18 BL: Fascist Mass Spectacle Author(s): Jeffrey T. Schnapp Source: Representations, No. 43 (Summer, 1993), pp. 89-125 Published by: University of California Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2928734 . Accessed: 28/10/2013 04:14 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . University of California Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Representations. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions JEFFREY T. SCHNAPP 18 BL: Fascist Mass Spectacle Moscow OR ROME? The question was posed withurgencythroughout the 1920s and 1930s. Socialistpamphleteersdrew up diagrams to illustrate the starkchoice confrontingall of humankind:"Fascismor Communism; Rome or Moscow."' Fascistsyndicalistslike Sergio Pannunzio envisionedcontemporary historyas a clash betweenthe twosecularchurchesthathad arisenafterthedeath of God: the fascist"religionof spirit"and the Bolshevist"religionof matter."2 Others formulatedthe dilemma less as a choice between Rome or Moscow than betweenRome and Moscow versusthe old Europe: ofhistory. Modernrevolution is bornin these Italyand Russia... twospatialunfoldings The firstgreatin the spiritualgrandeurof itsuniversalmission.The gigantictheaters. secondgreatinthehumangrandeurofitsmanypeoples.The politicalprocessthatbegan in 1789and extendedintothecapitalist phase,nowexplodesand reachesitsrevolutionary and thefresh ofRomancivilization epilogue,fusinginequalmeasuretheenduringvitality ofMoscow'santi-civilization.3 and primitive vitality A widespread convictionsubtends these views: namely,that liberal democracy had run its fullcourse in history.Industrializationhad ensured the triumphof a new mass societyand, so manybelieved,the demise of all liberal formsof social, cultural, political,and economic organization. The bourgeois individual, who once stood at the centerof the universeof liberaldemocracy,had been buried in the trenchesof WorldWar I. The question facinghumankindwas, therefore,one of succession.What sort of being would take the place of the bourgeois subject? What sortof mass societywould arise out of the trenches'mud? Would the identityof the new subject and societybe anchored in the concept of class or in that of the nation? Would theircharacterbe utopian, utilitarian,and collectivist;or instead mythical,aesthetic,and individualist?Did all roads lead to Moscow or instead to Rome? withinwhicha new mass subject could be shaped Culture was the laboratory and new formsof mass organizationtestedout. I use the metaphorof the "laboratory"advisedly,not only because it pervades the culturaldebates of the 1920s and 1930s, fromthe Proletkultto the Bauhaus, but also because it underscores the inaugural role assigned by both revolutionsto cultural artifacts.Works of fascistor communistart were conceived not merelyas instrumentsof propaganda; theywere to serve as messengersfromthe future,relaysfromthe imagiREPRESENTATIONS 43 * Summer 1993 (C THE REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions OF CALIFORNIA 89 nary to the real, activatingwithin the collective'smind and body the entire And since the complex of the revolution'svalues yetto befullyrealizedin history. values in question encompassed everyarea of human activity-fromworkto leisure,frompoliticsto ethicsto individualpsychologyto a regimeof bodilyhygiene and exercise-culture was envisaged in total,even totalitarian,terms. artof choice, much as it had From the startthe theaterwas the revolutionists' been during the French Revolution.Due to its value as a tool for mobilizingan art form,and to illiteratepopulation, to its statusas the preeminentfin de sitecle itspotentialas a totalspectacleblendingall of the arts,the theaterunderwentan explosion in the years followingthe October Revolution.Hundreds of amateur and professionalclubs sprang up throughoutRussia and performedagitprop works,leading ViktorShklovskyto remarkwrylythat"drama circles... are propagatinglike protozoa. Not lack of fuelnor lack of food nor the Entente-nothing can stop theirgrowth."4Thousands of actors performedin open-air mass spectaclesrecreatingthe eventsof the revolution;workertheatersproliferatedunder the guidance of Alexander Bogdanov's Proletkult;and directorssuch as Vsevolod Meyerholdproclaimeda "TheatricalOctober,"launchinga war againstthe bourgeois theateras millionsstarvedand Russia battledthroughitsbittercivilwar.By 1920, it seemed to Shklovskythat "all Russia is acting; some kind of elemental processis takingplace wherethe livingfabricof lifeis being transformedintothe of everydaylifewas understood The purpose of thistheatricalization theatrical."5 as once and utilitarian.Through the revotheorists at utopian by contemporary lutionarytheateritwas hoped that"a new generationof harmoniouslydeveloped individuals"would be forged.6 Fascismwas in itsinfancyas Russia decked itselfout as a livingstage. Originatingfromwithinthe fold of socialism,the fascistmovementemerged in 1919 and war vetout of an ill-definedgroupingof nationalists,irredentists,futurists, erans,drawn togetherbytheiroppositionto Italy'sparliamentarianregime,to its politicsof accommodationvis 'a vis a wave of strikesand factoryoccupations,and to the Treatyof Versailles.Althoughsmall,the movementwas able to seize state power in 1922. But it was not untilthe late 1920s thatfascism's"culturalrevolution" trulybegan: first,because