Martin Transcript

[Music]

00:07

hello my name is Jason Peck and this is

00:11

a comedy Q&A interview with Professor

00:13

Richard Martin in this interview we

00:16

talked about Greek playwright

00:17

Aristophanes

00:18

who’s also known as the father of comedy

00:21

professor Martin has taught at several

00:24

universities including Stanford and is

00:26

also the author or co-author of several

00:29

books so if this is a subject that

00:31

interests you maybe check out one of

00:33

these courses or take a look at one of

00:34

these books in the meantime please enjoy

00:37

this interview with Professor Richard

00:39

Martin and those that professor Martin

00:42

yes it is yes

00:47

so it’s the only way for people

00:49

unfamiliar with the work of Aristophanes

00:51

do you think there’s any combination of

00:55

modern comedians that you may be

00:57

familiar with who could sort of you know

01:01

that will be similar to his work it

01:09

really would have to be a combination

01:11

there is no one person or troupe that

01:14

does it and I’m thinking it would have

01:17

to be something like Monty Python first

01:19

of all oh yes okay you’re thinking of

01:22

the the collective work of Monty Python

01:24

and combined with something like Stephen

01:29

Colbert or Jimmy Kimmel and what I mean

01:34

by that is it’s topical it’s political

01:37

it’s like stand-up in a way because you

01:39

got these jokes that zing local

01:43

demagogues in Athens and the you know

01:46

people sitting in front of the stage

01:50

right in the theater who are getting

01:53

satirized and parodied and insulted

01:57

right to their face right even Colbert

01:59

doesn’t have that because he doesn’t

02:01

have people in the administration right

02:04

in front of him in the theater but he

02:05

has them on TV so there’s that kind of

02:09

satirical in so

02:11

thing stand up behavior combined with

02:15

these fantastic plots the kind of thing

02:18

that Monty Python came up with all the

02:21

time so if you can imagine furthermore

02:24

something in musical form with lots of

02:29

interludes lots of singing and dancing

02:32

and carousing so it’s got a very strict

02:36

formal kind of feel to it with the kind

02:40

of hilarity that the Monty Python

02:42

routines take over right that would be a

02:45

little bit like the combination that

02:48

must have been okay got it

02:51

now you mentioned demagogues that he was

02:54

satirizing could you would you be able

02:59

to just really roughly paint a a picture

03:02

of what Greece was like during

03:05

Aristophanes his time they were in the

03:06

middle of a war is that right that’s

03:09

right yes and so we know that the the

03:14

Peloponnesian War so-called lasted from

03:19

431 to 404 BC got it and Aristophanes

03:26

had his first play produced in 427 BC in

03:31

Athens so already the war had been

03:34

grinding on for three or four years okay

03:37

so when we say Greece of course we know

03:40

most about just one city-state Athens

03:43

mmm-hmm and the Peloponnesian War is

03:46

basically Athens versus Sparta but it

03:49

became almost a regional World War and

03:53

since Athens had many allies and Sparta

03:57

had a number of aloes and so the Athens

04:00

is the place we know most about because

04:02

that’s the place theater seems to have

04:05

been born in the way that we have it and

04:08

Aristophanes is the only surviving

04:12

comedian he did probably 40 or so plays

04:16

in his lifetime but we only have 11 of

04:18

them and we just have bits and pieces of

04:21

the other guys who were competing

04:22

against him

04:23

right in a few sentences the

04:26

Peloponnesian War started with the

04:30

Spartans invading Athenian territory

04:32

pretty regularly every spring in summer

04:35

okay Pericles had the idea of bringing

04:39

people from the outlying districts in

04:42

Attica the area around Athens bringing

04:45

them inside the city walls which caused

04:48

on the one hand it was a good defensive

04:50

move on the other hand it caused all

04:52

kinds of crowding and probably helped

04:56

lead to disease there was a big plague

04:58

in which Pericles himself lost a son um

05:03

so that was all just before Aristophanes

05:06

begins producing his comedy then there’s

05:09

a let-up in the fighting around 422 421

05:14

and then it resumes again a couple of

05:17

years later and finally Athens loses

05:20

this war because they lose their their

05:22

fleet of ships on which they depend so

05:24

after that the Athenian democracy goes

05:27

on for a bit

05:28

but it’s never like the golden years so

05:31

what we’re seeing is really the last

05:32

couple of decades of the Golden Age of

05:36

Athens in Aristophanes okay got it and

05:40

just it’s just so I’m clear Sparta was a

05:43

part of Greece won right yeah you know

05:47

there was no official country of Greece

05:50

until 1821 in the 19th century yeah so

05:54

it was just a collection of about 800

05:58

city-states

05:59

you know things ranging for maybe 5,000

06:03

people to a hundred thousand people who

06:07

shared a language who shared pretty much

06:09

the same set of divinities and tope

06:13

practices and you know they saw each

06:17

other as sharing a culture but there was

06:20

no organized country of Greece right

06:22

right so it wasn’t quite a civil war

06:26

then because they were they were in the

06:28

same region yeah it’s not because the

06:32

the Spartans have a slightly different

06:34

dialect they have different

