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    Baal Archived Message

    Posted by Gerard on April 6, 2020, 2:33 pm, in reply to "Re: I love Bertolt Brecht..."

    My sixth form English Lit class were taken to see "The Good Soldier.." at the National Theatre...I have performed two of the songs from "Baal" to a live audience in recent years ("no names, no pack drill" I wasn't getting paid),

    "In 1981 Bowie took the title role of a BBC television adaptation of Brecht’s play Baal. The titular protagonist is a drunken poet, iconoclast and womaniser, whose decline is charted over the course of the play.

    Brecht wrote Baal, his first full-length play, in 1918, yet it was not performed in public until 1923. Its premiere took place on 8 December that year at the Altes Theater in Leipzig, and it was reworked for a 1926 production in Berlin.

    The BBC adaptation was directed by Alan Clarke, who was best known for his social realism works for television and cinema. These included Scum, Made In Britain, and the feature film Rita, Sue And Bob Too.

    Clarke envisaged a stark television version of Baal, using split-screen effects to convey Brechtian Verfremdungseffekt, the distancing effect in theatre and cinema in which the actor directly addresses the audience in order to make conscious critical observers of them.

    The play was adapted for the small screen by John Willett, produced by Louis Marks and directed by Alan Clarke. The three approached David Bowie after noting his performance as the lead in The Elephant Man, and correctly guessed that the singer had an interest in Brecht and Weimer-era Germany.

    Bowie had been introduced to Brecht in the late 1960s by mime artist Linsday Kemp. He had absorbed the works of Brecht while living in Los Angeles in the mid-70s, a period in which he had become obsessed with Germany. Clarke and Marks visited Bowie at his home in Vevey, Switzerland in July 1981, and were impressed by the scale and depth of his knowledge.

    To their delight he readily agreed to appear in the play. Four weeks of rehearsals took place in Acton, London, before the week-long shoot from 8-12 August 1981. It was first broadcast by the BBC the following March, and the EP David Bowie In Bertolt Brecht’s Baal was released to coincide.

    Bowie performed a series of songs in the TV adaptation, with lyrics translated by Willett and Ralph Manheim. They were given a simple banjo accompaniment on screen, but it was decided that they would benefit from a fuller arrangement for the record release." https://www.bowiebible.com/eps/baal/

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