SUSANNA: Ei la destina
Per ottener da me certe mezz'ore...
Che il diritto
feudale...
FIGARO: Come? ne'
feudi suoi
Non l'ha il
Conte abolito?
Part One: In Medias Historia
Precisely
at
He
trod down the stairs of the townhouse in which he resided about half of every
year, with the balance of his time spent either touring the provinces with his
troupe or vacationing or making films in the south of
"Much
business to attend to today, sir?" she asked.
Edward
sighed. "I don't believe so. I will be seeing the same people, doing the
same things, rehearsing the same lines. Performing, day after day, night after
night."
"That's
a shame."
Edward
smiled. "I'm sure something will change my mood. There's always
hope."
Two
hours later he arrived at the Bijou Theatre. The stage manager, John, took his
cane and top-hat to Edward's dressing room as the latter proceeded to the
seventh row where George Nobbs the director was smoking cigar after cigar as he
marked and circled, in red, moments he felt had been amiss during the previous
night's performance.
Edward
said, "Hello, George. What's new?"
The
director coughed. "Did you see the couple leaving during the second act
last night?"
Edward
clutched his tie. "Some people left?"
The
director pointed to a page. "Precisely here."
"Maybe
they had an appointment."
"Maybe
the beginning of the act stank."
"If
you have any suggestions-"
"I
fired Agnes."
"You
fired Docella?"
"No,
I fired the actress who played Docella. There's a difference."
"Of
course there is. But how can I play the wine-glass scene without a
Docella?"
At
that moment a young woman popped up as if from out of nowhere. "I've got
the lines down, Mr. Director."
"Miss
Mahew, please meet our leading man, Edward Stevens."
She
stuck out her hand. "I've always loved your work, Mr. Stevens."
Edward
too her hand. "Thank you. Have you performed much before?"
Miss
Mahew blurted, "No, not at all! I mean, I'm fresh out of acting
school."
Edward
looked to the director. "Acting school? There are schools for acting now,
George?"
"I
understand so, Edward."
"How
odd! How novel! How ... twenty-first century! Well, Miss..."
"Please:
Helen."
"Well,
Helen. You're about to become part of our little troupe. The world of theatre
is a very special world. We have our own customs, and our own rituals. You'll
get the hang of it."
"Hot
dog!"
Edward
looked to the director, who shrugged. "A lot to learn," said Edward.
"We should get started. Come to my dressing room, and I'll break you
in."
"Sure!"
Edward
nodded to the director as if he was about to embark on a regrettable task.
"Give us an hour," said Edward. "I have to break ... Helen
in."
The
director said, "Yes. Go break her in." And coughed.
Part Two: The Young Ones
Under
late capitalism, the female body is surveilled by a vast panopticalization of
state and social apparati in methods both concealed and revealed by terms such
as 'education,' 'labour,' 'sexualities,' 'vocation,' and even 'vacation'. We
would be remiss to delimit our interests to just one female-gendered body out
of billions--which would have the effect of marginalizing the all-but-one--but
such is the nature of post-colonialism that all cannot be seen at once; we are
forced, by the logic of Althusser et. al., to stay within the prisonhouse of
language: though we can be as near as possible to the walls of the aforementioned
jail.
Thus
we are forced to use the language of the colonialist sexist racist oppressors
when we are forced to say that Dani Thompson, twenty-six years of age according
to cultural determination, was furiously re-underlining and re-annotating The Order of Things when her roommate
Helen came home that day at around six.
Dani
ceased her research to say to her, "How did it go?"
Helen
flopped into their easychair and drew her knees up to her chest. After a moment
she said, "How did what go?"
"Your
first day, as a big-time actress. Remember?"
"Of
course."
Pause.
"So
how did it go," pressed Dani.
Helen
slowly said, "Not ... too well."
Dani
set her volume of post-structuralist wisdom aside. "So, tell. Were you
exploited?"
"I....
You've heard of their main actor? Edward Stevens?"
"No.
I don't pay attention to the State Theatre."
"He's
their main actor. He took me to his dressing room ... and had sex with
me."
"What?"
"He
had his way with me. Said, 'This is how you join.'"
"Jesus,
did he rape you?"
"No.
He was pretty violent about it. I struggled but he wouldn't let me go."
