PARIS — Peter Brook, who has died
aged 97, was among the most influential theater directors of the 20th century,
reinventing the art by paring it back to drama’s most basic and powerful
elements.
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An almost mystical figure often mentioned in the
same breath as Konstantin Stanislavsky, the
Russian who revolutionized acting,
Brook continued to work and challenge audiences well into his 90s.
Best-known for his 1985 masterpiece “The
Mahabharata”, a nine-hour version of the Hindu epic, he lived in Paris from the
early 1970s, where he set up the International Center for Theater Research in
an old music hall called the Bouffes du Nord.
A prodigy who made his professional directorial
debut at just 17, Brook was a singular talent right from the start.
He mesmerized audiences in
London and New York with
his era-defining “Marat/Sade” in 1964, which won a Tony award, and wrote “The
Empty Space”, one of the most influential texts on theater ever, three years
later.
Its opening lines became a manifesto for a
generation of young performers who would forge the fringe and alternative
theater scenes.
“I can take any empty space and call it a bare
stage,” he wrote.
“A man walks across an empty space whilst someone
else is watching him, and this is all that is needed for an act of theater.”
For many, Brook’s startling 1970 Royal Shakespeare
Company production of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” in a white-cube gymnasium was
a turning point in world theater.
It inspired actress Helen Mirren to abandon her
burgeoning mainstream career to join his nascent experimental company in Paris.
African odyssey
Born in London on March 21, 1925, to a family of Jewish scientists who
had immigrated from Latvia, Brook was an acclaimed director in London’s West
End by his mid-20s.
Before his 30th
birthday he was directing hits on Broadway.
But driven by a
passion for experimentation that he picked up from his parents, Brook soon
“exhausted the possibilities of conventional theater”.
His first film,
“Lord of the Flies” (1963), an adaptation of the William Golding novel about
schoolboys marooned on an island who turn to savagery, was an instant classic.
By the time he
took a production of “King Lear” to Paris a few years later, he was developing
an interest in working with actors from different cultures.
In 1971 he moved
permanently to the French capital, and set off the following year with a band
of actors including Mirren and the Japanese legend Yoshi Oida on a 13,600km
odyssey across Africa to test his ideas.
Drama critic John
Heilpern, who documented their journey in a bestselling book, said Brook
believed theater was about freeing the audience’s imagination.
“Every day they
would lay out a carpet in a remote village and would improvise a show using
shoes or a box,” he later told the BBC.
“When someone
entered the carpet the show began. There was no script or no shared language.”
But the grueling
trip took its toll on his company, most of whom fell ill with dysentery or
tropical diseases.
Mirren later
described it as “the most frightening thing I have ever done. There was nothing
to hold onto.”
She parted company
with Brook soon after.
He “thought that
stardom was wicked and tasteless. ... I just wanted my name up there,” she told
AFP.
‘Mahabharata’ masterpiece
Brook continued to experiment at the Bouffes du Nord, touring his
productions across the globe.
His big landmark after “The Mahabharata” was
“L’Homme Qui” in 1993, based on Oliver Sacks’ bestseller about neurological
dysfunction, “The Man Who Mistook his Wife for a Hat”.
Brook returned to Britain in triumph in 1997 with
Samuel Beckett’s “Happy Days” and his actress wife Natasha Parry in the lead.
Critics hailed him as “the best director London does
not have”.
After turning 85 in 2010, Brook relinquished
leadership of the Bouffes du Nord but continued to direct there.
Eight years later, aged 92, he wrote and staged “The
Prisoner” with Marie-Helene Estienne — one of the two women with whom he shared
his life.
The real-life story was based on his own spiritual
journey to Afghanistan just before the Soviet invasion to shoot a film called
“Meetings with Remarkable Men” in 1978.
It was adapted from a book by mystical philosopher
George Gurdjieff, whose sacred dances Brook performed daily for years.
Quiet-spoken, cerebral and charismatic, Brook was
often seen as something of a Sufi himself.
But Parry’s death in 2015 shook him. “One tries to
bargain with fate and say, just bring her back for 30 seconds,” he said.
Yet he never stopped working despite failing
eyesight.
“I have a responsibility to be as positive and creative as I
can,” he told The Guardian. “To give way to despair is the ultimate cop-out,”
he said.
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