E-Book, Englisch, Band 0, 125 Seiten
Reihe: NHB Drama Classi
Molière The Hypochondriac
1. Auflage 2015
ISBN: 978-1-78001-642-9
Verlag: Nick Hern Books
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark
Full Text and Introduction (NHB Drama Classics)
E-Book, Englisch, Band 0, 125 Seiten
Reihe: NHB Drama Classi
ISBN: 978-1-78001-642-9
Verlag: Nick Hern Books
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark
Jean-Baptiste Poquelin (1622-1673), known by his stage name Molière, was a French playwright and actor who is considered to be one of the greatest masters of comedy in Western literature. Among Molière's best known works are The Misanthrope, The School for Wives, Tartuffe, The Miser, The Imaginary Invalid and The Bourgeois Gentleman.
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Introduction
Molière (1622-1673)
Jean-Baptiste Poquelin (later known as Molière) was baptised in the St-Eustache church, Paris, on the 15 January 1622, but the precise date of his birth is not known. Both his parents were in the upholstery business, enjoying considerable success and wealth. Between 1633-1639 Molière was educated at the Jesuit Collège de Clermont, now the Lycée Louis-le-Grand. In 1642, he was a law student at Orléans, and in the following year he renounced his succession to his father as tapissier du Roi (upholsterer-royal) , preferring instead to join the newly-formed Illustre Théâtre company in Paris. In 1644, he adopted the name Molière, and this marks the beginning of his illustrious career as actor-manager-playwright. His first full-length play, The Scatterbrain, was put on in 1655.
The company at first toured the provinces, then returned to Paris in 1658 and shared the Petit-Bourbon theatre with the Italian commedia dell’arte players. Molière also received the patronage of the King’s brother, Philippe d’Orléans. 1659 saw the great success of The Pretentious Ladies. In 1661, the company was forced to move to a different theatre, the Palais-Royal. In 1662, Molière married Armande Béjart, then aged around 20. She was either the daughter or the sister of Madeleine Béjart, with whom Molière had set up the Illustre Théâtre some twenty years before. Molière’s acutely pertinent and highly successful The School for Wives was given later in 1662. The next year, he was granted a royal pension of 1,000 livres, and in February 1664 the King himself acted as godfather to his first child, Louis.
In 1665, Molière’s company became the Troupe du Roi and the annual royal pension was raised to 6,000 livres. In the early part of 1666, Molière became seriously ill with pneumonia and had to give up acting for many months. The summer of that year saw The Misanthrope and Doctor in Spite of Himself. Then, in 1667, Le Tartuffe, renamed The Imposter, was given a public performance. 1668 saw first productions of Amphitryon, George Dandin, The Miser, 1669 Monsieur de Pourceaugnac, 1670 The Would-be Gentleman, 1671 Scapin’s Tricks, 1672 The Bluestockings. The Hupochondriac opened on 10 February 1673, and was instantly a success. By its fourth performance, on 17th February, Molière’s illness, probably tuberculosis, had become critical. He was performing the title role of Argan, the hypochondriac, and by all accounts doing so with great energy and gusto. Then, near the end of that performance, in the third interlude, the ‘coronation’ scene, he was taken violently and suddenly ill but managed to struggle through to the end of the performance. He was rushed back to his house in the rue de Richelieu where he died shortly after. He was buried on the 21st, in the St-Joseph cemetery, during the night – the penalty for not having made a last-minute denunciation of his actor’s life in the presence of a priest.
The Hypochondriac: What Happens in the Play
The play’s three Acts are surrounded by a prologue, interludes and a finale in musical, balletic style. All but the finale are often omitted in performance, though the interludes between the acts (if not the prologue) are integrated with the action. Argan is a rich man obsessed with his own health. His obsession puts him in the power of quack doctors, and of his second wife Béline, who is scheming to separate him from his wealth. As the first Act opens, we see him totting up his medical bills, then arguing with his servant Toinette, who has time neither for his fantasies nor for the quacks Florid and Purgeon who sponge on him.
Argan plans to marry his daughter Angélique to a doctor, the newly qualified Thomas Lillicrap, so ensuring himself ‘family’ medical care for life. But she is in love with Cléante, and refuses the suggestion. Toinette supports her, but Argan sends her away and proposes to alter his will in Béline’s favour. Béline protests that she doesn’t want his money – and then brings in Mr Goodfellow, her lawyer, to arrange the documents.
