George Bernard
Shaw
George Bernard Shaw (26 July 1856 – 2
November 1950), known at his insistence simply as Bernard Shaw, was
an Irish playwright, critic, polemicist and political activist. His
influence on Western theatre, culture and politics extended from the 1880s to
his death and beyond. He wrote more than sixty plays, including major works
such as Man and Superman (1902), Pygmalion (1912)
and Saint Joan (1923). With a range incorporating both
contemporary satire and historical allegory, Shaw became the leading dramatist
of his generation, and in 1925 was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature.
Born in Dublin, Shaw moved to London in 1876, where he struggled
to establish himself as a writer and novelist, and embarked on a rigorous
process of self-education. By the mid-1880s he had become a respected theatre
and music critic. Following a political awakening, he joined the gradualist Fabian
Society and became its most prominent pamphleteer. Shaw had been writing
plays for years before his first public success, Arms and the Man in
1894. Influenced by Henrik Ibsen, he sought to introduce a new realism
into English-language drama, using his plays as vehicles to disseminate his
political, social and religious ideas. By the early twentieth century his
reputation as a dramatist was secured with a series of critical and popular
successes that included Major Barbara, The Doctor's Dilemma and Caesar
and Cleopatra.
Shaw's expressed views were often contentious; he promoted eugenics and alphabet
reform, and opposed vaccination and organised religion. He courted
unpopularity by denouncing both sides in the First World War as
equally culpable, and although not a republican, castigated British policy
on Ireland in the postwar period. These stances had no lasting effect on his
standing or productivity as a dramatist; the inter-war years saw a series of
often ambitious plays, which achieved varying degrees of popular success. In
1938 he provided the screenplay for a filmed version of Pygmalion for
which he received an Academy Award. His appetite for politics and
controversy remained undiminished; by the late 1920s he had largely
renounced Fabian Society gradualism and often wrote and spoke
favourably of dictatorships of the right and left—he expressed admiration for
both Mussolini and Stalin. In the final decade of his life he
made fewer public statements, but continued to write prolifically until shortly
before his death, aged ninety-four, having refused all state honours, including
the Order of Merit in 1946.
Since Shaw's death scholarly and critical opinion about his
works has varied, but he has regularly been rated among British dramatists as
second only to Shakespeare; analysts recognise his extensive influence on
generations of English-language playwrights. The word Shavian has
entered the language as encapsulating Shaw's ideas and his means of expressing
them.
Life
Early years
Shaw was born at 3 Upper Synge Street in Portobello, a
lower-middle-class part of Dublin. He
was the youngest child and only son of George Carr Shaw (1814–1885) and Lucinda
Elizabeth (Bessie) Shaw (née Gurly; 1830–1913). His elder siblings
were Lucinda (Lucy) Frances (1853–1920) and Elinor Agnes (1855–1876). The Shaw
family was of English descent and belonged to the dominant Protestant
Ascendancy in Ireland; George Carr Shaw, an ineffectual
alcoholic, was among the family's less successful members. His relatives
secured him a sinecure in the civil service, from which he was pensioned off in
the early 1850s; thereafter he worked irregularly as a corn merchant. In
1852 he married Bessie Gurly; in the view of Shaw's biographer Michael
Holroyd she married to escape a tyrannical great-aunt. If, as
Holroyd and others surmise, George's motives were mercenary, then he was
disappointed, as Bessie brought him little of her family's money. She came
to despise her ineffectual and often drunken husband, with whom she shared what
their son later described as a life of "shabby-genteel poverty".
By the time of Shaw's birth, his mother had become close to
George John Lee, a flamboyant figure well known in Dublin's musical circles.
Shaw retained a lifelong obsession that Lee might have been his biological
father; there is no consensus among Shavian scholars
on the likelihood of this. The young Shaw suffered no harshness from his
mother, but he later recalled that her indifference and lack of affection hurt
him deeply. He found solace in the music that abounded in the house. Lee
was a conductor and teacher of singing; Bessie had a fine mezzo-soprano voice
and was much influenced by Lee's unorthodox method of vocal production. The
Shaws' house was often filled with music, with frequent gatherings of singers
and players.
In 1862, Lee and the Shaws agreed to share a house, No. 1 Hatch
Street, in an affluent part of Dublin, and a country cottage on Dalkey
Hill, overlooking Killiney Bay. Shaw,
a sensitive boy, found the less salubrious parts of Dublin shocking and
distressing, and was happier at the cottage. Lee's students often gave him
books, which the young Shaw read avidly; thus, as well as gaining a
thorough musical knowledge of choral and operatic works, he became familiar
with a wide spectrum of literature.