Mussolinihad ruled over the old parliamentary stateuntil 1925, when his dictatorshipwas declared; second, because fascismwas an inherentlyunstableideological formation.Fascismdid not have at itsdisposal a complete philosophical systemlike that provided by Marxism-Leninismas it struggledto address such fundamentalconflictsas thosebetweenitspopulistand elitistcurrentsor betweenitscultof heroic individualismand itsinstitutionalcall to order. Rather,fascismwas littlemore than a complex of ethical principles, glue. Unable to credos, and aversions,held togetherby a rhetorical-aesthetic to the its of recourse utopias of theory resolve the question of identitybymeans and technology,haunted byitsown belatednesswithrespectto itsBolshevikrival, fascismrequired (and attemptedto stimulatethrough the lavish patronage of 90 REPRESENTATIONS This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 1. Ferdinando Gatteschi,poster for18 BL, 1934. Posted throughout Florence and reproduced in newspapersand on the cover this of Gioventfifascista, postershows the spectacle's protagonistrollingover a line of barbed wire earlyin act 1. In later printingsthe slogan "Credere, Obbedire, Combattere"("Believe, Obey, Fight")was handwrittenover te truck'sradiator; the inscription"A. Blasetti Director"took the place of the acronym"G.U.F." FIGURE t-I / O / - -/\ ---y X _ t v+(Gruppi i i z - _ x Universitari Fascisti).Source: Blasetti Archive. modern art) "an aestheticoverproduction-asurfeitof Fascistsigns,images, slogans, books, and buildings-in order to compensate for,fillin, and cover up its unstable ideological core."7This is one reason whythe fascistregime,despite its authoritarianism,tended towardan "eclecticismof the spirit"in itsculturalpolicies, encouraging a proliferationof competingformulationsof fascistmodernity, among whichMussolini feltfreeto choose as a functionof circumstance.8 This essay examines one such formulation:an experimentalmass spectacle thatwas engaged both in negotiatingthe fascistrevolution'srelationto itsSoviet predecessor and in forgingan alternativeto Bolshevism'smechanicalmass subject-the fascistideal of 'tmetallizedman." Entitled18 BL (afterthe model name the spectacle was the featuredeventof the 1934 Littoof its truck-protagonist), riali Della Cultura e dell'Arte, fascism'syouthOlympicsof art and culture (fig. 1).9The collaborativecreationof seven young writersand a filmdirector,18 BL trucks,eight bulldozers,four fieldbrought togethertwo thousand actors,fifty and machine-gunbatteries,ten fieldradio stations,and six photoelectricbrigades in a stylizedSoviet-stylerepresentationof the fascistrevolution'spast, present, 18BL This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 91 and future.But howevertitanicitsscale, itsambitionswere even greater:to institute a theaterof the future,a modern theaterofand forthe masses that would end, once and for all, the crisisof the bourgeois theater.Against the bourgeois stage'semphasis on individualpsychology,itsreliance on the starsystem,and its maintenance of partition between interior and exterior forms of spectacle (between the theater'sprivatedramas and the state'spublic acts of self-display), 18 BL elaborated a totalconceptof spectaclefounded on fascism'swholesale theatricalizationof Italian life.Moreover,it aspired to fashiona distinctivemass hero forthe new mass theater:a being cast in the image of the nation'sleader, at once individualized and mass produced; a subject identifiedwith the transnational values of industrialism,as well as withnew image and voice technologies,but in whom the principleof the nationcould be modernizedand preserved.It created, in short,a mass protagonistwho could representthe fascistrevolution'scontinuitieswithits Bolshevikdouble but who, in so doing, could also embody the distinctivefascistethos of constant exertion and fatigue endured by means of individualand collectivediscipline. 18 BL was but one of a number of interlockingtheatricalinitiativesundertaken in early 1930s Italy,so I begin byexaminingthe event'sbroader context.I then turnto the spectacleitself,to itsorganization,realization,and failure,concluding withsome remarkson fascistcultureas a whole. I wish to insistfromthe outset,however,thatmyobjectof analysishere cannot be designated as the "official theaterof the regime."A diversityof theaterscoexisted during the 1930s, some traditionalin character,some avant-garde,few"propagandistic"in the ordinary sense. No simple correlationexists,therefore,between state sponsorship and explicitpoliticalcontent.Those fewmajor worksthat,like 18 BL, endeavored to devise specificallyfascistformsof theaterhave generallybeen dismissedeither as "kitsch"or as expressionsof artisticbad faith. I view the effortto dissectworkslike 18 BL and to reconstructthe complex social choreographyof theirstagingas a challenge to the modes of writingculturalhistorythathave prevailedin thestudyof Italian fascism.For reasons having claims,the first to do withthe urgentneed to dismantlefascism'scultural-political generationof post-warculturalhistorianswas averse to an enterpriseof thissort. thisgenerationtookas axiomaticBenedetto Whetherliberalor Marxist-affiliated, Croce's notion, articulatedin the 1925 "Manifestoof the Anti-FascistIntellectuals," that fascismand culture were diametricallyopposed. Its historiography writing,turned