233- ] English Literature
George Bernard Shaw
1920s
Shaw's
first major work to appear after the war was Heartbreak House, written in
1916–17 and performed in 1920. It was produced on Broadway in November, and was
coolly received; according to The Times: "Mr Shaw on this occasion has
more than usual to say and takes twice as long as usual to say it". After
the London premiere in October 1921 The Times concurred with the American
critics: "As usual with Mr Shaw, the play is about an hour too long",
although containing "much entertainment and some profitable
reflection". Ervine in The Observer thought the play brilliant but
ponderously acted, except for Edith Evans as Lady Utterword.
Shaw's
largest-scale theatrical work was Back to Methuselah, written in 1918–20 and
staged in 1922. Weintraub describes it as "Shaw's attempt to fend off 'the
bottomless pit of an utterly discouraging pessimism'". This cycle of five
interrelated plays depicts evolution, and the effects of longevity, from the
Garden of Eden to the year 31,920 AD. Critics found the five plays strikingly
uneven in quality and invention. The original run was brief, and the work has
been revived infrequently. Shaw felt he had exhausted his remaining creative
powers in the huge span of this "Metabiological Pentateuch". He was
now sixty-seven, and expected to write no more plays.
This
mood was short-lived. In 1920 Joan of Arc was proclaimed a saint by Pope Benedict
XV; Shaw had long found Joan an interesting historical character, and his view
of her veered between "half-witted genius" and someone of
"exceptional sanity". He had considered writing a play about her in
1913, and the canonisation prompted him to return to the subject. He wrote
Saint Joan in the middle months of 1923, and the play was premiered on Broadway
in December. It was enthusiastically received there, and at its London premiere
the following March. In Weintraub's phrase, "even the Nobel prize
committee could no longer ignore Shaw after Saint Joan". The citation for
the literature prize for 1925 praised his work as "... marked by both
idealism and humanity, its stimulating satire often being infused with a
singular poetic beauty". He accepted the award, but rejected the monetary
prize that went with it, on the grounds that "My readers and my audiences
provide me with more than sufficient money for my needs".
After
Saint Joan, it was five years before Shaw wrote a play. From 1924, he spent
four years writing what he described as his "magnum opus", a
political treatise entitled The Intelligent Woman's Guide to Socialism and
Capitalism. The book was published in 1928 and sold well. At the end of the
decade Shaw produced his final Fabian tract, a commentary on the League of
Nations. He described the League as "a school for the new international
statesmanship as against the old Foreign Office diplomacy", but thought
that it had not yet become the "Federation of the World".
Shaw
returned to the theatre with what he called "a political
extravaganza", The Apple Cart, written in late 1928. It was, in Ervine's
view, unexpectedly popular, taking a conservative, monarchist, anti-democratic
line that appealed to contemporary audiences. The premiere was in Warsaw in
June 1928, and the first British production was two months later, at Sir Barry
Jackson's inaugural Malvern Festival. The other eminent creative artist most
closely associated with the festival was Sir Edward Elgar, with whom Shaw
enjoyed a deep friendship and mutual regard. He described The Apple Cart to
Elgar as "a scandalous Aristophanic burlesque of democratic politics, with
a brief but shocking sex interlude".
During
the 1920s Shaw began to lose faith in the idea that society could be changed
through Fabian gradualism, and became increasingly fascinated with dictatorial
methods. In 1922 he had welcomed Mussolini's accession to power in Italy,
observing that amid the "indiscipline and muddle and Parliamentary
deadlock", Mussolini was "the right kind of tyrant". Shaw was
prepared to tolerate certain dictatorial excesses; Weintraub in his ODNB
biographical sketch comments that Shaw's "flirtation with authoritarian
inter-war regimes" took a long time to fade, and Beatrice Webb thought he
was "obsessed" about Mussolini.
