Friday, January 29, 2021

The Dramatic Life and Legacy of Anton Chekhov - January 29, 2010

A cartoon in The New Yorker features an author, an auto mechanic, and a baseball player talking about their influences. All of them finished with the phrase "and, of course, Chekhov."

While Anton Chekhov probably never tuned up a car or took batting practice, his influence on modern literature and drama is incalculable. He wrote hundreds of
short stories that helped redefine fiction, and his plays led to new styles of acting that conveyed the psychology beneath dramatists' words. His stories are noted for the sheer volume of characters presented, from the highest to the lowest strata of Russian society, all of whom are portrayed with compassion and a sharp sense of their essential humanity.

Chekhov was born on January 29, 1860, in
Taganrog, Russia. After his father drove his family into poverty, they moved to Moscow -- except young Anton, who was left behind to finish school. He paid for his own education through a series of odd jobs -- tutoring, selling birds, and (most importantly) writing under a series of pseudonyms

At the age of 19, he was accepted to the medical school at Moscow University. Despite his workload as a medical student, Anton was still expected to provide the bulk of his family's income, so he kept writing, turning out short stories and sketches by the dozen. He developed a reputation as one of Russia's finest writers, winning the coveted Pushkin Prize at the age of 27. Even after graduation, he continued to write, claiming, "Medicine is my lawful wife, and literature is my mistress. When I get fed up with one, I spend the night with the other."

Chekhov loved the theatre, and throughout his early career, turned out a series of short comedies and broad
farces. In 1894, though, he began writing the play that would, ultimately, change the course of world drama. That play, The Seagull, premiered in 1896 -- and was an utter disaster, mainly because of the actors not knowing how to play the subtleties of the script. 

But the production caught the attention of directors Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko and Konstantin Stanislavski, who were looking for suitable material for their new Moscow Art Theatre. Despite Chekhov's insistence that his plays were comedies, Stanislavski directed them as intense dramas showing people in states of emotional inertia. When the theatre presented The Seagull in 1898, it stunned audiences and critics with its psychological realism and intensity. Stanislavski had created an acting "system" that was eventually transformed into the American "Method" that dominated acting in the second half of the 20th century.

Chekhov suffered from tuberculosis most of his life, and
his death in 1904, with its mixture of comedy and tragedy, reads almost as though he wrote it. On his deathbed, after saying, "It's been so long since I had champagne," he drained a glass and died. At that exact moment, the champagne bottle exploded and a giant moth began beating its body against a light bulb. His body was transported to Moscow in a crate labeled "For oysters," and he was buried in the Novodevichy cemetery alongside many of Russia’s greatest writers, artists, and statesmen.

Despite his modest dramatic output, Chekhov's influence on such writers as
Samuel Beckett, August Wilson, Bertolt Brecht, Harold Pinter, and Tennessee Williams is immense. Even though he died more than a century ago, his work is still as fresh, relevant, and dynamic today as when he wrote it.

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