear possession of his soul.
As far as is known, John Proctor is a figment of Miller’s imagination, a character created to help the playwright express a theme of betrayal such as he had experienced it in the years immediately leading up to his writing of the play, considered by many to be his finest. In 1947, his friend and colleague, the esteemed director Elia Kazan (he had previously directed Miller’s Death of a Salesman, another American classic) had testified before the House Un-American Committee (HUAC), exposing fellow artists with Communist sympathies.
Elia Kazan |
The story takes an interesting turn here. When Miller had finished the play, he sent it to Kazan. Kazan sent it back to Miller with notes and comments thinking that was what Miller was looking for. Miller wrote Kazan a note saying "no, this is about HUAC and the fact you named names." Kazan himself never responded, but his wife sure did. She wrote Miller a note telling him his metaphor didn't work because there were no witches in Salem, but there were certainly Communists in Hollywood.
Shortly after the play’s debut on Broadway in January 1953, Miller himself was called before HUAC, and when he refused to comply, he was blacklisted in Hollywood and his passport was revoked, though his plays continued to be produced. This is all background material, not part of the play proper, but fascinating nevertheless. It helps elucidate the work’s brilliance as a thinly veiled indictment of McCarthyism and other abuses of power condoned by the state. But beyond the political, The Crucible concerns itself with the human condition, showing it to be precariously perched between the sometimes competing worlds of the mind and the spirit, societal control and personal freedom. The play also highlights the tenuous divide separating rationality from irrationality, and how quickly even the best laid plans can fall into chaos when emotions run amok.
Shortly after the play’s debut on Broadway in January 1953, Miller himself was called before HUAC, and when he refused to comply, he was blacklisted in Hollywood and his passport was revoked, though his plays continued to be produced. This is all background material, not part of the play proper, but fascinating nevertheless. It helps elucidate the work’s brilliance as a thinly veiled indictment of McCarthyism and other abuses of power condoned by the state. But beyond the political, The Crucible concerns itself with the human condition, showing it to be precariously perched between the sometimes competing worlds of the mind and the spirit, societal control and personal freedom. The play also highlights the tenuous divide separating rationality from irrationality, and how quickly even the best laid plans can fall into chaos when emotions run amok.
Arthur Miller |
There are other breathtaking moments of sensual beauty in this play, such as when John Proctor takes pains to describe a Massachusetts evening as being like a flower: “Lilacs have a purple smell,” he says to his wife, Elizabeth. “Lilac is the smell of nightfall.” It’s a pungent image and it comes as something of a surprise in a play concerned mostly with shades of black and white.
Delivering the line is actor Stuart Hughes giving a stirring portrait of a man caught between his humanity and his community’s ideals. He creates a memorable portrait of unease. As his wife, Patricia Fagan is a study of elemental purity, glacial in her need to suppress the hurt of her husband’s betrayal. Hannah Miller as Abigail Williams is icy in that other way: a cold bitch who murders to get her way. She leads her gaggle of ghoulish girlfriends, including Courtney Ch’ng Lancaster as the would-be confessor Mary Warren, in a series of spine-tingling screams that could scare an exorcist. Certainly, they bend the ears of Derek Boyes as Reverend Parris, Oliver Dennis as Reverend John Hale and Joseph Ziegler as Deputy Governor Danforth, among other men of the cloth, who are easily beguiled by these not-so-innocent babes in the woods. Or should we say bewitched?
– Deirdre Kelly is a journalist (The Globe and Mail) and internationally recognized dance critic. Her latest book, Ballerina: Sex, Scandal and Suffering Behind the Symbol of Perfection, will be published in Canada on September 29, 2012, followed by a US release two weeks later. Her first book, Paris Times Eight, is a national best-seller.
"As far as is known, John Proctor is a figment of Miller’s imagination"- this article
ReplyDeleteJohn Proctor is a real person, not " a figment of Miller’s imagination"
Proctor was originally from Ipswich, where he and his father before him had a farm of considerable value. In 1666 he moved to Salem, where he worked on a farm, part of which he later bought. Proctor seems to have been an enormous man, very large framed, with great force and energy. Although an upright man, he seems to have been rash in speech, judgment, and action. It was his unguarded tongue that would eventually lead to his death. From the start of the outbreak of witchcraft hysteria in Salem, Proctor had denounced the whole proceedings and the afflicted girls as a scam. When his wife was accused and questioned, he stood with her throughout the proceedings and staunchly defended her innocence. It was during her questioning that he, too, was named a witch. Proctor was the first male to be named as a witch in Salem. He was hung.