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THE CUBE AND THE SPHERE*

ETIENNE SOURIAU

All I intend to do is state briefly the us; to impose its own reality upon us;
principle of a possible discussion about to be, for an hour or two, all of reality.
theatrical space, involving two different I used the word universe. Hamlet is
conceptions of staging and perhaps of not only Hamlet; it is Ophelia too, and
the art of the theatre taken as a whole. Horatio, and Laertes, all of them linked
It may be that these conceptions reveal together by the action that brings them
two different ways of thinking; and if face to face, torments them, sets them in
this morphology of the theatrical world conflict with each other. It is also the
leads me to speak of spherical or cubic embankment at Elsinore, the waves that
minds, I apologize in advance for such break against it, the cloudy sky over-
strange terms. The title I have given head, the earth under which the ghosts
this paper, The Cube and the Sphere, make their way. All of this must exist
may have seemed somewhat enigmatic for us, surround us, take hold of us, be
to you, but I have no intention of giv- given to us. But given-ab ungue
ing you a riddle. My idea is quite sim- leonem-in the form of a tiny fragment,
ple, and you will see that its point of de- a nucleus cut out of that immense uni-
parture is elementary. verse, whose mission will be to conjure
I submit the principle that in all the up for us, all by itself, the universe in
arts without exception, but particularly its entirety.
in the art of the theatre, the main bus-
For it is impossible ever to reduce the
iness is to present a whole universe-the universe of a work to what is presented
universe of the work-en patuite, in a
concretely on the stage. Let us take for
state of patency. This rather rare philo- example: II faut qu'une porte soit ouver-
sophical term must not frighten you. It te ou fermee. A man and a woman (the
denotes manifest existence, existence
Count and the Marquise) in a drawing-
that is clearly evident to the mind. room, that is all that is presented to us
A universe that exists manifestly be- concretely, all that appears before us
fore us ... a universe presented with all physically and' in the flesh-in gross
its power to stir us deeply; to overwhelm presence, if I may use that term. But
how many other presences float around,
*An address delivered at the Sorbonne, in Paris,
on 9 December 1948, before the Center of that are absolutely essential to the ac-
Philosophical and Technical Studies in the The- tion; presences that work with our char-
atre. Translated by Claude P. Viens, Assistant acters in the self-same adventure! There
Professor of French at the University of Illinois,
from Architecture et dramaturgie (ed. A. Vil- is not only a whole past and a whole fu-
liers), Paris, Flammarion, 1950; and reprinted
by permission of the publisher. ture, but all the space that surrounds

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12 EDUCATIONAL THEATRE JOURNAL

these, and the invisible people in that supposed reality, with all its dimensions
space who have a part in the action: of space, time, and humanity (the whole
there is M. Camus, the neighbor out in "rotten state" of Hamlet, or the whole
the country; there is the jeweler to rain-lashed Paris of la Porte, or all of
whose shop the ring must be taken; the the bourgeois group of Tartuffe, headed
little girls who bring hats; the draft by "the king who is an enemy of fraud").
that comes in the door; there is the In this universe we cut out a little cube,
weather-the showers beating down on as though with a saw-for example, the
the city, the "celestial wrath whipping one that contains just the sentry's box
windows, umbrellas, ladies' legs, and on the "platform before the castle" at
chimneys." And to this external world Elsinore; or else the drawing-room of
must be added the internal worlds, like- the Marquise with its furniture and ac-
wise invisible and essential to the action: cessories: the cushion the Count will
the characters' feelings and thoughts kneel on, the log he will throw on the
that must be conveyed to us. All these fire, and the inside surface of the door
things are there, sometimes only vaguely and the window, not forgetting the two
present, sometimes acutely and obvious- characters who are in the room. That
ly so, actually present although invisible. is the stage cube. WVithin this cube are
To take another example, think of Tar- rendered concretely, physically, in flesh
tuffe who does not come on stage until and bones, in wood or in canvas, with
the third act of the play, but whose in- real or sham articles (it does not much
visible presence is none the less central matter which), everything that ought
from the very start. to be there according to the hypothesis.
And so, once more, a whole universe And then this cube of concrete, visible,
must exist before us, but conjured up and audible realities is opened on the
and supported by a central nucleus, by side facing the spectator; one side is
that small bit of realized reality, if I may removed. Now, it is this cube, this little
put it that way, which alone is brought open box with its contents, that must
before our eyes and whose punctum maintain in the mind's eye a clear pic-
saliens, the living and beating heart, the ture of all the rest; around it there will
active center, is the temporary grouping be constructed and arranged (more or
of the actors on the stage. less satisfactorily) the whole universe
But how can this total existence, this that remains potential and unrepre-
common life of the whole universe of sented.

