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Saint Joan (play)

 

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Saint Joan (play)



 
 
Saint Joan is a play by George Bernard Shaw
George Bernard Shaw

George Bernard Shaw, was an Irish people playwright.Although Shaw's first profitable writing was music and literary criticism, his talent was for drama, and he wrote more than 60 plays....
, based on the life and trial of Joan of Arc
Joan of Arc

Saint Joan of Arc also known as the Maid of Orleans, is a national heroine of France and a Roman Catholic saint. A peasant girl born in eastern France, she led the French army to several important victories during the Hundred Years' War, claiming divine guidance, and was indirectly responsible for the coronation of Charles VII of Franc...
. Published not long after the canonization
Canonization

Canonization is the act by which a particular Christian church declares a deceased person to be a saint and is included in the canon, or list, of recognized saints....
 of Joan of Arc
Joan of Arc

Saint Joan of Arc also known as the Maid of Orleans, is a national heroine of France and a Roman Catholic saint. A peasant girl born in eastern France, she led the French army to several important victories during the Hundred Years' War, claiming divine guidance, and was indirectly responsible for the coronation of Charles VII of Franc...
 by the Roman Catholic Church
Roman Catholic Church

The Roman Catholic Church, officially known as the Catholic Church is the world's largest Christianity Ecclesia , representing over half of all Christians and one-sixth of the world population....
, the play dramatises based on what is known of her life and on the substantial records of her trial. Shaw studied the transcripts and decided that the concerned people acted in good faith according to their beliefs. He wrote in his preface
Preface

A preface is an introduction to a book written by the author of the book. An introductory essay written by a different person is a foreword and precedes an author's preface....
 to the play:

"There are no villains in the piece.






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Encyclopedia


Saint Joan is a play by George Bernard Shaw
George Bernard Shaw

George Bernard Shaw, was an Irish people playwright.Although Shaw's first profitable writing was music and literary criticism, his talent was for drama, and he wrote more than 60 plays....
, based on the life and trial of Joan of Arc
Joan of Arc

Saint Joan of Arc also known as the Maid of Orleans, is a national heroine of France and a Roman Catholic saint. A peasant girl born in eastern France, she led the French army to several important victories during the Hundred Years' War, claiming divine guidance, and was indirectly responsible for the coronation of Charles VII of Franc...
. Published not long after the canonization
Canonization

Canonization is the act by which a particular Christian church declares a deceased person to be a saint and is included in the canon, or list, of recognized saints....
 of Joan of Arc
Joan of Arc

Saint Joan of Arc also known as the Maid of Orleans, is a national heroine of France and a Roman Catholic saint. A peasant girl born in eastern France, she led the French army to several important victories during the Hundred Years' War, claiming divine guidance, and was indirectly responsible for the coronation of Charles VII of Franc...
 by the Roman Catholic Church
Roman Catholic Church

The Roman Catholic Church, officially known as the Catholic Church is the world's largest Christianity Ecclesia , representing over half of all Christians and one-sixth of the world population....
, the play dramatises based on what is known of her life and on the substantial records of her trial. Shaw studied the transcripts and decided that the concerned people acted in good faith according to their beliefs. He wrote in his preface
Preface

A preface is an introduction to a book written by the author of the book. An introductory essay written by a different person is a foreword and precedes an author's preface....
 to the play:

"There are no villains in the piece. Crime, like disease, is not interesting: it is something to be done away with by general consent, and that is all [there is] about it. It is what men do at their best, with good intentions, and what normal men and women find that they must and will do in spite of their intentions, that really concern us."


Michael Holroyd has characterised the play as "a tragedy without villains" and also as Shaw's "only tragedy". John Fielden has discussed further the appropriateness of characterising Saint Joan as a tragedy.