06:37

gods that they pay attention to more

06:40

than the Athenians as so yeah it’s it’s

06:44

more like hmm I don’t know be like

06:46

English against Scots or something oh

06:49

come yeah you know they share territory

06:52

they share to some extent the same

06:55

language yeah

06:57

but interestingly enough the translators

07:01

of Aristophanes in the early 20th

07:04

century when they wanted to do other

07:06

dialects like B ocean or Spartan dialect

07:10

they would often use lowland Scots to

07:13

represent the other whereas the

07:15

Athenians would be speaking you know

07:17

more southern English got it

07:20

interesting interesting okay yeah

07:23

and so so that was the the the time that

07:29

he was writing in there was a war

07:31

happening and so so they would had they

07:37

would I might Craig I mean I have a

07:39

vague knowledge nothing like your own

07:42

obviously I have a vague knowledge of

07:44

Aristophanes I’ve read a couple of these

07:46

plays read a carnie ins Lysistrata

07:50

assembly women so I’ve read those in the

07:54

past and I’ve read there was a but I

07:56

think it was the theater of Aristophanes

07:59

by Kenneth McLeish I think it was I got

08:02

hold of Roy that book many years ago now

08:06

what I’m trying to and what I’m trying

08:08

to get to is so he would write his plays

08:11

but they would they am I correct and

08:14

understanding they were only performed

08:15

during like a festival or a competition

08:19

exactly yeah you got it there were two

08:22

festival periods in Athens each year and

08:26

they would be the same festivals at

08:28

which tragedies were produced right and

08:31

comedies on different days so the major

08:36

festival called the Dionysia

08:39

you know in the worship of Dionysus

08:41

would be that’s the kind of top-shelf

08:44

competition and apparently they had five

08:47

different comic poets

08:50

staging one play apiece so Aristophanes

08:54

would be up against four other guys and

08:57

then the judges would award for a second

09:01

third prize they’d also award a prize

09:04

for an actor starting later in the

09:07

fourth century

09:08

less an actor so it was a lot like the

09:10

dramatic festivals that we you know

09:12

competitions we still have right right

09:15

but it was a one-time deal so that was

09:17

it it’s not like a movie or not like a

09:19

Broadway play you can go to you can see

09:21

cats and on Broadway for 20 years that

09:24

was your one shot only in maybe March

09:28

for 25 you could see the car nians right

09:32

and then that’s it

09:34

that’s it if you didn’t see it too bad

09:37

for you

09:38

well yeah they developed a book trade

09:42

later in the fifth century and you could

09:45

with difficulty

09:46

you know the elite who could read it

09:49

might have been maybe two out of ten

09:50

people yes could actually purchase a

09:54

scroll you’d go to apparently to the

09:58

bookseller and you’d say you know I want

10:00

a copy of a couple of things by

10:03

Aristophanes and then it’s like an early

10:06

copy shop they’d have a slave in the

10:10

back room who would carefully transcribe

10:12

it sometimes not so carefully yes the

10:15

master copy that they had and then you

10:17

would come by a week later and pick it

10:19

up it’s apparently the way it worked

10:22

right so it’s not like they’ve got

10:24

multiple copies some and you just

10:25

purchased them it’s yeah it would take a

10:27

lot of effort to actually get a copy of

10:29

the book right and so they presumably

10:32

then you were I think you mentioned

10:34

earlier on here he originally wrote

10:36

something like around 40 plays so

10:38

presumably they would have had maybe all

10:40

40 or at least as close a number and

10:44

then you could purchase whatever you

10:46

wanted

10:47

probably yeah I mean it’s very unclear

10:49

how we ended up only getting the ones

10:52

that we have right because we know the

10:54

titles of the others yeah and you know

10:57

we just we have little pitiful scraps

10:59

they fill one volume and some of them

11:02

are like two words you

11:04

but a certain plays got into the

11:08

curriculum and they were guaranteed more

11:11

success because little Athenian boys all

11:16

through the period of the Roman Empire

11:18

and the early Byzantine period would

11:21

have to read like the Pluto’s the wealth

11:23

I thought it’s one of the favorite ones

11:25

got it okay now I wanted I was looking

11:29

at your your information on the Stanford

11:33

website and I you know obviously I do a

11:38

bit of background reading about before

11:40

the whoever I’m speaking to and there

11:43

was something that left out at me I hope

11:45

it’s okay if we can we can just talk a

11:47

little bit about the course that you’re

11:49

running is that okay sure because what I

11:52

was reading it’s you know at Stanford

11:54

you teach the course classics three

11:56

one-eighth Aristophanes comedy and

11:58

democracy and then and the description

12:02

on the website says intensive study of

12:05

three plays in Greek so not in English

12:08

in Greek and it’s nice piece and what is

12:13

the pronunciation of that then the last

12:15

one the original word for assembly women

12:20

so he say that again so it ecclesia Zeus

12:25

I am I bring up you did just momentarily

12:28

that yeah and and it’s the word ecclesia

12:32

means assembly and they make a verb out

12:35

of it to go to the assembly and they put

12:38

a feminine ending on it so it’s

