Study Guide-Gaudy Night Taproot Student Mats, Show 1
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Study Guide-Gaudy Night Taproot Student Mats, Show 1
Taproot Student Mats, Show 1 Study Guide-Gaudy Night Gaudy Night A D A F R O M P T E T H E D B Y N O V E Dec 4th 2012 Sherlock Holmes & the Case of the Christmas Carol Feb 5th 2012 Jeeves in Bloom Apr 2/Apr 24 2013 The Whipping Man I N S I D E T H I S I S S U E : 1 The Play in Context: Oxford Women 2-3 Oxford Vocabulary 4 Read and Discuss 5 Scene from Gaudy Night 6 Behind the Scenes L I M D O R O T H Y Time Period: 1935 Main Location Shrewsbury College, at Oxford University in England May 21st 2013 Bach at Leipzig Dorothy L. Sayers B Y S O N C E L . L L I S A Y E R S must be someone living and working at the college, so all of the faculty and staff are under suspicion. Dean Letitia Martin doesn't want to call the police because the scandal could seriously harm the reputation of the college. She asks if Harriet will come back to Oxford and help solve the mystery. Plot Synopsis L R A N C E PLOT SUMMARY STUDENT MATINEES COMING SOON! F 7 8 Harriet Vane is a well known detective novelist. Five years ago she was falsely accused of murdering her lover. It was Lord Peter Wimsey who solved her case; proving her innocence and falling in love with her in the process. Harriet isn’t sure that she wants to get married, but Lord Peter is both patient and persistent. He just keeps asking. Harriet receives a letter from the Dean of her alma mater, Shrewsbury College in Oxford. The college is being plagued by vicious pranks and anonymous letters from a “Poison Pen.” It looks as though the perpetrator is dangerously insane. Evidence indicates that it Harriet interviews the professors and tries her best to establish which of them are suspects. While she is there the pranks and threats continue; the library is vandalized and a dummy with a knife stuck into it is hung in the chapel. The situation reaches a crisis point when the vicious letter writing campaign drives one student to attempt suicide. At this point Harriet decides to ask Lord Peter for help. He lends a hand with collecting new evidence and warns Harriet that she may be the focus of the Poison Pen’s next attack. True to his prediction Harriet is attacked, but thanks to his warning she escapes with minor injuries. Lord Peter, by this time, has gathered enough evidence to expose the culprit. The case is closed, but the mystery of love and marriage is still a problem that Harriet and Lord Peter must solve together. Main Characters Harriet Vane—a detective novelist Lord Peter Wimsey—aristocratic gentlemen and famous as an amateur sleuth Dean Letitia Martin—Head of Shrewsbury College, Oxford Miss Lydgate—professor at Shrewsbury College Miss Hillyard—professor at Shrewsbury College Mrs. Goodwin—professor at Shrewsbury College Miss de Vine—research fellow at Shrewsbury College Annie Wilson—Shrewsbury scout, servant class Carrie—Head scout at Shrewsbury, servant class Miss Newland—a student at Shrewsbury college Jerry Wimsey, Viscount Saint-George—Oxford student, Lord Peter’s nephew Hostess—sophisticated lady who arranges a book reading for Harriet Vane Lord Oakapple—Chancellor of Oxford University P a g e 2 G a u d y N i g h t T h e P l ay i n C o n t e x t Somerville= Shrewsbury Dorothy L. Sayers, the author of Gaudy Night, was one of the first generation of British women to be granted an official university degree from Oxford University. Shrewsbury College, the setting of Gaudy Night, is based on Sayers’ own alma mater, Somerville College, Oxford. Founded in 1879 as a women’s academy, Somerville achieved many "firsts" among the five women's halls in Oxford. The first to adopt the title of "college"; the first to appoint its own teaching staff; the first to build its own library. In Oxford legend it soon became known as the "bluestocking college*". The examination results of Somerville students spectacularly refuted the widespread belief that women were incapable of high academic achievement. ************************************************************************************************ If Shrewsbury College is based on Somerville, then we can give it [and the female scholars in our play] a similar kind of history. Founded in the late 1800’s; the college began as a single building providing education for women students. It grew steadily in size and influence, but was never accepted as part of Oxford University. The women who came as students would complete similar work as their male counterparts. They might attend lectures given by male professors in addition to those given by the female dons. They would be tested and graded in similar ways, but always separate from the University process and never awarded degrees. Student life and activities were also kept very much within the College grounds as female students were forbidden to join many of the male university societies and clubs. This made for a very tight community and the early Somerville women were intensely loyal to their own college. They were also very conscious about the way that their behaviour would reflect on the college reputation. One Somerville don commented that the women scholars in Oxford had “many privileges but no rights”. S t u d y G u i d e - G a u dy P a g e N i g h t Oxford Women *An Oxford proverb c.1930 