Between 1865 and 1871, Shaw attended four schools, all of which
he hated. His experiences as a schoolboy left him disillusioned with
formal education: "Schools and schoolmasters", he later wrote, were
"prisons and turnkeys in which children are kept to prevent them
disturbing and chaperoning their parents." In October 1871 he left
school to become a junior clerk in a Dublin firm of land agents, where he
worked hard, and quickly rose to become head cashier. During this period,
Shaw was known as "George Shaw"; after 1876, he dropped the
"George" and styled himself "Bernard Shaw".
In June 1873, Lee left Dublin for London and never returned. A
fortnight later, Bessie followed him; the two girls joined her. Shaw's
explanation of why his mother followed Lee was that without the latter's
financial contribution the joint household had to be broken up. Left in Dublin
with his father, Shaw compensated for the absence of music in the house by
teaching himself to play the piano.
London
Early in 1876 Shaw learned from his mother that Agnes was dying
of tuberculosis. He resigned from the land agents, and in
March travelled to England to join his mother and Lucy at Agnes's funeral. He
never again lived in Ireland, and did not visit it for twenty-nine years.
Initially, Shaw refused to seek clerical employment in London.
His mother allowed him to live free of charge in her house in South
Kensington, but he nevertheless needed an income. He had abandoned a
teenage ambition to become a painter, and had not yet thought of writing for a
living, but Lee found a little work for him, ghost-writing a
musical column printed under Lee's name in a satirical weekly, The
Hornet. Lee's relations with Bessie deteriorated after their move to
London. Shaw maintained contact with Lee, who found him work as a
rehearsal pianist and occasional singer.
Eventually Shaw was driven to applying for office jobs. In the
interim he secured a reader's pass for the British Museum Reading
Room (the forerunner of the British Library) and
spent most weekdays there, reading and writing. His first attempt at
drama, begun in 1878, was a blank-verse satirical
piece on a religious theme. It was abandoned unfinished, as was his first try
at a novel. His first completed novel, Immaturity (1879), was
too grim to appeal to publishers and did not appear until the 1930s. He
was employed briefly by the newly formed Edison Telephone Company in 1879–80,
and as in Dublin achieved rapid promotion. Nonetheless, when the Edison
firm merged with the rival Bell Telephone Company, Shaw chose not to
seek a place in the new organisation. Thereafter he pursued a full-time
career as an author.
For the next four years Shaw made a negligible income from
writing, and was subsidised by his mother. In 1881, for the sake of
economy, and increasingly as a matter of principle, he became a vegetarian. He
grew a beard to hide a facial scar left by smallpox. In
rapid succession he wrote two more novels: The Irrational Knot (1880)
and Love Among the Artists (1881), but neither found a
publisher; each was serialised a few years later in the socialist magazine Our
Corner.
In 1880 Shaw began attending meetings of the Zetetical Society,
whose objective was to "search for truth in all matters affecting the
interests of the human race". Here he met Sidney
Webb, a junior civil servant who, like Shaw, was busy educating
himself. Despite difference of style and temperament, the two quickly
recognised qualities in each other and developed a lifelong friendship. Shaw
later reflected: "You knew everything that I didn't know and I knew
everything you didn't know ... We had everything to learn from one another
and brains enough to do it".
Shaw's next attempt at drama was a one-act playlet in
French, Un Petit Drame, written in 1884 but not published in his
lifetime. In the same year the critic William Archer suggested
a collaboration, with a plot by Archer and dialogue by Shaw. The project
foundered, but Shaw returned to the draft as the basis of Widowers'
Houses in 1892, and the connection with Archer proved of
immense value to Shaw's career.
Novelist and critic
The mid-1880s marked a turning point in Shaw's life, both personally
and professionally: he lost his virginity, had two novels published, and began
a career as a critic. He had been celibate until his twenty-ninth
birthday, when his shyness was overcome by Jane (Jenny) Patterson, a widow some
years his senior. Their affair continued, not always smoothly, for eight
years. Shaw's sex life has caused much speculation and debate among his
biographers, but there is a consensus that the relationship with Patterson was
one of his few non-platonic romantic liaisons.
The published novels, neither commercially successful, were his
two final efforts in this genre: Cashel Byron's Profession written
in 1882–83, and An Unsocial Socialist, begun and finished in 1883.
The latter was published as a serial in ToDay magazine in 1884,
although it did not appear in book form until 1887. Cashel Byron appeared
in magazine and book form in 1886.
