Judith Malina's Voracious Body, Mind and Spirit

Rosenthal argues that legendary avant-garde performer and codirector of the Living Theatre, Judith Malina (1926-2015), never focused on an Aristotelian through-line in her theatre art, nor on the 'peak and decline' narrative associated with older people in their later years. Malina's...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inPerformance research Vol. 24; no. 3; p. 139
Main Author Rosenthal, Cindy
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Abingdon Taylor & Francis Ltd 01.05.2019
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Summary:Rosenthal argues that legendary avant-garde performer and codirector of the Living Theatre, Judith Malina (1926-2015), never focused on an Aristotelian through-line in her theatre art, nor on the 'peak and decline' narrative associated with older people in their later years. Malina's alternative path resembled a 'life course' trajectory, more in line with Brecht's Epic Theatre, and with ideas suggested by theorists such as Margaret Morgenroth Gullete and Elinor Fuchs. This essay tracks Malina's two years at the Lillian Booth Actors Home in Englewood, New Jersey, where she attempted to stage fellow residents in an original, devised work, The Triumph of Time. The theme of this unproduced piece reflects Malina's perspective - humans become wiser and should be more valuable to society as they age. In her day-to-day resistance to 'incarceration' at the Actors Home and in the performance work that took her outside its walls, Malina challenged the rules for and expectations about older people until the end of her long life.Antigone was a role icon for Malina; she saw herself as one who stood up against oppression and authority figures at all costs. Malina played Antigone in her own adaptation of Brecht's version of Sophocles' play from age 40 into her late fifties. Performances in her eighties include Maudie and Jane, where she stripped naked on stage and The Plot is the Revolution, where she recounted how she performed Antigone and engaged the audience in a 'theatre of the scream'.
ISSN:1352-8165
1469-9990
DOI:10.1080/13528165.2019.1579024