the work, be obtained from that small This cube process entailing the com-
beating heart-from the central point plete bringing into concrete existence of
which we actually see in action, and a small, well-defined fragment, cut out
whose essential feature is a small constel- of the universe of the work has three
lation of characters? striking traits from the point of view of
At this point, two methods of proced- the theatre.

ure are possible (obviously, I am simpli- In the first place, its realism. Every-
fying and selecting the most obvious con- thing within the limits of the cube must
trasts in the purest and most extreme be incarnated or represented concretely
cases). -it may be more or less stylized, but it
The first method is the one I call the must be made apparent to the senses.
cube. (The Antoine type of stage-setting, where
Let us imagine that we have before us everything within the cube is genuine,
the entire universe of the work in its is merely the extreme limit of the genre.)

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THE CUBE AND THE SPHERE 13

This cube has a sharply defined form ranged in advance, and that the colon-
and precise limits; limits that are in- nade or the staircase is carefully calcu-
variable until a change of place and of lated to announce prophetically Mou-
setting presents us with another cube, net's tragic journey across the stage, or
cut out elsewhere in the universe with the pathos of Dorval's slide. That makes
which we are concerned. no difference. Everything must be adapt-
In the second place, its orientation or ed to an initial decision about the stag-
aspect. The little cube is open on the ing, to a preestablished architecture.
spectator's side. It faces him. It exerts Even the couch, placed center stage or
a force over him, a dynamic force in a diagonally in the corner, is a force of in-
horizontal plane pointing like an arrow ertia that blocks a point, that interferes
into the hall. If the actor turns his back with the free use of the available space,
on the audience for a moment, it is his and forces the characters to sit down
back that exerts the force during that there or walk around it. Hence the im-
moment. A dynamic back. It is this portance, the gravity of the initial ques-
back that becomes the arrow as long as tion: where to put the couch? The de-
the actor remains in that position; it cision will give the stage a certain form
which will itself be a force.
assumes a function on the stage, it takes
on a force directed outward into the And now let us pass on to the prin-
hall, and makes an impact on the spec- ciple of the sphere. As you will see, it
tator.
is entirely different. Its practical and
And finally, its third trait: its prede- aesthetic dynamism are not at all the
termined, confining architecture. This same (of course, I am simplifying once
little piece of universe is internally or- more, and taking an exaggeratedly pure
ganized, and the physical aspects of this and extreme case).
organization are imposed from start to No stage, no hall, no limits. Instead
finish on everything that happens with- of cutting out a predetermined frag-
in the box. The whole incident, the
ment in the world that is going to be set
comings and goings of the characters, all up, one seeks out its dynamic center, its
their stage business are constrained and beating heart, the spot where the action
given shape in advance according to the is emotionally at its keenest and most
stage setting adopted; and they will have exalted. This center is permitted to ir-
to yield to it, trying to turn it to the best radiate its force freely and without lim-
possible account. Such are the colon-
its. The actors or the group of actors
nades of the temple in Mounet-Sully's who incarnate this heart, this punctum
well-known piece of business: the blind
saliens, dynamic center of the universe
Oedipus feels his way along the columns
of the work, are officiating priests, magi-
one by one, until this maneuver brings
cians whose power extends outward in-
him face to face with the spectators, who
definitely into open space. The ficti-
then for the first time see the bleeding,
tious world of which they are the center
sightless eyes. Another example is Kitty
Bell's staircase (in Chatterton), down develops to dimensions limited only by
which the dying Marie Dorval used to the incantatory group's power to con-
let herself slide with a long scream. The jure up and create. They are the center,
and the circumference is nowhere-the
staircase is there from the very start, and
Dorval must come down it, some way point is to push it out into the infinite,
or other, unless she wants to die upstairs. taking the spectators themselves into the
Of course, it may be that all this is ar- limitless sphere.

