DRAMATIS PERSONÆ.
ACT I.
ACT II.
ACT III.
CLAUD LOVAT FRASER
That
when I die this word may stand for me—He
had a heart to praise, an eye to see,And
beauty was his king.Dead
at the age of thirty-one after a sudden operation, Claud Lovat Fraser
was as surely a victim of the war as though he had fallen in action.
He was full of vigour for his work, but shell-shock had left him with
a heart that could not stand a strain of this kind, and all his own
fine courage could not help the surgeons in a losing fight. We are
not sorry for him—we learn that, not to be sorry for the dead. But
for ourselves? This terror is always so fresh, so unexampled. I had
telephoned to him to ask whether he would help me in a certain
theatrical enterprise. I was told by his servant that he was
ill, but one hears these things so often that one gave but little
thought to it beyond sending a telegram asking for news; and now
this. Personal griefs are of no public interest, but here is as sad a
public loss as has befallen us, if the world can measure truly, in
our generation.But
it is not, I think, of our loss that we should speak now. These
desolations, strangely, have a way of bringing their own fortitude.
A few hours after hearing, without any warning, of Lovat
Fraser’s death, I was walking among the English landscape that
he loved so well, and I felt there how poor and inadequate a thing
death really was, how little to be feared. This apparent intention to
destroy a life and genius so young, so admirable, and so rich in
promise, seemed, for all the hurt, in some way wholly to have failed.
We all knew that, given health, the next ten years would show a
splendid volume of work from the new power and understanding to which
he had been coming in these later days. But just as it seems to me
not the occasion to lament our own loss, so does it seem idle to
speculate with regret upon what art may have lost by this sudden
stroke. It is, rather, well to be glad that so few years have borne
so abundantly. Not only is the work that Lovat Fraser has left full
in volume, it is decisive in character beyond all likelihood in one
of his years. Greatly as he would have added to our delight, and
wider as his influence would have grown, nothing he might have done
could have added to our knowledge of the kind of distinction that was
his and that will always mark his fame.The
man himself had a charm of unusual definition. One might go to his
studio at five o’clock and find him lumbering with his great frame
among a chaos of the rare and curious books that he loved, stacked
pell-mell on to the shelves, littered on tables and the floor, his
clothes and face and fingers streaked with paint. And then an hour or
two later he would come dressed ready for the theatre, an immaculate
beau of the ’fifties, his top coat with waist and skirts, his opera
hat made to special order by a Bond Street expert on an 1850 last.
And then, before setting off, he would talk of some fellow-artist who
was a little down and out, and wonder whether some of his drawings
might not be bought at a few guineas apiece. Then to book, as it
were, such an order gave salt to his evening, and if the evening
meant contact with some of his own exquisite work, a word of
admiration was taken with that wistful gratitude that it is now
almost unbearable to remember.The
theatre is a complex, co-operative affair, and it is idle to inquire
who gives more than another to it. But on one side of its effort
nobody in these later years has fought for light and beauty more
surely and courageously than Claud Lovat Fraser. Like every fine
artist, he was sometimes a little puzzled, a little hurt, that
the critics could not see the clear motives inspiring his work. But
the purpose never faltered.
As You Like It,
The Beggar’s Opera,
If, the exquisite
designs for Madame Karsavina’s later ballets—these made it plain
enough that a new genius of extraordinary power and fertility was at
work on the stage. With a knowledge of tradition that combined the
widest learning with profound intuition, Lovat Fraser in his design
touched the life of five hundred years with the English spirit of our
own time, with a certainty that every one of his colleagues, I know,
will be proud to allow was beyond them all. The fertility of which I
speak was perhaps his peculiar distinction, and it had no touch of
common facility. He could not draw a line that was not hard with
thought and rooted in imaginative decision. But he could invent with
immense rapidity. It was the old, though rare, story. Alike in his
theatre design and his tender landscape, beauty of spirit flowed in
everything he did into beauty of execution. He was a man in whose
presence everything mean or slipshod withered.But
perhaps it is most fitting at this time that we should think of our
dead friend in yet another way. We are governed by two influences,
our own character, and example. For each man his own character is for
his meditation apart, but of example we may sometimes speak together
in the open with profit. Those of us who live always striving towards
creative effort believe passionately that the thing towards which we
aim makes for all that is most chivalrous and most intelligent in
life, that it is indeed the one true honesty in the world. And yet we
know how easily that effort is beset by fears and jealousies and
failure in generosity, how lightly we who should together give all
our energy to the service of our art, waste it in little concerns of
spite and self-interest. And it is in just such ways as this that
great example may serve us nobly, and there has surely never lived an
artist in whom such example more clearly shone. Art, which for him
embraced and crystallised all that was brave and adventurous and
tender, was the worship of Lovat Fraser’s life, a worship
which he kept with an absolute loyalty.It
is my privilege to know most of the best artists, in all kinds, of my
age. One has this distinction, another that. But I think that he had
the loveliest of them all. I have known nobody who brought to
his art a devotion so pure and utterly removed from self-interest. If
he could serve the beauty that he loved, he was eager always to do so
with perfect indifference to his own reward. Nobody could be with him
for ten minutes without feeling that art was a thing far greater than
any artist. He had the lovely, humorous humility that is the one sure
sign of greatness. One felt always that if he should think that
another might do given work better than he, there could be for
him nothing but distress if the best was not done, even though it
meant the loss of personal opportunity. But it is one of the happy
things of genius that this exquisite humility can only live with
great creative gifts, so that Lovat Fraser knew from day to day the
supreme joy of mastery. The humility, however, is our example, and
the thought that seems most worthy to-day is that he stands at this
moment, for all he was younger than most of us, as a challenging
leader to us all. It will, I think, always be impossible to
remember him without feeling that anything mean or grudging in the
spirit in which we do our work is a betrayal and an intolerable
thing. With all his gaiety, his fun, his simplicities, and his
powers, he showed us not only what a fine artist can do but what a
fine artist can be. And under his leadership at this moment may we
not go back to our work in the world with renewed courage and faith,
“We
few, we happy few, we band of brothers.”For
his fame none of us have any fear. There is in his public achievement
and his portfolios a solid body of work that more and more must
establish itself. However futile prophecy in these things must be,
one is confident that a hundred years hence his name will be highly
honoured among the little band who helped to bring back some life and
truth to the English theatre of this age. He would wish for nothing
better than that. And idle though it is to ask what his death, at
little more than youth, may mean in the way of loss to the art that
he lived for, his friends know that as dear a life as any of our time
has gone suddenly, inexplicably, taking with it the tenderest love of
every one who knew him. And he leaves with us an example without any
stain.John
Drinkwater.London,Midsummer
1921.
