George Bernard Shaw a penn State Electronic Classics Series Publication


part of the ordinary theatre system, but in association with



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Bernard Shaw - Pygmalion


part of the ordinary theatre system, but in association with
the exceptional genius of Richard Mansfield. In Germany
and Austria I had no difficulty: the system of publicly aided
theatres there, Court and Municipal, kept drama of the kind
I dealt in alive; so that I was indebted to the Emperor of
Austria for magnificent productions of my works at a time
when the sole official attention paid me by the British Courts
was the announcement to the English-speaking world that
certain plays of mine were unfit for public performance, a
substantial set-off against this being that the British Court,
in the course of its private playgoing, paid no regard to the
bad character given me by the chief officer of its household.
Howbeit, the fact that my plays effected a lodgment on
the London stage, and were presently followed by the plays
of Granville Barker, Gilbert Murray, John Masefield, St. John
Hankin, Lawrence Housman, Arnold Bennett, John
Galsworthy, John Drinkwater, and others which would in
the nineteenth century have stood rather less chance of pro-
duction at a London theatre than the Dialogues of Plato,
not to mention revivals of the ancient Athenian drama and a
restoration to the stage of Shakespeare’s plays as he wrote
them, was made economically possible solely by a supply of
theatres which could hold nearly twice as much money as it
cost to rent and maintain them. In such theatres work ap-
pealing to a relatively small class of cultivated persons, and


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Heartbreak House
therefore attracting only from half to three-quarters as many
spectators as the more popular pastimes, could nevertheless
keep going in the hands of young adventurers who were do-
ing it for its own sake, and had not yet been forced by ad-
vancing age and responsibilities to consider the commercial
value of their time and energy too closely. The war struck
this foundation away in the manner I have just described.
The expenses of running the cheapest west-end theatres rose
to a sum which exceeded by twenty-five per cent the utmost
that the higher drama can, as an ascertained matter of fact,
be depended on to draw. Thus the higher drama, which has
never really been a commercially sound speculation, now
became an impossible one. Accordingly, attempts are being
made to provide a refuge for it in suburban theatres in Lon-
don and repertory theatres in the provinces. But at the mo-
ment when the army has at last disgorged the survivors of
the gallant band of dramatic pioneers whom it swallowed,
they find that the economic conditions which formerly made
their work no worse than precarious now put it out of the
question altogether, as far as the west end of London is con-
cerned.

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