"That's
rape."
"No,
I've been raped before. Many times, and it was always nice."
"When?"
"You
know Pete."
"Your
boyfriend?"
"Yeah.
He rapes me all the time, and it's never violent."
"He
does?"
Helen
cuddled up her knees tightly and smiled. "Yeah!"
"I
never knew!"
Helen
frowned. "But you're the one who told me it was rape."
"Say
what?"
"You
said, All sexual intercourse is rape."
"How's
a social construct like me supposed to know anything like that about this
stuff? So this actor, he was violent with you?"
"Yes,
very."
"That
was rape."
"So
what was the stuff with Pete?"
"I
don't know, but it wasn't rape."
"Then
why did you.... So what should I do?"
"Call
up a rape crisis centre."
"Do
you know their number?"
"No,
but it must be in the phone book. Maybe under social services or
something."
Part Three: Popular Actor a Rapist:
Source
Helen
Mahew, an actress at the tender beginning of her career, went to the Metropolis
Intelligencer newspaper office earlier today to assert that she had been raped
the day before at the State Theatre in Metropolis by famed actor Edward Stevens
during a bizarre ritual whose meaning has not thus far been revealed to
anyone's satisfaction.
In
the office, Helen said to the nearest person who appeared to have any authority
(turned out to be a proof-reader), "I have something to report. Something
... newsy. Do you know what I mean?"
"The
general editor's office is right over there," and he was not being
misleadful.
Helen
knocked on the office door. The general editor, J.T. by name, looked up and
said, "Yes?"
"I
have something I think you'd be interested in. 'Yesterday,' um, 'I was sexually
assaulted by Edward Stevens the actor.'" (She had carefully rehearsed this
line.)
J.T.
said, "Wow." He got on his phone. "Jones! Grab Smith and get in
here!"
Jones
and Smith were suddenly there.
Helen
told them, as best she could, the whole bizarre story.
Smith
said, "Have you been to any other paper?"
"No."
Jones
cried, "Great Gotham, this is a scoop! J.T. keep her here! Don't let her
out of your sight!"
Smith
cried, "We're gonna go get us a comment from Mr. Big Actor Guy before
anyone knows Dutch about it!"
Jones
and Smith left the office of the Metropolis Intelligencer, hopped in their Ford
sedan, and sped off.
Jones
said, "This is going to be great!"
Smith
said, "Right where we want him!"
"We
could even use psychology on him!"
"Maybe
even reverse psychology on him!"
"Where
you were on the night of!"
"Mr.
Hotshot!"
"Been
waiting my whole life for this!"
"Imagine
his face!"
"Innuendo,
wick-dipping and sleaze!"
"Goddamn
rapist prick!"
"I
hope he gets the needle!"
"He's
a great poison in the world!"
"I
can see the headline now!"
"And
the byline! Us!"
"Morning
paper!"
"Maybe
even a special edition!"
"Even
if we write slowly: A Special Edition!"
"Send
five copies to my mother!"
"The
theatre is ruined for me now!"
"Movies
too?"
"Movies
too!"
"I'm
with you! no more movies for me neither!"
Jones
hit the brakes and the car skidded to a halt. "Wait!" he cried.
"We can't do this."
"Why
not? What's the problem?"
"The
problem is tomorrow."
"What's
the problem with tomorrow?"
"Brunch."
"What
brunch?"
"It's
the brunch of the Metropolis Club. We're going, remember?"
"Yeah,
so what?"
"The
speaker of honour is none other than Mr. Edward Stevens."
"Sheesh,
that would make it really awkward, wouldn't it?"
"We'd
be blackballed for sure!"
"Our
careers would be effectively over!"
"No
more cocktail party invites!"
"Say
goodbye to the kickbacks!"
"No
more pull with City Hall!"
"I
bought a new jacket and everything!"
"Win
some, lose some," said Jones, who was a man.
"Let's
go home," said Smith, who was a woman.
Part Four: The Fourth Part
Oh,
okay. Got it. Good morning and welcome to the fourth chapter of.... What's the
name of this story again? [Laughter.] Yes, "The Tragedian." You're
all looking pretty wide awake out there. Why do computer geeks give each other
Christmas presents on Halloween? It's 'cause Dec 25 equals Oct 31! Is this
thing on? [Slow clapping.] So here he is, Mr. Edward Stevens, and here you are,
watching and waiting. Something's going to happen. Can't you feel it?
