With this project – Elia Kazan: A Theatre
Investigation – I hope to ignite in all those that participate, audience
included, a new taste for research and focus on the greater world of
theatre; its history and that history’s profound and direct influence on what
we do today in our world of contemporary Australian theatre.
So why focus on Elia Kazan to tell this story?
Because it was he that gave me the courage to
direct my first play. I was, until that time, an actor and sometimes
technician. But the world of ‘the play’ was starting to expand in my mind and
my appetite for the big picture was becoming overwhelming. I wanted to paint
the complete landscape of a piece, not just a corner of the canvas, and I
wanted it to mean something. I wanted to saturate myself in an artform that had
a direct relationship with its audience and the potential to affect it.
As potent as Kazan was as an ambitious careerist,
what he mostly looked for in the work that he delivered was a greater social
consciousness. Kazan’s directorial choices looked at the world’s biggest social
and inherently political issues of the time, through the microcosm of domestic
life.
Clifford Odets' Waiting for Lefty is a universal call to restore
power to the common man during the Great Depression.
_______________________
Arthur Miller's All My Sons reflects the corruption of the
corporate sector and shows the fallibilities of the American Dream driven by
unrealistic ambitions.
_______________________
Robert Anderson's Tea and Sympathy is one of the last plays he
directed on Broadway. It is a play that attacks the social doxology of
masculinity, has a direct relationship with his views of McCarthyism and
exposes the very delicate world of the ‘Hollywood Closet’, that is still alive
and well in the film industry today.
_______________________
In Elia Kazan is the perfect example of a
complete landscape. It was only after studying him – his circumstances and
choices – that I realised that the world he was a part of, he changed to such
profound effect; and that the impact of such an artist on the history of
theatre must never be forgotten.
— Peta Hanrahan










Dear Peta
ReplyDeleteI tried to log into Post Comments (Atom) but couldn't get there. Something may be wrong in the ether but never with your vision and skills xx