12:39

basically women who go to the assembly

12:41

got it okay and then the the rest of the

12:46

description says and the rest in the

12:48

corpus in English got it

12:50

with reference to formal features what

12:53

is what do you mean by formal features

12:56

there well this is something you you

12:59

wouldn’t really see clearly in the

13:02

English translation but um each part of

13:06

the play has a different meter in Greek

13:11

so the spoken parts are air in iambic

13:15

trimeter meter then the

13:16

chorus marches on to what’s called the

13:19

anapestic meter which is like ba-ba-boom

13:21

ba-ba-boom ba-ba-boom ba-ba-boom must

13:24

have been to some sort of music then

13:25

there are lyric songs in these very

13:28

complicated meters that recall the

13:31

poetry of Sappho and and other lyric

13:33

poets so that’s what I’m saying in order

13:36

to recreate it you have to imagine

13:37

something like you know Oklahoma or

13:40

Claire’s or an American musical in order

13:44

to capture the kind of musical

13:45

differentiation so those are some of the

13:48

formal features then there are another

13:50

two there’s one called the a goon a gon

13:54

which is the contest uh-huh and it’s a

13:58

very careful kind of schema as to how

14:03

two major figures Duke it out on stage

14:06

verbally I see and it’s another one

14:10

finally called the power reverses the

14:13

going forward where the chorus kind of

14:15

comes forward on the stage and speaks to

14:18

the audience directly almost like in the

14:21

persona of Aristophanes himself I see

14:25

and they give advice and talk about

14:26

political issues right and would they

14:29

maybe throw it open for audience

14:32

interaction at that point that’s a great

14:35

question because it seems that sometimes

14:38

they make reference to oh look at

14:41

so-and-so in the audience is doing such

14:43

and such yeah whether that’s a stylized

14:45

bit or something which is more like you

14:48

know David Letterman actually tossing

14:51

things out to the audience and hearing

14:54

back it’s an open question I love to

14:57

imagine that the audience is interacting

14:59

at all these times right because I mean

15:02

you know I obviously I don’t really want

15:05

to extrapolate but you know I I guess

15:08

I’m kind of a little bit more free to do

15:09

that than you are I mean there would be

15:11

there would have been a lot of

15:12

interaction in Shakespeare’s day and

15:15

then and then later on in the

15:18

restoration period so I you know they’re

15:21

the silent audiences in my understanding

15:24

is is a much later thing where audiences

15:27

yeah I think so you know I think that’s

15:29

probably at one

15:29

a century invention yeah anything I

15:32

think so I’m with you I would have yea

15:34

played frankly and say you’ve got people

15:37

you’ve got at least 5,000 people in the

15:40

audience first of all it’s open air yes

15:44

you probably got guys selling peanuts or

15:46

something on the aisles and we know that

15:49

they made a lot of noise by kicking the

15:53

back of their seeds with their feet

15:56

because Plato has some references to

15:58

that so I’m sure that it’s a rare

16:01

audience and you’ve got actors who must

16:04

be really bowling out through their

16:07

masks in order to reach the back rows in

16:12

a theater that holds at least 5,000

16:14

people in the fifth century right right

16:16

I do just want to finish with the

16:21

description but just before I of your

16:23

course but just before I do something

16:26

that’s to come to my mind as you

16:28

mentioned the masks now if you I’m not

16:34

sure if you’ve got a theater background

16:36

you know as in I proudly appeared in

16:40

productions of the South Boston players

16:43

and you know I high school and the real

16:46

amateur stuff but right I love live

16:49

theater

16:50

okay the the reason for me asking is you

16:52

mentioned about the masks now if in your

16:57

opinion in your educated opinion if any

17:00

a theater company or myself or anybody

17:03

was to try to stage Aristophanes today

17:08

do you think is it better to try and

17:11

stage it as they did it replete with the

17:14

masks or loose masks altogether

17:19

you know that’s a great question and I

17:23

much as I would love to try to do it you

17:26

know in an authentic historical sort of

17:29

like early music troops who really want

17:33

an archaeological version yeah I don’t

17:36

think it would fly because we just we

17:39

associate masks with a completely

17:41

different realm of experience you know

17:43

we think of like Halloween or we Hank of

17:46

Kabuki or no drama or something like

17:50

that so I think it would just be too

17:51

weird for anglo-american audiences

17:56

although you know the BBC did wonderful

17:58

productions of tragedy the few that I’ve

18:02

seen Aristophanes with masks they don’t

18:06

carry very well because again they’re

18:10

you’re always defeating the audience’s

18:12

expectation to see eerie actions on the

18:16

face and you can’t do reactions in the

18:18

face well some people would claim you

18:20

can actually do them with masks if you

18:22

have an expert actor yeah as you find

18:25

you know you see in in kabuki and in no

18:29

theatre so but it’s just really

18:31

difficult right right and they yeah it

18:34

would be that an additional level of

18:38

distance I think you know they’ve got

18:40

the decision time as it is and then

18:44

you’ve got the business of masks oh yeah