In the second Act, Toinette introduces Cléante into the house as Angélique’s new music teacher, and Cléante and Angélique improvise a song of frustrated yearning, to Argan’s bafflement. Dr Lillicrap arrives with his doltish son Thomas, who makes absurdly flattering, flowery speeches to all concerned. Béline tells Argan that Angélique and Cléante are planning to elope, and Argan (after finding that this is true by questioning his younger daughter, the child Louison), falls into his chair, bewildered beyond endurance. His brother, the sensible Béralde, brings dancers to divert him, then sets about trying to make him see sense.
Act Three begins with a long scene between Argan and Béralde, discussing the merits of doctors. Apothecary Florid arrives to give Argan ‘something for his bowels’, and Béralde sends him packing, together with his employer Dr Purgeon. Béralde and Toinette now hatch a plan: Toinette appears, disguised as a 90-year-old doctor, and ridicules every cure Purgeon has previously prescribed. Béralde suggests that Argan test the affections of his wife and daughter by feigning death – and, predictably, Béline is revealed as heartless, Angélique as truly loving. Argan agrees to let Angélique marry Cléante, and Béralde solves the problem of his brother’s obsession with medicine by arranging for him to be made a doctor himself, in the burlesque musical finale which ends the play.
The Hypochondriac: Origins and First Production
Molière’s last play owes its particular form as well as its existence in good part to Louis XIV. A few months before it opened, the Sun King had returned to France from his Dutch campaign, and Molière’s idea was to write a comédie-ballet – a blend of comedy, song and dance, one of the King’s favourite kinds of entertainment – as part of the entertainments which would be put on to celebrate the King’s safe return from the war. The prologue makes this intention clear. And the form was a well-tried one, successful in the past. All Molière’s previous twelve comédies-ballets had received their first staging in front of a private audience of Louis XIV and his Court. What characterised this type of play, from the first one, The Bores of 1661, onwards, was its mix of comedy, song and dance. Molière’s skill was to integrate the seemingly disparate elements into a unified entertainment, all of whose parts reflected and commented upon the others.
The plan to stage The Hypochondriac before the Court at Versailles was not realised, however. Ironically, the comédie-ballet form was the focus of bitterness between Molière and the composer, Lully. Up to this point, Lully had written the music for those plays of Molière which required it. The collaboration had started in 1664, but in 1672 Lully obtained from the King the monopoly for most of the entertainments which involved singing. He secured significant publication rights as well. Relations between Molière and Lully inevitably soured, so that the playwright had to turn to another composer, Charpentier, for the music to The Hypochondriac. In effect, Molière suffered a ban from the Court, where Lully was in artistic command.
Thus it was that the play received its first performance at the Palais-Royal theatre in Paris, and not at Versailles. On top of that, the opening was delayed until February 1673 apparently because some news reached Paris at the last moment of reverses suffered by Louis’s army in Holland. The original prologue also was replaced by a shorter ‘alternative’ version, better suited to a production in the capital rather than at Court.
The Household of the Rich Bourgeois
Unlike Molière’s earlier plays about medicine (The Flying Doctor, Doctor Love, Doctor in Spite of Himself), the focus in The Hypochondriac is on the patient and not the doctor. Argan is so locked into his range of imagined illnesses that his role and duties as the head of a household are seriously relegated and distorted.
Argan belongs to the upper echelons of the bourgeoisie. Both Toinette and Béralde refer to his wealth – as indeed he does himself, when he plans his will. His medical bills paint the same picture. His monthly outlay on his medical requirements puts him way above the level of the ordinary middle class. Even apart from his wealth, Argan’s social status must be high. Certain details indicate this, such as the type of chair he sits in as opposed to the sort he offers people in the room, and the way he is addressed as seigneur (‘Your Excellence’) and monsieur (‘Sir’).
After the loss of his first wife, Argan has been left with two daughters to bring up, and he has to confront the attendant problem of their dowries. This problem, as far as Angélique is concerned, should have been easily resolved. She has met and fallen for a perfectly acceptable suitor, Cléante, who, it is revealed, is an homme...