Content ID:
Field:


  • About Smithsonian
  • Email Updates
  • Member Services
  • Shop
  • Archive
Smithsonian.com
  • Smithsonian Institution
  • Smithsonian Channel
  • goSmithsonian
  • Air & Space magazine
  • Home
  • History & Archaeology
  • People & Places
  • Science & Nature
  • Arts & Culture
  • Travel
  • Photos & Videos
  • Games & Puzzles
  • Subscribe
  • Art & Artists
  • Music & Literature
  • Photo of the Day
  • Smithsonian Institution
  • Trends & Traditions
  • Arts & Culture

35 Who Made a Difference: Julie Taymor

Transcending genres, the designer and director creates shamanistic theater

  • By Edward Rothstein
  • Smithsonian.com, November 01, 2005

Article Tools

 
  • Font
  • Share/Save/Bookmark Share
     
  • Email
  •  
  • Print
  • Digg Digg
     
  • Comments
  • StumbleUpon StumbleUpon
     
  • RSS
  • Reddit Reddit
     

    Most Popular

    • Viewed
    • Emailed
    1. A Salute to the Wheel
    2. 50 Years of Pantyhose
    3. Photo Contest Grand Prize Winner - In the early morning, fishermen clean their nets by Erhai Lake
    4. Tattoos
    5. Frank Baum, the Man Behind the Curtain
    6. Family Ties
    7. Photo Contest Finalist - A mountain dwarfs a passenger boat in the Three Gorges area of the Yangzi River
    8. Photo Contest Finalist - Ganga Arati
    9. The World's Largest Fossil Wilderness
    10. Photo Contest Finalist - After a hard night's work at sea, a fisherman collects the rope that ties the nets
    1. There Oughta Be a Law
    2. The World's Largest Fossil Wilderness
    3. Frank Baum, the Man Behind the Curtain
    4. Nikita Khrushchev Goes to Hollywood
    5. Terra Cotta Soldiers on the March
    6. A Salute to the Wheel
    7. Catching a Wave, Powering an Electrical Grid?
    8. Up in Arms Over a Co-Ed Plebe Summer
    9. Buenos Aires: a City's Power and Promise
    10. High Hopes for a New Kind of Gene

    Watch the opening of Disney's Broadway musical The Lion King, and you feel something like a sense of the ecstatic—the ecstatic not just as a state of pleasure or excitement, but the ecstatic in its old, almost archaic sense of being lifted out of one's familiar state. The animals of Africa come parading down the aisles as if they too had undergone such a transformation, their skin and feathers turned into poles and fabric, their bodies turned into hybrid surfaces mixing the flesh of the puppeteers and the mechanisms of puppets. They are grand and finely wrought, as miraculous as their live counterparts, leaping and loping onto the stage as if celebrating themselves and their maker.

    Such is the thrill of Julie Taymor's theater magic, though the ecstasy is not always so sunny and the transformations are not usually so celebratory. In her stagings, her puppetry and her writing, the ecstasies more often descend into darkness: the human is turned into animal, playfulness is turned into violence; a boy becomes a jaguar and devours his taunters; a mother becomes a killer and spurs her sons to revenge. It is no accident that Taymor is the chosen director for a forthcoming Broadway production of Spider-Man—another tale of troubled transformation in which human and animal intertwine.

    Taymor, who won two Tony Awards for the direction and costume design of The Lion King, who won a MacArthur "genius" award in 1991, who directed Anthony Hopkins in the film Titus and Salma Hayek in Frida and who is the director of last year's acclaimed production of Mozart's The Magic Flute at the Metropolitan Opera in New York, is really a shaman of sorts. She has the ability to move between worlds, pass across borders, descend into darkness and reemerge with promises of transformation. Her major tools are puppet and mask, which in their expressive detail are objects that seem in the midst of transformation themselves—ecstatic objects, half-human, half-thing; half-alive, half-dead. She was drawn to their powers even as a child. And when Taymor was 16, she finished her Newton, Massachusetts, high school a semester early and studied in Paris at L’École de Mime Jacques LeCoq, where she worked with masks, learning, she told Smithsonian in 1993, "how to transform myself into a nonhuman object" as well as "how to infuse an inanimate object with character."

