Carousel
(1945) is a Rodgers and Hammerstein classic. The music is memorable, the dance
sequences heartwarming. Too bad the storyline and characters are STUPID.
From my understanding Carousel is one of the first musicals
about domestic violence yet a prime example of how horrible Rodgers and
Hammerstein are at tackling controversial issues. However its main character,
or anti-hero, Billy Bigelow, is the greatest victim because the writers put him
into situations where he is doomed to fail because society just works that way.
Their manipulations go straight
down to his gender and make his life terrible simply because he’s a guy. Billy
is this flirtatious carousel barker that is quite possibly banging his dead
boss’s promiscuous wife Mrs. Mullin and sets his sights on millworker Julie
Jordan. Billy touches Julie and Mullin kicks her off the carousel. Now we can
say that Billy broke the law because back then men weren’t allowed to touch
women, and still aren’t really, but it’s safe to say that the catalyst for Mrs.
Mullin’s actions is that she is just a jealous bitch. Billy argues with Mrs.
Mullin and gets fired. Mullin returns to the story every so often to seduce him
back but Billy refuses Mrs. Mullin because he is aware of her sexual intentions
and is a “respectable married man” now - that hits his wife. This is where
gender problems really take off. Billy marries Julie and stresses out because
he’s jobless and can’t support his family. Why they got married then is beyond
comprehension. It’s stated throughout that he hit Julie once out of frustration
about this and everybody makes a big deal out of it, for good reason.
Men were always breadwinners, so
his concern makes sense. Julie reveals to him that she’s pregnant with their
kid and at the end of Act 1 he has this soliloquy song thinking about his
future child. Once it dawns on him that he could have a daughter he starts to
panic again, suggesting the idea that women need men to take care of them. He
doesn’t seem to have any other skill besides his barker job with the ONE
carousal in the area, so what else is he supposed to do? Rob someone?
That’s exactly what he and his
sailor pal Jigger Craigin decide to do.
Thanks writers. That’s one point
against you.
Another reason why it’s evident
that these writers hate Billy so much is that Billy Bigelow is a New Yorker
with attitude. They throw Billy’s New Yorker personality into a Maine
population where everyone else is singing and dancing about how “June is bustin’
out all over.” Chances are if this musical were set in New York Billy wouldn’t
stand out so much as a bad guy but rather blend in more with other people like
him. Billy comes across as a jerk because the writers decided to make him
represent the aggressive New York stereotype in a setting where everyone else
does not.
After an agonizingly long and unnecessary
group musical number opens up the second act about what a wonderful clambake
they just had, Billy and Jigger try to pull off their heist. It goes wrong and
Billy decides that instead of going to jail where he cannot look after his
daughter, he stabs himself to death because apparently him DEAD would help her
more. He goes to Purgatory and though Billy really doesn’t give a crap the
Starkeeper decides to help him gain entrance into Heaven. The key is to get his
daughter Louise, who is now fifteen, to accept a star he gives her and then he’s
good. So that’s all it took to get into Heaven back then? Billy agrees and
returns to Earth as a ghost.
Don’t worry. He screws this up
too. He tries to talk to Louise and she freaks out so he slaps her. Julie comes
out because she hears her daughter screaming. Then Louise states the most
insulting line in the history of insulting musical lines: “Is it possible that
when he hit me, it felt like a kiss?”
No. No it is not. That is a
terrible lesson. But of course Julie stupidly justifies her daughter’s dumb
conclusion by responding “Yes.”
It turns out that the kid has been
ostracized because nobody liked her father. Gee, that’s shocking. So Billy
shows up at her graduation and whispers encouragement. Oh and Julie accepted
the star that Billy left on her front porch, so he’s all clear for Heaven now.
Yay.
Writers, Billy did nothing to
redeem himself so stop acting like he accomplished something. Not only do the
writers set Billy up for disaster, they force him to make stupid decisions
because of the stupid scenarios they create. He fails again and again and never
fixes anything. The best part is he is not somebody we root for, but yet that
is the perceived intention for the character.
But that’s okay. The music is
still nice.
I haven't heard of this play before, but after reading your review I can see why it's so offensive, especially toward women. I'm shocked that there actually is the line “Is it possible that when he hit me, it felt like a kiss?” That's basically saying men know what they're doing and women should do as they're told. Domestic violence is a sensitive issue, but the way Rodgers and Hammerstein handle it only personifies the traditional archetypes of men vs. women that where so prevalent in the 40's-50's. It could have been progressive and shown a woman's point of view. Worse still is that Billy didn't do anything to show that he's a "good" person. Maybe it's supposed to be a joke that men get what they want no matter what, but being a guy myself, I know that's false.
ReplyDeleteGood analysis.
ReplyDeleteThank you very much. :)
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