a blind eye to the thereforeemphasized apoliticalor anti-fascist political commitmentsof writerssuch as Giuseppe Ungarettiand Luigi Pirandello, and elaborated thefictionthatneorealism-the characteristicculturalform of the 1930s and 1940s-represented a revoltagainst the unrealityand manipulationsof the fascistepoch. Althoughitsfindingswere sometimesvaluable, this historiographicalmodel was graduallydisplaced by more complex second- and histhird-generationapproaches that addressed a question the first-generation 92 REPRESENTATIONS This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions torianseithercould or would not: namely,How did Mussolini'sregime maintain the support of the Italian populace duringa period of over two decades? Terror and censorshipwere inadequate responses; so, inspiredby the ground-breaking work of historians such as Renzo de Felice, "consensus"-orientedhistorians of the realms of turned theirattentionto the fasciststate'sinstrumentalization media, culture,intellectualinquiry,and leisure. "Consensus" studies have revolutionizedthe studyof fascistculturalpolitics.Yet,due to an inherentbias toward mattersof policyand a desire to provide a unified,top-downperspectiveon fascistculture,theytend to shyaway fromsustained engagementswithfascistaestheticartifacts,withthe resultthatthe latterstillremain largelyunread. I believe thatit is preciselythissort of analysisof the fascistimaginarythat mustnow be undertakenin the pursuitof a complementary,as it were "lateral," perspectiveon the culturalhistoryof the fascistdecades. Culturalhistorians,that is, need to look beyond the broad descriptivetaxonomies that have heretofore occupied them to bring to bear a broader set of methodologicaltools (psychoanalysis,reception theory,and so on) on the reading of the period's aesthetic production.In so doing, theirtaskwillbe twofold:on the one hand, to propose new periodizations that help to account for the notable continuitiesbetween aestheticproduction;on the other fascist-periodcultureand pre-and post-fascist hand, to attend to the deeper question of how and whya generationof writers and artists,as well as a substantialsegmentof theiraudience, not onlyheard and gave heed to the regime's call to forge an authentic fascistculture but also expanded upon and reinventedthiscall, often transformingit into a personal calling. Fascism'sinterpellativesuccess in post-WorldWar I Italy,that is, points less to the efficacyof certainviolenttacticsand policyinitiativesor to the crisisof the liberalstatethan to the fact,well understoodbyGeorges Bataille,thatfascism elaborated a mythfar more powerfuland psychologicallyastute than that provided byeitheritsliberalor socialistrivals.'0While Mussolini'spolicyeffortshave been well described,it is only recentlythatthe persuasive effectsof thisrevolutionarymythor itsabilityto sustaina pluralityof competingculturalformulations has begun to .be accounted for in any detail." The event under consideration here, 18 BL, put forwardone distinctiveredactionof thisfascistmyth.Although influentialamong intellectualsin the heady atmosphereof the early 1930s, with itsdebates on the collectivenovel,rationalistarchitecture,and fascisttypography, thisversionwould prove less successfulin the long run. And thislack of success renders 18 BL all the more valuable a case studyof the uncertaintiesof fascism in the making.The first(and last) fascistexperimentwithSoviet-stylemass theaterwas manythingsto manypeople: to thefascistyouthorganizations,a training exercise; to itsdirectorand his supporters,a batteringram against culturalconservatives;to the theatercommunity,a solution to the crisis of the theater; to Mussolini'sstate,a potentialanswer to the vexingquestion of fascism's(cultural) identity.In thisessay,thisclusterof meaningsis explored. 18BL This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 93 Shklovsky'searlier-citedremark that the fabric of Russian life was being "transformedinto the theatrical"in the wake of the 1917 revolutioncould well be applied to fascistItaly.As never before,theatercame to permeate the fabric of Italian lifein the 1920s and 1930s, fromthe streetsto the public squares to the factoryfloorto the corridorsof Palazzo Venezia. Among the fascisthierarchs,no less than six ministersor Grand Council or Directoratememberswere involved with the theater: Enrico Corradini, author of Giulio Cesare;Roberto Farinacci, who penned a play entitled Redenzione;Galeazzo Cianno, foreign minister between 1936 and 1943 and author of La fortunadi Amleto;Cornelio di Marzio, creatorof Occhidi gufo;Alessandro Pavolini,futureMinisterof Popular Culture, author of Le fatalone;and, finally,Edmondo Rossoni, head of the fascistlabor unions and ministerof agriculturebetween 1935 and 1939, co-authorof II canto del lavoro,withmusical accompanimentprovidedby Pietro Mascagni. Never one to be outdone bymembersof his entourage,Benito Mussolinidabbled frequently in the contemporarytheater.During the 1930s he collaboratedwithGiovacchino Forzano on a trilogyof tragediesdepictingthe lives of Napoleon, Cavour, and (howevermodesttheirliterary JuliusCaesar.12 To theseexercisesin playwrighting value) one must add a vigorous participation in debates concerning state patronage of the theaterand opera.'3 The hierarchs'singular commitmentto the art of theater must be viewed against