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The Tramp in a Skirt: Laboring the Radiant Path

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 January 2017

Abstract

In this article, Anna Wexler Katsnelson focuses on Grigorii Aleksandrov's musical comedy, 'Svetlyi put' (The Radiant Path, 1940) as a way of investigating the modes of screening laughter in the USSR in the 1930s and exploring the reasons for the film's gradual disavowal of laughter. The key questions posed by the article are why does laughter disappear from the nominally comedic, purposefully merry Svetlyi put'? Where is its affective energy redirected? And, finally, is laughter on film at all possible under the conditions of high Stalinism?

Type
Soviet Jocularity
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies. 2011

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References

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6. Highest ranked were heroically themed features that drew upon revolutionary history; second came films dedicated to the issues of life at the moment of transition from capitalism to communism; lowest ranked (but most produced) were the entertainment films.

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9. In the early 1930s elaborate taxonomies documented and analyzed the music of various demonstrations only to find the repertoire of the masses lacking in truly revolutionary marches. See quotes from Proletarskii muzykant cited in Rothstein, Robert A., “The Quiet Rehabilitation of the Brick Factory: Early Soviet Popular Music and Its Critics,SlavicReview 39, no. 3 (September 1980): 373–88.Google Scholar

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16. In his autobiography Aleksandrov writes: “Friendship with Charlie Chaplin and knowledge of musical revues … augmented … my comedic education.” Aleksandrov, Epokha i kino, 191-92.

17. Bytovaia komediia is the Russian cognate of the comedy of manners.v

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19. While already present in the original play, the shifting of emphasis from mere comedy to heightened social content is made evident in the changes in the script. Rossiiskii gosudarstvennyi arkhiv literatury i iskusstva (RGALI), f. 2450, op. 2, d. 1295.

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28. While in Svetlyiput´ the shuttle acquires a sexual connotation, in traditional fairy tales it was the spindle that signified penetration (for example, Charles Perrault's “Sleeping Beauty“). For a classical exploration of the weaving/sexuality axis in fairy tales, see Fromm, Erich, The Forgotten Language: An Introduction to the Understanding of Dreams, Fairy Tales,and Myths (New York, 1957)Google Scholar.

29. This again is a wordplay (albeit not at all intriguing), since the Russian for “beating“ and “achieving” are cognates. Anne Eakin Moss offers a fascinating account of the peculiar erotic gaze of Stalinist cinema, diverted as it was to Stalin himself and the partystate, basing her analysis on Svetlyi put´ as well as other films of the era. Moss, Anne Eakin, “Stalin's Harem: The Spectator's Dilemma in Late 1930s Soviet Film,Studies in Russian andSoviet Cinema 3, no. 2 (August 2009): 157–72CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

30. This scene draws on some well-known and ideologically driven predecessors: the factory/castle echoes a similar image in Dziga Vertov's paean to socialist labor, Enltiziazm (Enthusiasm, 1931); while the dramatic wrought-iron gate references an analogous opening in Sergei Eisenstein's Oktiabr’ (October, 1928—on which Aleksandrov worked as an assistant).

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33. Richard Dyer's seminal analysis of musicals as embodiments of a Utopian sensibility is operative here as well, as are the categories he oudines. Dyer, Richard, “Entertainment and Utopia,” in Altman, Rick, ed., Genre: The Musical (London, 1981), 175–89Google Scholar.

34. On socialist realism and Utopia, see, for example, Giinter, Hans, “Sotsrealizm i utopicheskoe myshlenie,” in Gunther, Hans and Dobrenko, Evgenii, eds., Sotsrealisticheskiikanon (St. Petersburg, 2000), 4149.Google Scholar

35. From a review of Svetlyi put´ in A. Iakovlev, Komsomol´skaia pravda, 11 October 1940.

36. I. Bachelis, Izvestiia, 5 October 1940.

37. Ardov's play was criticized for being bourgeois in its all-too-naked transformation, its lack of emplotments, and its general mediocrity. Quoted in Igor, Frolov, GrigoriiAleksandrov (Moscow, 1976), 112 Google Scholar.

38. There are visual parallels that connect this shot of Aleksandrov's film to Dziga Vertov's Man with a Movie Camera (1929) produced a decade earlier.

39. Projection work—and in the 1930s only rear projection was in use—entails placing actors against a screen onto which a setting would be projected, then refilming the whole ensemble from the front.

