Eight Men Speak

A Play by Oscar Ryan et al.

Livre numérique

This volume comprises a reprinting and gloss of the original text of the 1933 Communist play Eight Men Speak. The play was banned by the Toronto police after its first performance, banned by the Winnipeg police shortly thereafter and subsequently banned by the Canadian Post Office. The play can be considered as one stage–the published text–of a meta-text that culminated in 1934 at Maple Leaf Gardens when the (then illegal) Communist Party of Canada celebrated the release of its leader, Tim Buck, from prison. Eight Men Speak had been written and staged on behalf of the campaign to free Buck by the Canadian Labour Defence League, the public advocacy group of the CPC.

In its theatrical techniques, incorporating avant-garde expressionist staging, mass chant, agitprop and modernist dramaturgy, Eight Men Speak exemplified the vanguardist aesthetics of the Communist left in the years before the Popular Front. It is the first instance of the collective theatrical techniques that would become widespread in subsequent decades and formative in the development of modern Canadian drama. These include a decentred narrative, collaborative authorship and a refusal of dramaturgical linearity in favour of theatricalist demonstration. As such it is one of the most significant Canadian plays of the first half of the century, and, on the evidence of the surviving photograph of the mise-en-scene, one of the earliest examples of modernist staging in Canada.

Table des matières

Table des matières
Cover 1
Title Page 5
Copyright Page 6
Table of Contents 7
Acknowledgements 9
Critical Introduction 11
Eight Men Speak in Historical Context 11
Authorship: Coalescent Dramaturgy 26
The Theatrical Modernism of Eight Men Speak 34
Reception 45
Eight Men Speak 55
Foreword 59
Act I 63
Act II 73
Act III 81
Act IV 89
Act V 94
Act VI 107
Dossier: Documents, Reports and Reviews 111
Explanatory Notes 147
Textual Notes 157
Works Cited 161

Compléments