Saturday, February 16, 2013
Reading Response to Glaspell's "Trifles"
For
a play as reliant upon on images and descriptions as Susan Glaspell’s Trifles, directors face the unique
challenge of how best to stage the production in a way that remains true to the
nearly one hundred year old script while still being widely accessible to
modern audiences. Essentially, directors can either stage the script with
period sets and costumes or with minimal staging and props and simple costumes
so as not to distract audiences from the words, emotions, and actions of the
actors on stage. The first option makes the play more true to life since it
gives audiences a definite setting in which to place the scene. The small “trifles”
that abound throughout Minnie Wright’s kitchen would give members of the
audience a better understanding of how she kept her house and what life must
have been like in the harsh Nebraska environment. However, the latter option is
equally plausible because the dialogue spoken on stage gives audience members
all of the information they need to know that is relevant to the plot,
including descriptions of the jars of preserves, the birdcage, the quilt, and
the appearance of the farmhouse in general. Personally, I find the first option
to be more practical for several reasons. To begin with, the play is already
fairly dated, but performing the play as a “concept” production might
disinterest audience members even more since it combines surreal staging
elements with a script that relies heavily on an understanding of what life was
like for rural women during the early 20th century. If the play is
staged with full sets and costumes, the production then fuels the audience’s
collective imagination and brings the material to life before their very eyes.
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