Luigi Pirandello
Six Characters in Search of an Author
(Sei personaggi in cerca d'autore - 1921)
A COMEDY IN THE MAKING
PREFACE By LUIGI
PIRANDELLO (1925)
[Translated by Eric Bentley, 1950, in
Naked Masks, New York: E. P. Dutton, 1952.)
It seems like yesterday but is actually many
years ago that a nimble little maidservant entered the service of my
art. However, she always comes fresh to the job.
She is called Fantasy.
A little puckish and malicious, if she likes to
dress in black no one will wish to deny that she is often positively
bizarre and no one will wish to believe that she always does
everything in the same way and in earnest. She sticks her hand in
her pocket, pulls out a cap and bells, sets it on her head, red as a
cock's comb, and dashes away. Here today, there tomorrow. And she
amuses herself by bringing to my house -- since I derive stories and
novels and plays from them -- the most disgruntled tribe in the
world, men, women, children, involved in strange adventures which
they can find no way out of; thwarted in their plans; cheated in
their hopes; with whom, in short, it is often torture to deal.Well,
this little maidservant of mine, Fantasy, several years ago, had the
bad inspiration or ill-omened caprice to bring a family into my
house. I wouldn't know where she fished them up or how, but,
according to her, I could find in them the subject for a magnificent
novel.
I found before me a man about fifty years old, in
a dark jacket and light trousers, with a frowning air and
ill-natured mortified eyes; a poor woman in widow's weeds leading by
one hand a little girl of four and by the other a boy of rather more
than ten; a cheeky and "sexy" girl, also clad in black but with an
equivocal and brazen pomp, all atremble with a lively, biting
contempt for the mortified old man and for a young fellow of twenty
who stood on one side closed in on himself as if he despised them
all. In short, the six characters who are seen coming on stage at
the beginning of the play. Now one of them and now another -- often
beating down one another -- embarked on the sad story of their
adventures, each shouting his own reasons, and projecting in my face
his disordered passions, more or less as they do in the play to the
unhappy Manager.
What author will be able to say how and why a
character was born in his fantasy? The mystery of artistic creation
is the same as that of birth. A woman who loves may desire to become
a mother; but the desire by itself, however intense, cannot suffice.
One fine day she will find herself a mother without having any
precise intimation when it began. In the same way an artist imbibes
very many germs of life and can never say how and why, at a certain
moment, one of these vital germs inserts itself into his fantasy,
there to become a living creature on a plane of life superior to the
changeable existence of every day.
I can only say that, without having made any
effort to seek them out, I found before me, alive -- you could touch
them and even hear them breathe -- the six characters now seen on
the stage. And they stayed there in my presence, each with his
secret torment and all bound together by the one common origin and
mutual entanglement of their affairs, while I had them enter the
world of art, constructing from their persons, their passions, and
their adventures a novel, a drama, or at least a story.
Born alive, they wished to live.
To me it was never enough to present a man or a
woman and what is special and characteristic about them simply for
the pleasure of presenting them; to narrate a particular affair,
lively or sad, simply for the pleasure of narrating it; to describe
a landscape simply for the pleasure of describing it.
There are some writers (and not a few) who do
feel this pleasure and, satisfied, ask no more. They are, to speak
more precisely, historical writers.
But there are others who, beyond such pleasure,
feel a more profound spiritual need on whose account they admit only
figures, affairs, landscapes which have been soaked, so to speak, in
a particular sense of life and acquire from it a universal value.
These are, more precisely, philosophical writers.
I have the misfortune to belong to these last.
I hate symbolic art in which the presentation
loses all spontaneous movement in order to become a machine, an
allegory -- a vain and misconceived effort because the very fact of
giving an allegorical sense to a presentation clearly shows that we
have to do with a fable which by itself has no truth either
fantastic or direct; it was made for the demonstration of some moral
truth. The spiritual need I speak of cannot be satisfied-or seldom,
and that to the end of a superior irony, as for example in Ariosto
-- by such allegorical symbolism. This latter starts from a concept,
and from a concept which creates or tries to create for itself an
image. The former on the other hand seeks in the image -- which must
remain alive and free throughout -- a meaning to give it value.