    Using these otherworldly talismans, she has steadfastly attempted to cross boundaries, not only between the human and nonhuman or between life and death—the shaman's traditional realms—but between theatrical genres: Western staging and Indonesian drama, folk tale and high art, realism and fantasy. In the 1970s Taymor spent four years in Indonesia, ran her own theater troupe and toured with a theater piece called Tirai, meaning "curtain." Only, in this case, the curtain is torn: it is about a tragic failure to negotiate transitions between Indonesian culture and the West. A young man, trying to straddle the divide, ends up lost, at home in neither.

    But if transitional challenges were unreconcilable to some, Taymor managed to pass back and forth with great care, eventually returning to the United States and working first as a stage designer, then as a creator and director. She staged a series of theater pieces that crossed ethnic and historical boundaries. One was about the Jewish celebration of Passover (The Haggadah). Another was about an American Indian seer (Black Elk Lives). Her first triumph came in 1988 with Juan Darién: A Carnival Mass, which she wrote with her musical collaborator and longtime companion, the composer Elliot Goldenthal. It was a tale, told with puppets and masked characters, of a jaguar who is turned into a boy. Like Tirai, it is ultimately a tale of a failure, in which its characters are unable to negotiate the boundaries between the human and animal worlds.

    But Taymor's reputation was made by her ability to explore both. By staging dramas about opposing worlds or tragic failures to manage them, Taymor ended up becoming the shaman who could manage both. At their best, Taymor's works allow opposing worlds to interact. In the 1992 film version of her staging of Igor Stravinsky's Oedipus Rex, for example, there are two Oedipuses, one singing words adapted from Sophocles, the other, a Butoh dancer, mimicking the doomed king, enacting his history in formalized gesture. One is the man, the other, apparently, a kind of puppet, though by the end, both are enmeshed, for Oedipus too, we see, is a puppet, his destiny manipulated by the Fates.

    Taymor is not, of course, always successful. There are times when she veers too far in one direction or another and something seems missing. When the film Frida, based on a biography of the Mexican painter Frida Kahlo, is merely telling its tale, it becomes an overly conventional homage; only when it turns as surreal, mercurial and conflicted as the images painted by its subject does it come fully alive.

    Now Taymor and Goldenthal are working on an ambitious opera, Grendel, to première in Los Angeles next May. It will retell the Beowulf saga from the monster's point of view, and again promises to explore the boundaries between human and beast. If it succeeds, it will take its place in Taymor's attempt to create a form of shamanistic theater. This may also be what has lured her to the film she is now making (for release late next year) using Beatles songs to chronicle the 1960s—an era with its own theatrical reverberations of disillusion and ecstatic transformation. In Taymor's universe, drama becomes ritual. Its aim becomes ecstasy in that ancient, liberatory sense. And if risks undertaken by its characters often end in failure, the hope is that similar risks, undertaken by creator and audience, may end in triumph.

    Watch the opening of Disney's Broadway musical The Lion King, and you feel something like a sense of the ecstatic—the ecstatic not just as a state of pleasure or excitement, but the ecstatic in its old, almost archaic sense of being lifted out of one's familiar state. The animals of Africa come parading down the aisles as if they too had undergone such a transformation, their skin and feathers turned into poles and fabric, their bodies turned into hybrid surfaces mixing the flesh of the puppeteers and the mechanisms of puppets. They are grand and finely wrought, as miraculous as their live counterparts, leaping and loping onto the stage as if celebrating themselves and their maker.

    Such is the thrill of Julie Taymor's theater magic, though the ecstasy is not always so sunny and the transformations are not usually so celebratory. In her stagings, her puppetry and her writing, the ecstasies more often descend into darkness: the human is turned into animal, playfulness is turned into violence; a boy becomes a jaguar and devours his taunters; a mother becomes a killer and spurs her sons to revenge. It is no accident that Taymor is the chosen director for a forthcoming Broadway production of Spider-Man—another tale of troubled transformation in which human and animal intertwine.