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14 EDUCATIONAL THEATRE JOURNAL

No stage! Obviously, you need some ful withdraw to give the effect of a
utilitarian spot, some platform or other vaguer, more distant presence; later they
on which the actors can stand and move will return in a form whose realism mat-
about; you need some place, some build- ters very little, to take on more visibil-
ing, open like an amphitheatre or cov- ity, a more actual and localized presence,
ered over, in which to house them along as, under the collective magic spell, they
with the spectators; but whether this be are summoned to appear at the author's
the chancel of a cathedral, or a ring in command.

the circus, the courtyard of an Elizabe- If you want to find the basis for this
than inn, or a Russian-style circular the- kind of staging by pure, spell-binding
atre, the site of this theatrical theophany suggestion outside the theatre, think of
sets no limits, and in no way imposes its a child sitting in a chair, cracking a whip
form on what is happening. Its only over another chair. He finds this enough
function is to gather actors and spec- to play at being in a carriage, or at driv-
tators around the central point where ing a dogsled on some Arctic trail-a
the happenings that animate the uni- convention that is just as valid in the
verse of the work vibrate and beat most theatre provided we, the spectators, enter
intensely. into the game, and are tempted like
There is no scenery either, properly him (or rather like the actor) to act out
so-called, if we mean by scenery those a part whose main feature lies in the
box-sides on which are painted one-di- visual and verbal representation of the
mensional representations destined to be action. Or, to take an example closer
seen from a given point directly oppo- to the theatre, think of the clown who
site in the hall. Only what is needed to makes all the spectators look up by pre-
fix momentarily what will later become tending that the sleight-of-hand artist's
intensified and take on local significance pigeon is still flying in circles under the
in the world that is being suggested. canvas top. But within the history of
Why not simply a circular area on which the art of the theatre itself, think of the
are a step-ladder and two boxes, so long actor Garrick wringing tender tears from
as we are willing to take that box at an audience while cradling a pillow in
various moments for a chair or a chop- his arms (it is true that this happened in
ping block, a chest or a rock; and so a drawing room and not on the stage);
long as the step-ladder can be changed, and then making everyone cry out in
according to the moment and the dra- anguish when finally, with an impreca-
matic needs, into a tower, a mountain- tion against this illegitimate child, he
side, or a ghost? In the other system, throws the pillow out the window. As
that of the cube, all the beings of the a matter of fact, in this system, it is
world selected for representation neces- much more the actor's business than it is
sarily had one or the other of the follow- the property man's or the scene-painter's
ing modes of existence: either they were or the stage-hand's, to make a carrier-
real and visible in the box, within the pigeon fly across the sky (as in Mange-
limits of the section cut out, or else they ront-ils?), or to have Marco Polo's cara-
were immaterial and disincarnated in van file by on the horizon (as in Chris-
the invisible world outside these limits, tophe Colomb); or, to come back to our
in the wings. There are no wings here. original example, to make gray seas
At most there are "mansions" as in the break against the terrace at Elsinore.
medieval theatre, to which characters Now if this gradual transition by deli-
whose presence is momentarily less use- cate nuances from presence incarnate,