the backdrop of a widelyperceived and decried "crisisof the traditional theater": a crisisof inadequate facilities,of a diminishingcontemporaryrepertory,of a falteringstar system,and of audiences in decline due (or such at least was a widespread perception)to growingcompetitionfrommoviesand sporting events.It was as an expressionof the formercommitmentand in response to the latter crisis that a series of policy initiativescame about in the later 1920s, designed to achievethreeinterrelatedgoals: first,to absorbthe fragmentedworld of theaterinto the regime'scorporativestructures;second, to expand the traditional audience of theater,whether from the standpoint of topography or of social class,in order to forgea genuine mass and nationalaudience; and third,to alterand ideologicallyinflectthe wayin whichtheatricalworkswere delivered to thisnew audience. The firstof these aims was addressed via the creation of the Corporation of Spectacle in December 1930: a national entitybringingtogether individuals at all levels of the music,theater,and filmindustries.'4The second and the thirdobjectiveswere addressed via the creationof "philodramatic"associations,Theatrical Saturdays,Thespian Cars, and open-air festivals.Like the open-air festivals,"philodramatic"associations had preexisted the March on Rome, but it was under fascismthattheycame into theirown. They consistedin amateur drama clubs that,under the aegis of the fascistafter-workorganization, the Opera Nazionale Dopolavoro (OND), trained workersin the theaterarts.'5 Such clubs had been rare in the prefascistera, but by 1938 theynumbered over 2,000 and performedin 1,200 theatersall over Italy,in addition to which they 94 REPRESENTATIONS This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions staged 360 open-air performances before an audience of nearly 200,000 spectators. If the philodramatists'stagecraftremained for the most part traditional (embarrassinglyso in the eyes of fascistintellectuals),the intended intellectual horizons were hardly provincial.'6The juries of the annual philodramaticcontestsalwaysincluded major criticslike Silvio D'Amico, and the movement'sstandard referencemanual was authored byno less than Antonio Valente,one of the designers of the 1932 Exhibitionof the FascistRevolutionand inventorsof the Carri di Tespi. It called fora theatercast in the image of "our era of the masses": a theatersuited to the "incredulousand, in a way,atheisticspiritof the modern world"and founded not on individualprotagonists,but instead on an "aesthetics of thecompany."'17But beyondsuch qualitativeconsiderations,itis the sheer scale of the movementthatis striking.As earlyas 1931, the philodramatistsperformed 13,733 playsin a singleyear.By 1938 the numberof regularphilodramaticactors had surpassed 32,000, and the movementwas administering45 acting schools and 469 regional theaterlibraries.'8 To this mass mobilizationof amateur dramatistscorresponded initiatives focusedinsteadon the professionaltheater.The so-called"TheatricalSaturdays," a programof reduced-ratematineeperformancesheld in smallercities,reached over400,000 workersand peasantsin 1936 alone. But farmore telling,as regards the regime'sdeterminationto forgea nationalmass audience, were the Thespian travelingtheatersdesigned by Valente and Forzano. First Cars: state-of-the-art developed in the late 1920s, the Carri di Tespi were divided into foursquadrons, each withitsown companyof up to fourhundred actors,dancers, musicians,and staff.Three were dedicated to stagingplays; a fourthto operas.'9 For nearlyten years,thesefourcompaniescriss-crossedthepeninsulaeveryspringand summer, performingbeforesmall-townaudiences rangingin size fromtwoto fifteenthousand. Their 1937 schedule, for instance,took them over 10,000 miles,withthe drama cars performing124 timesbefore 170,000 spectatorsand the opera car performing75 timesbefore 430,000 spectators.The tours' immediate purpose was thatof bringingprovincialaudiences withinthe fold of Italian high culture. They aimed to furtherfascism's"spiritualand intellectualreclamation"of Italy and to propagate the nationallanguage "in thoseareas where dialectsstilldeform our marvelouslanguage."20 But on a deeper level, the medium was the true message. Mobile and modular,capable of rapid assemblyand disassemblybyteamsof technicians,featuring thebestin contemporarystageand lightingdesign,theThespian Cars functioned as vehiclesforfascistvalues.2' Their mere arrivalconstitutedan event,thanksto media coverage and to effortson the OND's part to coordinate transportationof rural workersto the show.Such expectationswould come to a head on the day of the performanceas the trucksrolled into the city'smain square, whereupon an army of technicianswould feverishlyset about the task of erectingcanvas and 18BL This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 95 steelarmatures.22Alwayswell attended,thispre-performance"show"was meant achieved throughcorporativeorganization.In the to put on displaytheefficiency words of Paolo Orano: ofworkis appliedwiththeutmostrigor.Everygesturehasa funcThe scientific discipline tionand is brief,resolute,firm.Hands and shouldersturntowardpieceswhoseposition oftubesrisessolidlyup thescaffolding Suddenly, is knownprecisely. in theconstruction he livesand mastersthesectorof materialfor intotheair.Everyworkeris a technician; whichhe