THE BEGGAR’S OPERA
NOTE
ON THE SCENE AND COSTUMES AT THE LYRIC THEATRE, HAMMERSMITHSuperficially
the task of staging
The Beggar’s Opera
was one of supreme ease. Indeed, so easy was it that it became a
matter of some embarrassment to prune and select the required amount
of data. Here was Hogarth and his actual scene of Newgate with
Macheath in chains; here was Laroon’s
Cries of London
falling, in its edition of 1733, pat into the period; here was the
National Portrait Gallery and, added to these, here was the benefit
of all Mr. Charles E. Pearce’s research.1
After a month or two of work in designing, the ease became so marked
and apparent that it engendered in me the beginnings of mistrust.
Still, I persevered in scene and costume with historically
accurate reproduction and, until three weeks before the actual work
was due to be carried out at the costumier’s and in the painting
shops, I felt comparatively cheerful. Then I reviewed my
forces—the little scale models of the scenes, the characters in
painted cardboard—all exact and accurate. Something was wrong and
the result was, I confess, appalling. I had not made
allowances either for my theatre or for my audience. I had
forgotten that it required a spacious Georgian theatre, the intimacy
of the side-boxes, the great personages sitting on the stage. The
Duke of Bolton, Major Pauncefoot and Sir Robert Fagg were not in
their places as in Hogarth’s painting; the pit would not be filled
with tye-wigs and hoops and there would be a sharper line of division
between the actors and the spectators than ever existed in 1728.
Something else had to be done. As reproduction was a failure one
would try to give an impression of the same thing. Impressionism
proved even worse than accuracy. It was neither one thing nor the
other. It merged into “making a picture of it”—a crime that is
without parallel in the staging of a play. To make a pretty picture
at the expense of drama is merely to pander to the voracity of the
costumier and scene-painter.What
was then to be done? Added to all these objections was the important
fact that I had designed scenes that would have seriously hampered
the resources at Hammersmith. The theatre would have required more
space for storage than could possibly have been given and, in
addition, an army of stage hands would be wanted for whom there was
not in this little theatre the accommodation.The
solution was, of course, to forget one’s past work, to scrap the
models, and to start feverishly afresh. The only method left untried
was the symbolic. That is to say, to hint at the eighteenth century
and to suggest that through the doors on the stage existed the London
of 1728. The scene demanded to be simple and one which, with slight
modifications in doors and windows, remained before the audience for
the whole action of the play. It was, therefore, to be a scene of
which people did not easily tire and that remained interesting,
unobtrusive and formally neat. To find such a scene it is necessary
to refer back to days when the Comic and the Tragic scenes were
architectural and permanent. This I did and, taking Palladio’s
magnificent scene at Vicenza, by a shameless process of
reductio ad absurdum,
evolved the scene that is now in use at Hammersmith. Palladio and Gay
have much to forgive.So
far the scene, but it called for a corresponding treatment in the
dresses. In The
Beggar’s Opera no
one is in the height of fashion. Macheath and certain Ladies of the
Town alone “keep Company with Lords and Gentlemen,” and even then
there must have been apparent a distinction. Macheath is unaltered.
Here it was essential to keep to tradition. Macheath in a blue coat
is unthinkable. The rest of the characters are frankly in the
neighbourhood of Newgate. The clothes of Peachum and Lockit would be
as equally unfashionable and just as possible thirty years before as
thirty years after 1728, whilst the footpads are clad in whatever
Georgian rags that happened to come their way. With the women I have
taken greater licence. I have kept faithfully to the outlines of
the age, the close-fitting bodice, the flat hoops, the square-toed
shoes, but I have taken considerable liberties in the manner in which
I have shorn them of ribbons and laces and—for the sake of dramatic
simplicity, be it remembered—I have eliminated yards of
trimming.Just
so much explanation is, I consider, due to the public, but whether I
have been justified by results or whether, under the sacred mask of
Drama, I have erred unpardonably, are points which, so long as
this revival draws attention to a forgotten masterpiece, can be of no
very great importance.C.
Lovat Fraser.Chelsea,February
1921.1.
Polly Peachum and The Beggar’s Opera,
by Charles E. Pearce. Messrs. Stanley Paul & Company, 1913.