Edward
had been roused from his slumbers at the unkind hour of nine to attend the
assembly. He stood up, notes in hand (he must have considered it worth the
bother to memorize something for a single soon-to-be-forgotten performance),
and left the head table of business leaders and politicians who were applauding
him in a most soberly manner. He ascended the dais, shook hands with the
President of the Metropolis Club, and waved to the crowd. He was familiar to
most, for they were mostly the sorts who went to events, theatre, ballet,
opera, and so on, and his National Theatre was known far beyond the walls of
that hotel and deep into the nameless nation in which they resided.
"Thank
you. Thank you. I don't recall when I was last honoured in such a manner. Yes,
I've met royalty, presidents, czars, caliphs, and so on, but there is something
special about being honoured in one's own nation. I suppose you want to hear
something of theatre, something of art, indeed ... something of life! Yet, how
to sum it up? Are we not all players? Ah, I see your faces, don't worry, I won't
bore you with that line! Down, Will! Yet, I think he was onto something
fundamental. How do we come to know the inner lives of others, or even of
ourselves?"
"Let's
talk about Helen Mahew!" came a shout from the right side of the room,
third table out. Everyone turned to look.
Edward
covered his eyes to see; Smith and Jones, who were sitting way in the back,
gasped.
Smith
said, "Who let him in?"
Jones
said, "Like a fish out of water."
Edward
hadn't been expecting such an Elizabethan interruption, and so his guard was
most entirely down. He said, innocently enough, "Excuse me, who are you?
What are you doing here?"
The
figure stood up. Few in the room knew him by name; more knew him by reputation;
half didn't know him at all. Expecting this, he introduced himself.
"Hi,
this is Tommy T. Track, a blogger with crisiswhatcrisis.com, and I also have a
half-hour radio show on CTNX, home of the Metropolis Mandrakes. Edward Stevens
we all know, or mostly know, or mostly think we know. He's an actor, some say
one of our greatest, and he performs at the National Theatre here in
Metropolis. It's a grand place, chandeliers, red carpets, the works. It should
be grand: one hundred million--of your tax dollars--per year go toward the
running of it.
"But
you know what happened? I don't know if you're going to believe it or not. I
kind of can't believe it myself. This man, this actor, has made a habit of
rape. That's right: savage, brutal, rape. He raped a young woman just yesterday.
The evidence is being collected by the police as we speak. How many women has
he raped? Only time will tell. Now don't you find it shocking that this man is
praised--hallowed, even!--by the establishment? Scotiabank. You're richer than
you think.
"Hallowed,
adored even, by people who all go to one another's parties and events. Did they
know? It would be almost impossible to believe that no-one knew. So, who knew?
The political class, which I see here? The media class, also well in
attendance? Oh, and what about my favourite: the journalism class. All
of it swept under a fine plush rug, all these young girls chewed into and spat
out. Doesn't it make you feel disgusted? Don't you want to see some justice
done? Slim your wallet without turning your world upside down. Bellroy.
"So
I ask all you good people. Does anything about this sound right or proper? Our
greatest actor, a tragedian no less, rutting with women a third his age. You
wouldn't catch King Lear doing that, no would you? But this girl--she could
have would up playing Cordelia, no less! His own character's daughter! This is
a massive, massive scandal, folks. No two words about it no matter how tender
they sound, no matter how iambically they trip off the tongue. This is really
the most disgusting charge I've ever made; and believe me, I've made plenty.
Learn how to turn $100 into $181 every 60 seconds! Free software!"
Part Five: Lawyered
Aliquam
vitae hendrerit metus! Nullam convallis varius ornare! Morbi quis mauris ac
velit auctor lobortis ac sed mi! In at fermentum nulla! Maecenas condimentum
turpis vel odio consectetur mattis!
As
chaos ensued, some organizers, apparently of the Metropolis Club though they
could have been free-range organizers, pushed a speechless Edward Stevens
through the cinderblock hallway lined with cardboard boxes and discarded dusty
electronic equipment which was the rear half, the closer-to-reality half, of
the hotel banquet room, and out an alley door where Edward beheld, quietly
idling, a long black limousine. A hand emerged from the rear-most smoke-tinted
window. The index finger of the hand remained in place as the rest of the
digits closed. The index finger twitched enticingly. Edward approached. A fatty
face came into view, saying, "Get in."