18:47

I mean so that’s the big question do you

18:49

want to make it alien and strange you

18:52

know kind of Brechtian theater or do you

18:55

want to make it really like something

18:58

you could see on Broadway or TV yeah and

19:01

and so then with that in mind if so

19:07

let’s assume then a company’s gonna

19:09

stage some Aristophanes they decide to

19:13

lose the masks what about the the

19:16

references there were a lot of I mean

19:18

the references to Cleon we can sort of

19:21

figure out you know from what I’ve read

19:23

he was a as you were mentioning he was a

19:25

demagogue so we could you know that

19:28

would be like a modern comparison we’re

19:29

looking talking about Hitler or

19:30

Mussolini something like that but in

19:33

terms of

19:33

not to mention later figures yeah yep a

19:36

lot of later figures that’s right but in

19:41

terms of like other references more

19:43

local references you know is it worth

19:45

completely removing those and updating

19:48

those or or do you think it would be

19:49

good to keep those you know so again

19:52

it’s a sort of archeological instinct

19:55

versus the instinct to connect directly

19:58

yeah and I have to say that it it might

20:03

turn people off if you keep them you

20:06

know if you’re gonna really keep things

20:08

I would say go whole hog and produce a

20:11

thing in Greek and write it in fact

20:14

King’s College London does this I think

20:17

every other year they do a Greek play I

20:19

planned them perform the wasps of

20:22

Aristophanes in Greek and was hilarious

20:25

they did musical numbers and everything

20:28

but you have to know Greek ancient Greek

20:31

to get it on the other hand you not to

20:35

blow our own horn at Stanford but our

20:38

grad students every year put on

20:40

something through Stanford classics in

20:43

theater and they take an Aristophanes

20:45

play or sometimes a plot line Latin

20:48

comedy and they totally morph it into

20:54

current day terms so they’ve done the

20:58

clouds in terms of you know

21:02

deconstruction being taught in the

21:04

school and they’ve done women at the

21:07

Assembly in terms of Occupy Wall Street

21:09

so they’ve done some brilliant things

21:11

and they’re all commercial message all

21:13

online through our website Stanford

21:15

classics and I think that’s the way to

21:18

go the audience’s love it it’s it’s pure

21:20

comedy but the basic inspiration is

21:23

Error Stefanik right nice nice okay so

21:30

just a cycle back to the end I know we

21:32

sort of broken this up and gone on a

21:34

little digression here and very comic –

21:39

I I do want to just cycle back to the

21:42

last sentence of your of the description

21:44

of your course the final sentence being

21:47

and a focus on how old comedy related to

21:51

the democratic practices of Athens would

21:56

you be able to tell me a little bit more

21:57

about what you mean by that well this is

22:01

something we’re always exploring in the

22:04

seminar but in a modest outline in

22:08

Athens you have three different physical

22:13

spaces in which you gather a whole bunch

22:17

of citizens and you decide on crucial

22:21

issues and number one is the ecclesia

22:24

the assembly yeah where you have at

22:26

least 6,000 people on a hill which is

22:30

just across the street basically from

22:32

the theatre of dionysus so you can see

22:35

that theater from the so called clinics

22:37

where the Assembly met then there’s the

22:40

courts in the Agora on the other side of

22:43

the Acropolis Hill there’s a whole

22:45

system of Courts where you have juries

22:47

sometimes five thousand people on a jury

22:50

so there’s these big judgmental spaces

22:54

where people decide on policy and they

22:57

rank each other out

22:59

they make speeches the court the

23:01

assembly and finally the theater so the

23:03

theater is like one of these performance

23:06

spaces in terms of the topography of

23:08

Athenian democracy and the ideology of

23:12

Athenian democracy it’s art that really

23:15

matters it talks to what’s going on that

23:17

year that month

23:20

it calls for judgment right there

23:23

somebody’s going to win somebody’s going

23:24

to lose so it’s like a court it’s like

23:27

an assembly and that’s the the basic

23:29

idea for exploring how illusions in the

23:33

play or decision-making in the play or

23:35

even where people come from what

23:37

neighborhoods they come from in the play

23:39

in our Stephanies reveal things I’ll

23:42

give you one example Aristophanes

23:44

himself we know comes from a

23:49

neighborhood is called a diamond DME in

23:52

Athenian political parlance which is

23:56

right downtown called CUDA and I own

23:58

his major opponent at least in the

24:02

stylization of the play is the demagogue

24:05

Cleon who comes from the same

24:07

neighborhood and we know that cleon’s

24:09

father ran a cannery not far from the

24:13

neighborhood and we also know from

24:15

inscriptions that survived that people

24:18

were up in arms against this tannery for

24:20

polluting the local river so there’s all

24:22

kinds of kind of infighting neighborhood

24:25

issues or there’s rural issues people in

24:28

the outlying districts versus people

24:31

downtown what policies they want you get

24:35

into kind of NIMBYism not in my backyard

24:38

it’s perfect kind of urban localized

24:43

comedy as well so it’s not not quite the

24:45

same as talking about national political

24:48

