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WSWS : Arts
Review : Theatre
McKinsey Is Coming
A feeble warning to the German business and political establishment
by playwright Rolf Hochhuth
By Ulrich Rippert
9 March 2004
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At the conclusion of five short acts, the flag of the European
Union is burning on stage and a demonstrator shouts: A lack
of imagination and submissiveness towards our master, the US,
has led us Europeans to copy their star-spangled banner. Here
too in Europe, profit has now become our only god. The curtain
falls.
The premiere of Rolf Hochhuths new play, McKinsey
Is Coming, had been eagerly awaited, and the theatre in Brandenburga
small town with the same name as the depressed state surrounding
Berlinwas packed to the last seat. During the event, no
scandal materialised. The biggest German bank, Deutsche Bank,
had long since withdrawn its threat to bring a lawsuit against
Hochhuth for a supposed appeal to murder bank chairman Josef Ackermann.
Director Oliver Munks had duly allowed the incriminating language,
including calls for a Kalashnikov, to be spoken in a scene involving
persons in an advanced state of vodka delirium.
It is, of course, to be welcomed when a well-known author (Hochhuths
best-known work in the English-speaking world is The Deputy,
a denunciation of Pope Pius XIIs role in the persecution
of the Jews) addresses one of the most pressing social issues
and denounces the horrendous degree of inequality characterising
present-day society. This is a refreshing development, given that
modern theatre is all too often marked by self-indulgence and
mawkish sentimentality. Regrettably, however, the political content
of this didactic piece of theatre remains very threadbare.
The play presents facts and figures in newspaper style, while
failing to rise above the level of an editorial piece. Before
the curtain goes up, an actor reads bits of news from the latest
edition of the conservative Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung,
all the while improvising as he comments on certain news items.
Next, statistics are fired off in the course of a conversation
between judge Kurt of the Constitutional Court and Hilde Zumbusch,
who has just founded a political party of the unemployed. The
year before last, the Deutsche Bank made a net profit of 9.4
billionan absolute record in its 130-year historywhile
at the same time sacking 11,000 employees. We learn that Deutsche
Bank chairman Josef Ackermann earns an annual salary of 6.95
million and is planning more redundancies.
The play also points out that as the takeover of Chrysler was
occurring, the Daimler executives raised their salaries from 2.5
million to 15.5 million400 times the wage of an average
worker.
Overall, however, the plays dialogue lacks new ideas
or at least interesting formulations, with a few exceptions, such
as Hildes paraphrasing of Voltaires statement that
he would rather be ruled by one lion than by 200 rats. These rare
moments make the rest of the narrative appear all the thinner.
In the second act, two recently sacked female workers talk
in front of their lockers. While they dont, as Hochhuths
stage direction would have it, emerge from the shower room undressed,
they wear only underwear and proceed to change in front of the
audiencemore naked facts. They read to each other short
news stories frompredictablyGermanys main daily
tabloid, the Bild newspaper, and complain about the corruption
of their union convenor, who, with the legal guarantee of job
security, toes the line of the boss. The comrade of the
bosses, just like his chancellor!
One gets the impression that both playwright and director share
the conviction that a dialogue between workers only appears realistic
if it is as superficial and banal as possible, and spoken in a
broad dialect. The same applies to the entire play. There are
no characters with any depth, no human beings shown with their
diverse facets and contradictions. The bosses and the managers
are depicted as nothing other than brutal, selfish, cruel and
arrogant. The workers, on the other hand, are purely victims,
unable to defend themselves, until one of them just cannot take
any more: he conspires with some others and runs amok.
The third act is taken up by a verbal ideological duel between
the social-reformist variant of capitalism introduced in West
Germany after 1945, Rhine capitalism, and so-called
predatory capitalism. The former is represented by
an aging CEO, who eventually quits his job, and the latter by
the boss of a transnational tobacco corporation. Next, we see
three workers who have been laid off and degraded get drunk and
call for a Kalashnikov while bewailing their own lack of resolve
and consistency.
Finally, the spokeswoman of the unemployed, Hilde Zumbusch,
demands of the Constitutional Court that the right to work be
included in the constitution. In this, she is supported by a student
demonstration carrying Attac banners with the call
for resistance. In the background, we see film material of street
battles in Florence and Genoa.
Before the curtain comes down for good, an actor reads out
the warning to Josef Ackermann who never showed the least
scruple, as he skilfully and murderously handled his scalpel carrying
out redundancies. The warning is read out in a deliberately
sober manner, and its source is given: Schleyer, Ponto,
Herrhausena warning. (Employers Association
President Hanns-Martin Schleyer, Dresdner Bank Chairman Jürgen
Ponto and Deutsche Bank Chairman Alfred Herrhausen were murdered
by the terrorist group Red Army Faction in the 1970s
and 1980s.)
