- well-made play
-
French pièce bien faitePlay constructed according to strict technical principles that produce neatness of plot and theatrical effectiveness.The form was developed с 1825 by Eugène Scribe and became dominant on 19th-century European and U.S. stages. It called for complex, artificial plotting, a buildup of suspense, a climactic scene in which all problems are resolved, and a happy ending. Scribe's hundreds of successful plays were imitated all over Europe; other practitioners of the form included playwrights Victorien Sardou, Georges Feydeau, and Arthur Wing Pinero, who brought the form to the level of art with The Second Mrs. Tanqueray (1893).
* * *
▪ theatreFrench pièce bien faitea type of play, constructed according to certain strict technical principles, that dominated the stages of Europe and the United States for most of the 19th century and continued to exert influence into the 20th.The technical formula of the well-made play, developed around 1825 by the French playwright Eugène Scribe (Scribe, Eugène), called for complex and highly artificial plotting, a build-up of suspense, a climactic scene in which all problems are resolved, and a happy ending. Conventional romantic conflicts were a staple subject of such plays (for example, the problem of a pretty girl who must choose between a wealthy, unscrupulous suitor and a poor but honest young man). Suspense was created by misunderstandings between characters, mistaken identities, secret information (the poor young man is really of noble birth), lost or stolen documents, and similar contrivances. Later critics, such as Émile Zola (Zola, Émile) and George Bernard Shaw (Shaw, George Bernard), denounced Scribe's work and that of his successor, Victorien Sardou (Sardou, Victorien), for exalting the mechanics of playmaking at the expense of honest characterizations and serious content, but both playwrights were enormously popular in their day. Scribe, with the aid of assistants, wrote literally hundreds of plays and librettos that were translated, adapted, and imitated all over Europe. In England the well-made play was taken up by such practitioners as Wilkie Collins (Collins, Wilkie), who summed up the formula succinctly: “Make 'em laugh; make 'em weep; make 'em wait.” Henry Arthur Jones (Jones, Henry Arthur) and Arthur Pinero (Pinero, Sir Arthur Wing) used the technique successfully, with somewhat improved characterizations and emotional tension, and Pinero brought it to the level of art with The Second Mrs. Tanqueray in 1893. The polished techniques of the well-made play were also turned to serious purposes in the plays of Émile Augier (Augier, Émile) and fils (Dumas, Alexandre, fils), which dealt with social conditions, such as prostitution and the emancipation of women, and are regarded as the precursors of the problem play. Lillian Hellman (Hellman, Lillian) and Terence Rattigan (Rattigan, Sir Terence) are among 20th-century playwrights whose works draw on the principles of the well-made play.Additional ReadingJohn Russell Taylor, The Rise and Fall of the Well-Made Play (1967).* * *
Universalium. 2010.