Edward
slipped into the limousine which started going someplace. The man beside Edward
said, "I saw it all from the centre of the room; You need my help."
"Do
I?"
"Yes.
I am an attorney. George Pudpie's the name, and touchy cases are my game."
Edward
was looking out the window. "What did it mean? What did that strange man
mean?"
Pudlpie
said, "I've handled this sort of case before."
"I'm
sorry; I have a case?"
"Damn
right you do! Weren't you listening? You've been accused of rape."
"There's
been no rape. I didn't rape anyone."
"Be
that as it may, you should take me on as your attorney right now, before you
say another word."
"Why?"
"Because
attorney-client secrecy kicks in, from that moment on."
"Ah,
then anything I say is in the strictest confidence? Where are we going?"
"My
headquarters, beneath Mt. Metropolis. Yes, strict confidence."
"You've
had other clients?"
"I
can't tell you that. I can't tell you anything. That's the way law works. It's
silent, and it's deaf."
"If
I agree, can you tell me anything?"
"Nope!
It's all hush-hush."
"Not
even a reference?"
"Nope!
Some attorneys would, but not me. I'm a better
attorney. Let's say the wife sends me out for a carton of milk. I go out, come
back in fifteen minutes. She asks, 'Did you get the milk?' and I have to say,
because I'm such an excellent attorney, 'I can't tell you that. There's
attorney-milk privilege involved. If I was to betray a carton of milk, what's
to stop me from betraying a homicidal maniac? Really, what could be done? The
carton has rights, so just knock it off.' Of course I don't have a wife so the
whole thing's hypothetical."
Edward
was shaking his head slowly. "They simply don't understand. That's got to
be the answer. It's funny, really. They just don't understand."
"Now
let's say I buy a telephone pole. Doesn't matter what for...."
"Stop
the car. I want to get out."
"You're
refusing my services?"
"I
suppose so. I don't need an attorney. Truth will be my judge."
"Good
luck on that! Well, fine. James, stop the car."
Edward
got out of the car and ran off madly.
Part Six: Oasis
It's
the breath that slows one, now isn't it? Know what I mean, mate? You can run,
but you have to stop sooner or later. I was never much of a runner. Others, you
know the ones, have to keep in shape. Like actors. Like that Edward Stevens chap.
You hear what he's done, now? He raped young actresses. Dozens of 'em. Makes
you sick doesn't it? Me, I never got rape. I mean, don't it hurt your prick to
stick it in some un-aroused pussy? Wouldn't there be an awful lot of chafing? I
guess some things are important to some blokes. Oi, I think that's him now.
Sardi's
restaurant was unusually enpty when Edward came through the door out of breath.
His eyes turned this way and that, as if afraid to see someone he knew; but the
only person he saw was the waitress, an ex-actor named Janice, once a minor
player in the National Theatre. He appeared to be glad to see her, and he
waved. She same over, same mousy brunette as ever.
"Hey,
Ed, how you doing?"
She
appeared not to know what had happened less than an hour earlier. Ed happily
said, "I'm very well, thanks. Sounds like you've got a bit of a
cold."
"Yeah,"
she sniffed. "Just you today?"
"Just
me today."
She
led him to a fine table, sniffling.
"Bourbon,
please. I need bourbon."
"Something
wrong?"
"Janice,
I've been accused of rape."
"What?"
"I
know. Isn't it crazy? Someone has misinterpreted the theatre."
"I
guess so."
"Your
nose is running."
She
could have snorted the phlegm back into her nose, but she didn't. Instead she
dabbed at her nose with a handkerchief.
Edward
said, "You know what it's like."
"I
remember."
"Take
you and me, for example. I wasn't harsh
with you, was I?"
"No,
no."
"What
we had that first day, it wasn't rape,
now was it?"
"No,
no. So anyway, what will you be having?"
Edward
smiled. "This is like an oasis. Hmmm. I think I'll have the linguine
bolognese."
"Coming
right up."
"And
the bourbon, of course."
"Yes,
bourbon."