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THE CUBE AND THE SPHERE 15

through presence with a bare pretense the country-side roundabout, helps to


of representation, to immaterial pres- assimilate everyone into the dramatic
ence, is in striking contrast with the action. But even on the Italian-style
prime feature of the cubic system-the stage this principle of assimilation is
All or Nothing, i.e., really present or followed whenever there is an attempt
completely absent-there are also other to produce universal inclusiveness, to ob-
points of contrast. scure the outlines, either physically ac-
We do not find here, or at least we cording to methods of stage design (in
find the minimum of, face-to-face rela- which a Gordon Craig, for example, has
tionship, that arrow-like function of the pioneered) or, in a more general manner,
actor with reference to the spectator. As by any means that tends to destroy the
evidence of a structural framework for-
much as possible, the spectators are in
the cathedral or around the platform as mally bound to the stage locale. For
participants; they are, so to speak, in- after all, the conflict between the Italian-
vited along with the actor to enter the style stage and, let us say, the amphi-
universe that is being conjured up. They theatre or the circular platform-or for
are within the sphere whose periphery that matter any other analogous arrange-
pulsates and is infinitely expansive, a ment-is but an episode and a particu-
sphere whose walls can encompass them lar consequence of the choice made be-
or even go far beyond them. I was say- tween these two broad systems, both of
ing a short while ago in connection with which have many other aesthetic impli-
the cube, that if the actor turned his cations.

back on the public, his back assumed There is a third point of view from
a dramatic force. Here, not only does which this effort towards universal ex-

all of the actor's person have dramatic pansion of a cosmic theatrical nucleus
force, but his ideal would be to get the is in contrast with the preestablished
spectator's back to take on such a force. architectural constraints of the cubic
Let me explain what I mean: if, in Oedi- system, a point of view based on the
pus Rex, the actor who is playing Oedi- former's freedom to improvise and to
pus manages, during his tragic inquiry, move about. The ideal, the unattain-
to make the spectators feel with a little able ideal pursued by the Sphericals (if
shiver that Destiny is advancing on I may dare speak of them as though
Oedipus from behind their backs, then they constituted a race, a nation, or a
they are indeed inside the sphere! And sect), would be the absolute availability,
it doesn't much matter then, basically, by mere invocation and as though magic-
how the stage is laid out. I was speaking ally, of every manifestation momentarily
a moment ago about a round platform. needed, of every dimension to be tra-
Obviously, with the cubic principle versed or conquered; the absolute mal-
there is a tendency to organize the stage leability of theatrical material, in a per-
along the lines of the Italian theatre petual and unimpeded improvisation,
(which is its natural product); while the without any previous calculation or
sphere calls for a broader organization, curb, without "exquisite constraint" (if
one that is less rigid and more inclusive I may, in this connection, quote Valery,
as concerns the audience, like certain who was speaking only of versification
Russian stages-or like open-air per- -but after all, is there not a kind of
formances in amphitheatres or arenas. parallel between this problem, and the
Here the presence of the same real sky duel, among poets, between the partisans
over actors and spectators alike, and of of free verse and those of conventional

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16 EDUCATIONAL THEATRE JOURNAL

verse?). Failing the ability to realize this one to choose. Which side I approve?
dream, how do the "spherical minds" Whether I favor the cube or the sphere?
resolve the problem? Least successfully, Whether I am registered with the Spher-
by means of the unspecified locale, sup- ical party or the Cubist? Gulliver was
plemented either by imaginary or con- similarly called upon to become a Big-
ventional evocations, or by means of mo- Endian or a Small-Endian (I don't re-
bile drop settings; more recently, by member whether this involved the man-

settings involving projections, especially ner of using a spy glass or of breaking a