    Taymor, who won two Tony Awards for the direction and costume design of The Lion King, who won a MacArthur "genius" award in 1991, who directed Anthony Hopkins in the film Titus and Salma Hayek in Frida and who is the director of last year's acclaimed production of Mozart's The Magic Flute at the Metropolitan Opera in New York, is really a shaman of sorts. She has the ability to move between worlds, pass across borders, descend into darkness and reemerge with promises of transformation. Her major tools are puppet and mask, which in their expressive detail are objects that seem in the midst of transformation themselves—ecstatic objects, half-human, half-thing; half-alive, half-dead. She was drawn to their powers even as a child. And when Taymor was 16, she finished her Newton, Massachusetts, high school a semester early and studied in Paris at L’École de Mime Jacques LeCoq, where she worked with masks, learning, she told Smithsonian in 1993, "how to transform myself into a nonhuman object" as well as "how to infuse an inanimate object with character."

    Using these otherworldly talismans, she has steadfastly attempted to cross boundaries, not only between the human and nonhuman or between life and death—the shaman's traditional realms—but between theatrical genres: Western staging and Indonesian drama, folk tale and high art, realism and fantasy. In the 1970s Taymor spent four years in Indonesia, ran her own theater troupe and toured with a theater piece called Tirai, meaning "curtain." Only, in this case, the curtain is torn: it is about a tragic failure to negotiate transitions between Indonesian culture and the West. A young man, trying to straddle the divide, ends up lost, at home in neither.

    But if transitional challenges were unreconcilable to some, Taymor managed to pass back and forth with great care, eventually returning to the United States and working first as a stage designer, then as a creator and director. She staged a series of theater pieces that crossed ethnic and historical boundaries. One was about the Jewish celebration of Passover (The Haggadah). Another was about an American Indian seer (Black Elk Lives). Her first triumph came in 1988 with Juan Darién: A Carnival Mass, which she wrote with her musical collaborator and longtime companion, the composer Elliot Goldenthal. It was a tale, told with puppets and masked characters, of a jaguar who is turned into a boy. Like Tirai, it is ultimately a tale of a failure, in which its characters are unable to negotiate the boundaries between the human and animal worlds.

    But Taymor's reputation was made by her ability to explore both. By staging dramas about opposing worlds or tragic failures to manage them, Taymor ended up becoming the shaman who could manage both. At their best, Taymor's works allow opposing worlds to interact. In the 1992 film version of her staging of Igor Stravinsky's Oedipus Rex, for example, there are two Oedipuses, one singing words adapted from Sophocles, the other, a Butoh dancer, mimicking the doomed king, enacting his history in formalized gesture. One is the man, the other, apparently, a kind of puppet, though by the end, both are enmeshed, for Oedipus too, we see, is a puppet, his destiny manipulated by the Fates.

    Taymor is not, of course, always successful. There are times when she veers too far in one direction or another and something seems missing. When the film Frida, based on a biography of the Mexican painter Frida Kahlo, is merely telling its tale, it becomes an overly conventional homage; only when it turns as surreal, mercurial and conflicted as the images painted by its subject does it come fully alive.

    Now Taymor and Goldenthal are working on an ambitious opera, Grendel, to première in Los Angeles next May. It will retell the Beowulf saga from the monster's point of view, and again promises to explore the boundaries between human and beast. If it succeeds, it will take its place in Taymor's attempt to create a form of shamanistic theater. This may also be what has lured her to the film she is now making (for release late next year) using Beatles songs to chronicle the 1960s—an era with its own theatrical reverberations of disillusion and ecstatic transformation. In Taymor's universe, drama becomes ritual. Its aim becomes ecstasy in that ancient, liberatory sense. And if risks undertaken by its characters often end in failure, the hope is that similar risks, undertaken by creator and audience, may end in triumph.