Synopsis

Characters
  • Joan
  • Robert de Baudricourt
  • Steward to Robert de Baudricourt
  • Bertrand de Poulengey
  • Monseigneur de la Trémouille, Lord Chamberlain
  • Archbishop of Rheims
  • Gilles de Rais ("Bluebeard")
  • Captain La Hire
  • Peter Cauchon, Bishop of Beauvais
  • Dauphin, Charles VII
  • Richard de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick
  • Dunois, Bastard of Orleans
  • Page to Dunois
  • John de Stogumber, English chaplain
  • Canon John D'Estivet
  • Canon de Courcelles
  • Brother Martin Ladvenu


Shaw characterised Saint Joan as "A Chronicle Play in Six Scenes and an Epilogue". Joan, a simple peasant girl, hears voices which she claims to be those of Saint Margaret
Margaret the Virgin

Margaret the Virgin, also known as Margaret of Antioch , virgin and martyr, is celebrated by the Roman Catholic Church and Anglican Church Churches on July 20 and July 17 in the Eastern Church....
, Saint Catherine
Catherine of Alexandria

Saint Catherine of Alexandria, also known as Saint Catherine of the Wheel and The Great Martyr Saint Catherine is a Christian saint and martyr who is claimed to have been a noted scholar in the early 4th century....
, and the archangel Michael
Michael (archangel)

Saint Michael is an archangel in Christian and Islamic tradition. He is viewed as the field commander of the Army of God.He is mentioned by name in the Book of Daniel and the Book of Revelation....
, sent by God to guide her conduct.

Scene 1 begins with Robert de Baudricourt complaining about the inability of the hens on his farm to produce eggs. Joan claims that her voices are telling her to raise a siege against Orléans
Orléans

Orl?ans is a city in north-central France, about 130 km southwest of Paris. It is the capital of the Loiret Departments of France and of the Centre R?gion in France....
, and to allow her several of his men for this purpose. Joan also says that she will eventually crown the Dauphin in Rheims cathedral. de Baudricourt ridicules Joan, but his servant feels inspired by her words. de Baudricourt eventually begins to feel the same sense of inspiration, and gives his consent to Joan. The servant enters at the end of the scene to exclaim that the hens have begun to lay eggs again. de Baudricourt interprets this as a sign from God of Joan's divine inspiration.

In Scene 2 (8 March 1429), Joan talks her way into being received at the court of the weak and vain Dauphin. There, she tells him that her voices have commanded her to help him become a true king by rallying his troops to drive out the English occupiers and restore France to greatness. Joan succeeds in doing this through her excellent powers of flattery, negotiation, leadership, and skill on the battlefield.

In Scene 3 (29 April 1429), Dunois and his page are waiting for the wind to turn so that he and his forces can lay siege to Orléans. Joan and Dunois commiserate, and Dunois attempts to explain to her more pragmatic realities of an attack, without the wind at their back. Her replies eventually inspire Dunois to rally the forces, and at the scene's end, the wind turns in their favour.

Ultimately she is betrayed, and captured by the English at the siege of Compiègne
Compiègne

Compi?gne is a Communes of France in the Oise Departments of France in northern France.The city is located along the Oise River. Its inhabitants are called Compi?gnois....
. Scene 6 (30 May 1431) deals with her trial. John de Stogumber is adamant that she be executed at once. The Inquisitor, the Bishop of Beauvais, and the Church officials on both sides of the trial have a long discussion on the nature of her heresy. Joan is brought to the court, and continues to assert that her voices speak to her directly from God and that she has no need of the Church's officials. This outrages de Stogumber. She acquiesces to the pressure of torture
Torture

Torture, according to the United Nations Convention Against Torture, is:In addition to state-sponsored torture, individuals or groups may be motivated to inflict torture on others for similar reasons to those of a state; however, the motive for torture can also be for the sadism gratification of the torturer, as was the case in the Moors M...
 at the hands of her oppressors, and agrees to sign a confession relinquishing the truth behind her voices, so that she can live a life in permanent confinement without hope of parole. Upon hearing this, Joan changes her mind:

Joan: "You think that life is nothing but not being dead? It is not the bread and water I fear. I can live on bread. It is no hardship to drink water if the water be clean. But to shut me from the light of the sky and the sight of the fields and flowers; to chain my feet so that I can never again climb the hills. To make me breathe foul damp darkness, without these things I cannot live. And by your wanting to take them away from me, or from any human creature, I know that your council is of the devil."