summarized four of the women’s college at Oxford: “Lady Margaret Hall for Ladies St Hugh’s for Girls St Hilda’s for Wenches Somerville for Women.” The professors [dons] of Somerville would have been known as “bluestockings.” They were often on the fore front of the campaign for women’s right, women’s votes and women’s higher education. During WWI, with so many of the men called to the front, it was the dons from the women’s colleges who stepped in to fill lecture spots and other duties for the university. Their admirable performance during these years helped to remove lingering doubts about a woman’s “fitness” for academia. Oxford degrees were finally awarded to women in 1920. After 1920, however, the female colleges grew so rapidly that Oxford University was alarmed. There was a proposal in 1926 to place a maximum limit on the number of students who could be enrolled at women’s colleges. The debate about this within the university was bitter. It seemed like the battle for women’s education was being fought all over again. Essentially what was at stake was the character of Oxford itself. Was it going to be primarily a men’s institution that allowed some women to be present. Or was it going to be fully co-ed? Much to the dismay of the female colleges, some male dons who had fully supported giving degrees to women voted in favour of limiting the number of female students. The proposal limiting enrolment at women’s colleges in Oxford was passed in 1927. This proposal was still in effect in 1935. (It would remain in effect until the 1950’s.) It had the practical effect of ensuring the women’s colleges would be smaller and therefore poorer than the male colleges. A smaller student enrolment meant less money in tuition fees and a smaller pool of alumni to approach for donations and endowments. It was also tangible evidence that women scholars had not yet proven themselves. The history of women’s education at Oxford provides an important backdrop to the mystery of Gaudy Night. The fear of scandal that runs as an undercurrent throughout the play is a very real fear. These women are not exaggerating when they speak about the whole reputation of women’s colleges being damaged by one “female scholar gone mad.” All of these women have devoted their lives to learning and in the 1930’s that was still a very controversial lifestyle choice. Think About It When Dorothy L. Sayers was a college student women were very much in the minority on college campuses. Is that still the case today? Use your internet search skills to locate statistics on male and female college enrollment in the US. Then research the female generations in your own family history. What kinds of schools did your mother or your aunts attend? What about your grandmothers or your great-aunts? (Note: Not all education happens in schools. What skills could women in the early 1900s learn outside of school?) 3 P a g e 4 G a u d y N i g h t O x fo r d Vo c a b u l a ry Chancellor, Lord Oakapple The Chancellor is the senior officer of Oxford University. The role of the Chancellor is to provide strategic direction and leadership to the collegiate University. Dean Letitia Martin The Dean of a college is in charge of discipline, and with enforcing college rules and security. The Dean is responsible for managing emergency situations and for maintaining student safety. Gaudy Night At the University of Oxford a gaudy is a college feast. It is often a reunion for its old members (i.e., alumni). The origin of the term may be connected to the traditional student anthem, Gaudeamus. Oxford Dons/Tutors An Oxford don is equivalent to an American university professor. At Oxford University students are taught in the tutorial system. This means that students meet with a don in groups of one to three on a weekly basis to discuss essays and assignments. Oxford Research Fellow A research fellow is a member of the faculty who is focussing solely on research for a specific project. S/he would not be responsible for teaching students. Placet-ne Magistrae?/Placet A ceremonial Latin phrase used at Oxford University. The phrase is translated. "Does it please [thee], Mistresses?"/ "It pleases." Porter The Porter’s Lodge is located at the gate of the college. A porter is employed by the college to watch the gate and make sure the college is secure and that students/visitors return by curfew. Punt A boat that is steered using a long pole (rather than by oars or paddles). SCR Senior Common Room - this refers to the faculty, staff and fellows of the college. It can also refer to the room where these people spend time. The SCR is similar to a teacher’s lounge. Scout An Oxford term for the servants who clean the college and serve meals to the students and staff. S t u d y G u i d e - G a u dy N i g h t P a g e I n s i d e S t o r y H e a d l i n e Read and Discuss This story can fit 150-200 words. your own articles, or include a calenfinished writing your newsletter, condar of upcoming events or a special vert it to a Web site and post it. One benefit of using your newsletter offer that promotes a new demanded product. “When the pioneers of university training for women that women should be admitted to as a promotional tool is that you can the universities, the cry went up at once: “Why should women want to know about Aristotle?” The reuse content from