A Bulletin for George
Bernard Shaw
October 2003
The Associate Editor of THE OSCHOLARS with responsibility for helping with this issue of SHAVINGS is Julie A. Sparks of the Department of English, University of Arkansas-Monticello, to whom contributions should be submitted.
|
'Oh, Shaw! That's the man who smokes Jaeger cigarettes!' Oscar
Wilde, quoted
by Richard Le Gallienne: The Romantic
Nineties. New edition. |
Click
for the previous
issue of Shavings (September
2003); click
for the Table of Contents of this issue; click
to
return to the Shavings home
page. Clicking
will return you to our hub page with links to
all our publications.
The sign @ connects to an e-mail address.
Click
for
the home page of THE OSCHOLARS
Note: Subscribers to this Journal have their names printed in bold, and can be contacted through us @
|
1. The Plays c. Candida g. Misalliance |
|
2. Shawlines a. Conference (1): Shaw in the Here and Now Conference (2): St Joan b. Lecture c. Publications d. The Shrines e. Exhibition |
|
3. Anthology: Echoes of Oscar b. Candida e. Letters |
|
b. Websites |
|
a. The International Shaw Society b. The Bernard Shaw Society & The Independent Shavian |
|
6. Tailpiece |
In this section we try to cover productions of Shaw's
pre-1901 plays, and news of productions of these (with offers of review) will
be most welcome. The plays are Arms and the Man (1894), Cæsar
and Cleopatra (1898), Candida (1895), Captain Brassbound's
Conversion (1899), The Devil's Disciple (1897),The Man of Destiny
(1895), Mrs Warren's Profession (1893),The Philanderer (1893),
Widowers' Houses (1892), You Never Can Tell (1895). (Dates of composition, not first performance.) Wilde is known to have attended the
first night of Arms and the Man (
at
is having a number of outings:
29th September to 4th October: Richmond
Theatre,
|
Director |
Timothy Sheader |
|
Design |
Robert Jones |
|
Lighting |
Howard Harrison |
|
Catherine Petkoff |
Gwen Taylor |
|
Major Petkoff |
Duncan Preston |
|
Bluntschli |
Barnaby Kay |
|
Sergius |
Sam Callis |
|
Raina |
Rachel Ferjani |
|
Louka |
|
|
Fred Ridgeway |
Nicola |
|
Matt Zarb |
Officer |
Arms and the Man is also at the
Pendragon Theatre,
Taproot Theatre Company,
Theatre Three,
Man and Superman opened at the Pitochry Festival,
Misalliance is at
the Germinal Stage,
John Bull's Other Island is at the Tricycle Theatre in

There is a reading of How
He Lied to Her Husband by Food for Thought
Productions in
Michael Friend has staged a number of
Shaw's plays at Shaw's Corner,
In this section we will print all the news that we find or, better still, are sent. We especially welcome news of Shaw on curricula.
We also wish to record articles and papers relating to the earlier Shaw, and news of new editions of Cashel Byron's Profession (1886), An Unsocial Socialist (1887), The Quintessence of Ibsenism (1891), The Perfect Wagnerite (1898), Love Among the Artists (1900), as well as other related material.
This is to announce a Shaw Conference on
Deadline for Abstracts: 1st October. Cash prizes for Best Papers by Students. Deadline for Student Papers: 1st December.
The conference will be headquartered at the Hilton Garden
Inn, near the
Paper sessions and panel discussions will take place on the campus.
Play productions, such as The Millionairess, Arms and The Man, Bernard and Bosie (starring Barry Morse), and perhaps one more, will take place there or at the nearby Asolo Theatre.
Everything is within walking distance.
For details and explanations, please visit the conference website at
http://chuma.cas.usf.edu/~dietrich/USFShawConference2004-Sarasota/index.html
You can print out the registration form there and mail it in. Any questions not answered there please direct to Richard Dietrich at dietrich@chuma1.cas.usf.eduor to his co-director Lagretta Lenker at llenker@admin.usf.edu
It is also possible to register online with a credit card. Just go to or click on the following address and follow the instructions: https://registration.outreach.usf.edu/shaw.htm
The conference brochure and call for papers can be printed off and copies and posters made at:
http://chuma.cas.usf.edu/~dietrich/USFShawConferenceBrochure.htm.pdf.
This requires Acrobat Reader to open.
. . .UPDATES WILL BE PUBLISHED HERE. . .
The International Joan of Arc Society is
sponsoring a session of papers on 'The Life and Lives of Joan of Arc' at the
next International Medieval Congress, to beheld in
Abstracts should have been sent by 13th
September to Professor Ann W. Astell, Department of English,
31st October: 'Morris,
Shaw, and Politics', lecture by David Rainger,
Linda Wong (
QIAN, Jiyang.
'The Symptom of Subconscious Suppression: On G.B. Shaw's Plays and the Image of
Woman in "Scholarly-Gentlemen-and-Beautiful-Ladies" Novels in
Gearóid O'Flaherty's article 'George Bernard
Shaw and
Other publications in prospect are noted below.