Now, however much I sought, I did not succeed in
uncovering this meaning in the six characters. And I concluded
therefore that it was no use making them live.
I thought to myself: "I have already afflicted my
readers with hundreds and hundreds of stories. Why should I afflict
them now by narrating the sad entanglements of these six
unfortunates?"
And, thinking thus, I put them away from me. Or
rather I did all I could to put them away.
But one doesn't give life to a character for
nothing.
Creatures of my spirit, these six were already
living a life which was their own and not mine any more, a life
which it was not in my power any more to deny them.
Thus it is that while I persisted in desiring to
drive them out of my spirit, they, as if completely detached from
every narrative support, characters from a novel miraculously
emerging from the pages of the book that contained them, went on
living on their own, choosing certain moments of the day to reappear
before me in the solitude of my study and coming -- now one, now the
other, now two together -- to tempt me, to propose that I present or
describe this scene or that, to explain the effects that could be
secured with them, the new interest which a certain unusual
situation could provide, and so forth.
For a moment I let myself be won over. And this
condescension of mine, thus letting myself go for a while, was
enough, because they drew from it a new increment of life, a greater
degree of clarity and addition, consequently a greater degree of
persuasive power over me. And thus as it became gradually harder and
harder for me to go back and free myself from them, it became easier
and easier for them to come back and tempt me. At a certain point I
actually became obsessed with them. Until, all of a sudden, a way
out of the difficulty flashed upon me.
"Why not," I said to myself, "present this highly
strange fact of an author who refuses to let some of his characters
live though they have been born in his fantasy, and the fact that
these characters, having by now life in their veins, do not resign
themselves to remaining excluded from the world of art? They are
detached from me; live on their own; have acquired voice and
movement; have by themselves -- in this struggle for existence that
they have had to wage with me -- become dramatic characters,
characters that can move and talk on their own initiative; already
see themselves as such; have learned to defend themselves against
me; will even know how to defend themselves against others. And so
let them go where dramatic characters do go to have life: on a
stage. And let us see what will happen."
That's what I did. And, naturally, the result was
what it had to be: a mixture of tragic and comic, fantastic and
realistic, in a humorous situation that was quite new and infinitely
complex, a drama which is conveyed by means of the characters, who
carry it within them and suffer it, a drama, breathing, speaking,
self-propelled, which seeks at all costs to find the means of its
own presentation; and the comedy of the vain attempt at an
improvised realization of the drama on stage. First, the surprise of
the poor actors in a theatrical company rehearsing a play by day on
a bare stage (no scenery, no flats). Surprise and incredulity at the
sight of the six characters announcing themselves as such in search
of an author. Then, immediately afterwards, through that sudden
fainting fit of the Mother veiled in black, their instinctive
interest in the drama of which they catch a glimpse in her and in
the other members of the strange family, an obscure, ambiguous drama,
coming about so unexpectedly on a stage that is empty and unprepared
to receive it. And gradually the growth of this interest to the
bursting forth of the contrasting passions of Father, of
Step-Daughter, of Son, of that poor Mother, passions seeking, as I
said, to overwhelm each other with a tragic, lacerating fury.
And here is the universal meaning at first vainly
sought in the six characters, now that, going on stage of their own
accord, they succeed in finding it within themselves in the
excitement of the desperate struggle which each wages against the
other and all wage against the Manager and the actors, who do not
understand them.
Without wanting to, without knowing it, in the
strife of their bedevilled souls, each of them, defending himself
against the accusations of the others, expresses as his own living
passion and torment the passion and torment which for so many years
have been the pangs of my spirit: the deceit of mutual understanding
irremediably founded on the empty abstraction of the words, the
multiple personality of everyone corresponding to the possibilities
of being to be found in each of us, and finally the inherent tragic
conflict between life (which is always moving and changing) and form
(which fixes it, immutable).