Joan accepts the ultimate punishment of death at the stake as preferable to such an imprisoned existence. de Stogumber vehemently demands that Joan then be taken to the stake for immediate execution. The Inquisitor and the Bishop of Beauvais excommunicate her and deliver her into the hands of the English. The Inquisitor asserts that Joan was fundamentally innocent, in the sense that she was sincere and had no understanding of the church and the law. de Stogumber re-enters, screaming and severely shaken emotionally after seeing Joan die in the flames, the first time that he has witnessed such a death, and realising that he has not understood what it means to burn a person at the stake until he has actually seen it happen. A soldier had given Joan two sticks tied together in a cross before the moment of her death. Bishop Martin Ladvenu also reports that when he approached with a cross to let her see the cross before she died, and he approached too close to the flames, she had warned him of the danger from the stake, which convinced him that she could not have been under the inspiration of the devil.

In the Epilogue, 25 years after Joan's execution, a new trial has cleared her of heresy. Brother Martin brings the news to the now-King Charles. Charles then has a dream in which Joan appears to him. She begins conversing cheerfully not only with Charles, but with her old enemies, who also materialise in the King's bedroom. An emissary from the present day (at the time of the play, the 1920s) brings news that the Catholic Church is to canonise her, in the year 1920. Joan says that saints can work miracles, and asks if she can be resurrected. At this, all the characters desert her one by one, asserting that the world is not prepared to receive a saint such as her. The last to leave is the English soldier, who is about to engage in a conversation with Joan before he is summoned back to hell at the end of his 24-hour respite. The play ends with Joan ultimately despairing that mankind will never accept its saints:

"O God that madest this beautiful earth, when will it be ready to accept thy saints? How long, O Lord, how long?"


Criticism

Shaw was a famous pacifist, and there has been controversy over his approach, which was consistent with his anti-war speeches at the time of the First World War, a conflict in which he stated that Great Britain and its Allies were equally culpable with the Germans, and argued for negotiation and peace (which damned him in the eyes of many).

His interpretation of the events in Joan's life and its times has upset some historians, many of whom regard the play as highly inaccurate, especially in its depiction of medieval society.

Shaw states that the characterization of Joan by most writers is "romanticized" to make her accusers come off as completely unscrupulous and villainous. Some writers claim that Shaw attempts to wrongly rehabilitate Cauchon
Pierre Cauchon

File:Pierre Cauchon-Jeanne Darc manuscript.jpgPierre Cauchon , bishop of Beauvais. A strong partisan of English interests in France during the latter years of the Hundred Years' War, his role in arranging Joan of Arc's downfall led most subsequent observers to condemn his extension of secular politics into an ecclesiastical trial....
, the powerful Bishop of Beauvais, and the Inquisitor
Inquisitor

An inquisitor was an official in an Inquisition, an organisation or program intended to eliminate heresy and other things frowned on by the Roman Catholic Church....
, who were most instrumental in sending Joan to the stake. It is worth noting that Shaw takes no position on whether the sentence was just or otherwise. He does, however, dabble in psychology when he claims that Joan wore male clothing as a reflection of personal preference rather than out of necessity. Certainly the wearing of armor was never a female pursuit. The opposing point is made that Joan wore male clothes to protect herself from rape, especially towards the end of her life in the dungeon
Dungeon

A dungeon is a place where prisoners are kept. In the past, it used to double as the keep....
.

The playwright claims in his preface that she was most likely not physically attractive. He bases this claim on the fact that, at the time, no evidence had been found that Joan was beautiful. However, modern scholars have the advantage of recent translations into English of voluminous French transcripts, and have concluded that Joan was in fact "beautiful and shapely".

More general interpretation of Joan's character is to describe her as a rebel against general institutional authority, such as that of the Catholic Church and to the feudal system. Contemporary comments have noted her particularly strong form of religious belief and how it borders on religious fanaticism.