is responsible.23 Broken down into segmentedtasksthatcan be masteredby individual laborers disciplineof work"displayed in the workingin close collaboration,the "scientific building process may sound just like the sortof Tayloristideology advocated by But it is only superficially Lenin during the firstphase of the Sovietrevolution.24 so inasmuch as the end producttowardwhichthe disciplinestrivesis not a technological utopia founded on an ethos of utilitarianism.Instead, it aspires to realize an aesthetic "totality"(identical to the nation): a totalityamounting to more than the sum of any given set of individual parts,functions,or elements. In the case of the Thespian Cars, the totalityin question is at once human, mechanical,aerial, and electrical.Explicitlyassociated withthe advent of beauty, itclaimsto resultfromfascism's"miraculous"overcomingof human nature,time, and space-an overcoming,however,whose authenticityis guaranteed by its being bound by nature,time,and space: and precision. isintelligence and certainty The skeletontakesshapebeforethe Everything ecstaticeyesof onlookers;itbecomeswalls,pillars,and vaults.Fromthehammerto the and interthatdistributes and multiplies bolttothepulleytothedynamotothegenerator theentiregamutofdevicesas wellas currentforpurposesoflighting: ruptstheelectrical standbeforethepeople.A peoplewhosees and learnsjust thefullrangeof technicians, crudematterintostyle, schoolofinnovation transfigures howrapidlyand easilyfascism's of of construction, and beauty.Here thenis the miracleof transformation, harmony, thatis,ofthecorporative age.25 makingthingsmentimespaceobey:themiracle, The rapid passage described here from crude matterto art, from mere technologyto a transfiguredtotality(the corporativeage), was centralto the mythos of the Thespian Cars, to the "politicalstyle"of the fasciststate,and, as will soon be seen, to the concept of spectacleelaborated in 18 BL. One could go on detailingotherfeaturesof the Thespian Cars: theirrefined electricalcontrolbooths,theirlongitudinaltracksfor rapid set changes, and so on. One could also document theirincreasinguse as platformsfor politicalpropaganda: "Giovinezza" and the "Hymn to Rome," forinstance,were sung at the conclusion of the opera car's tour in 1937, a year during which"the most significant epic lyricsconcerned withthe FascistEmpire" were recited during intermissions.26But the key point would remain much the same: throughthese and other aspects of theirdesign, construction,and staging,the cars portrayedthe 96 REPRESENTATIONS This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions fascist governmentas a ubiquitous agent of cultural-politicalmodernization reachingout directlyto attendto the needs of the Italian masses and to forgethe nation into a unifiedwhole. Moreover,the sleek visionof fascistmodernityconveyed by the cars and by theirstagecraftwas not to be contemplatedin isolation. Rather,the "marvelous reality"that theywould bring to the provinces was to not onlywiththeopen skybut also withtheclassical,medieval,and renaisresonate sance architecturalbackdrops provided by Italian cities,so as to implya genealogicallinkbetweenthe nation'spast and presentgrandeur.27Such indirectforms of allusion to culturaltraditionwould give way to far more heavy-handedones during the period of Italy'simperialadventuresin Ethiopia, where open-air festivals brought as many as two million spectatorsa year into sites such as the Roman arena in Verona.28 just describedreached as manyas threemillionItalians a year. The initiatives Yet theywere never intended as more than a preparatorystage. A second phase was alwaysenvisioned in which the prefascistrepertorywould yield its place to an authenticfascistrepertorymade up of worksthatwould convey the revolutionaryspiritof the times.29This fascistrepertorywas rarelyconceived in narrowlypropagandistic terms. Propagandistic intent,crude didacticism,and an excessivereliance upon mechanizationwere among the featuresof the Sovietrevolutionarytheatermostregularlydecried in the culturaldebates of the 1930s, to the point thatin 1932 Mussoliniwent so far as to turndown a proposal for the building of two national theaterson the grounds that "the belief that modern materialist facilitieswillsave theprose theater"is "a typicallymechanico-positivist, Musand to them authors, The solution instead with contemporary lay error."30 soliniaddressed himselfin April 1933, insistingthat"a Statecannot createitsown literature."'3'He went on to summon them "to prepare a theater of masses, a theaterable to accommodate 15,000 or 20,000 persons [thatwill] stirup great collectivepassions, be inspiredby a sense of intensehumanity,and bring to the The stage thatwhichtrulycountsin the lifeof the spiritand in human affairs."32 "theaterof masses" Mussolinihad in mind was, in the firstplace, a physicalplant akin to a modern sportsarena. In the second place, the phrase envisaged a popular, even populisttheaterthatwould forego the representationof private emotionsin favorof "thegreatcollectivepassions."The taskof puzzlingoutjust what such passions mightconsistin or just how one mightfindfor them an adequate dramaticformwas leftto others. Like many fascistintellectuals,Alessandro Pavolini,the originatorof 18 BL, heard Mussolini'sspeech as an invitationto create a theatermodeled afterfascism's most