Two above all among the six characters, the
Father and the Step-Daughter, speak of that outrageous unalterable
fixity of their form in which he and she see their essential nature
expressed permanently and immutably, a nature that for one means
punishment and for the other revenge; and they defend it against the
factitious affectations and unaware volatility of the actors, and
they try to impose it on the vulgar Manager who would like to change
it and adapt it to the so-called exigencies of the theatre.
If the six characters don't all seem to exist on
the same plane, it is not because some are figures of first rank and
others of the second, that is, some are main characters and others
minor ones -- the elementary perspective necessary to all scenic or
narrative art -- nor is it that any are not completely created --
for their purpose. They are all six at the same point of artistic
realization and on the same level of reality, which is the fantastic
level of the whole play. Except that the Father, the Step-Daughter,
and also the Son are realized as mind; the Mother as nature; the Boy
as a presence watching and performing a gesture and the Baby unaware
of it all. This fact creates among them a perspective of a new sort.
Unconsciously I had had the impression that some of them needed to
he fully realized (artistically speaking), others less so, and
others merely sketched in as elements in a narrative or
presentational sequence: the most alive, the most completely created,
are the Father and the Step-Daughter who naturally stand out more
and lead the way, dragging themselves along beside the almost dead
weight of the others -- first, the Son, holding back; second, the
Mother, like a victim resigned to her fate, between the two children
who have hardly any substance beyond their appearance and who need
to be led by the hand.
Inizio pagina
Analysis
And actually! actually they had each to appear in
that stage of creation which they had attained in the author's
fantasy at the moment when he wished to drive them away.
If I now think about these things, about having
intuited that necessity, having unconsciously found the way to
resolve it by means of a new perspective, and about the way in which
I actually obtained it, they seem like miracles. The fact is that
the play was really conceived in one of those spontaneous
illuminations of the fantasy when by a miracle all the elements of
the mind answer to each other's call and work in divine accord. No
human brain, working "in the cold," however stirred up it might be,
could ever have succeeded in penetrating far enough, could ever have
been in a position to satisfy all the exigencies of the play's form.
Therefore the reasons which I will give to clarify the values of the
play must not be thought of as intentions that I conceived
beforehand when I prepared myself for the job and which I now
undertake to defend, but only as discoveries which I have been able
to make afterwards in tranquillity.
I wanted to present six characters seeking an
author. Their play does not manage to get presented -- precisely
because the author whom they seek is missing. Instead is presented
the comedy of their vain attempt with all that it contains of
tragedy by virtue of the fact that the six characters have been
rejected.
But can one present a character while rejecting
him? Obviously, to present him one needs, on the contrary, to
receive him into one's fantasy before one can express him. And I
have actually accepted and realized the six characters: I have,
however, accepted and realized them as rejected: in search of
another author.
What have I rejected of them? Not themselves,
obviously, hut their drama, which doubtless is what interests them
above all but which did not interest me -- for the reasons already
indicated.
And what is it, for a character -- his drama?
Every creature of fantasy and art, in order to
exist, must have his drama, that is, a drama in which he may be a
character and for which he is a character. This drama is the
character's raison d'être, his vital function, necessary for
his existence.
In these six, then, I have accepted the "being"
without the reason for being. I have taken the organism and
entrusted to it, not its own proper function, but another more
complex function into which its own function entered, if at all,
only as a datum. A terrible and desperate situation especially for
the two -- Father and Step-Daughter -- who more than the others
crave life and more than the others feel themselves to be characters,
that is, absolutely need a drama and therefore their own drama--the
only one which they can envisage for themselves yet which meantime
they see rejected: an "impossible" situation from which they feel
they must escape at whatever cost; it is a matter of life and death.
True, I have given them another raison d'être, another
function: precisely that "impossible" situation, the drama of being
in search of an author and rejected. But that this should be a
raison d'être, that it should have become their real function,
that it should be necessary, that it should suffice, they can hardly
suppose; for they have a life of their own. If someone were to tell
them, they wouldn't believe him. It is not possible to believe that
the sole reason for our living should lie in a torment that seems to
us unjust and inexplicable.I cannot imagine, therefore, why the charge was
brought against me that the character of the Father was not what it
should have been because it stepped out of its quality and position
as a character and invaded at times the author's province and took
it over. I who understand those who don't quite understand me see
that the charge derives from the fact that the character expresses
and makes his own a torment of spirit which is recognized as mine.