issues in the way that Stephen Colbert

24:50

would it’s more like maybe David

24:53

Letterman talking about stuff in New

24:54

York City got it I see so it would be it

24:58

would be the like Letterman then it

25:01

would be local New York staff as well as

25:03

at the national level yeah exactly right

25:07

because what happens in New York happens

25:09

elsewhere yeah but it’s also you know

25:12

some of the in jobs even now if you ask

25:15

somebody in you know Idaho what such and

25:19

such a joke meant on Letterman in the

25:23

1990s they would be clueless because

25:26

they wouldn’t think of you know the

25:28

mayor of New York at the time and or the

25:30

issues in the subway or rather something

25:33

like that their logo all comedy is local

25:36

it’s like all politics is local

25:38

as Tip O’Neill used to say old comedy is

25:43

local there’s a there’s a reference that

25:45

I bet you don’t get Tip O’Neill and I’m

25:48

aware of the name okay but again anybody

25:52

coming from Boston like myself would

25:54

know this guy you know politics is local

25:56

and comedy is local in in these terms in

26:01

the arista fanuc comedy is real local

26:04

right but of course that causes big

26:06

problems for how you translate it right

26:09

got it

26:09

so we US you were just

26:12

sort of talking about the space of the

26:16

theater now did I misunderstand that the

26:20

way you were describing it it painted an

26:22

image in my head that everything was

26:25

open so if people are making policy if

26:29

politicians are making policies you can

26:32

walk by you can see them sitting there

26:33

doing that is that about right I mean

26:37

the the well just to compare assembly

26:40

and theater they both in big open-air

26:44

slopes on a hill one on the Acropolis

26:47

one on the panik’s across the street

26:50

maybe you know a couple hundred meters

26:54

anybody can go and attend it seems you

26:58

didn’t need a ticket at some point to

27:00

get into the space of the theater of

27:03

Dionysus but then they made tickets

27:06

available kind of a special fund so I’m

27:09

sorry professor I don’t mean to

27:10

interrupt you but you’re you’re breaking

27:12

up there slightly I’m breaking up not

27:15

sure what’s perfect it’s just okay yeah

27:17

that’s right yeah it seems to be the

27:19

direction in which I point the phone

27:21

here okay I’m thank you so where where

27:24

where did I we were talking about you

27:27

were talking about tickets yeah so you

27:31

don’t need a ticket to get into the

27:33

assembly but basically they’re the same

27:36

structure a bunch of people 5,000 6,000

27:40

people male citizens of course in the

27:43

assembly have the right to anybody can

27:47

stand up and voice his opinion in the

27:50

theatre probably women and children are

27:52

there although we’re not quite sure but

27:55

also lots of male citizens so they’re

27:58

they’re kind of homologous groups and

28:02

basically there’s a same group because

28:03

the male citizens who would go to the

28:05

assembly one day would be in the theatre

28:08

the next day so they share all of these

28:10

group critical judgmental venues oh wow

28:17

so would that be like the US Congress

28:21

being essentially an open building that

28:23

you could walk by yeah you

28:26

or when it get even better the the US

28:29

Congress is in the open air there yeah

28:32

and then they go across the street all

28:35

together to go to a show which makes fun

28:39

of the US Congress that that’s the sort

28:42

of tension if you could imagine that I

28:44

would love to see that in on Capitol

28:47

Hill right yeah Wow Wow yeah there was

28:51

that comedy group the Capitol Steps you

28:53

remember yeah they would do little skits

28:55

about politics but it was nothing like

28:58

going to a theater with 5,000 people but

29:00

yeah they’re all open-air right Wow okay

29:03

okay that that’s that’s very interesting

29:06

I didn’t know that and then so so then

29:11

just thinking more just a little bit

29:13

more about their you know because I I

29:16

took when I when I read the center’s all

29:19

commonly related to the democratic

29:21

practices of Athens I my initial

29:25

reaction I guess I misread it was how

29:29

comedy has it kind of having an impact

29:31

on democracy oh yeah well that’s part of

29:35

it too so the other step is really to

29:38

you know to realize the analogy among

29:42

court system which was a huge political

29:45

machine assembly which was where things

29:49

really happened you made policy

29:52

basically made foreign policy and urban

29:54

policy yes it’s a city state and and

29:57

then the theater so the theater let’s

29:59

say somebody like Aristophanes puts on a

30:02

play yeah that makes fun of the

30:04

demagogue Cleon that’s going to have an

30:07

instant impact and we know when he put

30:09

on a play in 427 we don’t have that

30:12

particular play but it made fun of Cleon

30:15

the the local demagogue at the time

30:17

after Pericles had died and Cleon was so

30:21

enraged that he took Aristophanes to

30:24

court and Aristophanes Aristophanes won

30:28

but you could imagine there are folks in

30:31

the court jurors because any Athenian

30:34

citizen could be a juror who had

30:35

probably seen the play the year before

30:38

so it’s really in

30:40

crossing of boundaries and yeah these

30:44

plays could have an impact on national

30:49

policy urban policy by making fun of

30:52

people now we don’t always we can’t

30:54