cinematographic projections (but in this soft-boiled egg).
case, the fatal presence of a screen, of Well, I absolutely refuse to take sides,
whatever kind, all too easily restores the on the grounds that both principles are
partition that the screen was intended equally valid conceptions of the theatre;
to eliminate); or finally-for want of a both equally authentic although anti-
revolving stage, which has never given thetical. It is up to the artist (whether
satisfactory results in this genre-by the author, actor, or producer, or all of
division of the set into compartments them working together as a team) to de-
(the original sets of the Cid!). This pro- cide how he is going to break the egg.
cess has been rejuvenated in America by And of course personalities must be tak-
drawing the attention of the audience en into consideration. One producer,
first to one compartment and then to essentially Apollo-like, will prefer by far
another with lighting effects, thus creat- an assignment that permits him to play
ing the impression that various points the clever architect; he will lay out in
of the universe of the work are being advance the dramatic or spectacular ac-
conjured up instantaneously and at will, tion of his team-mates upon the stage,
as they are needed in the dramatic un- through the strong and ingenious struc-
folding of the story, and according to its ture he creates in Olympian fashion at
particular pattern. But basically, a pro- the very start, by the very act of cutting
cess of almost pure suggestion, an incan- out his block of reality. Another, more
tatory magic resting on the power of the Dionysian, will yield to the intoxication
word, on the authority of the actor, of being the sum and substance of all
aided by a bare minimum of visual rep- the forces seething on the stage; he will
resentation, and consciously conceived seek to amplify the rhythm of such
as just an imaginative and evocatory pre- forces, to set in motion the beat of a
text (this magic can be quite close to so- freely expanding universe, and to direct
called abstract art)-such a suggestive a great evocatory rite in which theoret-
process, I say, still remains the best ically he has control even over the pub-
means (and the most economical!) of lic. Of course there are also other ques-
contributing to the freedom and to the tions, such as the desires of the specta-
flexibility that are the ideal or the dream tors, the search for novelty, and a fidelity
of this form of theatrical thinking. to established successes or to the nobil-

You see how very different are these ity of the past.
two broad conceptions of the art of the But all these factors can be examined

theatre, not only in their principles, but from a common point of view, and per-
also in their artistic aims, in their effects, haps integrated.
and in their aesthetic means. At least Both, as I was saying, are authentic
if they are studied in their pure state, and valid. The spherical principle, more
in extreme examples. primitive, more closely related to the
But you will now ask me which beginnings of the theatre-in certain re-

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THE CUBE AND THE SPHERE 17

spects, more "religious" (in the very determine (in advance) the steps of this
broadest sense of the term)-is perhaps ballet. How great then is the urge to
also the one that offers at the present expand all that, to break down all par-
moment most opportunities for new re- titions, to explode through space and
search, for expansion of the present descend into the midst of the spectators,
boundaries of the theatre towards new in an excitement carrying away actors
destinies. But the principle of the cube, and spectators alike in common exalta-
which is more solid, more classic (al- tion!

though it too can be broadened and di- Yes, but there is the alternative.
versified), more common in the theatre Pushed to extremes, the triumph of the
of the last three centuries, has on its spherical principle results in a carica-
side purity of structure, potential styli- ture. A tragedy is reduced to dance
zation, and a spectacular glamor, that movements by several choruses around
are susceptible of monumental elabora- an area in whose center a few officiating
tion. "priests" are intoning their lines or in-
As a matter of fact the art of the the- dulging in a kind of ceremonial chore-
atre has oscillated rhythmically, so to ography. They thus proceed, by an es-
speak, between the two tendencies, as sentially verbal theophany, to the evoca-
did the Greek theatre, for example, tion of a great legend, or of some myth
which used them alternately in the con- (of past ages or of future time)-to
trast between the chorus and the actors, which a thousand spectators, seated on
in the preeminence accorded first to the circular tiers, pay rapt attention, silent,
orchestra, then to the logeion. The de- immobile, docile in their hallucination.
fect of the cubic principle, or (if you are Or, if we are dealing with a comedy,
getting tired of hearing those words re- we find some kind of free and univer-

peated so frequently) of the principle of sal saturnalia, or the carnival-like im-


