Mystery
Monday: Who was Jean Anouilh?
Resistance in general comes in many forms, and certainly
did so during World War II. Activities ranged from sabotage and violence to
clandestine publications and coded radio programs. But not all resistance was
performed by members of any sort of organization.
Such was the case of Jean Anouilh (pronounced
ah-noo-eej). A playwright born in 1910 in a tiny village on the outskirts of
Bordeaux, he seems to have received creativity from his mother who played
violin. The family eventually moved to Paris where Jean attended Lycée Chaptal,
a secondary school that taught students trades. He went to law school, but was
unable to afford tuition and left after eighteen months. There followed a
variety of jobs from copywriter at an advertising agency to secretary a French
theatre director, Louis Jouvet.
It is unclear whether he was always interested in
playwriting or the desire was sparked by his work with Jouvet. Jean managed to
get two of his plays into production, but they closed after just a few
performances. Undeterred, he continued to write and finally found success in
1937 with Le Voyageur sans Baggage (Traveler
without Luggage). After that, every theatre season featured one of his works.
Vocally apolitical, Jean continued to live and work in
Paris during the German occupation. However, because he refused to take sides, had
several public disagreements with Charles de Gaulle, and was one of many who
signed a petition to prevent the execution of writer Robert Brasillach, some
feel (then and now) that he was a Nazi sympathizer.
Completed in 1942, Anouilh’s adaptation of Sophocles’
Greek tragedy Antigone (pronounced
Ant-ee-gōn to differentiate it from the original An-tig-on-ee), became a symbol
for the underground. As one scholar put it “freedom fighters saw the heroine’s
defiance as a rebel-yell to patriotism.” Others have commented that the play is
purposely ambiguous about the rejection of authority by Antigone and the acceptance
of it by Creon. Another claims Jean purposely adapted the play to speak out
against authoritarian rule.
Whatever the truth about its inception, the Nazis saw
nothing wrong with it, and while German censors regularly suppressed any new
works that even hinted of anti-Fascism, Jean’s Antione slipped past as a safe retelling of this classic tale that
debuted in 1944.
Five years later, it premiered at the Old Vic Theatre
in London and starred Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh.
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