immediatecontributionto Italian national life: the mass rallies and ceremonies that had become a common featureof daily life since the March on Rome. Such an interpretationwould have been buttressedby il Duce's frequent as the dramaturge of the Italian masses. In the phrase "stirup the self-styling greatcollectivepassions,"Pavoliniand his cohortsdoubtlessalso heard echoes of 18 BL This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 97 the culturalwar cryof F. T. Marinetti's1909 Manifestoof Futurism: "We will sing the greatcrowdsstirredup bywork,pleasure, and revolt;we willsing the multicolored and polyphonictidesof revolutionin modern capitals."33Since futurism had played an inaugural role in the rise of fascism,for Pavolini there could be littledoubt thatthe "multicoloredand polyphonictide"bestsuitedto the requirementsof both the futuristleader and Mussoliniwas the fascistrevolution.Here, then, was a fittingsubject matterto be sung in the new mass theater.And who betterto sing it than Italy'syouth: the firstgenerationto have been raised in the bracingclimateof the fascistera, the firstgenerationuntaintedbythe pre-fascist past? Pavolinihad risen rapidlythroughthe ranksof the PNF to become the federal secretaryof the Florentinefascio byage 26. In thiscapacityhe was entrusted withorganizingthe 1934 "LittorialGames of Culture and Art": a national competitionamong universitystudentsin fieldssuch as painting,poetry,economics, and politicalscience.35The games were a keycomponent in the regime'soverall strategyfor "avoiding at all costs a riftbetween the generationthat foughtthe war and the Revolution,and subsequent generations."36In the words of Achille Starace,nationalsecretaryof the PNF duringthe 1930s, "thegoal of the Littoriali was and is to directlyinfluenceyouth,spurringthem to reflectseriouslyoutside the classroomon the mostpressingproblemsof contemporarypoliticaland spiritual life,in order to have a decisiveimpacton theirtrainingas a rulingclass."37 A breeding ground for the future fascistelite, these "Olympics of the spirit" seemed the ideal settingforthe firsttheater"born and realized byforceswithno prior experience of theateror spectacle: conceived by youth,directed by youth, and acted out byyouth."38 The project was set in motion in late 1933 as Pavolini convened a series of meetingsat the Casa del Fascio in Florence,attended by seven young to middleaged critics,playwrights,directors,and set designers: Luigi Bonelli, Gherardo Gherardi, Sandro De Feo, Nicola Lisi, Raffaello Melani, Corrado Sofia, and Giorgio Venturini.(Called in at a later point were the choreographer Angela Sartorioand Ugo Ceseri, the actor who would play the driverof the lead 18 BL truck.)In a period of intensedebate over the so-called "choral" novel, the spectacle took shape as a group creation.As Pavolinidescribesit: of thespectaclewasdiscussed,thenideas Firstthephysiognomy Each of us contributed. theidea ofarticulating thewholearoundan 18 and finally foritsplotwereputforward, as singleand collectivepersonage;as BL truckwas seizedupon: a truckas protagonist; oftheFascistsquadrons,and ofbuildingprojects.39 heroofthewar,ofthestruggles The era of the masses, it was thought,required new collectiveformsof art and new collectiveheroes, be theyhuman or mechanical. The psychologismof the naturalistnovel would have to give way to a mass epos that,mimingcommunications technologiessuch as radio and followingthe lead of novelistslike John 98 REPRESENTATIONS This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions vastand Dos Passos and the Sovietwriters'collectives,commingled"theinfinitely the infinitelyminute, the individual'svoice and the mob's howl."40The intertwined realitiesof urban experience, the trialsof the modern mass individual, could be represented by pressing modernisttechniques, like the insertionof externalobjectsintothenarrativestreamand the use of multiplenarrativevoices, fascistformof realism.Such was the theorybehind intothe serviceof a distinctly the "choral novel" as formulated by the publisher Valentino Bompiani. It remained to be seen, however,whetherthe proposed collectiveepos would be a matter of process or simplyof product. In Pavolini's experiment the answer would be "both." Every phase of the production process-from the shaping of the scriptto the sellingof tickets-would put on displayfascism'scultureof collectivedisciplineand collaboration.And the spectacle itselfwould place masses of actorsand machineson stage beforea mass audience. Among the plotsconsideredbyPavolini'scollectivewere a sequence of battles fromWorld War I, the so-called eccidiodi Empoli,and the murder of the young fascistGiovanniBerta at the hands of Florentinecommunists.4'The lattertheme prevailed at first,but as deliberationsproceeded the fascistmartyrwas shunted aside in favorof an 18 BL truck.42The selectionof a truckas hero may not seem self-evident,especiallygiven the importanceof the national train systemto the fascistimagination.Since the late nineteenthcenturytrainshad indeed become a privileged symbolof modernizationthroughoutthe world. This was all the more true in a fragmentednation such as Italy,where theyhad come to signify three key fascist"conquests": the reimpositionof discipline afterthe labor disruptionsof the post-warperiod, the forgingof a centralizednational state,and the democratizationof