the architectonic organization of a se- provisations of communal merry-making.
lected piece of the universe of the work, What becomes of the truly theatrical in
presented in such a way that it faces the all this? Of the art of the stage, proper-
spectator-its defect, I say, is that it ly speaking? What a temptation it is
either limits itself too much to a mere, to say to those high priests of lyricism:
artless reproduction of a piece of reality, "Climb up on the platform, or, if that
viewed as though through a keyhole; or is beneath your dignity, delegate some
else, if it stylizes and arranges, it tends of your henchmen who won't disdain
little by little to fall into excesses of the to get up on the stage in front of us
spectacular that some associate with the and let themselves go-in actions as
"movies." The box is compressed onto well as in words, with pantomime as
a narrow stage on which three or four well as with settings!" Or to tell that
people in front of a backdrop face the life-of-the-party at the carnival: "Come
public and talk, then change their places out of the crowd; get up on those boards
kaleidoscopically and start talking again and show us what you can do-as an
from new places, and so on until all artist!" Now was it not by just such a
the combinations of places have been selective process that the theatre was
exhausted! Meanwhile, at long, equal born and that it constantly rises anew
intervals, four or five times in all, the out of its religious or socially collective
shape and color of the box are changed. origins? Isn't this return to the cube
And the central location of the divan, from the sphere a technical reconstruc-
or the staircase, or the statue of Apollo, tion of the development of the theatre?

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18 EDUCATIONAL THEATRE JOURNAL

And so the true life of the theatre sable to us; and also a kind of internal
oscillates between these two opposite presence that is equally useful and per-
poles; it quickens and draws enthusiasm haps fills a greater void in our existence.
from their struggle, from their double And the triumph of theatrical art is the
and contrasting impulses, from the ever- moment when there begins to grow
lasting nostalgia these two extremes have around the small architectonic struc-
for each other-neither of them ever ture facing the audience a presence, an
completely triumphant, for then the the- existence-one that swells, dilates, be-
atre would die. comes more and more vast, more and
This basic discrepancy, this double more cosmic, and that finally carries
principle (or alternating temptation), away high-priests and audience alike in
seems to me of the very essence of the a whirlwind, to a new universe conjured
theatre. And that is the theme that I up and imposed by the magic act of art.
submit to you for discussion. If, in order If I had to become specific about ques-
to shorten the distance between these tions of technique and stage structure,
two extremes, it seemed necessary to I would say that the best theatre was
sketch out the outlines of a possible syn- the one that put the fewest obstacles in
thesis, I should say that the real theatri- the way of the following transition: a
cal sequence, or at least the most natur- gradual evolution in which the action
al and effective, is to start with the cube, was first presented in front of an audi-
and to have it burst, abruptly or grad- ence on a shallow stage, then by progres-
ually, into the sphere. The great ad- sive stages (corresponding to important
vantage of the cube is that its stage ar- moments in the play) was broadened.
rangement and the nature of its open- Ultimately it might include a step-by-
ing scenes arouse the interest of the spec- step descent into the very midst of the
tators at the very beginning, before they spectators, until they were finally envel-
come under the spell of the drama prop- oped, and were merged with the players
er. The spherical principle requires that in a common act of artistic creation.

the audience be spell-bound from the But why specify? Each work has its
very start, yet it is difficult to seize the own particular way of blossoming forth.
spectator's attention immediately and The basic need is for a microcosm, ar-
wholly unless a measure of readiness has chitecturally organized and rich with all
been built up in him beforehand, in the power of form, but aiming at the
some way. But is it not one of the finest spectator an action that keeps opening,
and most complete artistic triumphs to and conquering, and expanding into
succeed sooner or later in casting this universal existence. At any rate, this
collective spell, in registering this total gradual transformation of a microcosm
presence of the universe of the work- into a macrocosm is certainly the su-
a presence that finally pervades the en- preme act of the art of the theatre, an
tire audience and permits it to enter in- act that no other art permits with quite
to communion? This is a quasi-religious so much breadth. For the theatre alone
communion, as many have shown. permits the existence-half-concrete, yet
The reason is that the same is true of half-abstract, half-perceptible to the
art, after all, as of reality: we know very senses, yet half-hallucinatory-of a uni-
well that man is at once in the world, verse in all its dimensions and all its
and looking out on the world. In all art emotional force; and it is this very in-
as in all reality, there is a kind of ex- stant of total existence that constitutes
ternal presence, in front of us, indispen- true theatre, theatre in its highest form.

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