always connect the dots and say oh yeah

30:56

play X you know influence policy why the

30:59

next year right but do certain local

31:03

characters who get made fun of again and

31:05

again the one possible thing where we

31:09

can say it’s a smoking gun as you know

31:11

is the clouds of Aristophanes yes where

31:14

he makes fun of Socrates Socrates some

31:19

twenty four years later is upon trial

31:22

for corrupting the youth and in his

31:24

defense speech Socrates says you know

31:26

why you put me on trial

31:28

it’s that play of Aristophanes that you

31:30

all saw back in twenty four years ago

31:33

that made fun of Socrates that’s really

31:36

what here against me isn’t it so maybe

31:39

it worked there they put Socrates to

31:41

death because many of the jurors

31:43

probably had seen the play or their

31:45

parents in the play and they thought of

31:47

Socrates in these Peres distich

31:51

satirical ways right as a kind of prank

31:54

Wow but it but it took twenty four years

31:58

to get to that point though it’s not

31:59

like it was we saw the player then yeah

32:02

that’s right they don’t rush out with

32:04

torches and thanks we’re gonna burn down

32:06

socrates house right yeah yeah Wow also

32:12

it’s complicated by the fact that we’re

32:14

pretty sure Socrates and Aristophanes

32:16

were friends in the work of Plato the

32:20

symposium they’re all at a dinner party

32:22

together so it we’re not really sure I

32:25

have other ideas on what might have been

32:27

going on there but it doesn’t seem to be

32:31

Aristophanes is out to take down it

32:34

would be like somebody today what

32:37

putting Bill Clinton on trial because of

32:39

a comedy that was produced in night yeah

32:43

yeah or maybe even that the movie the

32:49

American president goes yeah it was

32:53

Michael Douglas

32:54

presidential character who falls in love

32:56

with or has an affair with I forget

32:58

which now annette bening is character or

33:02

something like that

33:04

yuria right right and and then using

33:08

there was another movie with John

33:10

Travolta back in the day I forget the

33:12

name of it and he was primary colors and

33:14

he played a character that everyone was

33:16

basically said it was Clinton so it’s

33:19

not alright and it yeah and I didn’t see

33:22

the movie or read the novel that it was

33:24

based on but it everyone was sort of

33:27

saying at the time it was like a Clinton

33:29

character so it essentially be like Bill

33:32

Clinton being put on trial now because

33:34

of that jervey

33:35

or him reading the movie right which

33:38

seems unlikely then again yes to have

33:41

long long memories and a history of

33:44

vengeance but I think there are a lot of

33:47

other things going on it didn’t help

33:50

that Socrates was supporting some people

33:52

who were thought to be against democracy

33:57

so in after the the Athenians lose the

34:03

war with Sparta in 404 right you know

34:05

lots of ill feelings come out okay so

34:11

they say they lost the war and and that

34:15

was in the final decades of of Athens

34:19

right you were saying and then what

34:20

happened after that well you know it’s

34:23

an interesting thing we think of it as

34:25

old Athens is gone but yeah the Athenian

34:29

basic functions of the Athenian

34:32

democracy kept going they had however

34:37

overlords or overseers who were Spartans

34:41

and and other allies of Spartans so the

34:46

Athenians don’t really get totally taken

34:51

over by an outside power until the later

34:55

fourth century when the Great’s people

35:01

I’ve just I’ve just lost you there again

35:04

professor sorry yep we break it up again

35:07

yeah

35:07

sorry about that eh yeah it’s kind of

35:11

wonky reception here my shoulder was but

35:15

that’s okay I’m saying is that Athens

35:17

continues and they continue producing

35:19

tragedies and comedies for a couple of

35:22

hundred years and we know that there

35:25

were many comedians and comic writers

35:27

after Aristophanes yeah like his son oh

35:30

okay he had three sons and they all

35:33

produce comedies unfortunately we don’t

35:34

have any of those comedies and and then

35:37

in the three 20s BC Menander starts a

35:42

kind of new form which we call new

35:45

comedy and it’s basically sitcom I it’s

35:48

totally unlike the old stuff right but

35:51

so comedy keeps going Aristophanes

35:53

produced at least two plays in the

35:55

fourth century in 391 and in probably

35:58

388 or so two of his later plays there

36:02

for most people they’re a little bit

36:04

less funny than the fifth century plays

36:06

okay but he’s still at work right right

36:11

and Athens keeps going yeah yeah Athens

36:16

has its courts and its assembly and in

36:20

the theater and were you saying that

36:22

they were they were they were taken over

36:24

by someone well there’s you know a lots

36:29

of seesaw action the they have after 404

36:34

they have Spartan overseers I mean it’s

36:38

not like a regime of you know jackbooted

36:40

Spartans come in and shut things down

36:43

hmm

36:44

they had a very light touch and after

36:46

all they are all Greeks right then later

36:50

in the fourth century a regime which is

36:56

basically associates and descendants of

36:59

Alexander the Great

37:01

takes over and they have a certain

37:04

killing effect but they still support

37:07

the Arts and and then Athens you know

37:10

becomes a sort of backwater and but even

37:13

through the time of the Roman Empire

