The Crucible, March 7, 2017
S6 and S7 are going to see The American Theatre Group of Brussels perform Arthur Miller's play 'The Crucible' next Tuesday night.
http://www.theatreinbrussels.com/listings/blog/atc-the-crucible-7th-11th-of-march/
Here is a short summary of the play. Read it in advance and it should help you to understand and enjoy the performance a little more on the night.
The
Crucible
By Arthur
Miller
Plot
Overview
In the
Puritan New England town of Salem, Massachusetts, a group of girls goes dancing
in the forest with a black slave named Tituba. While dancing, they are caught
by the local minister, Reverend Parris. One of the girls, Parris’s daughter
Betty, falls into a coma-like state. A crowd gathers in the Parris home while
rumors of witchcraft fill the town. Having sent for Reverend Hale, an expert on
witchcraft, Parris questions Abigail Williams, the girls’ ringleader, about the
events that took place in the forest. Abigail, who is Parris’s niece and ward,
admits to doing nothing beyond “dancing.”
While
Parris tries to calm the crowd that has gathered in his home, Abigail talks to
some of the other girls, telling them not to admit to anything. John Proctor, a
local farmer, then enters and talks to Abigail alone. Unbeknownst to anyone
else in the town, while working in Proctor’s home the previous year she engaged
in an affair with him, which led to her being fired by his wife, Elizabeth.
Abigail still desires Proctor, but he fends her off and tells her to end her
foolishness with the girls.
Betty wakes
up and begins screaming. Much of the crowd rushes upstairs and gathers in her
bedroom, arguing over whether she is bewitched. A separate argument between
Proctor, Parris, the argumentative Giles Corey, and the wealthy Thomas Putnam
soon ensues. This dispute centers on money and land deeds, and it suggests that
deep fault lines run through the Salem community. As the men argue, Reverend
Hale arrives and examines Betty, while Proctor departs. Hale quizzes Abigail
about the girls’ activities in the forest, grows suspicious of her behavior,
and demands to speak to Tituba. After Parris and Hale interrogate her for a
brief time, Tituba confesses to communing with the devil, and she hysterically
accuses various townsfolk of consorting with the devil. Suddenly, Abigail joins
her, confessing to having seen the devil conspiring and cavorting with other
townspeople. Betty joins them in naming witches, and the crowd is thrown into
an uproar.
A week
later, alone in their farmhouse outside of town, John and Elizabeth Proctor
discuss the ongoing trials and the escalating number of townsfolk who have been
accused of being witches. Elizabeth urges her husband to denounce Abigail as a
fraud; he refuses, and she becomes jealous, accusing him of still harboring
feelings for her. Mary Warren, their servant and one of Abigail’s circle,
returns from Salem with news that Elizabeth has been accused of witchcraft but
the court did not pursue the accusation. Mary is sent up to bed, and John and
Elizabeth continue their argument, only to be interrupted by a visit from
Reverend Hale. While they discuss matters, Giles Corey and Francis Nurse come
to the Proctor home with news that their wives have been arrested. Officers of
the court suddenly arrive and arrest Elizabeth. After they have taken her,
Proctor browbeats Mary, insisting that she must go to Salem and expose Abigail
and the other girls as frauds.
The next
day, Proctor brings Mary to court and tells Judge Danforth that she will
testify that the girls are lying. Danforth is suspicious of Proctor’s motives
and tells Proctor, truthfully, that Elizabeth is pregnant and will be spared
for a time. Proctor persists in his charge, convincing Danforth to allow Mary
to testify. Mary tells the court that the girls are lying. When the girls are
brought in, they turn the tables by accusing Mary of bewitching them. Furious,
Proctor confesses his affair with Abigail and accuses her of being motivated by
jealousy of his wife. To test Proctor’s claim, Danforth summons Elizabeth and
asks her if Proctor has been unfaithful to her. Despite her natural honesty,
she lies to protect Proctor’s honor, and Danforth denounces Proctor as a liar.
Meanwhile, Abigail and the girls again pretend that Mary is bewitching them,
and Mary breaks down and accuses Proctor of being a witch. Proctor rages
against her and against the court. He is arrested, and Hale quits the
proceedings.
The summer
passes and autumn arrives. The witch trials have caused unrest in neighboring
towns, and Danforth grows nervous. Abigail has run away, taking all of Parris’s
money with her. Hale, who has lost faith in the court, begs the accused witches
to confess falsely in order to save their lives, but they refuse. Danforth,
however, has an idea: he asks Elizabeth to talk John into confessing, and she
agrees. Conflicted, but desiring to live, John agrees to confess, and the
officers of the court rejoice. But he refuses to incriminate anyone else, and
when the court insists that the confession must be made public, Proctor grows
angry, tears it up, and retracts his admission of guilt. Despite Hale’s
desperate pleas, Proctor goes to the gallows with the others, and the witch
trials reach their awful conclusion.
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