once-bourgeoismodes of transport.This rendered trains an effectivesymbolof centralgovernmentalpower. But when it came to representingthe revolution'sbeginnings,it was the truck-the proletarianvehicle par excellence-that would prevail (much as in Bolshevistand Maoist iconography). In the specificcase of Pavolini'sspectacle,the choice of an 18 BL was ensured by the fact that this particular truck was already fully enshrined within the mythologyof fascistsquadrism. Featured in the worksof painterssuch as Mario Sironi,the 18 BL merged the iconographyof industrywiththe evocationof fascism's"outlaw"origins.43 A firsttreatmententitled18 BL was developed fromthe brainstormingsessions held at the Casa del Fascio.44Each author was assigned the task of fleshing out a subsection of the work and, after collectivediscussion, the drafts were passed along to Alessandro Blasetti,the young filmmakerPavolini had selected to directthe spectacle.45Regarded bymanyas the Eisensteinof the fascistcinema, Blasettihad just completed a suite of historicalfilmsinvolvinglarge numbers of amateur actors,notablySole,TerraMadre,and 1860. From these directorialexperiencesBlasettiwould bringto 18 BL a batteryof techniquesformountingbattle scenes and achievingcomplex twilightlightingeffects,as well as a stylizedrealist 18BL This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 99 ~~~~~.--4- tAcme; *tAf A 0 j; P.lsg ^- H- - v* J -.-.@. zj 2 (above). Site map of the "Theater of the Masses"; La nazione,18 April 1934. The theaterwas builtdownriverfromthe Ponte della Vittoria,beyond the Oltrarnoneighborhoodof San Frediano and across the Arno fromthe Cascine, Florence'slargestpublic park. Black areas representbuildingsand grayareas vacant fields.Arrowsmarkthe two pointsof access to the stadium: Viale della Regina (numbered tickets)and Via Isolotto(general admission). FIGURE 3 (below). Alessandro Blasetti,lightingand stage design foract 3, pencil drawingon mimeograph,1934. The positionsof searchlightbrigades are indicated by numberedboxes. Numberswithincirclesindicatestagingareas connected byfieldtelephoneto home base (1). Lettersmarkthe principalroads traversingthe stage. Cross-hatchedzones stand forthe canted platformson whichthe action unfolded. Pencilled-inarrowsindicatethe movementof trucks and actorsfromroad C to A, thenonto and offthe centerof the stage under searchlights3, 11, and 12. Source: BlasettiArchive. FIGURE C)1 .0-- 100 .... -,x - REPRESENTATIONS This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 4. Leftside of stage duringact 2, press photo, 1934. This photo seems to show Road A bending around the centralpart of the stage, withRoad B enteringit fromleft.Note staging platformin rear center,power lines running along back of the stage,and controlbooth in foreground,covered in brush and camouflage. Source: BlasettiArchive. FIGURE mode of narrationalwaysopen to allegoricalintimations.Blasettireworkedthe collective'stextswiththe demands of stagingsuch a large spectaclein mind,carryingover fromhis filmsnumerous formaland thematicelements.46 During the ensuing monthsof preparationhe would adopt, for instance,Sole's Manichean dialectic of darkness and light,according to which the Pontine marshes represented the values of "darkness and old age" and the reclaimed swamps the FromTerraMadre,he would borrowthe mass openpromiseof "sun and youth."47 air ceremonialsand use of intervalsof silenceas a dramaticdevice. From 1860 he would carryover,among many other ingredients,the film'svast landscape settings;itsmythsof rural virtueand urban vice; itsmass choreographies;itsuse of songs, flags, and banners; its tendencyto create dislocated relations between bodies and voices; itsoblique presentationof Garibaldi throughthe masses convergingtoward unityunder his leadership; and the triumphalparade featured in itscoda.48 But the firstchallenge facingBlasettiwas less the scriptthan the design and 18BL This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 101 constructionof an outdoor theater: an arena, as per it Duce's orders, "able to accommodate twentythousand persons." This Blasetti set about with several dozen workers,a team of thirtyearth movers,and withbarely six weeks at his disposal.49Inspired perhaps bycontemporaryprojectslikeWalterGropius's"total theater" and Gaetano Ciocca's teatroper masse,the young directorhad initially dreamed of building an amphitheaterthatwould turn the conventionalGrecoRoman theater inside out: placing the audience at the center of a crater,surrounded by a circular upward sloping stage.50But practical factorsled to the adoption of an alternateplan (fig.2). The site selected for18 BL was on the left shore of the Arno, across fromthe Cascine, Florence'sprincipalpublic park. The terrain,knownas the Alberetadell'Isolotto,was cleftin two bya deep gully(Via Argin Grosso) whichthe cityauthoritiesagreed to expand so thatBlasetticould transformit intoa command post and lightingpit.The gentlysloping riverbank to the northwas chosen as a seatingarea; thesteeperinclinerisingup to the south as a stage.5' The stage was roughlysix hundred feetwide by two hundred feet deep, occupyingan area equivalentto two and a half footballfields.Blasettihad a series of artificialhillscarved into thisplatform:a three-steppedhill to the left, ridge a two-steppedhillto theright,and, at thecenter,a three-hundred-foot-long