37:15

it’s still the place you send your kids

37:17

to to go to the university as where

37:20

the Roman elite get educated in Athens

37:23

Wow but they’re not they’re not

37:24

producing new plays you know in the

37:28

first century AD as far as we know

37:31

they’re rerunning a lot of the old ones

37:33

right right

37:34

interesting interesting okay I think

37:40

that’s that’s pretty much it from what I

37:42

wanted to go over with you this has been

37:46

very enlightening for me well it’s

37:49

always fun to try to spread the word

37:51

about this stuff right yeah absolutely

37:54

one of the essentially I’ve got one one

37:57

final question I wanted to ask you and

38:02

that question is this knowing what you

38:04

know about Aristophanes is work and you

38:09

know the the modern-day comparisons that

38:11

we we mentioned earlier do you do you

38:14

feel there are any lessons that you wish

38:18

modern comedies or modern comedians

38:20

could learn from his work and I’m and

38:23

what I mean beyond just doing an

38:25

adaptation yeah yeah it’s a wonderful

38:30

question and I did think about this and

38:32

you know what I did to help me

38:35

crystallize my thoughts I looked at a

38:38

Google 10 best comedies right yeah and

38:41

there’s tons and tons of listicles about

38:44

almost all of those comedies like

38:47

airplane or anchorman hour it kind of

38:52

stringing together of little funny

38:55

things right yeah so they’re jokey

38:59

they’re not particularly overtly

39:02

political and they lack the number one

39:05

thing that our Safa news was brilliant

39:07

at which is the great idea Charlie

39:11

Chaplin I think was better a great idea

39:13

place by this I mean you know there’s

39:16

the piece of Aristophanes the character

39:19

has a great idea to mount a gigantic

39:23

dung beetle and fly to heaven to

39:28

confront Zeus or the Akane ins right the

39:31

Hierapolis has a great idea to go make

39:34

his own private piece with the Spartans

39:36

or the birds two Athenians have a great

39:40

idea to go to the edge of the world and

39:42

found another city-state out there where

39:45

the birds are so these great ideas give

39:47

you a real parabola comic plot which

39:52

takes you through the whole play and the

39:55

one that I thought of that it was a kind

39:57

of great idea play although it it’s more

40:00

the character doesn’t have agency is

40:03

Groundhog Day yes you know so it’s a

40:05

high concept he his dilemma is to escape

40:09

Groundhog Day and but we don’t really

40:14

have great idea comedies and if you

40:17

could combine a great idea comedy with a

40:19

political point maybe wag the dog is the

40:23

closest we yeah we come to that right

40:26

right and what about something like I

40:30

know we’re going back to Chaplin but the

40:32

Great Dictator yeah did that’s a good

40:36

example where you know he there’s a lot

40:39

of parody there’s a lot of political

40:43

content obviously yeah when you have

40:45

Chaplin as Hitler and the the great idea

40:50

I can’t frankly remember whether it

40:53

succeeds or not I think maybe I think in

40:56

modern times instead but yes Chaplin

40:58

generally he got that concept of the

41:01

kind of high concept one big thing we’re

41:05

going to do and then the little guy wins

41:08

which is another arista fanuc motif

41:11

right right because you may you

41:14

mentioned Groundhog Day and my knowledge

41:18

of the of the development of that

41:21

screenplay was that at some point it the

41:25

story was supposed to span a thousand

41:27

years oh yeah yeah yeah and obviously

41:32

they went can’t do that we’ll just you

41:34

know knock it all down and there’s no

41:35

reference to it but it might have been

41:38

interesting from an era Stefanik point

41:40

of view to have that concept that the

41:44

whole thing that takes place over a

41:46

thousand years maybe yeah

41:48

yep yep exactly I think Aristophanes if

41:51

he was in the writers room would say no

41:53

no no don’t don’t shrink it let’s go big

41:55

right right so they they were crazy guys

42:00

you can imagine and they know what the

42:03

rival comedian is trying to put on it

42:06

reminds me of that movie about Gilbert

42:09

and Sullivan maybe now about 20 years

42:11

ago and the sort of the feel of having

42:16

you know putting on a musical in London

42:18

or light opera and knowing what you’re

42:21

competing against and plotting and and

42:23

going around you know stealing people’s

42:25

props and that kind of stuff that’s what

42:27

my movie about Aristophanes would be

42:30

most like was that the movie topsy-turvy

42:33

you were talking about yeah that’s the

42:35

one yeah

42:37

got it okay Wow okay that’s really

42:40

interesting so having an having a really

42:44

big idea that connects to a lot of

42:47

people having a man having to keep it a

42:51

secret so that your rival doesn’t scoop

42:53

you on the idea and win the prize and I

43:00

still insist though seriously at this

43:02

could the life of Aristophanes could be

43:04

a great movie

43:05

there was one a put-on I think BBC had

43:10

it called I Aristophanes but it was it

43:14

was not great it was a sort of one-man

43:16

show achieved yeah it seems a lot of the

43:19

times when they do something like that

43:21

you know they they they they just take

43:24

an idea going oh yeah this is

43:25

Aristophanes or yeah this is I don’t

43:27

know say Moliere and then they they just

43:30

do you know they just do something else