Which is entirely natural and of absolutely no significance. Aside
from the fact that this torment of spirit in the character of the
Father derives from causes, and is suffered and lived for reasons,
that have nothing to do with the drama of my personal experience, a
fact which alone removes all substance from the criticism, I want to
make it clear that the inherent torment of my spirit is one thing, a
torment which I can legitimately -- provided that it be organic --
reflect in a character, and that the activity of my spirit as
revealed in the realized work, the activity that succeeds in forming
a drama out of the six characters in search of an author is another
thing. If the Father participated in this latter activity, if he
competed in forming the drama of the six characters without an
author, then and only then would it by all means be justified to say
that he was at times the author himself and therefore not the man he
should be. But the Father suffers and does not create his existence
as a character in search of an author. He suffers it as an
inexplicable fatality and as a situation which he tries with all his
powers to rebel against, which he tries to remedy: hence it is that
he is a character in search of an author and nothing more, even if
he expresses as his own the torment of my spirit. If he, so to speak,
assumed some of the author's responsibilities, the fatality would be
completely explained. He would, that is to say, see himself accepted,
if only as a rejected character, accepted in the poet's heart of
hearts, and he would no longer have any reason to suffer the despair
of not finding someone to construct and affirm his life as a
character. I mean that he would quite willingly accept the raison
d'être which the author gives him and without regrets would
forego his own, throwing over the Manager and the actors to whom in
fact he runs as his only recourse.
There is one character, that of the Mother, who
on the other hand does not care about being alive (considering being
alive as an end in itself). She hasn't the least suspicion that she
is not alive. It has never occurred to her to ask how and why and in
what manner she lives. In short, she is not aware of being a
character, inasmuch as she is never, even for a moment, detached
from her role. She doesn't know she has a role.
This makes her perfectly organic. Indeed, her
role of Mother does not of itself, in its natural essence, embrace
mental activity. And she does not exist as a mind. She lives in an
endless continuum of feeling, and therefore she cannot acquire
awareness of her life -- that is, of her existence as a character.
But with all this, even she, in her own way and for her own ends,
seeks an author, and at a certain stage seems happy to have been
brought before the Manager. Because she hopes to take life from him,
perhaps? No: because she hopes the Manager will have her present a
scene with the Son in which she would put so much of her own life.
But it is a scene which does not exist, which never has and never
could take place. So unaware is she of being a character, that is,
of the life that is possible to her, all fixed and determined,
moment by moment, in every action, every phrase.
She appears on stage with the other characters
but without understanding what the others make her do. Obviously,
she imagines that the itch for life with which the husband and the
daughter are afflicted and for which she herself is to be found on
stage is no more than one of the usual incomprehensible
extravagances of this man who is both tortured and torturer and --
horrible, most horrible -- a new equivocal rebellion on the part of
that poor erring girl. The Mother is completely passive. The events
of her own life and the values they assume in her eyes, her very
character, are all things which are "said" by the others and which
she only once contradicts, and that because the maternal instinct
rises up and rebels within her to make it clear that she didn't at
all wish to abandon either the son or the husband: the Son was taken
from her and the husband forced her to abandon him. She is only
correcting data; she explains and knows nothing. In short, she is
nature. Nature fixed in the figure of a mother. This character gave
me a satisfaction of a new sort, not to be ignored. Nearly all my
critics, instead of defining her, after their habit, as "unhuman" --
which seems to be the peculiar and incorrigible characteristic of
all my creatures without exception -- had the goodness to note "with
real pleasure" that at last a very human figure had emerged from my
fantasy. I explain this praise to myself in the following way: since
my poor Mother is entirely limited to the natural attitude of a
Mother with no possibility of free mental activity, being, that is,
little more than a lump of flesh completely alive in all its
functions -- procreation, lactation, caring for and loving its young
-- without any need therefore of exercising her brain, she realizes
in her person the true and complete "human type." That must be how
it is, since in a human organism nothing seems more superfluous than
the mind.
