Muse of Fire: Reflections on Theatre

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Acclaimed playwright Terrence McNally’s works are characterized by such diversity that critics have sometimes had difficulty identifying the pattern in his carpet. To redress this problem, in Muse of Fire, Raymond-Jean Frontain has collected McNally’s most illuminating meditations on the need of the playwright to first change hearts in order to change minds and thereby foster a more compassionate community. When read together, these various meditations demonstrate the profound ways in which McNally himself functioned as a member of the theater community—as a strikingly original dramatic voice, as a generous collaborator, and even as the author of eloquent memorials.

These pieces were originally written to be delivered on both highly formal occasions (academic commencement exercises, award ceremonies, memorial services) and as off-the-cuff comments at highly informal gatherings, like a playwriting workshop at the New School. They reveal a man who saw theater not as the vehicle for abstract ideas or the platform for political statements, but as the exercise of our shared humanity.

“Theatre is collaborative, but life is collaborative,” McNally says. “Art is important to remind us that we’re not alone, and this is a wonderful world and we can make it more wonderful by fully embracing each other. [. . .] I don’t know why it’s so hard to remind ourselves sometimes, but thank God we’ve had great artists who don’t let us forget. And thank the audiences who support them because I think that those artists’ true mission has been to bring the barriers down, break them down; not build walls, but tear them down.”

Author(s): Terrence McNally, Raymond-Jean Frontain
Publisher: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press
Year: 2020

Language: English
Pages: 206
City: Madison

Contents
Editor’s Preface
Introduction “Flights of the Imagination, Journeys of the Heart”—McNally’s Idea of Theater
Prelude “Make the Future Our Friend”
Section I “THE THINGS THAT CONNECT US AND MAKE US HUMAN” McNally on the Theater Arts
The World Needs Artists Juilliard Commencement Address
Where Are the Producers? Address to the League of American Theater Producers
The Current State of Off-Broadway Theatre
The Perils and Pitfalls Awaiting the Playwright
Random Thoughts of a Librettist, or, Quick! Who Wrote the Libretto for Aida?
Monsters and Pussycats
Zoe Caldwell, Tyne Daly, and Other “McNally Actors”
Gay Theater? No, Just Life
Section II “WRITERS WRITE” McNally on Playwrights
Oscar Wilde
Tennessee Williams
Arthur Laurents
Section III “ART WITH RESTRICTIONS IS A CONTRADICTION IN TERMS” McNally on Censorship
Art and My First Dirty Word
A Word from Terrence McNally
Remarks Delivered at a Rally to Support the NEA in Union Square (May 15, 1990)
An Open Letter to Samantha Gellar
Section IV “LITTLE, INSIGNIFICANT, MAGNIFICENT LIVES” Testimonials and Memorials
Ethel Merman
Edward Albee
Melina Mercouri
James Coco
Ruth Goetz
Elaine Steinbeck
Chita Rivera
Marian Seldes
James Kirkwood
Jonathan Alper
John Kander and Fred Ebb
Marin Mazzie
Broadway Theatre and AIDS
Coda American Theatre Wing Lifetime Achievement Award Acceptance Speech
Index
About the Author and Editor