Shaw's Corner at
The Shaw Birthplace in

The
Echoes of Oscar
|
'It is almost incredible that Oscar's essays and novels and dramas should not have had an effect upon the mind and conceptions of a man like Shaw'. –
H.M. Hyndman: Further Reminiscences. |
Although it is difficult for even close reading to convince that this play is more than a trifle, a prelude to deeper plays in future, it can perhaps be given some added meaning by incorporating it into a Shaw/Wilde discussion. It is valuable, for example, to read Raina Petkova with Vera, Cicely and Gwendolen in mind, curious mix as she is of idealism both assumed and real, and artlessness, both real and assumed. Major Petkoff says of his daughter 'She always appears at the right moment', and his wife replies 'Yes; she listens for it. It is an abominable habit.' This is not necessarily to suggest influence, but it is to suggest affinity.
If The Manor House, Woolton, Hertfordshire is a sort of internal Ruritania, so the house in the 'small town near the Dragoman Pass' has its own status between prelapsarian innocence and the Fall itself, with the Tree of Knowledge ('the only library in Bulgaria'), about to give of its fruit. Such knowledge, in the form of self-awareness, is one of the more serious themes in Wilde: 'O Arthur,' says Lady Windermere, 'don't love me less, and I will trust you more. I will trust you absolutely. Let us go to Selby. In the Rose Garden at Selby the roses are white and red.' Act II in both The Importance of Being Earnest and Arms and the Man are each set in the garden of the respective houses. Raina tells Bluntschli 'You shewed great ignorance in thinking that it was necessary to climb up to the balcony because ours is the only private house that has two sets of windows. There is a flight of stairs inside to get up and down by.' The intertextual reading with Wilde here is in An Ideal Husband :'At the top of the staircase stands Lady Chiltern, a woman of grave Greek beauty': we are again in the Balkans. One may also note that the rose 'Maréchal Niel' in the garden at Woolton is a climber.
The subplot between with servants Nicola and Louka is more eighteenth-century than Wildëan, but there is one exchange of significance in a conversation between Sergius (the officer formally betrothed to Raina) and her maid:
Sergius: If our conversation is to continue, Louka, you will please remember that a gentleman does not discuss the conduct of the lady he is engaged to with her maid.
Louka: It's so hard to know what a gentleman thinks is right. I thought from your trying to kiss me that you had given up being so particular.
This shifting of how a gentleman should behave is a constant theme in Wilde.
Lord Fermor: If a man is a gentleman, he knows quite enough, and if he is not a gentleman, whatever he knows is bad for him. (The Picture of Dorian Gray)
Lord Illingworth: If a man is a gentleman, he knows quite enough, and if he is not a gentleman, whatever he knows is bad for him. (A Woman of No Importance)
Sir Robert Chiltern: You have lived so long abroad, Mrs. Cheveley, that you seem to be unable to realise that you are talking to an English gentleman.
Mrs Cheveley: I realise that I am talking to a man who laid the foundation of his fortune by selling to a Stock Exchange speculator a Cabinet secret. (An Ideal Husband)
Jack: It is a very ungentlemanly thing to read a private cigarette case.
Algernon: Oh! it is absurd to have a hard-and-fast rule about what one should read and what one shouldn't. More than half of modern culture depends on what one shouldn't read.
Jack: Your duty as a gentleman calls you back.
Algernon: My duty as a gentleman has never interfered with my pleasures in the smallest degree. (The Importance of Being Earnest)
Being found out is almost an obsessive theme in Wilde (hardly surprisingly):
'No, Basil, you must tell me,' insisted Dorian Gray. 'I think I have a right to know.' His feeling of terror had passed away, and curiosity had taken its place. He was determined to find out Basil Hallward's mystery.
Algernon: The doctors found out that Bunbury could not live, that is what I mean–so Bunbury died.
Jack: Gwendolen, it is a terrible thing for a man to find out suddenly that all his life he has been speaking nothing but the truth.
James Fane: If this man wrongs my sister, I will find out who he is, track him down, and kill him like a dog.
Lady Chiltern: You have guessed it. After you left last night I found out that what she had said was really true. Of course I made Robert write her a letter at once, withdrawing his promise.
Lady Hunstanton: How charming you are, dear Lord Illingworth. You always find out that one's most glaring fault is one's most important virtue. You have the most comforting views of life.
Lady Stutfield: Do you really, really think, Lady Caroline, that one should believe evil of every one?
Lady Caroline: I think it is much safer to do so, Lady Stutfield. Until, of course, people are found out to be good. But that requires a great deal of investigation nowadays.
Lady Windermere: Have you found out at what time Lord Windermere came in last night?
Lady Windermere: I know where Arthur keeps his bank book–in one of the drawers of that desk. I might find out by that. I will find out.
Lady Windermere: You think it wrong that you are found out, don't you?