In 1884 and 1885, through the influence of Archer, Shaw was
engaged to write book and music criticism for London papers. When Archer
resigned as art critic of The World in
1886 he secured the succession for Shaw. The two figures in the
contemporary art world whose views Shaw most admired were William
Morris and John Ruskin, and he sought to follow their
precepts in his criticisms. Their emphasis on morality appealed to Shaw,
who rejected the idea of art for art's sake, and insisted that all
great art must be didactic.
Of Shaw's various reviewing activities in the 1880s and 1890s it
was as a music critic that he was best known. After serving as deputy in
1888, he became musical critic of The Star in
February 1889, writing under the pen-name Corno di Bassetto. In May 1890
he moved back to The World, where he wrote a weekly column as
"G.B.S." for more than four years. In the 2016 version of the Grove Dictionary
of Music and Musicians, Robert Anderson writes, "Shaw's
collected writings on music stand alone in their mastery of English and
compulsive readability." Shaw ceased to be a salaried music critic in
August 1894, but published occasional articles on the subject throughout his
career, his last in 1950.
From 1895 to 1898, Shaw was the theatre critic for The
Saturday Review, edited by his friend Frank Harris. As
at The World, he used the by-line "G.B.S." He campaigned
against the artificial conventions and hypocrisies of the Victorian
theatre and called for plays of real ideas and true characters. By
this time he had embarked in earnest on a career as a playwright: "I had
rashly taken up the case; and rather than let it collapse I manufactured the evidence".
Playwright and politician: 1890s
After using the plot of the aborted 1884 collaboration with
Archer to complete Widowers' Houses (it was staged twice in
London, in December 1892), Shaw continued writing plays. At first he made slow
progress; The Philanderer, written in 1893 but not
published until 1898, had to wait until 1905 for a stage production.
Similarly, Mrs Warren's Profession (1893) was written five
years before publication and nine years before reaching the stage.
Shaw's first play to bring him financial success was Arms and
the Man (1894), a mock-Ruritanian comedy
satirising conventions of love, military honour and class. The press found
the play overlong, and accused Shaw of mediocrity, sneering at heroism and
patriotism, heartless cleverness, and copying W. S. Gilbert's
style. The public took a different view, and the management of the theatre
staged extra matinée performances to meet the demand. The play ran from
April to July, toured the provinces and was staged in New York. It earned
him £341 in royalties in its first year, a sufficient sum to enable him to give
up his salaried post as a music critic. Among the cast of the London
production was Florence Farr, with whom Shaw had a romantic
relationship between 1890 and 1894, much resented by Jenny Patterson.
The success of Arms and the Man was not
immediately replicated. Candida, which
presented a young woman making a conventional romantic choice for unconventional
reasons, received a single performance in South Shields in
1895; in 1897 a playlet about Napoleon called The Man
of Destiny had a single staging at Croydon. In
the 1890s Shaw's plays were better known in print than on the West End stage;
his biggest success of the decade was in New York in 1897, when Richard
Mansfield's production of the historical melodrama The
Devil's Disciple earned the author more than £2,000 in royalties.
In January 1893, as a Fabian delegate, Shaw attended the
Bradford conference which led to the foundation of the Independent
Labour Party. He was sceptical about the new party, and scorned
the likelihood that it could switch the allegiance of the working class from
sport to politics. He persuaded the conference to adopt resolutions
abolishing indirect taxation, and taxing unearned income
"to extinction". Back in London, Shaw produced what Margaret
Cole, in her Fabian history, terms a "grand philippic"
against the minority Liberal administration that
had taken power in 1892. To Your Tents, O Israel excoriated
the government for ignoring social issues and concentrating solely on Irish
Home Rule, a matter Shaw declared of no relevance to socialism. In
1894 the Fabian Society received a substantial bequest from a sympathiser, Henry
Hunt Hutchinson—Holroyd mentions £10,000. Webb, who chaired the board of
trustees appointed to supervise the legacy, proposed to use most of it to found
a school of economics and politics. Shaw demurred; he thought such a venture
was contrary to the specified purpose of the legacy. He was eventually
persuaded to support the proposal, and the London School of Economics
and Political Science (LSE) opened in the summer of 1895.
By the later 1890s Shaw's political activities lessened as he
concentrated on making his name as a dramatist. In 1897 he was persuaded
to fill an uncontested vacancy for a "vestryman" (parish
councillor) in London's St Pancras district.
At least initially, Shaw took to his municipal responsibilities
seriously; when London government was reformed in 1899 and the St Pancras
vestry became the Metropolitan Borough of St Pancras, he was elected to the
newly formed borough council.