Janice
poured out a big glass of bourbon for Edward and brought it to him. She went to
the kitchen, sniffling loosely and wetly, and ordered the linguine. She cleaned
some glasses snifflingly as the dish was being prepared. Sniff-sniff,
sniff-sniff. The cook rang the domed bell and she went into the kitchen to get
the plate. She told the cook to go off for a smoke. When he was gone, Janice
with a jerk of all her effort drew all the snot and mucus up her nose and into
her throat; she nearly choked. Then with a great rumbling from her deepest
being she pushed all the mucus and phlegm into her mouth--it was quite a
mouthful!--and with one thick push expelled it onto the linguine. She caught
her breath, wiped her mouth, and took the dish out to Edward.
Oi!
Part Seven: The Tragedian
By
the time Edward finished his linguini sputumese, hysteria was in full swing.
The feminists had detected all sorts of systemic systematizations of systems
against sisters, the libertarians had nearly pissed and moaned themselves to
death with all their twaddle about so-called 'due process', the bloggers had
referenced and cross-referenced citations re Edward Stevens going all the way
back to the dark ages of 1998, and the newspaper reporters had already chosen
their pens from their pen-racks. In one of the greatest-ever episodes of
narrative telescoping, mobs with pitchforks bought from pitchfork stores and
torches bought from torch stores were running the streets, shouting, "Come
out, Edward!" Cars were crashing, babies were crying, innuendos were
floating, jaws were literally dripping with bile, and Hephaestus was sealing up
a tomb in which Aphrodite was busy blowing Ares. But that is another story.
Edward
downed the rest of his bourbon and paid Janice, with a nice tip, of course.
Janice
looked toward the door. Seemed there was something of a commotion going on
outside in the streets. Maybe, just maybe, an angry and homicidal mob had
formed with the intent to lynch Edward. My!
"Okay,
see you later," she said.
Edward
walked outside, seemingly unawares of the ruckus. Then someone pointed to him
and screeched in an ungodly way.
Edward
clutched his coat as a gang of ruffians (the Consolidated Union of Perverted
Eroticists [CUPE] in fact, who were angry that their good name had been
sullied, and by someone without a card no less) started after him.
Edward
ran. The pursuing mob grew larger and larger. An abandoned warehouse! Just the
place!
Edward
breathlessly got into the warehouse and hid behind some skids. Voices outside:
"He went in the warehouse! Cover the exits!"
Edward
moved up to the second floor. The voices cried, "He must've gone up to the
second floor! Let's get on the second floor!"
Edward
moved up to the third floor. The voices cried, "He must've gone up to the
third floor! Let's get on the third floor!"
Edward
moved up to the fourth floor. The voices cried, "He must've gone up to the
fourth floor! Let's get on the fourth floor!"
Edward
moved up to the fifth floor. The voices cried, "He must've gone up to the
fifth floor! Let's get on the fifth floor!"
Edward
moved up to the sixth floor. The voices cried, "He must've gone up to the
sixth floor! Let's get on the sixth floor!"
Edward
moved up to the seventh floor. The voices cried, "He must've gone up to
the seventh floor! Let's get on the seventh floor!"
That
was as high as the warehouse went. Edward cowered in the north corner as the
mob gathered around him, torches ablaze and pitchforks ... apitched. They
wanted his blood and he knew they wouldn't leave without it. So, like Peter
Lorre climactically in M and like Simon Oakland anticlimactically in Psycho, he
spoke.
"People!
Listen to me! You don't understand! It's a process, it's a historical
theatrical process! The young ones, they come to us, they want to be part of a
tradition of two thousand years. Marlowe did it to Shakespeare and Shakespeare
did it to Ford, Socrates did it to Plato and Plato did it to anyone he could
get his hands on! It's a close bond, what we have in the theatre; it has to be a close bond! It cannot stop,
it can't ever stop! And I.... And I get the blame for it? Blame every actor who
has ever existed, because this is how it is! Maybe I got a little rough, sure.
That's my only sin! You people, you ordinary
people, you have no idea what it takes to be an actor! You don't know the
emotional commitment necessary for our creativity! You can't understand....
You'll never understand...."
The
mob had heard enough. They fell on Edward, and Actaeon, looking on from Hades,
understood the meaning of fury.