Lord
Lord Goring: So she has found out everything! Poor woman! Poor woman!
Lord Goring: That is the reason they are so pleased to find out other people's secrets. It distracts public attention from their own.
Lord Henry Wotton: But she would have soon found out that you were absolutely indifferent to her. And when a woman finds that out about her husband, she either becomes dreadfully dowdy, or wears very smart bonnets that some other woman's husband has to pay for.
Lord Henry Wotton: I like to find out people for myself.
Mrs Allonby: I found out then that what he had told me was perfectly true. And that sort of thing makes a man so absolutely uninteresting.
Mrs Erlynne: Don't use ugly words, Windermere. They are vulgar. I saw my chance, it is true, and took it.
Lord Windermere: Yes, you took it–and spoiled it all last night by being found out.
Sir Robert Chiltern: If my wife found out, there would be little left to fight for.
It is clear enough that even in Edenic Bulgaria truth is a negotiable instrument:
Bluntschli: You said youd only told two lies in your whole life. Dear young lady: isnt that rather a short allowance? I'm quite a straightforward man myself; but it wouldn't last me a whole morning.
Raina protests that she is being insulted, and then collapses. 'How did you find me out?'
But of course all is sham here: the heroism of Sergius, the social standing of Petkoff, the airs of Louka. Bluntschli, whom we meet as a sort of holy fool, is man of sense and decisiveness when required to be so. Yet the play ends on an ambiguous note, with Sergius's declaration about Bluntschli, which from its punctuation is a statement, but from its grammar is a question: 'What a man! Is he a man!'
In Candida, we find a number of references that draw us back to Wilde, not least in the two leading male characters, the Revd James Mavor Morell and Eugene Marchbanks. Morell (like the Revd Stewart Headlam, who went bail for Wilde, and is referred in the stage directions towards the beginning of Act I) is a Christian Socialist, but he also has something of a physical resemblance to Wilde at the height of his powers:
A vigorous, genial, popular man of forty, robust and good looking, full of energy, with pleasant, hearty considerate manners [...] with a wide range and command of expression […] His well-spring of enthusiasm and sympathetic emotion has never run dry for a moment […] pardonably vain of his powers and unconsciously pleased with himself [...] good forehead [...] eyes bright and eager, mouth resolute but not particularly well cut [...]
Morell's books include Henry George's Progress and Poverty, Fabian Essays (to which GBS himself contributed), Morris's A Dream of John Ball, Marx's Capital 'and half a dozen literary landmarks in Socialism'. One would be hard put in 1898 to name half a dozen literary landmarks in Socialism that did not include Wilde's The Soul of Man. His admiration for his wife Candida, 'a good woman', is that of Robert for Gertrude Chiltern (although Candida's admiration for James is exactly the reverse of that of Gertrude for Robert). He also expresses himself aphoristically, although, as so often with Shaw, one feels that Wilde would have been less sententious: 'We have no more right to consume happiness without producing than to consume wealth without producing it'. We are told that he has addressed the Women's Liberal Federation on the theme of the Woman Question [Lady Chiltern: I have just come from the Woman's Liberal Association, where, by the way, Robert, your name was received with loud applause]. Candida can also express herself aphoristically 'How conventional all you unconventional people are!' (cp. Lord Windermere: How hard good women are! Lady Windermere: How weak bad men are!)
But it is Morell's foil, the poet
Marchbanks, who steps out of the world of the Rhymer's Club and the Café Royal. The nephew of an
earl (and Eugene of course means well-born, while Marchbanks,
in its form 'Marjoribanks', was the family name of
Lord Tweedmouth), he is 'a strange, shy youth of
eighteen, slight, effeminate, with a delicate childish voice, and a hunted
tormented expression and shrinking manner that shew
the painful sensitiveness of very swift and accurate apprehensiveness [...]
Miserably irresolute, he does not know where to stand or what to do [...] His
nostrils, mouth, and eyes betray a fiercely petulant wilfulness'. It is
not difficult to give a queer reading to this description, nor
to discern there something of 'Bosie'
This strikes Morell as all too
high-falutin', but Candida reminds Morell that Marchbanks cleans the household's boots (Marchbanks:
'Oh don't talk about boots! Your feet should be beautiful on the mountains'),
and it will be recalled that Constance Wilde is said to have interrupted a
poetic discourse of Oscar's by referring to Cyril's boots. It is not necessary
to believe that she did so (Vyvyan
Morell's secretary is called Proserpine Garnett ('a brisk little woman of the lower middle class'), and acts to some extent as raisonneuse. Addressed as Miss Prossy, she may be a younger incarnation of Miss Prism, who also has a pretentious classical first name, Letitia. Shaw likes to play these little games with names: one thinks of 'Rummy' Mitchens, the broken down old woman in Major Barbara, who was named after George Eliot's Romola.
v
After writing the above, we
read Sally Peters: Bernard Shaw, The Ascent of the Superman. New Haven &
London:
There is some scope for discussing most marvellous of all gospels, the gospel of gold', as expounded by Baron Arnheim to dazzle Robert Chiltern, and its use by Andrew Undershaft. Wildean echoes are frequent in Major Barbara.