But the critics have tried to get rid of the
Mother with this praise without bothering to penetrate the nucleus
of poetic values which the character in the play represents. A
very human figure, certainly, because mindless, that is, unaware
of being what she is or not caring to explain it to herself. But not
knowing that she is a character doesn't prevent her from being one.
That is her drama in my play. And the most living expression of it
comes spurting out in her cry to the Manager who wants her to think
all these things have happened already and therefore cannot now be a
reason for renewed lamentations: "No, it's happening now, it's
happening always! My torture is not a pretence, signore! I am alive
and present, always, in every moment of my torture: it is renewed,
alive and present, always!" This she feels, without being
conscious of it, and feels it therefore as something inexplicable:
but she feels it so terribly that she doesn't think it can be
something to explain either to herself or to others. She feels it
and that is that. She feels it as pain, and this pain is immediate;
she cries it out. Thus she reflects the growing fixity of life in a
form -- the same thing, which in another way, tortures the Father
and the Step-Daughter. In them, mind. In her, nature. The mind
rebels and, as best it may, seeks an advantage; nature, if not
aroused by sensory stimuli, weeps.
Conflict between life-in-movement and form is the
inexorable condition not only of the mental but also of the physical
order, The life which in order to exist has become fixed in our
corporeal form little by little kills that form. The tears of a
nature thus fixed lament the irreparable, continuous aging of our
bodies. Hence the tears of the Mother are passive and perpetual.
Revealed in three faces, made significant in three distinct and
simultaneous dramas, this inherent conflict finds in the play its
most complete expression. More: the Mother declares also the
particular value of artistic form -- a form which does not delimit
or destroy its own life and which life does not consume -- in her
cry to the Manager. If the Father and Step-Daughter began their
scene a hundred thousand times in succession, always, at the
appointed moment, at the instant when the life of the work of art
must be expressed with that cry, it would always be heard, unaltered
and unalterable in its form, not as a mechanical repetition, not as
a return determined by external necessities, but on the contrary,
alive every time and as new, suddenly born thus forever!
embalmed alive in its incorruptible form. Hence, always, as we open
the book, we shall find Francesca alive and confessing to Dante her
sweet sin, and if we turn to the passage a hundred thousand times in
succession, a hundred thousand times in succession Francesca will
speak her words, never repeating them mechanically, but saying them
as though each time were the first time with such living and sudden
passion that Dante every time will turn faint. All that lives, by
the fact of living, has a form, and by the same token must die --
except the work of art which lives forever in so far as it is form.
The birth of a creature of human fantasy, a birth
which is a step across the threshold between nothing and eternity,
can also happen suddenly, occasioned by some necessity. An imagined
drama needs a character who does or says a certain necessary thing;
accordingly this character is born and is precisely what he had to
be. In this way Madame Pace is born among the six characters and
seems a miracle, even a trick, realistically portrayed on the stage.
It is no trick. The birth is real. The new character is alive not
because she was alive already but because she is now happily born as
is required by the fact of her being a character -- she is obliged
to be as she is. There is a break here, a sudden change in the level
of reality of the scene, because a character can be born in this way
only in the poet's fancy and not on the boards of a stage. Without
anyone's noticing it, I have all of a sudden changed the scene: I
have gathered it up again into my own fantasy without removing it
from the spectator's eyes. That is, I have shown them. instead of
the stage, my own fantasy in the act of creating -- my own fantasy
in the form of this same stage. The sudden and uncontrollable
changing of a visual phenomenon from one level of reality to another
is a miracle comparable to those of the saint who sets his own
statue in motion: it is neither wood nor stone at such a moment. But
the miracle is not arbitrary. The stage -- a stage which accepts the
fantastic reality of the six characters -- is no fixed, immutable
datum. Nothing in this play exists as given and preconceived.
