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THEATER REC

Cosmologizing social evil: Dulaang UP’s ‘Faust’


Dulaang UP’s current production, Rody Vera’s Filipino adaptation of Faust, directed by Jose Estrella, at once seeks to stay true to the spirit of and attempts to contemporize Goethe’s famous Manichean drama, which was resolutely rooted in the Romantic vision of its own time.

This was a vision that, as with Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, cast a nostalgic look back on the pre-industrial life of folkloric Europe, viewing with suspicion modernity’s unbridled investment in materialistic rationality. National literatures—and modern nations—were of course at this time themselves being steadily consolidated and solidified, accompanied by the establishment and spread of print literacy across increasingly discrete national boundaries and classes.

A re-inscription of the Biblical Job, Goethe’s extended dramatic poem saw the pursuit of worldly knowledge as being inherently spiritually dangerous and fraught with metaphysical peril. The story of the moral ruination and eventual redemption of the innocent Gretchen (here renamed Margarita), all because of the venality of the intellectually insatiable scholar and alchemist Faust, was Goethe’s way of dramatizing the same ethical quandary that lay at the heart of Shelley’s paranoid Gothic novel about the potential monstrosity of human ingenuity.

And yet, the spatial and temporal localization of this Romantic allegory, in this latest offering from UP Diliman's foremost theater company, seems unwittingly caught in a self-contradiction, one that proves, on hindsight, productive in a not entirely foreseeable sense: ironically, the same longing for folkloric value (and purity) is what actually confounds the urgent sense of righteous indignation that this production seeks to elicit in its audience.

This is because the folkloric in our case isn’t—unlike in Goethe’s Europe, effectively Christianized as it had been for more than a millennium by the time this play was written—securely dualistic and therefore ontological in its cognitive predisposition. By contrast, our culture remains residually and powerfully oral in its most basic character, and this effectively makes it difficult for us to commit ourselves to the absolutes of the categorical mentality from which Goethe’s lyric vision derived its ethical and dramatic energies.


Thus, even as Jose’s production distinguishes itself in cosmologizing the everyday evil of our country’s current state of affairs—rendering as blatantly diabolical and Mephistophelian, for example, the potty-mouthed and murderous national leadership, as well as its phalanges of iniquitous mercenaries, allies, apologists, and trolls, whose sequential sound bytes and appearances on the stage of the Wilfrido Ma. Guerrero theater were met with raucous applause and uncomfortable if self-ironic laughter—this message is diluted by the play’s own declared investment in the desire to return to the folkloric past, which in our case is precisely what makes the passing of stern judgment difficult.

From another angle, the play’s central story is a cautionary one: of how the life of a virtuous maiden, all because she has allowed herself to love and desire and have sex out of wedlock, is spectacularly ruined, almost to the point of hopelessness. This proves hardly relatable to the contemporary Filipino viewer, all too aware as she or he must be of how even the most publicly libidinal forms of scandalization—namely, wildly viral videos, taken mostly from hidden cameras—in our case have not, in fact, ruined the lives of the women who were unfortunate (and, like Gretchen, gullible) enough to be involved in them. As we only too keenly know, these contemporary Filipinas have even ended up marrying well, and are presently, and to all intents and purposes, upstanding members of their respective personal and professional communities.

In other words, the effect that Goethe sought—of sympathy for the ignorant and the misled victim, and suspicion and/or derision for the clever and the cynical victimizer, who is finally more the devil than the man—was grounded in the metaphysical tradition of his own time, and therefore easy enough to achieve among the audiences of his own culture, who were already well acquainted with (and entirely imbricated in) the moral and ontological dualisms of Judeo-Christian thought.

Adapting such a vision to our contemporary circumstances—which was the obvious intention of this production—can only be a fraught and difficult proposition, one that is more likely to fail than succeed. Indeed, this would seem to have been the case on the day that we saw it, the assembled audience being fundamentally unmoved by what appeared to be an anachronistic and particularly severe morality tale, which not even the numerous and pointed allusions to horrific current events—extrajudicial killings, antiheroic reburials, etc., all visualized as the grotesqueries that they veritably are—could render emotionally and dramatically relatable.

The decision to abridge the original two-book play—which was both unfortunate and, given the logistical and time constraints, unavoidable—also didn’t help clarify Goethe’s Romantic vision, which pitted worldly knowledge and rational advancement against traditional religiosity on one hand, but on the other, in the play’s full version, also yearned for and gestured toward an older, more unitarian, and pre-Christian spirituality.

This was, for Goethe, an immemorial and possibly pagan or animist form of spirituality that transcended the Madonna/Whore, Heaven/Hell, and Virtue/Sin dualisms that afflicted even the folk knowledges of his own time, and could in fact imagine it perfectly possible for the soul of a child-murdering—in our own language today, abortive—mother like Gretchen to deserve to be eternally saved, in the end.

This is because her transgression is that she simply acquiesced to the needs of her body, which cannot be corrupt but is—within the Romantic purview, in which Nature became the surrogate for the discredited God of institutional religion—entirely self-evident, given, and therefore inalienably divine. In envisioning Gretchen’s spirit being lifted up from the dark depths of despair to the brilliance of salvific heights, Goethe arguably taps into at the same time that he revises the Mariological mythology to which he himself is heir, and reacquaints it with an “earthier” and more compassionate understanding of the Divine Feminine, that antedated the arrival of the cult of the Virgin in Europe. (This would later on be archeologically revealed in the recovery of sculpted Paleolithic images of feminine fertility such as the Venus of Willendorf).

Despite this unprocessed thematic complexity—that Vera’s script fails to dramaturgically take into account—Jose’s production has its strengths. Even as the first act could’ve been better conceptualized and edited to a more effective length, the play is audiovisually arresting and choreographically interesting enough for the most part, and the performances of the cast are—as is the case with many of Dulaang UP’s semestral offerings—pretty earnest and, in the main, competent and strong.

Also, there may be some casting “oddities” here and there—especially the choice of a pudgy and mature-looking Faust, whose transformation from slovenly and decrepit scholar to youngly dapper and virile lothario could’ve been sharper—but they didn’t finally detract from the drama, and arguably even nuanced it. To wit: the all-too-visible misalliance in terms of chronological age between the central characters added an additional layer of perversion, that was certainly germane to this morality play.

Special mention needs to be made of the lovely Karen Gaerlan, who memorably enfleshed her Margarita with equal measures of vulnerability, eroticism, and dignified insanity, as well as Paolo O’Hara, whose rowdy, istambay, and gauchely potbellied take on the deal-making devil was spot on, especially given the script’s avowed intention to register its harsh but timely political critique (sadly, at the expense of a deeper understanding of, and a more critically translational engagement with, Goethe’s thematically challenging and complicated work).

Dulaang UP’s staging of Faust will run at the Wilfrido Ma. Guerrero Theater of the University of the Philippines Diliman up to the first week of March, 2017. Go here for more information.