1930s
Shaw's
enthusiasm for the Soviet Union dated to the early 1920s when he had hailed
Lenin as "the one really interesting statesman in Europe". Having
turned down several chances to visit, in 1931 he joined a party led by Nancy
Astor. The carefully managed trip culminated in a lengthy meeting with Stalin,
whom Shaw later described as "a Georgian gentleman" with no malice in
him. At a dinner given in his honour, Shaw told the gathering: "I have
seen all the 'terrors' and I was terribly pleased by them". In March 1933,
he was a co-signatory to a letter in The Manchester Guardian protesting at the
continuing misrepresentation of Soviet achievements: "No lie is too
fantastic, no slander is too stale ... for employment by the more reckless elements
of the British press."
Shaw's
admiration for Mussolini and Stalin demonstrated his growing belief that
dictatorship was the only viable political arrangement. When the Nazi Party
came to power in Germany in January 1933, Shaw described Hitler as "a very
remarkable man, a very able man", and professed himself proud to be the
only writer in England who was "scrupulously polite and just to
Hitler"; though his principal admiration was for Stalin, whose regime he
championed uncritically throughout the decade. Shaw saw the 1939
Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact as a triumph for Stalin who, he said, now had Hitler
under his thumb.
Shaw's
first play of the decade was Too True to Be Good, written in 1931 and premiered
in Boston in February 1932. The reception was unenthusiastic. Brooks Atkinson
of The New York Times commenting that Shaw had "yielded to the impulse to
write without having a subject", judged the play a "rambling and
indifferently tedious conversation". The correspondent of the New York
Herald Tribune said that most of the play was "discourse, unbelievably
long lectures" and that although the audience enjoyed the play it was
bewildered by it.
During
the decade Shaw travelled widely and frequently. Most of his journeys were with
Charlotte; she enjoyed voyages on ocean liners, and he found peace to write
during the long spells at sea. Shaw met an enthusiastic welcome in South Africa
in 1932, despite his strong remarks about the racial divisions of the country.
In December 1932 the couple embarked on a round-the-world cruise. In March 1933
they arrived at San Francisco, to begin Shaw's first visit to the US. He had
earlier refused to go to "that awful country, that uncivilized
place", "unfit to govern itself ... illiberal, superstitious, crude,
violent, anarchic and arbitrary". He visited Hollywood, with which he was
unimpressed, and New York, where he lectured to a capacity audience in the
Metropolitan Opera House. Harried by the intrusive attentions of the press,
Shaw was glad when his ship sailed from New York harbour. New Zealand, which he
and Charlotte visited the following year, struck him as "the best country
I've been in"; he urged its people to be more confident and loosen their
dependence on trade with Britain. He used the weeks at sea to complete two plays—The
Simpleton of the Unexpected Isles and The Six of Calais—and begin work on a
third, The Millionairess.
Despite
his contempt for Hollywood and its aesthetic values, Shaw was enthusiastic
about cinema, and in the middle of the decade wrote screenplays for prospective
film versions of Pygmalion and Saint Joan. The latter was never made, but Shaw
entrusted the rights to the former to the unknown Gabriel Pascal, who produced
it at Pinewood Studios in 1938. Shaw was determined that Hollywood should have
nothing to do with the film, but was powerless to keep it from winning one
Academy Award ("Oscar"); he described his award for
"best-written screenplay" as an insult, coming from such a source. He
became the first person to have been awarded both a Nobel Prize and an Oscar.
In a 1993 study of the Oscars, Anthony Holden observes that Pygmalion was soon
spoken of as having "lifted movie-making from illiteracy to
literacy".
Shaw's
final plays of the 1930s were Cymbeline Refinished (1936), Geneva (1936) and In
Good King Charles's Golden Days (1939). The first, a fantasy reworking of
Shakespeare, made little impression, but the second, a satire on European
dictators, attracted more notice, much of it unfavourable. In particular,
Shaw's parody of Hitler as "Herr Battler" was considered mild, almost
sympathetic. The third play, an historical conversation piece first seen at
Malvern, ran briefly in London in May 1940. James Agate commented that the play
contained nothing to which even the most conservative audiences could take
exception, and though it was long and lacking in dramatic action only
"witless and idle" theatregoers would object. After their first runs
none of the three plays were seen again in the West End during Shaw's lifetime.