. . .
Sir Robert Chiltern: Believe me, Mrs. Cheveley, it is a swindle. Let us call things by their proper names.
– An Ideal Husband, Act I
Undershaft: Pooh, Professor! let us call things by their proper names.
– Major Barbara, Act II
. . .
'I know how people chatter in
– The Picture of Dorian Gray
Lady Britomart: 'It is only in the middle classes that people get in a state of dumb helpless horror when they find that there are wicked people in the world.
– Major Barbara, Act II
. . .
'Modern morality consists in accepting the standard of one’s age. I consider that for any man of culture to accept the standard of his age is a form of the grossest immorality.' (Lord Henry Wotton speaking)
– The Picture of Dorian Gray
Mrs Cheveley: Nowadays, with our modern mania for morality, every one has to pose as a paragon of purity, incorruptibility, and all the other seven deadly virtues.
– An Ideal Husband, Act I
Cecil Graham: But scandal is gossip made tedious by morality. Now, I never moralise. A man who moralises is usually a hypocrite, and a woman who moralises is invariably plain.
– Lady Windermere's Fan, Act II
Lady Britomart: Just as one doesnt mind men practising immorality so long as they own they are in the wrong by preaching morality; so I couldn't forgive Andrew for preaching immorality while practising morality.
– Major Barbara, Act I
. . .
Gerald: Mother, this is Lord Illingworth, who has offered to take me as his private secretary. It is a wonderful opening for me, isn't it?
– A Woman of No Importance, Act II
Lady
Jack: I know nothing, Lady Bracknell.
–The Importance of being Earnest, Act I
Undershaft: He knows nothing and thinks he knows everything. That points to a political career. Get him a private secretaryship to some one who can get him an Under Secretaryship.
– Major Barbara, Act III
. . .
Lady
JACK: Between seven and eight thousand a year.
–The Importance of being Earnest, Act I
Lady Britomart: You know how poor my father he is: he has barely seven thousand a year now; and really, if he were not the Earl of Stevenage, he would have to give up society.
– Major Barbara, Act I
. . .
One should also note that the career of Adolphus Cusins in Major Barbara turns on his being a foundling, while the future of Jack Worthing turns on his not being one.
Jack: It is a terrible thing for a man to find out suddenly that all his life he has been speaking nothing but the truth.
–The Importance of being Earnest, Act III
'Make any statement that is so true that it has been staring us in the face all our lives, and the whole world will rise up and contradict you.'
– Too True to be Good, Act II.
Algernon: I wish you would reform me. You might make that your mission.
Cecily: How dare you suggest that I have a mission?
Algernon: I beg your pardon: but I thought every woman had a mission of some kind, nowadays.
Cecily: Every female has! No woman.
–The Importance of being Earnest, Act II
'No fascinating woman ever wants to emancipate her sex'
– G.B.S. to Clement Scott, January 1902
Cashel Byron's Profession was written some years before the greater part of Wilde's work was undertaken, but it reveals how Shaw was also dipping into the same pool as Wilde. Here is Lydia Carew on railway trains:
A train is a beautiful thing. Its pure white fleece of steam harmonises with every variety of landscape.
This was said at Clapham Junction, where in November 1895 Wilde had other things on his mind.
Cashel Byron's Profession also has a prominent character called Lord Worthington. Had it been written ten years later we would have seized on this compound of John Worthing and Lord Darlington, while Wilde's Lady Roxton and Lady Plymdale seem to combine in Shaw's Lady Roxdale (Widowers' Houses). Byron goes to a 'scholastic establishment for the sons of gentlemen' called Moncrief House.
John Cooper draws our attention to the following:
In this world there are two tragedies. One is not getting what one wants, and the other is getting it. The last is much the worst.
Lady Windermere's Fan, Act 3.
There are two tragedies in life. One is to lose your heart's desire. The other is to gain it.
Man and Superman, Act 4.
This will be a cumulative bibliography as references come to hand.
Beerbohm, Max: Around Theatres.
This carries reviews of plays published
in the Saturday Review, namely The Devil's Disciple
('"G.B.S." at Kennington', 7th October 1899, pp.38-41; and the 1907
revival 'Mr. Vedrenne', 26th October 1907, pp.481-4);
You Never Can Tell (12th May 1900, pp.78-9); the 1901 reprint of Cashel Byron's Profession ('A Cursory
Conspectus of G.B.S.', 2nd November 1901, pp.171-5); Mrs Warren's Profession
('Mr Shaw's Tragedy', 1st February 1902, pp.191-5); the 1907 revival of The
Philanderer (9th February 1907 pp.449-51); and the 1908 revival of Arms
and the Man(4th January 1908, pp.491-3).