Tony Stafford has discussed Shaw's use of imagery related to birds in the play. Frederick Boas has compared the different treatments of Joan in dramas by Shakespeare, Schiller, and Shaw.

Productions

Shaw's personal reputation following the Great War was at a low ebb, and it is thought that he wanted to first test the play away from Britain. The play received its premiere on 28 December 1923 at the Garrick Theatre
Garrick Theatre

The Garrick Theatre is a West End theatre, located on Charing Cross Road, in the City of Westminster. It opened on April 24 1889 with The Profligate, a play by Arthur Wing Pinero....
 on Broadway
Broadway theatre

Broadway theatre, commonly called simply Broadway, refers to theatrical performances presented in one of the 39 large professional theaters with 500 seats or more located in the Theatre District, New York in Manhattan, New York City....
 by the Theatre Guild
Theatre Guild

The Theatre Guild is a theatre society founded in New York City in 1919 by Theresa Helburn, Lawrence Langner, and Armina Marshall. It evolved out of the work of the Washington Square Players....
. The London première, which opened on 26 March 1924 at the New Theatre
Noël Coward Theatre

The No?l Coward Theatre is a West End theatre on St. Martin's Lane in the City of Westminster. It opened on 12 March 1903 as the New Theatre, and was built by Charles Wyndham behind Wyndham's Theatre which was completed in 1899....
, was produced by Lewis Casson
Lewis Casson

Sir Lewis Thomas Casson Military Cross was an England actor and theatre director and the husband of Dame Sybil Thorndike....
 and star
Star

A star is a massive, luminous ball of Plasma that is held together by its own gravity. The nearest star to Earth is the Sun, which is the source of most of the energy on Earth....
red Shaw's friend Sybil Thorndike
Sybil Thorndike

Dame Agnes Sybil Thorndike Order of the Companions of Honour Order of the British Empire was a United Kingdom actor. A biography of Dame Sybil by Sheridan Morley was published in 1977....
, the actress for whom he had written the part . Costumes and sets were designed by Charles Ricketts
Charles Ricketts

Charles De Sousy Ricketts was a versatile English artist, illustrator, author and printer, and is best known for his work as book designer and typographer from 1896 to 1904 with the Vale Press, and his work in the theatre as a set and costume designer....
, and the play had an extensive musical score, specially composed and conducted by John Foulds
John Foulds

John Herbert Foulds , was a United Kingdom composer of classical music from England.A successful composer of light music and theatre scores, his principal creative energies went into more ambitious and exploratory works that were particularly influenced by Music of India....
.

Caught between the forces of the Church
Christian Church

Christian Church and the word church are used to denote both a Christian Groups of people and a Church . The word church is usually, but not exclusively, associated with Christianity....
 and the Law
LAW

LAW may refer to:* Anti-tank warfare, e.g. the US Army M72 LAW or the British Army LAW 80*Palestinian Society for the Protection of Human Rights ...
, Joan is the personification of the tragic heroine and the part is considered by actresses to be one of the most challenging of roles to interpret (see below). It is sometimes played by small petite women and sometimes by tall strong women. Because of the challenges of the role, it is often played by very experienced actresses who are much older than the age of the character, who was a teen-ager. As an interesting exception, for the movie version Joan was played by Jean Seberg
Jean Seberg

Jean Dorothy Seberg was an American actress. She starred in 34 films in Hollywood and in France. Seberg became even more of an icon after her roles in numerous French films and the tragedy of her turbulent life and eventual suicide....
 who actually was 19 at the time of filming and who, according to the views of many critics, was not very good, due to her lack of dramatic experience.