Towards
the end of the decade, both Shaws began to suffer ill health. Charlotte was
increasingly incapacitated by Paget's disease of bone, and he developed
pernicious anaemia. His treatment, involving injections of concentrated animal
liver, was successful, but this breach of his vegetarian creed distressed him
and brought down condemnation from militant vegetarians.
Second World War and final years
Although
Shaw's works since The Apple Cart had been received without great enthusiasm,
his earlier plays were revived in the West End throughout the Second World War,
starring such actors as Edith Evans, John Gielgud, Deborah Kerr and Robert
Donat. In 1944 nine Shaw plays were staged in London, including Arms and the
Man with Ralph Richardson, Laurence Olivier, Sybil Thorndike and Margaret Leighton
in the leading roles. Two touring companies took his plays all round Britain.
The revival in his popularity did not tempt Shaw to write a new play, and he
concentrated on prolific journalism. A second Shaw film produced by Pascal,
Major Barbara (1941), was less successful both artistically and commercially
than Pygmalion, partly because of Pascal's insistence on directing, to which he
was unsuited.
Following
the outbreak of war on 3 September 1939 and the rapid conquest of Poland, Shaw
was accused of defeatism when, in a New Statesman article, he declared the war
over and demanded a peace conference. Nevertheless, when he became convinced
that a negotiated peace was impossible, he publicly urged the neutral United
States to join the fight. The London blitz of 1940–41 led the Shaws, both in
their mid-eighties, to live full-time at Ayot St Lawrence. Even there they were
not immune from enemy air raids, and stayed on occasion with Nancy Astor at her
country house, Cliveden. In 1943, the worst of the London bombing over, the
Shaws moved back to Whitehall Court, where medical help for Charlotte was more
easily arranged. Her condition deteriorated, and she died in September.
Shaw's
final political treatise, Everybody's Political What's What, was published in
1944. Holroyd describes this as "a rambling narrative ... that repeats
ideas he had given better elsewhere and then repeats itself". The book
sold well—85,000 copies by the end of the year. After Hitler's suicide in May
1945, Shaw approved of the formal condolences offered by the Irish Taoiseach,
Éamon de Valera, at the German embassy in Dublin. Shaw disapproved of the
postwar trials of the defeated German leaders, as an act of self-righteousness:
"We are all potential criminals".
Pascal
was given a third opportunity to film Shaw's work with Caesar and Cleopatra
(1945). It cost three times its original budget and was rated "the biggest
financial failure in the history of British cinema". The film was poorly
received by British critics, although American reviews were friendlier. Shaw
thought its lavishness nullified the drama, and he considered the film "a
poor imitation of Cecil B. de Mille".
In
1946, the year of Shaw's ninetieth birthday, he accepted the freedom of Dublin
and became the first honorary freeman of the borough of St Pancras, London. In
the same year the British government asked Shaw informally whether he would
accept the Order of Merit. He declined, believing that an author's merit could
only be determined by the posthumous verdict of history. 1946 saw the
publication, as The Crime of Imprisonment, of the preface Shaw had written 20
years previously to a study of prison conditions. It was widely praised; a
reviewer in the American Journal of Public Health considered it essential
reading for any student of the American criminal justice system.
Shaw
continued to write into his nineties. His last plays were Buoyant Billions
(1947), his final full-length work; Farfetched Fables (1948) a set of six short
plays revisiting several of his earlier themes such as evolution; a comic play
for puppets, Shakes versus Shav (1949), a ten-minute piece in which Shakespeare
and Shaw trade insults; and Why She Would Not (1950), which Shaw described as
"a little comedy", written in one week shortly before his ninety-fourth
birthday.
During
his later years, Shaw enjoyed tending the gardens at Shaw's Corner. He died at
the age of 94 of renal failure precipitated by injuries incurred when falling
while pruning a tree. He was cremated at Golders Green Crematorium on 6 November
1950. His ashes, mixed with those of Charlotte, were scattered along footpaths
and around the statue of Saint Joan in their garden.
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