The most striking feature of this play is the stark contrast
between the authors self-confident claim to stand in the
tradition of the Enlightenment and his inability to come anywhere
near these standards. The play quotes no less a person than Hegel:
What is known is not yet understood. But then the
author presents us only with things that we already know and exhibits
no understanding.
More than half a century has passed since the authors of the
West German post-war constitution, in the oft-quoted article 14,
proclaimed that property must be put to a socially responsible
use. Since then, hundreds of judicial amendments have proven that
it is social reality that determines legal regulations, and not
the other way round. Still, today, when social and political reality
makes a mockery of all the old nostrums to the effect that social
responsibility is bound up with the ownership of property, Hochhuth
comes along proclaiming that one of the biggest social problemsthe
problem of unemploymentcould be solved if only the right
to work were included in the constitution!
Not only in its perspective, but also in its form, is the play
oriented towards the past, as if nothing had changed since the
days of Brecht, Piscator and agit-prop.
Maybe an important insight can be gained from precisely these
weaknesses. Intellectually and artistically, Rolf Hochhuth embodies
an important section of the protest generation of the 1960s. He
was barely 15 years old when Nazi Germany collapsed and the political
elite of this country proceeded to act as if nothing much had
happened. His first play, The DeputyA Christian Tragedy,
denounced the collaboration of the Catholic Church with the Nazis.
Directed by Erwin Piscator, it became a world success.
But at that time, it was not very difficult to create a scandal.
One simply had to lift just a little corner of the rug under which
the Nazi crimes had been swept in Germany. Fifteen years later,
Hochhuths play Jurists was directly bound up with
the resignation of Hans Filbinger as minister president of the
southern West German state of Baden-Württemberg. As a judge
under the Nazi regime, Filbinger had pronounced death sentences
against Wehrmacht soldiers even after the German capitulation.
Shortly afterwards, Hochhuth wrote Physicians, which
denounced the pharmaceutical industry for sacrificing human lives
for the sake of profit. This play was awarded the prestigious
literature prize of the city of Munich. Hochhuth has always taken
up explosive political issues, and he has invariably tried to
provoke his audience. But he has never gone beyond the limits
of mere protest.
Like many others of his generation, Hochhuth was influenced
by ideas and conceptions that originated with the Frankfurt school
of philosophers such as Theodor W. Adorno and Max Horkheimer.
While they had adopted parts of the Marxist critique of society,
they rejected the essence of the perspective of socialism: the
transformation of society by the conscious action of a politically
and culturally educated working class.
After the experience of fascism, Horkheimer and Adorno wrote
in their key work, Dialectics of Enlightenment: The
impotence of the worker is not merely a stratagem of the rulers,
but the logical fate of the industrial society. A large
part of their subsequent work was devoted to substantiating this
pessimistic outlook.
These positions led to the emergence of a political orientation
that was marked by social reformism at one pole and terrorism
at the other. While these positions appear to contradict each
other, they share in common an inability to acknowledge any social
force capable of bringing about a fundamental change of society.
It was this standpoint that strongly influenced Hochhuth. Even
if he realised that the deepening and irrevocable decay of capitalist
society was the source of the social ills he described, and that
behind individual business and political tyrants was a tyrannical
system, the only way he could possibly conceive of revolution
was as terrorist violence and chaos, not as a politically conscious
act of the working people.
He never saw his own task as that of preparing a revolutionary
transformation of society. Rather, his repeated threats of a revolution
were intended to bring the ruling elite to their senses. But the
mere facts and figures contained in his latest play illustrate
the failure of this perspective. Hence the bad aftertaste left
when the curtain comes down.
Mere protest combined with a mishmash of agit-prop theatrical
techniquewhich, in its heyday, was always aimed at least
at political educationis inadequate to deal with the contemporary
world. Facts and figures cannot transform a liberals nightmare
scenario into a viable, coherent political perspective.
Indeed, the growing social tensions that in reality beset Europe
and elsewhere require a conscientious assessment of the limited
political conceptions that have characterised protest movements
over the past decades and that lie at the heart of this theatre
piece.
From this point of view, it is possible to learn something
from Hochhuths polemic against Ackermann and company.
See Also:
Bestiality, humanity
and servility : How Jürgen Habermas defends the Balkan war
[5 June 1999]
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