other marketing You can also research articles or find answer is NOT that all women would be better for knowing about Aristotle...but simply: “What materials, such as press releases, “filler” articles by accessing the World women want as a class is irrelevant. I want to know about Aristotle. It is true that most women care market studies, and reports. Wide Web. You can write about a varinothing for him, and a great many male undergraduates turn pale and faint at the thought of him— ety of topics but try to keep your artibut I, eccentric individual I am, do want to know about Aristotle, and I submit that there is While your main goal of distributing that a cles short. which need prevent my knowing about him.” nothing in my orprodbodily functions newsletter might be toshape sell your uct or service, the key to a successful Much of the content you put in your Caption describing picture or graphic. The battle [for iteducation] was won, and rightly forfor women. But there is a sillier side to the newsletter is making useful to your newsletter can alsowon, be used your university education of women. I have noticed lately, and with regret, a tendency on the part of the readers. Web site. Microsoft Publisher offers a women’s colleges to “copy the men” on the side of their failings and absurdities, and this is not so simple way to convert your newsletter A great way to add useful good...To climb in content drunk to after hours and get gated is silly and harmless if done out of pure high to a Web publication. So, when you’re yourspirits; newsletter to done develop and write the men do it,” it is worse than silly, because it is not spontaneous and if itis is “because not even amusing…It is ridiculous [for example] to take on a man’s job just in order to be able to say I n s d e it—yah!” S t oThe r only y decent H e areason d l for i n e that “a woman hasi done tackling any job is that it is your job and you want to it. At this point, somebody it likely to say: “Yes, that is all very well. But it is the woman who is always trying to ape the man. She is the inferior being. You don’t as a rule find the men trying to take women’s jobs away from them. They don’t force their way into the household and turn women out of their rightful occupations.” Of course they do not. They have done it already… Let us return to the Middle Ages and ask what we [women] should get in return for certain political and educational privileges which we should have to abandon. It is a formidable list of jobs: the whole of the spinning industry, the whole of the dyeing industry, the whole of the weaving industry. The whole catering industry and...the whole of the nation’s brewing and distilling. All the preserving, pickling and bottling industry, all the bacon curing. And ( since in those days a man was often absent from home for months together on war or business) a very large share in the management of landed estates. Here are the women’s jobs—and what has become of them? They are all being handled men. It is all very well to say that woman’s place is in the home—but modern civilization has taken all these pleasant and profitable activities out of the home, where the women looked after them, and handed them over to big industry, to be directed and organized by men at the head of large factories… It is perfectly idiotic to take away women’s traditional occupations and then complain because she looks for new ones. Every woman is a human being—one cannot repeat that too often—and a human being must have occupation, if he or she is not to become a nuisance to the world...If any individual woman is able to make a first-class lawyer, doctor, architect, or engineer, then she must be allowed to try her hand at it. Once lay down the rule that the job comes first and you throw that job open to every individual, man or woman, fat or thin, tall or short, ugly or beautiful, who is able to do that job better than the rest of the world.“ “Are Woman Human?” Address Given to a Women’s Society, 1938 by Dorothy L. Sayers Think About It This speech by Dorothy L. Sayers contains many of the same themes as the play Gaudy Night. Are there parts of this speech that sound old fashioned? Is Sayers arguing for rights that women take for granted now? What parts of this speech are still relevant to feminist discussions today? 5 P a g e 6 G a u d y N i g h t Scene from Gaudy Night HARRIET: Miss de Vine, do you ever wonder if it’s natural for women to live a life of the mind? Of the mind only, without emotional attachments? MISS DE VINE: I have found it simpler to live one kind of life and live it well than to try to live two lives simultaneously. I don’t think it’s only women who find it difficult to combine intellectual and emotional interests. But when men put their public lives before their private lives it causes less outcry than when a woman does it. HARRIET: But suppose one doesn’t quite know which one wants to put first. Suppose one is cursed with both a heart and a brain? MISS DE VINE: You can usually tell by seeing what you can’t lie about. You’d lie cheerfully about anything except…what? HARRIET: Oh, except saying that somebody’s beastly book is good when it isn’t. I can’t do that. MISS DE VINE: No, one can’t. There’s always one thing one has to deal with sincerely, even if it causes pain. Miss Lydgate, for example. She’s the kindest