Cover of Callow's book about Dickens |
There are a
lot of books and other projects concerning Charles Dickens being released in 2012 to tie in with the bicentenary of his birth on February 12th, 1812. This
one is a book by Simon Callow; it focuses on Dickens as a man of the
theatre and, more generally, a public performer - a man happiest when up on the stage mesmerising an audience.
The author, Simon
Callow, is an English actor, writer and stage director. I’m familiar with him
primarily from three films: he played Mr. Beebe in the Merchant-Ivory film of A Room with a View. He was also did a
cameo in Howards End (the Music and
Meaning lecturer), another Merchant-Ivory film of an E.M. Forster book. The
majority of people, though, would probably know him best from his role as
Gareth in Four Weddings and a Funeral.
Callow, as
actor, has played the part of Charles Dickens several times: on BBC TV’s An Audience with Charles Dickens (1996);
in the film Hans Christian Andersen: My
Life as a Fairytale (2003); in two episodes of TV’s Doctor Who (in 2005 and 2011); and in a one-man stage show written
by the Dickens biographer Peter Ackroyd,
The Mystery of Charles Dickens (2000).
Simon Callow
is also an excellent and quite prolific writer. He has written some ten books -
including biographies of Oscar Wilde, Charles Laughton and Orson Welles, and several
works about the craft of acting. He also writes occasional pieces of journalism
on literature, theatre and cultural history for the UK newspapers.
So, having
played the great Victorian author, and performed selections of his work on
stage – as Dickens did himself at Readings in the latter half of his life – it
is no surprise that Simon Callow would eventually write a book about Charles
Dickens, focused on his interests in the theatre and in public performance.
Simon Callow portraying Charles Dickens |
Callow’s
book, Charles Dickens and The Great Theatre of the World, was released
about a month ago. It is a very readable and modest account (354 pages) of the
life of the great Victorian novelist. Callow focuses primarily on the major
biographical incidents – especially in his childhood – that stoked his enormous
ambition and prompted the unending need he had of proving himself in front of
others. It also documents his life-long interest in attending professional theatre
in London and in mounting his own amateur theatrical productions in front of
family, friends and invited celebrities of the age. It becomes clear that his
novel-writing was fuelled by his interest and knowledge of the stage, and that
his focus on creating interesting and unusual characters was the result of his
need to dramatise and perform. Throughout his literary career, his weakness in creating
coherent plots and tight narrative structures was often offset by his
brilliance in creating fascinating characters – some highly sympathetic and
some quite repulsive and grotesque.
Callow
focuses on Dickens’s early-teenage experience working at the Warren’s Blacking
factory in Charing Cross, when his father and family were living in the
Marshalsea Debtors Prison. Dickens was deeply humiliated and shaped by this
event. He kept the pain hidden – only revealing it in middle-age to his best
friend and future-biographer John Forster. It fuelled his need to compete, to act,
and to perform. To prove that he was better than he seemed.
The other key
formative experience was an unhappy love-affair with Maria Beadnell. He was
ardent, romantic and infatuated. She eventually rejected him. He was - that word
again - humiliated. He learned to bury the hurt and put up a façade. He began
to write and to perform.
In his
late-teenage years Dickens’s was a regular – almost daily – attendant of the
London theatre. He learned to love the melodrama and the showy style of acting.
He often attended theatres in the Strand and Vauxhall, where you could pay a
small fee to participate in the performances – a sort of thespian Karaoke,
Callow dubs it. He was trying it out and experimenting - considering acting and
theatrics a possible avocation.
Not too long
after establishing himself as a successful writer, Charles Dickens began a
life-long involvement with ‘amateur’ theatricals. He would create an
acting-company from family and friends, and work for weeks – sometimes months –
preparing a play that would be performed in their own house. It soon became
apparent that Dickens didn’t want to just act and perform – he wanted to be the
ultimate theatre impresario. He tended to do it all: casting, staging,
stage-managing, starring, setting the music, arranging the set, checking the
props, directing, producing, and advertising. He drove himself relentlessly. He
was a good actor and he loved being on stage. As Callow puts it: “dressing up
and disguising himself was as natural to him as breathing.”
Simon Callow |
One aspect
of Dickens’s theatrical career that Callow is emphatic on is his inability to write
anything good for the stage. He was a great novelist, but his plays were flops.
They suffered, Callow argues, “from his abject adoration of the theatre of his
day, which he dutifully reproduced … you will search the plays in vain for a
single Dickensian turn of phrase.” He stuck to melodrama, and relied on
coincidence and contrivance to drive the plot, rather than character
development.
Almost from
the very beginning of Charles Dickens’s success, London theatres began to do bootleg
stage versions on his novels. First there was The Perigrinations of Pickwick; then came Moncrieff’s Sam Weller. It was flattering to Dickens
to see the spreading success of his work, but then he began to resent the fact
that others were making money using his creations, and he was getting nothing
in return. This concern for copyright and “intellectual property” continued
throughout Dickens’s career. He spoke out forthrightly against American bootlegging
of his novels, during his U.S. tour of 1842, and suffered a noticeable backlash
from the local newspapers and public opinion. It would still be quite a time
before Dickens’s view was generally accepted. Yet he continued to promote “the financial
rewards and the status of his fellow professionals.”
One of Charles
Dickens’s notable nods to theatre and the theatrical spirit, says Callow, was
the long episode in Nicholas Nickleby dealing with the Vincent Crummles
acting troupe. He calls it Dickens’s “love letter to the profession”. He makes
fun of the motley crew, with stock stereotypes – like the ‘The Infant
Phenomenon’, but shows that he likes their camaraderie. He viewed the theatre,
and theatre groups, as an entire world, says Callow. “He finds a kindness and
warmth and inclusiveness in the theatre that contrasts favourably with almost
every other strata of society”.
Dickens skills
as performer also showed up in his oratorical skills – his ability to deliver ex tempore speeches for the many public
occasions he was obliged to attend and participate in. Actually, the speeches were
not really ex tempore; they may have
been delivered without notes, but, as Dickens explained once to his
writer-friend Wilkie Collins, he would prepare these speeches in his head
during extended walks in the country. He would establish the various headings
for the topics he’d be covering, than arrange them in his mind’s eye on a cart
wheel. As he delivered the oration, he could be seen to gesture as though he
were checking off each spoke of the wheel as he progressed.
Simon Callow as Charles Dickens |
The final
phase of Dickens’s life was dominated by his public Readings. He would perform
selected scenes from his most popular and best-loved books. Dramatic scenes and
scenes of strong pathos. No other great writer had ever done this before. It
all began with a few presentations of A Christmas Carol for charity. Dickens must have noticed how
much money came in. He realised speaking tours could be a major new source of
income.
These
presentations were not straight reading; Dickens gave dramatic performances. As
Callow emphasises, every one of these performances – and he ended up doing
hundreds of them – took a significant physical and emotional toll out of him. Callow
suggests they accelerated his early death. But these Readings allowed Dickens
to connect directly with his audience, his reading public. He loved doing them,
and thrived off the adulation he received. They were cathartic for him, and he
filled them with both passion and playfulness. The audiences were mesmerised.
As Simon Callow
shows in this excellent book, Dickens was more than just a writer; he was also
a born performer. He liked to play games. And mimic his friends and teachers.
He told stories and jokes in public. Gave long, formal speeches. Acted in his
own theatrical productions. And gave impassioned and dramatic presentations of
his books in hundreds of public Readings. He was always on a stage –
performing, competing, entertaining, and story-telling.
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