There is also a review of the published edition of Three Plays for
Puritans (The Devil's Disciple, Cæsar and Cleopatra and Captain Brassbound's Conversion) ('
Outside our current range are reviews of The Doctors' Dilemma, Getting Married, John Bull's Other Island, Major Barbara, Man and Superman, Misalliance, and Pygmalion.
Beerbohm, Max: More Theatres.
This volume opens with three squibs
against Shaw 'G.B.S. Oblige' (
There are further references to Mrs Warren's Profession (p.70), Arms and the Man (p267), Cæsar & Cleopatra (p.271),
The volume also contains a review of Captain Brassbound's
Conversion (
Borsa, Mario: The English Stage of
To-day. Translated
from the original Italian and edited with a prefatory note by Selwyn Brinton
M.A.
Chapter IV: G.B.S.
Boyd, Ernest A.:
Appreciations and Depreciations, Irish Literary
Portraits.
Chapter V: An Irish Protestant, Bernard Shaw.
Broad, C. Lewis & Broad,
Violet M. (George Bernard Shaw). Dictionary
to the Plays and Novels of Bernard Shaw With
Bibliography of His Works and of the Literature Concerning Him With a Record of
the Principal Shavian Play Productions. ill.
v A copy of this was offered by Delectus
Books in July’s ‘Some Sell and Others Buy’.
Dietrich, Richard: Portrait of the Artist as a Young Superman: A
Study of Shaw’s Novels.
Innes, Christopher (ed.): The
Gordon, David J.: Shavian Comedy and the Shadow of Wilde;
Kelly, Katherine E.: Imprinting the Stage: Shaw and the Publishing
Trade
Marker, Frederick J.: Shaw's early plays;
Powell, Kerry: New Women, new plays, and Shaw in the 1890s
Green, Benny. Shaw's Champions: G.B.S. and Prize Fighting from Cashel Byron to Gene Tunney.
v
A copy of this was offered by Delectus Books in July’s ‘Some Sell and Others
Buy’.
Jackson, Holbrook: The Eighteen Nineties. 1913. Pelican Books 1939. This contains a chapter devoted to Shaw.
Chapter XIV: Enter G.B.S.
Kennedy, J.M.: English Literature
Chapter VI: George Bernard Shaw.
Laurence, Dan H.: Bernard Shaw, Collected Letters
Laurence, Dan H: Bernard Shaw, Collected
Letters
McBriar, A.M.: Fabian Socialism &
English Politics
v A copy was
offered by Delectus Books in last month’s
‘Some Sell and Others Buy’.
Meisel, Martin: Shaw and the Nineteenth Century Theater. Princeton University Press 1963; new
edition
Morgan, A.L.: Tendencies of Modern English Drama.
Chapter VI. Shaw the Iconoclast– Iconoclast
Chapter VII: Shaw the Iconoclast–Social Iconoclast
Chapter VIII: Shaw the Philosopher.
Nicoll, Allardyce: British Drama, An Historical Survey from the Beginning to the Present Time.
Part VII: The Revival in the Drama (1890-1920)
Chapter IV: The Revival of Comedy and the Theatre of G.B. Shaw.
(i) Wilde and the Comedy of Manners
(iii) George Bernard Shaw.
Peters, Sally: Bernard
Shaw, The Ascent of the Superman. New Haven
& London:
This is chiefly concerned with the first half of Shaw's life, and includes some notable 'queer' reading.
– and covering a later period than the pre-1901 Shaw, the following should be mentioned:
Hyde, Mary (ed.): Bernard Shaw and Alfred Douglas, A
Correspondence.
Weintraub,
This covers not only Harris's
'biography' of Shaw but the attempts of Harris to involve Shaw in his book on
Wilde. The first letter in this collection is Harris to Shaw
The following bring together Shaw and Wilde:
Bader, Earl Delbert: 'The Self-Reflexive Language:
uses of Paradox in Wilde, Shaw and Chesterton .' Ph. D. dissertation.
Beckson,
Karl: 'Oscar Wilde's Celebrated Remark on Bernard Shaw.' Notes and
Queries 41(239): 3
Gollin,
Richard M.: 'Beerbohm, Wilde, Shaw and “The Good-Natured
Critic”.' Bulletin of the
Harris, Frank: Oscar Wilde, including My Memories of
Oscar Wilde by George Bernard Shaw. Carroll:
Harris, Frank: Oscar Wilde: His Life & Confessions,
with memories of Oscar Wilde by Bernard Shaw and Criticisms by Robert Ross. The author, 2nd edition, the first with the pieces by Shaw and
Ross.
Harris, Frank: Oscar Wilde: His Life &
Confessions. Together with Memories of Wilde by Bernard
Shaw. The author.
Harris, Frank: Oscar Wilde: His Life &
Confessions. Together with Memories of Wilde by Bernard
Shaw.
Hill, John Edward: 'Dialectical Æstheticism — Essays
on the Criticism of Swinburne, Pater, Wilde, James, Shaw and
Yeats'.
