Stage Echoes: Tracing the Pantomime Harlequinade through Comic Ballet, Trap Work, and Silent Film

IF 0.3 3区 艺术学 0 THEATER THEATRE SURVEY Pub Date : 2024-11-20 DOI:10.1017/s004055742400022x
Janice Norwood
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Abstract

In 2010 film and theatre historian David Mayer urged researchers to look to early film for evidence of continuing traditions of Victorian pantomime, arguing its “audiences tolerated, even enjoyed, the same sight-gags and hackneyed routines that amused their Victorian ancestors.” This article is a response to his challenge and in the process explores wider interconnections. The harlequinade was the portion of the pantomime that occurred after key characters from the narrative pantomime opening are transformed into Clown, Harlequin, Pantaloon, and Columbine. These stock figures, originally derived from commedia dell'arte, perform a series of comic scenes via mime, dance, and physical action rather than dialogue. Having been an important feature of Regency and Victorian pantomimes, by the end of the nineteenth century the harlequinade had largely vanished (with certain exceptions such as the Britannia Theatre), causing Clement Scott to lament that it is “a pleasure lost for ever and denied to the generation of to-day.” My contention is that there is a direct line of inheritance from the harlequinade through stand-alone comic ballets to chase scenes in early film. All demand a particular type of physical performance, choreographed fast-paced action, and humor. Uncovering the tradition allows us better to understand this form of popular amusement and see how Harlequin's antics were reinterpreted for new audiences. Starting from a seemingly unremarkable comic entertainment produced in 1871 at a minor London theatre, the Britannia Theatre in Hoxton, and bearing the intriguing title of Ki-Ki-Ko-Ko-Oh-Ki-Key, I trace its heritage as embodied culture, establishing its links to early nineteenth-century pantomime harlequinade and to simian performance, tracking the appearance of comic or dumb ballets in theatres and music halls in Britain, France, and the United States through one family of performers, the Lauris, and finally identifying the legacy of the complex trap work in silent film of the early twentieth century by examining Lupino Lane's Joyland (1929).

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舞台回声通过滑稽芭蕾、陷阱作品和无声电影追溯哑剧中的小丑表演
2010 年,电影和戏剧历史学家大卫-迈尔(David Mayer)敦促研究人员从早期电影中寻找维多利亚时代童话剧传统延续的证据,他认为,"观众容忍甚至喜欢维多利亚时代的祖先们曾经取乐的插科打诨和老套路"。本文是对他的质疑的回应,并在此过程中探讨了更广泛的相互联系。小丑表演是童话剧的一部分,在叙事童话剧开场的关键人物变成小丑、小丑、潘塔龙和柯伦宾之后出现。这些原型人物最初来自于喜剧艺术,他们通过哑剧、舞蹈和肢体动作而非对话来表演一系列喜剧场景。作为摄政时期和维多利亚时期哑剧的一个重要特征,到 19 世纪末,小丑表演已基本消失(不列颠剧院等某些剧院除外),克莱门特-斯科特因此感叹道:"这是一种永远失去的乐趣,当代人无法享受到这种乐趣"。我的论点是,从小丑戏到独立的滑稽芭蕾,再到早期电影中的追逐场面,它们之间有着直接的传承关系。所有这些都需要一种特殊的肢体表演、编排快节奏的动作和幽默。对这一传统的发掘使我们能够更好地理解这种流行的娱乐形式,并了解哈莱金的滑稽动作是如何被新的观众重新诠释的。我从 1871 年伦敦一家小剧院--霍克斯顿的不列颠剧院--制作的一个看似不起眼的滑稽娱乐节目开始,以 "Ki-Ki-Ko-Ko-Oh-Ki-Key "这个耐人寻味的名字为起点,追溯其作为体现文化的遗产,建立其与 19 世纪早期哑剧哈莱金和人猿表演的联系、通过一个表演者家族--劳里家族--追踪滑稽或哑巴芭蕾舞剧在英国、法国和美国的剧院和音乐厅的出现,最后通过研究卢皮诺-莱恩的《欢乐地》(1929 年),确定复杂的陷阱作品在二十世纪初无声电影中的传承。
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来源期刊
THEATRE SURVEY
THEATRE SURVEY THEATER-
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
42
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