Buried Child

Buried Child
Written by Sam Shepard
Characters Bradley
Dodge
Tilden
Father Dewis
Shelly
Halie
Vince
Date premiered 27 June 1978
Place premiered Magic Theatre
San Francisco, California
Original language English
Genre Drama
Setting a farm house in Illinois, 1978
IBDB profile

Buried Child is a play by Sam Shepard first presented in 1978. It won the 1979 Pulitzer Prize for Drama and launched Shepard to national fame as a playwright. Buried Child is a piece of theater which depicts the fragmentation of the American nuclear family in a context of disappointment and disillusionment with American mythology and the American dream, the 1970s rural economic slowdown and the breakdown of traditional family structures and values.

Contents

Characters

Context and Thematic Concerns

Disappointment and disillusionment with American Mythology and the American Dream

1970s economic slowdown

Breakdown of traditional family structures and values

Shepard's intention

Shepard's intention was to create a narrative which communicated and reflected the frustrations of American people but at the same time was engaging and entertaining. Set in a context which is easily recognisable, the American farming family, and centered around issues which are universal, the disillusionment with the American dream and the traditional patriarch, Buried Child reflects the universal frustrations of American people. The postmodern style which Shepard uses incorporates surrealism and symbolism in the realistic framework of a family drama. This platform allows for engaging visceral theatre. Shepard is able to create images in the imaginations of people through the use of surrealism and symbolism, evoke and harness the experiences of his audience through its postmodern nature and keep the audience comfortable in the trappings of realism.

Style

Buried Child incorporates many postmodern elements such as the mixing of genres, the deconstruction of a grand narrative, and the use of pastiche and layering. The use of humour is also an essential postmodern element.

Mixing of genres

Buried Child is laid in the framework of realism; the play is essentially a family drama. However, added into the realistic framework are distinct elements of surrealism and symbolism. The three-act structure, the immediate time frame and the setting of the play in reality give it an overall realistic appearance. Yet the use of symbols such as the corn and the rain give the play a symbolist element while the fragmented characterisation and actions like the multiple burials of Dodge are somewhat surreal or dreamlike. The humour is also an essential element of the style, giving the play sardonic, black and even at times slapstick elements. All these stylistic elements combine to give the play an overall postmodern feel.

Character summaries

Dodge:

Tilden:

Bradley:

Halie:

Vince:

Shelly

Father Dewis

Performance history

Buried Child premiered at The Magic Theatre in San Francisco on 27 June 1978, directed by Robert Woodruff. Its New York premiere was at Theater for the New City in New York City on October 19, 1978.[1] Theatre critic Harold Clurman wrote, in The Nation, "What strikes the ear and eye is comic, occasionally hilarious behavior and speech at which one laughs while remaining slightly puzzled and dismayed (if not resentful), and perhaps indefinably saddened. Yet there is a swing to it all, a vagrant freedom, a tattered song." It transferred to Theatre de Lys, now the Lucille Lortel Theatre, where it became the first Off-Off-Broadway play to win the Pulitzer Prize in 1979.

The show was revived for a two-month run on Broadway in 1996 following a production at the Steppenwolf Theatre in Chicago. The production, directed by Gary Sinise at the Brooks Atkinson Theater, was nominated for five Tony Awards but did not win any. The script for the production had been reworked by Shepard, allegedly fixing edits that a previous director had made to the text without Shepard's authorization.

Magic Theatre Cast
New York Premiere Cast

References

  1. ^ Richard Eder (1978-11-07). "Reviewed: Buried Child". The New York Times. http://theater2.nytimes.com/mem/theater/treview.html?res=FC77E7DF1738E632F25754C0A9679D946990D6CF. Retrieved 2008-08-02. 

Further reading

External links