La Maladie de la mort
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

''The Malady of Death'' (french: La Maladie de la mort) is a 1982 novella by the French writer
Marguerite Duras Marguerite Germaine Marie Donnadieu (, 4 April 1914 – 3 March 1996), known as Marguerite Duras (), was a French novelist, playwright, screenwriter, essayist, and experimental filmmaker. Her script for the film '' Hiroshima mon amour'' (1959) e ...
. It tells the story of a man who pays a woman to spend several weeks with him by the sea to learn "how to love".


Plot

''The Malady of Death'' is about an unconventional sexual relationship between a man and a woman. The man hires the woman to stay with him in a hotel by the sea, hoping that by doing so, he will be able to experience love. The woman accepts the proposal even though she is not a prostitute. After some days, the woman tells him that he is incapable of love as he is afflicted with the "malady of death". The book is written in the
second-person narrative Narration is the use of a written or spoken commentary to convey a story to an audience. Narration is conveyed by a narrator: a specific person, or unspecified literary voice, developed by the creator of the story to deliver information to the ...
; throughout the book, the man is referred to as "you", and the woman as "she".


Genesis

Duras began to write the book in Trouville, where she drank six to seven litres of wine each day. When the first ten pages were finished she moved to Neauphle. She stopped eating but continued drinking; she began each morning by drinking two glasses which she vomited up, and was then able to keep the third. Duras had become incapable to write herself, so she recited lines while her muse Yann Andréa wrote them down for her. The manuscript had the development title "A scent of heliotrope and citron", but when it was 20 pages long Duras changed it to the final title. Eventually Duras agreed to go to a clinic for alcoholics, and on 21 October 1982, she was taken to the
American Hospital of Paris The American Hospital of Paris (''Hôpital américain de Paris''), founded in 1906, is a private, not-for-profit hospital that is certified under the French healthcare system. Located in Neuilly-sur-Seine, in the western suburbs of Paris, Franc ...
. Upon returning from the clinic she immediately began to proofread the work.


Adaptations

1999 McElhinney production Film director
Andrew Repasky McElhinney Andrew Repasky McElhinney (born 1978) is an American film and theater director, writer and producer born in Philadelphia. McElhinney's cinema work is in the permanent collection of MoMA-The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Early life and educa ...
designed and staged The Malady of Death (in English, Barbara Bray translation) in a production that opened December 14, 1999 at the Atrium Theater, 64 West 11th Street, New York City, starring Alix D. Smith and
Oliver Wyman Oliver Wyman is an American management consulting firm. Founded in New York City in 1984 by former Booz Allen Hamilton partners Alex Oliver and Bill Wyman, the firm has more than 60 offices in Europe, North America, the Middle East, and Asia- ...
In McElhinney's production of The Malady of Death, the audience entered the space in near darkness. The performance began with a tape recording of McElhinney reading Duras' notes on staging The Malady of Text (found as the Afterwards to that published text). Then, the sound of ("music of") the sea faded in, and actors Smith (the Speaker) and Wyman (the Listener) were faintly revealed sitting a table with a dim lamp, smoking. This visual image was inspired by Duras' movie, Le Camion he Truck of which director McElhinney remarked that, "Drama becomes nothing and yet it suffices. ... The Truck highlights the excessive artifice that plagues much of our modern world." On the use of cigarette smoke in the production, director McElhinney wrote, "I wanted a lot of smoking in the play so that I could make the space uncomfortable and thus claustrophobic with the smoke." Also, revealed stage right over the duration of the show was a tableau of an inexpensive plastic blow-up doll "reading" magazines on a beach blanket. In the program essay, "On Staging The Malady of Death," director McElhinney commented that, "A blow-up-doll was perfect, as it is an object, like the girl is in the text. A blow-up-doll is an inherently sexual being and would strike the cord between sex and commerce that I think is implicit in Duras' text." As Smith read the Duras text (..."reading" as Duras instructed, as opposed to traditionally memorizing the text...), the lights very slowly rose over the duration of the 45-minute play, on both the stage and the audience, while the theater space was almost entirely filed with white smoke. The last visual sensation toward the end of the show was one of being on a hazy beach at dawn. In the essay, "On Staging The Malady of Death," director McElhinney remarked The Malady of Death, "should be ritualistic." In the final minutes of the play, the lights rose to an extreme level of brightness, and the audience was much more lit than the stage, and, in effect, the performance transferred its focus from the actors onstage to the audience watching the inaction on stage. Director McElhinney commented that, "At the end, everyone is part of the play, and the play has been deconstructed so that it is pure theater. Duras, I hope, would be proud." 2018 Birch/Mitchell production Playwright Alice Birch adapted ''The Malady of Death'' for the stage under its French title, ''La Maladie de la Mort''. The play premiered at the 2018 Edinburgh Fringe Festival and was directed by
Katie Mitchell Katrina Jane Mitchell (born 23 September 1964) is an English theatre director. Life and career Mitchell was born in Reading, Berkshire, raised in Hermitage, Berkshire, and educated at Oakham School. Upon leaving Oakham, she went up to Mag ...
. The play was narrated in French by
Irène Jacob Irène Marie Jacob (born 15 July 1966) is a French-Swiss actress known for her work with Polish film director Krzysztof Kieślowski. She won the 1991 Cannes Film Festival Award for Best Actress for the Kieślowski film ''The Double Life of Vero ...
and English subtitles were projected onscreen. Mitchell's production relied heavily on the use of live-feed greyscale images to give the audience a sense of dissociation.


See also

*
1982 in literature This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1982. Events * February 17 – Philip K. Dick ignores advice to go immediately to hospital. A fortnight later, after two strokes, he is pronounced brain-dead and ...
*
20th-century French literature 20th-century French literature is literature written in French from 1900 to 1999. For literature made after 1999, see the article Contemporary French literature. Many of the developments in French literature in this period parallel changes in ...


References

;Notes ;Bibliography * {{DEFAULTSORT:Malady of Death 1982 French novels Novels by Marguerite Duras