  • Winifred Lenihan, New York, December 1923 - April 1924 (Initial production)
  • Sybil Thorndike
    Sybil Thorndike

    Dame Agnes Sybil Thorndike Order of the Companions of Honour Order of the British Empire was a United Kingdom actor. A biography of Dame Sybil by Sheridan Morley was published in 1977....
    , London, March 1924 (Shaw wrote the play with her in mind)
  • Katharine Cornell
    Katharine Cornell

    Katharine Cornell was an American stage actress, writer, and theater owner and theatrical producer.She was born on February 16, 1893 in Berlin, Germany to American parents, and raised in Buffalo, New York....
    , New York, March 1936 - May 1936 (Tyrone Power
    Tyrone Power

    'Tyrone Edmund Power, Jr.' , usually credited simply as 'Tyrone Power' and known sometimes as "'Ty Power'", was an United States film and Theatre actor who appeared in dozens of films from the 1930s to the 1950s, often in swashbuckler roles or romantic leads such as The Mark of Zorro , The Black Swan , Prince of Foxes , T...
     made a pre-Hollywood appearance)
  • Wendy Hiller
    Wendy Hiller

    Dame Wendy Margaret Hiller Order of the British Empire was an English people film and theatre actor. The Academy Awards-winning actress enjoyed a varied acting career that spanned nearly sixty years....
    , 1936 Malvern Theater Festival (to honor Shaw's 80th birthday) Malvern,England, July 1936
  • Uta Hagen
    Uta Hagen

    Uta Thyra Hagen was a Germany-born United States actress and acting teacher....
    , New York, October 1951 - February 1952
  • Siobhán McKenna
    Siobhán McKenna

    Siobh?n McKenna , was an Irish people stage and screen actress.Born Siobh?n Giollamhuire Nic Cionnaith in Belfast, Northern Ireland, she grew up in Galway City and in County Monaghan, Ireland speaking fluent Irish Language....
    , New York, December 1956 - January 1957 (Peter Falk
    Peter Falk

    Peter Falk is an United States actor, best known for his role as Lieutenant Columbo in the long-running television series Columbo . He appeared in numerous films and television guest roles, and has been nominated for an Academy Award twice, and won the Emmy Award on five occasions and the Golden Globe award once....
     appeared in a small part)
  • Joan Plowright
    Joan Plowright

    Joan Ann Olivier, Lady Olivier, Order of the British Empire , better known as Dame Joan Plowright, is a Tony Award- winning, Golden Globe-winning, Academy Award- nominated, and Emmy Award- nominated England actor....
    , London, 1963
  • Genevieve Bujold
    Geneviève Bujold

    Genevi?ve Bujold is an Academy Award-nominated Canada actor....
    , (in a television production) 1967
  • Diana Sands. New York, January 1968 - February 1968
  • Lynn Redgrave
    Lynn Redgrave

    Lynn Rachel Redgrave Order of British Empire is an English actress.A member of the Redgrave family of actors, Lynn Redgrave trained in London, before making her theatrical debut in 1962....
    , New York, November 1977 - February 1978
  • Imelda Staunton
    Imelda Staunton

    Imelda Mary Philomena Bernadette Staunton, Order of the British Empire, is an Academy Award-nominated England actor best known for her performances in the United Kingdom comedy television series Up the Garden Path and the films Harry Potter and Vera Drake....
    , London, 1979
  • Frances de la Tour
    Frances de la Tour

    Frances de la Tour is an English actress perhaps best known for her role as Miss Ruth Jones in the United Kingdom sitcom Rising Damp, and as Olympe Maxime in the film adaptation of Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire ....
    , London, 1984
  • Imogen Stubbs
    Imogen Stubbs

    Imogen Stubbs, Lady Nunn, , is a United Kingdom actress who was born in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England, United Kingdom. She is married to Sir Trevor Nunn and they have two children together: a son called Jesse and a daughter called Ellie....
    , London 1994
  • Anne-Marie Duff
    Anne-Marie Duff

    Anne-Marie Duff is an England actor....
    , London 2007, National Theatre
    Royal National Theatre

    The Royal National Theatre, London, England, is generally known as the National Theatre and commonly as The National. It is located on the The South Bank in the London Borough of Lambeth, England, immediately east of the southern end of Waterloo Bridge....