43:32

entirely and you think well there’s all

43:33

this material real material about this

43:35

person’s life and you just completely

43:37

ignored it exactly and then you’re just

43:40

using this name because a handful of

43:43

people might know who that is right you

43:45

know or maybe more so in France with

43:48

Moliere I’m not sure but you know it

43:50

seems a shame that you I think you’re

43:51

right you know there could be a really

43:53

interesting era Stefanik movie about him

43:56

yep John using staged bits of the plays

44:01

and

44:01

you know just going over the top there’s

44:03

no reason we can’t have that except we

44:06

don’t have millions of dollars to

44:08

produce it at the moment right and it

44:12

would it could be done like an era

44:13

Stefanik play yeah the whole thing would

44:17

have the sort of parabola that Athens

44:21

itself has as a democracy and which in

44:24

me form you could yeah I’m just I’m just

44:30

losing the baby whoops that’s all right

44:33

hello yeah yeah but you know this is

44:36

just to fantasize about yeah go ahead

44:39

I want to do it okay so just just you

44:47

know do a movie about his life like one

44:50

of his plays would have been yeah right

44:54

yeah really really interesting okay I

44:58

think that’s that’s pretty much all I

45:00

wanted to ask you really you’ve been

45:03

you’ve been more than generous with your

45:05

time I really truly appreciate it well

45:07

it’s so good to talk to someone

45:09

knowledgeable about comedy and and with

45:12

interest and when good luck with all of

45:14

that thank you know if at any point I

45:16

can advise I’m happy to shoot emails

45:19

back and forth or talk wonderful

45:21

wonderful I really I really appreciate

45:23

that you know my thing is you know you

45:26

know inspired by the last question that

45:28

I asked you I’ve saw a number of

45:30

articles over the summer saying comedy

45:33

was dead you know at the box office

45:35

things we need to do things differently

45:37

you know and I’ve been thinking about it

45:40

for about a year or so you know there

45:42

are a number of things that I really

45:43

enjoy you know I like comedy that way

45:46

that swears I like cursing I like all

45:49

the rules enough but I also like other

45:51

things I like coward I like restoration

45:55

I like Shakespeare and you know I was

45:58

thinking selfishly that I don’t feel all

46:02

my tastes are being catered to yeah and

46:06

I figured I can’t be the only person and

46:08

and that’s what my initial idea came

46:11

from and I thought well there’s got to

46:13

be other and then I thought about the

46:14

history of comedy and gem

46:16

and I thought war is it interesting you

46:18

know I do comedy or today’s comedy

46:21

writers and comedians how much of an

46:23

awareness do we have about our ancestry

46:26

our our history is there anything we can

46:29

learn do people like yourself have this

46:33

information and you’ll sit in the going

46:35

I wish that they would just do X and it

46:38

would take it somewhere else you know I

46:40

think they just learned you know

46:43

something that Aristophanes had which is

46:45

why I asked you that question you know

46:47

it would take the comedy somewhere else

46:49

it would take it to a different level or

46:51

whatever that is so I thought well you

46:54

know as a passion project for me to try

46:58

to connect with as many different people

47:00

who have expertise whether it’s

47:02

performers directors authors or

47:05

professors like yourself in these

47:07

different areas and then just put that

47:10

information out there yeah I think

47:12

that’s wonderful I agree we need a kind

47:14

of comic Renaissance right and you know

47:18

the stuff that I find funniest these

47:19

days is frankly Family Guy and Robot

47:25

Chicken on the familiar with both of

47:28

those but you know I think they have a

47:31

certain amount of just wild obscene

47:34

energy that the rest of the profession

47:38

could use but by the same token you know

47:41

here they are sort of get a wised on

47:43

late-night TV and and not out there with

47:46

a live audience of 5,000 people so

47:50

bringing back the kind of social

47:53

activist aspects of or just huge live

47:57

publicity of comedy I think that could

47:59

be a shot in the arm yeah and I

48:02

appreciate that tastes change trends

48:05

change and things move on but then

48:07

there’s all this history is just lying

48:09

about the place well laying around the

48:12

place and this is sort of there and we

48:14

just seem to keep reinventing the wheel

48:16

and hey I come up with something it’s

48:18

surrealism well guess what that stuff’s

48:20

been around for thousands of years yeah

48:23

yeah we need a comic University majoring

48:27

in comic studies

48:29

right I would be happy to be the Dean of

48:32

such a point is a great idea yeah yeah

48:37

well best of luck as I say and thank you

48:40

for taking the time and I look forward

48:44

to the results no no problem tool again

48:46

thank you very much for your time I

48:48

really appreciate it okay you’re welcome

48:50

good you to think right now this is at

48:54

the end of this interview if you’d like

48:56

to hear more interviews please check out

48:57

our website comedy Q&A com

49:00

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49:02

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49:05

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49:21

you