First off, I want to say that Alice Gerstenberg’s Overtones
was an attention grabbing first read and yet one I had to be checked in completely
to understand. The intriguing part about the play is that there are some characters
present on stage who do not see each other and also, the interaction a
character has with another may not be mirrored by that other character. The two
cultured characters, Harriet and Margaret, can see and hear each other, each
character can hear their respective primitive inner selves, and the primitive
characters, in my opinion, see and talk directly to their respective cultured
selves in very few parts of the play. The question of whether or not the
primitive characters hear and see each other is not explicitly stated in the
script but my argument is based off evidence in the script. Because these primitive
characters are the inner thoughts of their cultured selves, they can sometimes
know exactly what the other is saying, just as we as humans can sometimes tell
exactly what the other person is thinking and wanting to say through subtle
facial expression and body language. There is a bit of dialogue at the end of
the play where Maggie and Hetty seem to know exactly what the other is saying
and in my opinion, the play should be staged as such. The primitive characters
do seem to become more connected and even have more connected thoughts as the
play moves on, I think, because both characters’ strong objective causes them
to become less concerned with social graces and more concerned with the object
at hand. While the stage directions in this play are extremely helpful because
they often tell the reader exactly to whom the line is to be delivered to, even
if those stage directions were not present, the dialogue is written well enough
that the director wouldn’t have a hard time deciding if a primitive characters’
line should be directed either to “the abyss,” to the audience, to their cultured
character, or to the fellow primitive character. I find this to be true because
much of the dialogue is adding onto a previously stated thought or answering
the question. Overall, there are some thought-provoking concepts in this play
and it leaves much opportunity for interesting staging choices.
I totally agree with you that the two primitive selves can hear each other. As you have pointed out it is never directly stated in the script that they hear each other, it only says that they direct certain lines to the other. To me the only way the play could make sense is if the two primitive selves can hear each other speak.
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