Other notable Joan
Joan

Joan is mainly a female name in the English language, but a male name in French language, Dutch language and in Catalan language. It is related to the names John , Jane , Jean , Johan , Joanna, Juan, Ivan, Siobh?n, and Siwan....
s include Judi Dench
Judi Dench

Dame Judith Olivia Dench, Order of the Companions of Honour, Order of the British Empire, Royal Society of Arts is an England actress. She has won nine BAFTAs, seven Laurence Olivier Awards, two Screen Actors Guild Awards, an Academy Award, two Golden Globe Awards's and a Tony Award....
, Zoe Caldwell
Zoe Caldwell

Ada "Zoe" Caldwell, Order of the British Empire is an Australian-born actress....
, Elisabeth Bergner
Elisabeth Bergner

Elisabeth Bergner was an actress.She was born Elisabeth Ettel in Drohobycz, Austro-Hungarian Empire .She began acting in Innsbruck at the age of 15....
, Constance Cummings
Constance Cummings

Constance Cummings, CBE was an United States-born Great Britain actress, known for her work on both movies and theater.Born Constance Halverstadt in Seattle, Washington to Dallas Halverstadt and Kate Cummings, she began as a stage actress, landing her first role on Broadway theater by the age of 18....
, Ann Casson, Roberta Maxwell
Roberta Maxwell

Roberta Maxwell is a Canadian actress.She began studying for the stage at the age of 12. She joined John Clark for 2 years as the kid co-host of his Junior Magazine series for CBC Television, before becoming the youngest actress apprentice at the Stratford Shakespeare Festival in Stratford, Ontario, Ontario, ready to pursue an acting...
, Barbara Jefford, Pat Galloway, Sarah Miles
Sarah Miles

Sarah Miles is an England theatre and film actress....
, Ellen Geer
Ellen Geer

Ellen Ware Geer is an United States actress, professor, screenwriter, film director and theatre director....
, Jane Alexander
Jane Alexander

Jane Alexander is an award-winning American actress, author, and former director of the National Endowment for the Arts. Although perhaps best known for playing the female lead in The Great White Hope on both stage and screen, Alexander has played a wide array of roles in both theater and film, and has committed herself to a variety of c...
, Lee Grant
Lee Grant

Lee Grant is an United States Academy Awards-winning, Golden Globe-nominated theater, film and television actor, and film director who was Hollywood ten by the Hollywood movie studio bosses in the 1950s....
, Janet Suzman
Janet Suzman

Janet Suzman is a South African actress and director....
, and Eileen Atkins
Eileen Atkins

Dame Eileen June Atkins Order of British Empire is an award-winning England actress and occasional screenwriter....
.

Film adaptations


In 1957, the play was adapted for film by Graham Greene
Graham Greene

Henry Graham Greene Order of Merit, Order of the Companions of Honour was an English writer best known as a novelist, but who also produced short stories, plays, screenplays, travel writing and criticism....
, directed by Otto Preminger
Otto Preminger

Otto Ludwig Preminger was an Austrian-born Jewish film director who moved from the theatre to Hollywood, directing over 35 feature films in a five-decade career....
, with Jean Seberg
Jean Seberg

Jean Dorothy Seberg was an American actress. She starred in 34 films in Hollywood and in France. Seberg became even more of an icon after her roles in numerous French films and the tragedy of her turbulent life and eventual suicide....
 as Joan of Arc, Richard Widmark
Richard Widmark

Richard Widmark was an United States actor of films, stage , radio and television.He was nominated for an Academy Award for his role as the villainous Tommy Udo in his debut film, Kiss of Death ....
, Richard Todd
Richard Todd

Richard Todd is an Ireland-born actor, United Kingdom soldier and film star....
, and John Gielgud
John Gielgud

Sir Arthur John Gielgud, Order of Merit , Companion of Honour was an England actor and singer, particularly known for his warm and expressive voice, which his colleague Alec Guinness likened to "a silver trumpet muffled in silk"....
.

Opera

The play has also been adapted into an opera by Sheffield composer Tom Owen

Awards and nominations

Awards
  • 2008 Laurence Olivier Award for Best Revival
Nominations
  • 1993 Tony Award for Best Revival of a Play


Further reading


External links