Jordan, John: 'Shaw, Wilde, Synge and Yeats: Ideas,
Epigrams, Blackberries and Chassis' in The Irish Mind; Exploring
Intellectual Traditions
Koritz,
Amy E.: 'Gendering Bodies, Performing Art: Theatrical Dancing and the
Performance Æsthetics of Wilde, Shaw & Yeats'. Dissertation Abstracts
International 50 : 3 [
Lee, Josephine D.: 'Language & Action in the Plays of
Wilde, Shaw & Stoppard.' Dissertation Abstracts International 48 : 7
Livermore, Ann: 'Goldoni, Wilde and Shaw: Co-Inventors of Comedy'. Revue de la Littérature Comparée 53 pp.108-24 1979.
Loughney,
Martin: Springs of Irish Wisdom: Shaw, Wilde, Swift, Yeats.
Nassaar, Christopher Suhal: 'Wilde's Lady Windermere's Fan and Shaw's Mrs Warren's
Profession'. Explicator 56 pp.137-8.
Powell, Kerry: 'Wilde, Shaw
and Women of the Stage'. William Andrews Clark Memorial Library
Conference: Oscar Wilde and the Culture of the Fin-de-Siècle, Session II Los
Angeles
Roy, Emil: British Drama Since
Shaw [Chapter on The Importance of Being Earnest]
Ruff, William: 'Shaw on Wilde and Morris, A Clarification' Shaw Review 11 : 1 January 1968.
Sherard, Robert Harborough: Bernard Shaw, Frank Harris
& Oscar Wilde.
Sherard, Robert Harborough: Bernard Shaw, Frank Harris
& Oscar Wilde. T. Werner Laurie
Sherard, Robert Harborough: Oscar Wilde 'Drunkard & Swindler': A Reply to George Bernard Shaw, Dr G.J. Renier, Frank Harris etc. Calvi: Vindex Publishing Co. 1933.
Weintraub,
Stanley: '"The
Weintraub,
Stanley: Shaw's People:
Wisenthal, J. L.: 'Wilde, Shaw and the Play of
Conversation Modern Drama' (U. of
· We welcome additions and corrections, and would much like to hear from any of the writers.
A list of websites kindly provided
by Richard Dietrich (
BERNARD SHAW SOCIETY WEB SITE (see illustration below):
http://chuma.cas.usf.edu/~dietrich/shawsociety.html
UNIVERSITY PRESS OF FLORIDA SHAW SERIES WEBSITE:
http://www.upf.com/se-shaw.html
SHAW BIZNESS WEB SITE:
http://chuma.cas.usf.edu/~dietrich/shawbizness.html
INTERNATIONAL SHAW SOCIETY WEB SITE:
http://chuma.cas.usf.edu/~dietrich/international_shaw_society/index.html
THE SHAW FESTIVAL
Other websites include
http://www.infography.com/content/272906973619.html (a bibliography).
http://www.therightside.demon.co.uk/quotes/shaw/ which has 123 quotations from Shaw, but irritatingly does not source them.
http://www.georgebernardshaw.com/is The Bernard Shaw Information & Research Service, which has as its Patrons Dame Diana Rigg, Dame Wendy Hiller, Brian Cox, Richard E Grant and Jerry Hall.
http://www.phnet.fi/public/mamaa1/shaw.html also gives an unsourced list of 'quotes' – 'one-liners' – presented in a table. The best use of it is to check all those sayings ascribed to Wilde that are in fact by Shaw.
http://www.shawchicago.org is the site of the Shaw Chicago Theatre Company, specialising in Shaw's plays.
http://www.theheritagetrail.co.uk/notable%20houses/shaws%20corner.htm has two pictures of Shaw's house and a brief account.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/programmes/centurions/shaw/shawbiog.shtml gives a biography of Shaw as it appeared to the BBC compilers.
http://mobydicks.com/lecture/BernardShawhall/wwwboard.html is a discussion group, with the somewhat brassbound greeting 'Ahoy mate! Welcome to the new Bernard Shaw lecture hall! The old Bernard Shaw lecture hall may be found at http://mobydicks.com/lecture/BernardShawhall/wwwboard23.html. Visit the Bernard Shaw Live Chat, and use the forum below to schedule a chat session.'
http://www.lyfe.freeserve.co.uk/quoteshaw.htm is another site with Shaw quotations, again, irritatingly, unsourced. Substitute wilde for shaw in the URL for an Oscar Wilde quotation site.
Richard Dietrich has kindly supplied the following notes:
The first formal meeting of the International Shaw Society took place on 20th August, at the Shaw Festival Theatre in Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario), attended by Sid Albert, Elaine Amroman, Stuart Baker, Elisa Bondar, Ron Bryden, Al Carpenter, Nancy Cole, Tracy Collins, Mary Ann Crawford, Sara Deats, Dick Dietrich, Lori Dietrich, Frances Evans, Tom Evans, Peter Gahan, Dennis Johnston, Mitchell Klein, Lagretta Lenker, Kay Li, Rhoda Nathan, John Pfeiffer, Isidor Saslav, Julie Sparks, Jay Tunney, Tramble Turner, Rodelle Weintraub, Stan Weinbraub, and Don Wilmeth.