40. Gorbachev, B., Tekhnika kombinirovannykh s'emok (Moscow, 1961)Google Scholar.

41. The sequence that has Tania flying over Moscow in her shiny black automobile might remind a contemporary viewer of a similarly fantastic flight in Mikhail Bulgakov's Master and Margarita (1966-67).There is a possibility that this connection is not an entirely accidental one. Around 1936 Aleksandrov and particularly Orlova, became friendly with the writer and his wife, visiting their home (Elena Bulgakova notes their presence a couple of times in her diary, although it is unclear from its text whether they were present during Bulgakov's reading of drafts of his novel).

42. Immediately following the revolution, fairy tales and their narrative devices were “condemned as ‘idealism'” by newly minted experts in child development, chief among diem Vladimir Lenin's wife Nadezhda Krupskaia. Balina, Marina, Goscilo, Helena, and Lipovetsky, Mark, eds., Politicizing Magic: An Anthology of Russian and Soviet Fairy Tales (Evanston, 2005), 105–7.Google Scholar On the resurgence of the fairy-tale genre under Stalin, Katerina Clark conwrites: “In order to describe homo extraordinarious one needed more fabulous forms, such as fairy tales.” Clark, Soviet Novel, 147.

43. The fairy tale of Cinderella, one of the oldest and most globally common motifs in folkloric literature, was first written down by Charles Perrault in Contes de ma MereL'Oye in 1697. His collection was translated into Russian in 1768 as Skazki o volshebnitsakhs nravoucheniiami.

44. The theme of a domestic servant who aspires to a better life was already featured in Aleksandrov's first film VeselyerebiataasweHas, for example, Boris Barnet's 1928 film Domna Trubnoi (A House on Trubnaia Street). The fairy tale of Cinderellawzs finally made into a film in 1947, but even then it was not based on the rather innocuous Perrault original, but on a Soviet adaptation by the playwright and children's book author Evgenii Shvarts.

45. Elena Stishova writes in an essayistic piece that “the archetype of Zolushka, as a sign for an oppressed woman liberated by the Soviet regime for a new, happy life,” originated in Lenin's famous quote that had a common cook governing a state. Stishova, Elena, “Prikliucheniia Zolushki v strane bol´shevikov,” in Engel, Christine and Reck, Renate, eds., Frauen in der Kultur: Tendenzen in Mittel- und Osteuropa nach der Wende (Innsbruck, 2000), 233.Google Scholar In the 1930s Zolushka was also treated by writers such as Shvarts and the once-futurist poet Semen Kirsanov.

46. Aleksandrov, Epokha i kino, 255. The song in question is the popular “March of the Aviators.“

47. Z. Grigor'ev, Vecherniaia Moskva, 7 October 1940.

48. Bergson, Laughter. Bergson's theories had a wide circulation in Russia at the time.

49. On comedic films as restricted economies, see Trahair, Lisa, The Comedy of Philosophy:Sense and Nonsense in Early Cinematic Slapstick (Albany, 2007)Google Scholar.

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51. Locally and historically, medieval Russia had developed two interconnected traditions of laughter: holy fools (iurodivye), inherited from Eastern Orthodoxy, whose performance of folly was seen as prophetic and wise, and the satirical folly of kromeshnye prazdnestva (dark celebrations), a type of ritualistically staged courdy laughter that was popular with Ivan the Terrible. For the Russian tradition of laughter and its political aspects, see Lotman, Iu M. and Uspenskii, B. A., “Novye aspekty izucheniia kul´tury Drevnei Rusi,Voprosyliteratury, no. 3 (1977): 148–67Google Scholar; Likhachev, D. S., Panchenko, A. M., and Ponyrko, N. V. , Smekh v Drevnei Rusi (Leningrad, 1984)Google Scholar.

52. Aleksandrov, Epohha i kino, 189.

53. Two points need to be made here. The first is that changes in the script of Svetlyiput´ seem to bear out this supposition—evidendy the subject matter demanded a more socially aware treatment. RGALI, f. 2450, op. 2, d. 1295. Second, Stalin, who adored Volga,Volgaund its bureaucratic fall guy (even making jokes about their resemblance), allegedly found Svetlyi put´ to be lacking in bite, commenting to its director that “we value your courage, but in this picture you aimed to please us. You wanted to please die boss.” Mark Kushnirov, Sveltyiput´ Hi Charli i Spenser (Moscow, 1998), 195.