In 1898, as a result of overwork, Shaw's health broke down. He
was nursed by Charlotte Payne-Townshend, a rich Anglo-Irish woman whom
he had met through the Webbs. The previous year she had proposed that she and
Shaw should marry. He had declined, but when she insisted on nursing him
in a house in the country, Shaw, concerned that this might cause scandal, agreed
to their marriage. The ceremony took place on 1 June 1898, in the register
office in Covent Garden. The bride and bridegroom
were both aged forty-one. In the view of the biographer and critic St John
Ervine, "their life together was entirely felicitous". There
were no children of the marriage, which it is generally believed was never
consummated; whether this was wholly at Charlotte's wish, as Shaw liked to
suggest, is less widely credited. In the early weeks of the marriage Shaw
was much occupied writing his Marxist analysis of Wagner's Ring cycle,
published as The Perfect Wagnerite late in 1898. In
1906 the Shaws found a country home in Ayot St Lawrence,
Hertfordshire; they renamed the house "Shaw's Corner",
and lived there for the rest of their lives. They retained a London flat in
the Adelphi and later at Whitehall Court.
Stage success: 1900–1914
During the first decade of the twentieth century, Shaw secured a
firm reputation as a playwright. In 1904 J. E. Vedrenne and Harley
Granville-Barker established a company at the Royal
Court Theatre in Sloane Square, Chelsea to
present modern drama. Over the next five years they staged fourteen of Shaw's
plays. The first, John Bull's Other Island, a
comedy about an Englishman in Ireland, attracted leading politicians and was
seen by Edward VII, who laughed so much that he broke his chair. The play was
withheld from Dublin's Abbey Theatre, for fear of the affront it
might provoke, although it was shown at the city's Royal Theatre in
November 1907. Shaw later wrote that William Butler Yeats, who
had requested the play, "got rather more than he bargained for ... It was uncongenial to the whole spirit of the
neo-Gaelic movement, which is bent on creating a new Ireland after its own
ideal, whereas my play is a very uncompromising presentment of the real old
Ireland." Nonetheless, Shaw and Yeats were close friends; Yeats
and Lady Gregory tried unsuccessfully to persuade Shaw
to take up the vacant co-directorship of the Abbey Theatre after J. M.
Synge's death in 1909. Shaw admired other figures in the Irish
Literary Revival, including George Russell and James
Joyce, and was a close friend of Seán
O'Casey, who was inspired to become a playwright after reading John
Bull's Other Island.
Man and Superman, completed in 1902, was a
success both at the Royal Court in 1905 and in Robert
Loraine's New York production in the same year. Among the other Shaw
works presented by Vedrenne and Granville-Barker were Major
Barbara (1905), depicting the contrasting morality of arms manufacturers
and the Salvation Army; The Doctor's Dilemma (1906),
a mostly serious piece about professional ethics; and Caesar
and Cleopatra, Shaw's counterblast to Shakespeare's Antony
and Cleopatra, seen in New York in 1906 and in London the following year.
Now prosperous and established, Shaw experimented with
unorthodox theatrical forms described by his biographer Stanley
Weintraub as "discussion drama" and "serious farce". These
plays included Getting Married (premiered 1908), The
Shewing-Up of Blanco Posnet (1909), Misalliance (1910),
and Fanny's First Play (1911). Blanco
Posnet was banned on religious grounds by the Lord
Chamberlain (the official theatre censor in England), and was produced
instead in Dublin; it filled the Abbey Theatre to capacity. Fanny's
First Play, a comedy about suffragettes, had
the longest initial run of any Shaw play—622 performances.
Androcles and the Lion (1912), a less heretical
study of true and false religious attitudes than Blanco Posnet, ran
for eight weeks in September and October 1913. It was followed by one of
Shaw's most successful plays, Pygmalion,
written in 1912 and staged in Vienna the following year, and in Berlin shortly
afterwards. Shaw commented, "It is the custom of the English press
when a play of mine is produced, to inform the world that it is not a play—that
it is dull, blasphemous, unpopular, and financially unsuccessful. ...
Hence arose an urgent demand on the part of the managers of Vienna and Berlin
that I should have my plays performed by them first." The British
production opened in April 1914, starring Sir Herbert Tree and Mrs
Patrick Campbell as, respectively, a professor of phonetics and a cockney flower-girl.
There had earlier been a romantic liaison between Shaw and Campbell that caused
Charlotte Shaw considerable concern, but by the time of the London premiere it
had ended. The play attracted capacity audiences until July, when Tree
insisted on going on holiday, and the production closed. His co-star then
toured with the piece in the US.
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