Mary Ann Crawford, on behalf of editor Gale Larson, reported on SHAW ANNUAL plans for upcoming years. Michel Pharand will edit the next volume on 'Shaw and Sex;' the 2005 SHAW will include the proceedings of the Shaw Conference in Florida, and the 2006 issue will be co-edited by Mary Ann Crawford and Heidi Holder at CMU, with a focus on postmodernist approaches to Shaw.
Al Carpenter distributed copies of his website project, MODERN BRITISH, IRISH, AND AMERICAN DRAMA: A DESCRIPTIVE CHRONOLOGY, 1865 to 1965, inviting a visit to http://bingweb.binghamton.edu/~ccarpen/Index.htm.
Stan Weintraub encouraged everyone to give credit to Shaw colleagues when writing, and reported on his projects, which include a substantial article on Shaw in the New Dictionary of National Biography on CD ROM for Oxford U Press, as well as several articles.
Richard Dietrich reported on the Shaw Series of the University Press of Florida. The most recent release is Leon Hugo’s book, Bernard Shaw's 'The Black Girl in Search of God'. He congratulated Peter Gahan on his recently accepted manuscript, Shaw Shadows, which will be published in the fall of 2004, and noted that Tony Gibbs has an exciting new biography under contract with the Press.
Dietrich should have mentioned (but didn't) that John Bertolini asked to have mentioned the forthcoming publication by Barnes & Noble of a collection of Shaw plays edited by him, Man and Superman & Other Plays ($4.95 in January), with other collections to follow.
SALES OF SHAW BOOKS: In response to the question of sales, Dick Dietrich noted that libraries are the major purchaser of Shaw books but that, to encourage more sales to individuals, there are now 3 discounts being made to ISS members:
1) 40% for UPF Shaw Series books. See http://www.upf.com/se-shaw.shtml.
2) 20% discount with the
3) $10 off from Penn State Press for the Shaw Annual to ISS members (once the ISS is incorporated and dues-paying).
And Dennis Johnston noted that Ron Bryden's just published book, Shaw and His Contemporaries, available in the Festival book shop, would be $15 for members.
A marketing suggestion for future years was offered by Mary Ann Crawford and Stan Weintraub that a comprehensive list of recent publications could be compiled for distribution to B&B’s and hotels in Niagara-on-the-Lake to increase sales.
OPTIONS FOR THE ISS:
Dietrich opened the discussion of the various options which were listed in degree of difficulty to implement, noting that the primary aim of the project was to attract younger people to the study of Shaw and especially to get new scholars involved in the academic study of Shaw.
A. Disbandment was mentioned and quickly dismissed.
B. A Virtual ISS (website and other internet venues only). Dietrich noted that he already has various Shaw websites and noted that the large number of 'hits' received suggests that there is still a strong interest in Shaw. An ISS that existed entirely in cyberspace was briefly discussed. Regardless of what option was chosen, Dietrich insisted, the ISS would always exist more in cyberspace than anywhere else.
C. An Unincorporated, Unfunded (Non-Dues-Paying), Informal ISS. This option received extensive and lively discussion, with Mary Ann Crawford, Rodelle Weintraub, Don Wilmeth and others sharing personal experiences with other organizations. This discussion concluded with a general view that for the ISS to be taken seriously and to have any force or interest for young scholars, incorporation was required.
D. An Incorporated, Not for Profit ISS, Dues-Paying.
Dietrich said he would donate $500 to get the ISS started
and Al Carpenter and several others said they would do so as well.
Dietrich noted that no monies could be accepted (i.e., officially banked for
the ISS) until incorporation as a tax-exempt entity was accomplished.
Dietrich went over some of the problems of 'incorporation,' noting the
possibility that government approval might delay incorporation for several
Rodelle Weintraub moved and it was seconded by Crawford that the ISS should incorporate as a not for profit, tax-exempt educational organization.
Further discussion ensued before the vote. Sara Deats, President of the Marlowe Society for many years, explained how revival of interest in Marlowe was the direct result of aggressive marketing by a rejuvenated Marlowe Society, and she encouraged incorporation as the only way for the ISS to succeed.
Don Wilmeth suggested that 200 would be a realistic number of members to hope for at sometime in the future, and there was general concurrence.
The vote was almost unanimously in favor of incorporating the ISS, with two dissenting votes.
The rest of the items on the agenda were conflated in a general, rather free-wheeling discussion of how to proceed with incorporation. Dietrich began it by discussing details of incorporation, distinguishing between decisions that needed to be made to incorporate and decisions that would be made after incorporation was accomplished.