54. Dobrenko, Evgeny, “Soviet Comedy Film: or, the Carnival of Audiority,Discourse 17, no. 3 (Spring 1995): 4857 Google Scholar; and Dobrenko, , “Gossmekh, ili Mezhdu rekoi i noch'iu,Kinovedcheskiezapiski, no. 19 (1992): 3945 Google Scholar.

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56. Thomas More, Utopia, at http://oregonstate.edu/instruct/phl302/texts/more/utopiacontents.html (last accessed 15 March 2011). Marx famously connected laughter and revolution: “The people, so often as it joined them, saw on their hindquarters the old feudal coats of arms, and deserted widi loud and irreverent laughter.” Marx, , “Manifesto of die Communist Party,” in Robert Tucker, C., ed., The Marx-Engels Reader (New York, 1978), 491.Google Scholar Fourier, meanwhile, thought that comic writers would provide yet more pleasure in his already pleasurable vision of a future society. Fourier, Charles, The Utopian Vision of CharlesFourier: Selected Texts on Work, Love, and Passionate Attraction, trans, and ed. Beecher, Jonathan and Bienvenu, Richard (Columbia, 1983)Google Scholar.

57. Hazlitt, William quoted in Gantar, Jure, The Pleasure of Fools: Essays in the Ethics ofLaughter (Montreal, 2005), 94.Google Scholar

58. Clark, Soviet Novel, 15-16.

59. Arendt, Hannah, The Human Condition (Chicago, 1958).Google Scholar

60. Thompson, Kristin, Eisenstein's “Ivan the Terrible“: A Neo-Formalist Analysis (Princeton, 1981), 292–93.Google Scholar

61. For a discussion of the operation of cinematic framing, its procedures of selection and delimitation, see Deleuze, Gilles, Cinema I: The Movement Image (Minneapolis, 1986)Google Scholar.

62. The choice of Tania's profession, no matter how much motivated by Soviet reality (her character was based on Dusia Vinogradova, a real-life prizewinning Stakhanovite master weaver) contained a suggestive set of built-in fairy-tale connotations, connecting it not only to the idea of sexual initiation mentioned earlier but also, self-reflexively, to the act of telling a story (made explicit, for example, in the English expression “spinning a tale“)—and, in this case, the making of a film. This metaphor is actualized by the many visual homologies that couple cinematographic procedure with the process of weaving

63. Virilio, Paul, The Aesthetics of Disappearance (New York, 1991), 61.Google Scholar

64. Shklovskii, Viktor, Dnevnik (Moscow, 1939), 119.Google Scholar

65. See, for example, Taylor, Richard, “But Eastward, Look, the Land Is Brighter: Towards a Topography of Utopia in the Stalinist Musical,” in Holmes, Diana and Smith, Alison, eds., 100 Years of European Cinema: Entertainment or Ideology? (Manchester, Eng., 2000)Google ScholarPubMed; Trudy, Anderson, “Why Stalinist Musicals?Discourse 17, no. 3 (Spring 1995): 3848 Google Scholar; and Haynes, John, New Soviet Man: Gender and Masadinity in Stalinist Soviet Cinema (Manchester, Eng., 2003).Google Scholar Finally, Emma Widdis reads Svetlyiput´ geographically, as domestication and subjugation of periphery to the center. Emma Widdis, Visions ofa Neiu Land: Soviet Film fromthe Revolution to the Second World War (New Haven, 2003).

66. Peter Kenez makes the parody assessment: see Kenez, Peter, Cinema and SovietSociety: From the Revolution to the Death of Stalin (New York, 2001)Google Scholar. Maria Enzensberger, ‘“We Were Born to Turn a Fairy Tale into Reality': Grigori Alexandrov's The Radiant Path,” in Taylor, Richard and Spring, Derek, eds., Stalinism and Soviet Cinema (London, 1993), 106.Google Scholar Enzensberger's analysis builds on Maiia Turovskaia's groundbreaking study of fairy-tale conventions in Ivan Pyr'ev's films: Maiia Turovskaia, “I. A. Pyr'ev i ego muzykal´nye komedii: K probleme zhanra,” Kinovedcheskie zapiski, no. 1 (1988): 111-46.

67. Clark, Soviet Novel.

68. Propp, Vladimir, Istoricheskie korni volshebnoi skazki (Moscow, 2000), 61.Google Scholar

69. Mark Lipovetsky, “Introduction,” in Balina, Goscilo, and Lipovetsky, eds., PoliticizingMagic, 240. The twentieth-century tradition of the fairy tale as a vessel for antitotalitarian content includes such authors as Evgenii Zamiatin and Evgenii Shvarts.

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