     
    Comments

    Post a Comment


    Name: (required)

    Email: (required)

    Comment:



    Advertisement

    Smithsonian Videos

    Counting Down for the Liftoff to the Moon

    Counting Down for the Liftoff to the Moon

    Photographer David Burnett focused his camera on the many tourists who flocked to Florida in 1969 to watch the launch of Apollo 11

    Lucian Perkins Images

    A Navy Plebe Re-Meets His Match

    Photojournalist Lucian Perkins reunites Naval Academy graduates Sandee Irwin and Don Holcomb, 30 years after his photo captured the new gender dynamics at the school

    Deploying the Wave Energy Buoy

    Deploying the Wave Energy Buoy

    See a prototype of a wave energy buoy bob up and down on the water’s surface as researchers from Oregon State University study its efficacy

    Nikita Khrushchevs Great American Tour

    Nikita Khrushchev's Great American Tour

    As part of a diplomatic mission, Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev traveled across the United States, meeting Americans from New York to Iowa to California

    Terra Cotta Soldiers

    Uncovering the Terra Cotta Soldiers

    A curator from the Houston Museum of Natural Science explains how the terra cotta warriors were discovered and what they reveal about China’s Qin dynasty

    Advertisement

    Culturespotter

    New at Viva Mexico

    Mexico is home to 43 active volcanoes and over 10% of all living organisms. Discover Mexico's natural (and social) diversity in the all-new "Mexican Culture" section.

    Marketplace

    SmithsonianStore

    Night at the Museum Plush Monkey
    Item No. 67925

    Window Shopping

    Gifts, Gadgets and Great Finds!

    From Our Advertisers: Products, Offers and Free Info

    Travel & Adventure

    Backstage on Broadway

    Meet theater professionals and see three Broadway's hits including Billy Elliot and Next to Normal (Nov. 18 - 22, 2009)

    Sojourners

    Join Us

    Facebook

    Facebook

    Become a fan of Smithsonian magazine's official Facebook page!

    Twitter

    Follow Smithsonian magazine on Twitter

    In The Magazine

    July 2009 Issue Cover

    July 2009

    • On the March
    • Nikita in Hollywood
    • We Have Liftoff
    • Birth of a Robot
    • Catching a Wave

    View Table of Contents



    Smithsonian magazine presents

    6th Annual Smithsonian Photo Contest Winners

    Out of more than 17,000 entries contributed from around the world, Smithsonian and its readers select the year's best

    Smithsonian magazine Museum Day

    Take your brain on a field trip - on us

    Free Museum admission on Saturday, September 26th. Click here to find participating museums »

    Smithsonian Journeys

    Lake Como and Villa del Balbianello, Villas and Vistas of the Italian Lake District Villas and Vistas of the Italian Lake District
    A stay amid romantic Lake Como and Lake Maggiore



    View full archiveRecent Issues

    • July 2009 Issue Cover
      Jul 2009

    • June 2009 Issue Cover
      Jun 2009

    • May 2009 Issue Cover
      May 2009

    Newsletter

    Sign up for regular email updates from Smithsonian magazine, including free newsletters, special offers and current news updates.

    Subscribe Now

    About Us

    Smithsonian.com expands on Smithsonian magazine's in-depth coverage of history, science, nature, the arts, travel, world culture and technology. Join us regularly as we take a dynamic and interactive approach to exploring modern and historic perspectives on the arts, sciences, nature, world culture and travel, including videos, blogs and a reader forum.

    Explore our Brands

    • goSmithsonian.com
    • Smithsonian Air & Space Museum
    • Smithsonian Institution
    • Smithsonian Catalogue
    • Smithsonian Journeys
    • Smithsonian Channel
    • Site Map
    • Privacy Policy
    • Copyright
    • About Smithsonian
    • Contact Us
    • Advertising
    • Reader Panel
    • Subscribe
    • RSS

    Smithsonian Institution

    Produced by Clickability