Stan Weintraub moved to have the
incorporation in
There was extensive discussion of a draft of bylaws provided by Dick Dietrich. However, Dietrich explained that bylaws were not necessary for incorporation, and that the relevant sections of the draft bylaws would have to be converted into the outline 'articles of incorporation' form the IRS requires for tax-exempt application. Denis Johnston and Dick Dietrich, with possible input after 10/1 by Rodelle Weintraub, will constitute a subcommittee to convert the draft bylaws into Articles of Incorporation. They will be distributed by email to the group for review and a vote.
There were discussions about what constitutes a quorum, what dues to charge, and motions were made and passed to make adjustments in the language of the draft bylaws, but, to make a long discussion short, the ultimate conclusion was to let the subcommittee of Dietrich and Johnston revise the bylaws, convert them into Articles of Incorporation, and then resubmit to the Founders for their input and vote.
Founding Members are to include all who attended the meeting and agreed to pay the initial dues, and they went on to vote after discussion on the following actions, abandoning the agenda somewhat in order to proceed with greater speed to necessary matters:.
THE ACTING PRESIDENT: Dick Dietrich was unanimously voted to the presidency, there being no other candidates. He shall consider himself 'Acting President' for a three-year term, concluding December 31 of 2006, at which time all appointed offices, as terms end, will begin to be voted upon by the entire membership. Dietrich expressed a strong conviction that a principal measure of the success of the ISS will be whether there will be somebody to replace him in three years, somebody of a younger generation.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS—Dietrich appointed the (international) members he had solicited for possible membership on the BOD, which, with the President, are the only names required for incorporation. When incorporation is achieved, this 6-member board will be expanded to a 14-member board, which thereafter will be strictly advisory to the President and the Executive Committee. The members of the initial Board of Directors are:.
The President of the ISS shall chair this Board and vote to break ties. The group unanimously passed this slate.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE—When the ISS is incorporated, an initial Executive Committee will be appointed for staggered terms by the Acting President, which will include VP, Treasurer, Membership Secretary, and Recorder. This initial Executive Committee will appoint the rest of the 15-member Board of Directors. When the staggered terms of the initial appointed officers run out, a democratic process will replace them with elected officers.
There are many suggestions in the draft bylaws as to how the funds the incorporated ISS may collect might be spent, the emphasis being on recruitment of younger members, and in support of that general approach it was suggested that the ISS could arrange with the Shaw Festival for an annual symposium, as follows:
ANNUAL SCHOLARLY SYMPOSIUM—Denis Johnston reported on Leonard Connolly's suggested initiation of a one-day scholarly symposium to be held at the Shaw Festival each summer in concert with the flagship Shaw production. It was decided that the symposium should be scheduled about the second week in August, preferably on a Sunday, to avoid conflict with the fall semester opening responsibilities of members who are still teaching. Denis Johnston and Leonard Conolly will handle the scheduling and report to members about arrangements. This was deemed a good start to the efforts of the ISS to organize activities that will encourage a growth of interest in Shaw.
The next meeting of the ISS will be at the Shaw Conference
scheduled for 17th-21st March in
Dietrich ended the almost 4-hour meeting by urging members to go out of their way to contribute to the database of addresses that is being compiled for the eventual membership drive.
Now, please copy, paste, print and fill out the form below and send it by snail mail to the address below or copy and paste it into a return e-mail. Thank you.
R. F. Dietrich
English Department,
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –
|
POLL OF INTEREST IN THE 'INTERNATIONAL SHAW SOCIETY' NAME: ADDRESS: PHONE #: E-MAIL ADDRESS: INSTITUTIONAL AFFILIATIONS: Please list other people who might be interested in the ISS that you think might have been overlooked in our mailing and, if possible, include their addresses (email preferred). |
Please feel free to print out and copy this form, and please post it where it will do the most good and/or distribute it to whomever you think might be interested (such as graduate students in English and Theater). If you know of anyone interested in Shaw who has not received this announcement, please pass it on.
Thank you, again.
This may be reached at
The Society publishes The Independent Shavian. The image below is the latest one on their website (vol.40 nos 2-3. 2002).
The Independent Shavian appears three times a year and is sent to all members of the Bernard Shaw Society at no charge as part of their membership dues.
This maintains
no website but maybe contacted through the Hon. Chairman, Brian Mc Grath <bricar@gofree.indigo.ie>.
The Society meets on the third Wednesday of every month in the United Arts
Club,
'I do not altogether accept [Shaw's] statement that it was about himself that Wilde made his celebrated remark about the man who had no enemies but was cordially disliked by his friends [...] But of course if Shaw likes to think that Wilde originally said it about him, there is no reason at all why he should be denied the satisfaction of claiming it.'
–Lord Alfred Douglas: Oscar
Wilde, A Summing Up.
Click
for the last
issue of Shavings (September
2003); click
for the Table of Contents of this issue; click
to
return to the Shavings home
page. Clicking
will return you to our hub page with links to
all our publications.
The sign @ connects to an e-mail address.
Click
for
the home page of THE OSCHOLARS