soul in the world, but he hasn’t the slightest mercy on the prosodical theories of Mr. Elkbottom, for example. She wouldn’t countenance those to save Mr. Elkbottom from hanging. If she actually saw Mr. Elkbottom writhing in humiliation, she’d be sorry, but she wouldn’t alter a paragraph. She couldn’t. One can’t be pitiful where one’s own job is concerned. Of course, one’s job may be an emotional thing, I don’t say it mayn’t. One may commit all the sins in the calendar and still be faithful and honest to one person. If so, then that person is probably one’s appointed job. I’m not despising that kind of loyalty; it doesn’t happen to be mine, that is all. HARRIET: I suppose one oughtn’t to marry anybody unless one’s prepared to make him a full-time job. MISS DE VINE: Probably not. Think About It Notice that both Harriet and Miss de Vine assume that a woman must choose between a career or a family. This was the usual choice in 1935. As a scholar, Miss de Vine has chosen the “life of the mind, without emotional attachments.” Harriet wonders if she must also make that choice. 1. 2. 3. 4. In our culture were two income families are the norm, do men and women still struggle to reconcile “public lives vs. private lives”? Are there different challenges in balancing family and career for men than for women? Do you agree with Miss de Vine’s statements about being true to one’s own job? What are the things in your life that you find too important to lie about? S t u d y G u i d e - G a u dy N i g h t P a g e D o ro t h y L . S ay e rs Dorothy Leigh Sayers was born at Oxford on 13th June 1893, the only child of the Rev. Henry Sayers, the headmaster of Christ Church Cathedral School. An exceptionally bright student, she won a scholarship to Somerville College, Oxford and graduated in 1915 with first class honors in modern languages. After an unhappy love affair that resulted in an illegitimate child, she married Arthur Fleming in 1926. Fearing the results of scandal, Sayers’ never publically acknowledged her son during her lifetime. He was legally adopted as a “Fleming” but was fostered at a friend’s house due to her husband’s reluctance to raise another man’s child. In 1923 Sayers' published her first novel, Whose Body, which introduced Lord Peter Wimsey, her hero for fourteen volumes of novels and short stories. . Writing full time she rose to be the doyen of crime writers and in due course president of the Detection Club. Gaudy Night was to be the culmination of the Wimsey saga, but her friend Muriel St Clare Byrne persuaded her to collaborate in putting Lord Peter on the stage in Busman's Honeymoon. The play was successfully launched in December 1936, and she gave up crime writing except for the book of the play and three short stories. The stage had always fascinated Sayers. Her play, The Zeal of Thy House, was a success at the Canterbury Festival. She followed this with six more plays, including an momentous radio drama, The Man Born to be King, written at the request of the BBC. In The Man Born to be King her presentation of Christ's voice speaking modern English raised a storm of protest and revolutionised religious play-writing. Sayers’ welcomed religious debate and wrote many articles enthusiastically defending her art and her theology. The events of WWII led her to write Begin Here, followed by The Mind of the Maker, in which she compares the human with the Divine creator. She explored by-ways of knowledge, delighted in puzzles and enjoyed many a [literary] fight which she conducted with wit and good humour. She found her culminating role after the war. Dante's writings had long intrigued her. Now she taught herself old Italian and made a translation in “terza rima” of The Divine Comedy unmatched for its popularity and the clarity of its notes. Sayers died from heart failure on 17 December 1957. To the end she drove herself hard, living the philosophy she expressed in the words that were carved as her epitat: "The only Christian work is good work, well done." [http://www.sayers.org.uk/dorothy.html] Think About It Literary critics agree that Dorothy L. Sayers based the character of Harriet Vane on her own life. What similarities between the real detective writer and the fictional detective writer can you identify? For more information about Harriet Vane including information found in other Sayers’ books visit this website: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harriet_Vane 7 Behind The Scenes What To Watch For: Set designer, Mark Lund has created a set that invokes the aging beauty of an Oxford College campus. The plot of Gaudy Night, however, moves through several locations; different buildings, different rooms, inside, outside, on the streets, in a punt on the river etc. Some of the scenes are not even real locations, but dreams or ideas taking place in Harriet Vane’s mind. In a small theatre space it is impossible to create different sets for all these places, BUT our lightning designer, Roberta Russell can use changes in the stage lights to indicate different locations. As you watch the show notice when and how the lights change on stage. What lighting is used for outdoor vs. indoor locations, daytime vs. nighttime scenes, dream sequences vs. real life etc? How are rooms “created” by lights? And how does the lighting designer affect the mood of the play?