Productions of performs in America’s excessive colleges have been more and more beneath assault. In 2023, Anton Chekhov’s “Three Sisters” was rejected in Tennessee (because it offers with adultery); “August: Osage County,” the Pulitzer Prize-winning play by Tracy Letts, was canceled in Iowa after rehearsals had begun (the group was deemed not prepared for it); and in Kansas, college students weren’t even allowed to check, not to mention stage, “The Laramie Mission,” a play by Moisés Kaufman and members of the Tectonic Theater Mission in regards to the homicide of a homosexual scholar, Matthew Shepard.
It ought to come as no shock, then, that within the Instructional Theater Affiliation’s most up-to-date survey, 85 p.c of American theater lecturers expressed concern about censorship. Even Shakespeare is in danger: In Florida, new legal guidelines led to the restriction of “A Midsummer Evening’s Dream” to grades 10 by 12 and “Romeo and Juliet” couldn’t be taught in full to keep away from falling afoul of laws focusing on “sexual conduct.” Kill off younger folks’s publicity to theater, and also you kill off a era of playgoers, together with the empathy and camaraderie (already briefly provide) that’s intrinsic to theater. Based on the most recent report from the Nationwide Endowment for the Arts, from 2017 to 2022 the proportion of Individuals who went even annually to see a nonmusical play dropped by roughly half, from about 10 p.c to lower than 5 p.c.
What begins as a struggle on theater by no means ends there.
The present assaults on theater in American colleges have their origins in a battle that happened within the late Thirties, when America’s political management believed that the humanities, a minimum of trade and agriculture, have been very important to the well being of the Republic and deserving of its monetary assist. There was nonetheless an implicit understanding that theater and democracy — twinborn in historic Greece, spheres the place competing visions of society could possibly be aired and debated — have been mutually dependent. Funded by Congress as a part of a Works Progress Administration aid invoice and established in 1935, the Federal Theater Mission by 1939 had staged over 1,000 productions in 29 states, seen free or for a pittance by 30 million spectators, or roughly one in 4 Individuals, two-thirds of whom had by no means seen a play earlier than.
It introduced kids’s performs on touring vehicles to youngsters in crowded cities. It staged works in Spanish, Yiddish and Italian to achieve immigrants. It established what it referred to as Negro models from Hartford, Conn., to Seattle to assist Black actors and playwrights. It staged Christmas performs and classics by Shakespeare and Euripides and nurtured younger playwrights and administrators, together with Arthur Miller and Orson Welles. It introduced free theater to asylums, orphanages, hospitals, prisons and veterans’ houses. It revived playgoing in rural states the place the flicks had all however ended it. Ten million listeners every week tuned in to its radio broadcasts. It established ties with lots of of instructional, fraternal, civic and non secular teams, strengthening communal bonds.
It turned out that Individuals have been hungry for performs about points that mattered to their lives, matters largely shunned by Hollywood and the industrial stage. In order that they flocked to see new performs about substandard housing and the plight of struggling farmers. Probably the most outstanding Federal Theater ventures was a stage model of Sinclair Lewis’s novel “It Can’t Occur Right here,” wherein a fascist is elected president of the USA. It opened on the identical day, Oct. 27, 1936, in 18 cities throughout the nation, and by the point it closed, greater than 379,000 Individuals had seen it. The price of these thousand or so productions to taxpayers was roughly the worth of constructing a single battleship.
This system’s reputation contributed to its undoing. Lots of these in Congress who had voted to fund the Federal Theater grew to become frightened by its attain and influence, its interracial casting, its problem to the established order — frightened, too, maybe, by the prospect of Individuals throughout racial, financial and political divides sitting cheek by jowl in packed playhouses.
Three years after the creation of the Federal Theater, Congress licensed the institution of what would grow to be the Home Un-American Actions Committee, chaired by Martin Dies of Texas. It was to speculated to spend seven months investigating the rise of Nazism, fascism and communism in America and submit a report. The formidable Mr. Dies, determined to have his committee’s life prolonged, as a substitute centered a lot of his consideration on a extra susceptible goal: the Federal Theater, accusing it of disseminating offensive and communistic and subsequently un-American values. In the middle of waging and profitable this battle, he assembled a right-wing playbook so pervasive that it now appears timeless. He succeeded wildly: All Federal Theater productions have been abruptly terminated in 1939, and the Home Un-American Actions Committee lasted till 1975. With a nascent nationwide theater now destroyed, focusing on theater in colleges was the inevitable subsequent step for his successors, who — whether or not cynical politicians or college board members desirous to police what offends their sensibilities — have all stolen a web page from the Dies playbook.
It’s arduous to think about what America can be like in the present day had assist for the Federal Theater continued and Mr. Dies’s committee not been renewed. Counterfactual historical past is finest left to novelists. However a extra vibrant theatrical tradition extending throughout the land may effectively have led to a extra knowledgeable citizenry and, by extension, a much less divided and extra equitable and resilient democracy. What occurred as a substitute was that Mr. Dies begat Joseph McCarthy, who begat Roy Cohn, who begat Donald Trump.
A few of these accustomed to this historical past haven’t given up. Proper now, artists are making ready tasks that on July 27 will open concurrently in 18 U.S. cities and cities, a lot as “It Can’t Occur Right here” did in 1936. Beneath the rubric of Arts for EveryBody, the initiative is bringing collectively performers, audiences, group leaders and native officers. It’s a small begin and a promising one. So, too, is laws coming earlier than Congress, the STAGE Act of 2024, that would offer badly wanted assist for endangered nonprofit theaters throughout the land. Passing it ought to be a no brainer, however there’s a chance that the Dies playbook might be used to defeat it. Till these in energy on this nation pivot from suppressing theater to investing in it, it’s not simply the humanities but additionally democracy itself that is still susceptible.