Everything is in the making, is in motion, is a sudden experiment:
even the place in which this unformed life, reaching after its own
form, changes and changes again contrives to shift position
organically. The level of reality changes. When I had the idea of
bringing Madame Pace to birth right there on the stage, I felt I
could do it and I did it. Had I noticed that this birth was
unhinging and silently, unnoticed, in a second, giving another shape,
another reality to my scene, I certainly wouldn't have brought it
about. I would have been afraid of the apparent lack of logic. And I
would have committed an ill-omened assault on the beauty of my work.
The fervor of my mind saved me from doing so. For, despite
appearances, with their specious logic, this fantastic birth is
sustained by a real necessity in mysterious, organic relation with
the whole life of the work.
That someone now tells me it hasn't all the value
it could have because its expression is not constructed but chaotic,
because it smacks of romanticism, makes me smile.
I understand why this observation was made to me:
because in this work of mine the presentation of the drama in which
the six characters are involved appears tumultuous and never
proceeds in an orderly manner. There is no logical development, no
concatenation of the events. Very true. Had I hunted it with a lamp
I couldn't have found a more disordered, crazy, arbitrary,
complicated, in short, romantic way of presenting "the drama in
which the six characters are involved." Very true. But I have not
presented that drama. I have presented another -- and I won't
undertake to say again what! -- in which, among the many fine things
that everyone, according to his tastes, can find, there is a
discreet satire on romantic procedures: in the six characters thus
excited to the point where they stifle themselves in the roles which
each of them plays in a certain drama while I present them as
characters in another play which they don't know and don't suspect
the existence of, so that this inflammation of their passions --
which belongs to the realm of romantic procedures -- is humorously "placed,"
located in the void. And the drama of the six characters presented
not as it would have been organized by my fantasy had it been
accepted but in this way, as a rejected drama, could not exist in
the work except as a "situation," with some little development, and
could not come out except in indications, stormily, disorderedly, in
violent foreshortenings, in a chaotic interrupted, manner:
continually sidetracked, contradicted (by one of its characters),
denied, and (by two others) not even seen.
There is a character indeed -- he who denies the
drama which makes him a character, the Son -- who draws all his
importance and value from being a character not of the comedy in the
making -- which as such hardly appears -- but from the presentation
that I made of it. In short, he is the only one who lives solely as
"a character in search of an author" -- inasmuch as the author he
seeks is not a dramatic author. Even this could not be otherwise.
The character's attitude is an organic product of my conception, and
it is logical that in the situation it should produce greater
confusion and disorder and another element of romantic contrast.
But I had precisely to present this
organic and natural chaos. And to present a chaos is not at all to
present chaotically, that is, romantically. That my presentation is
the reverse of confused, that it is quite simple, clear, and orderly,
is proved by the clarity which the intrigue, the characters, the
fantastic and realistic, dramatic and comic levels of the work have
had for every public in the world and by the way in which, for those
with more searching vision, the unusual values enclosed within it
come out.
Great is the confusion of tongues among men if
criticisms thus made find words for their expression. No less great
than this confusion is the intimate law of order which, obeyed in
all points, makes this work of mine classical and typical and at its
catastrophic close forbids the use of words. Though the audience
eventually understands that one does not create life by artifice and
that the drama of the six characters cannot be presented without an
author to give them value with his spirit, the Manager remains
vulgarly anxious to know how the thing turned out, and the "ending"
is remembered by the Son in its sequence of actual moments, but
without any sense and therefore not needing a human voice for its
expression. It happens stupidly, uselessly, with the going-off of a
mechanical weapon on stage. It breaks up and disperses the sterile
experiment of the characters and the actors, which has apparently
been made without the assistance of the poet.
The poet, unknown to them, as if looking on at a
distance during the whole period of the experiment, was at the same
time busy creating -- with it and of it -- his own play.
[First published as Como e perché ho
scritto i "Sei personaggi in cerca d'autore" in Comoedia,
Jan. 1, 1925, p. 7.]