witha basin hollowed out in itsmiddle,behind whichrose a conical hilltop-the stage's highestpoint (figs.3 and 4). Some twelvestagingareas were cut into the various hillsidesfor the preparationof the spectacle'sscenes, as well as a circuit horses,and trucks.A network of roads and trenchesformovingactors,artillery, of field telephones was installed to ease communicationsbetween the staging areas and the director'sheadquarters.52 Since thiswas a stage withouta curtain,Blasettideterminedthat the action should migratefromone area of the stage to another,followingthe movements of Ceseri and his truck.While the spectacle unfolded withinthese sharply lit zones, new scenes could be prepared in the darkened areas; during pauses in the main action,"thunderoussounds and luminous effects[would] draw the public's attentiontoward zones extraneous to the action" in order to "hold togetherthe dramatic design of the action fromone momentto another."53Given that both sides of the stage sloped steeplydownward,Blasettienvisaged 18 BL as a kind of shadow play in reverse,withfiguresrisingup and disappearing rapidlyover the horizon line. The actors and machines,thatis, would be viewed in profilefrom below,as in the filmsof Alexander Dovzhenko. Their silhouettes,cut out against eitherthe nightskyor against fieldsof lightproduced by means of pyrotechnics and searchlights,would therebyappear to have been raised to a higher,more volatile plane of existence: a plane defined by the propensityof these sharply outlined bodies and machinesto suddenlyemerge out of or dissolve into seas of darknessor brilliantlight(fig.5).54 In addition to lighting,there was a second element that would sustain dramatic tension in 18 BL: the alternationbetween silence and the "thunderous 102 REPRESENTATIONS This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions sounds" alluded to above.55The scale of Blasetti'sstage was such that microphones had to be planted throughoutthe landscape in order to ensure the diffusionof the work'stersedialogues and choral shouts.The musical score, songs, and sound effectswere all recorded in advance forbroadcastover the same loudspeakers employed by the microphones. The procedure was not unlike that adopted in 1860 where,in order to avoid the limitationsimposed bybulkysound equipment,Blasettihad the filmshotas ifsilent,dubbingthe dialogue and sound effectsover what,in essence,was a silentfilm.This recourse to microphonesand a recorded soundtrackwould laterprovecontroversial,56 but itsprincipalaim was to permitactorsto move about withoutconcern forwhethertheycould or could not be heard.57 It also permittedthe amalgamation of natural and artificial sounds: mechanically reproduced music, voices, and machine sounds could therebybe intermingledwithlive noises produced on stage by actors,weapons, and trucksso as to create an unstableboundarybetweenthe real and the imaginary.58Moreover,it allowed for some highlyoriginal spatial effects,forming"a vast sonic fieldthat,besides surroundingthe audience, can move sounds, songs, rhythms,and noises close up or faraway."59But mostimportantof all, in a spectacle withinwhich a few individuals would speak for the nation, it permitted amplification.A "vocal gigantism"could be achieved thatwould grantthe occasional dialogues exchanged among the human protagonistspriorityover the sea of machine noises.60 Because thistheaterforthe masses was also meant as a theaterofthe masses, the seating area too was designed as a theatricalspace. Shaped like a rectangle witha curved back, it was flankedon both sides bya highembankment.Much as FIGURE 5. "Act1: Network ofBarbedWire Under Enemy Reflectors," press photo, 1934. Source: BlasettiArchive. 18BL This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 103 in a modern sports arena, the more expensive numbered seats (5,000) were placed along thecentralaxis,and theinexpensive"popular" seatingareas (15,000 places) relegatedto theflanks.6'This distinctionbetweennumbered and unnumbered seatingmayseem perfectlyordinary.But itbecomes somewhatless so when one observes thatit corresponds to a complex social choreography,reflectedin turnin the play'sstagingof the dialecticbetweenmass man and the heroic individual. Two separate entranceswere provided for the public. The one on the Oltrarno side of the river was restrictedto the popolari, who were obliged to assemble in Piazza Gaddi and descend a blind alleywayknownas Via Isolotto: a "natural"itinerarygiventhatmanyof themwould be arrivingfromthe adjacent proletarianneighborhoodof San Frediano (siteof Berta's "martyrdom").As they stadium,these working-classspectatorswould have been entered the mist-filled dazzled by eighteenlarge open books topped by bayonetsbuilt in a ring around the stadium's periphery.Powerfulfloodlightswere pointed against the books' whitepages so as to bounce lightback out into the stalls.Amidstthese pages yet to be inscribedby the firstgenerationof fascistyouth,the popolari would have gazed upon the procession of dignitariesenteringthe theater'smiddle section. The latterwould include writerslike Ugo Ojettiand Massimo Bontempelli,most of Italy'stheatercritics,and hierarchslike Galeazzo Ciano, so an equation would have been implied betweenfascistfaces,fasces,weapons, and books.62 The elite membersof the public would reach theirnumbered seats by followingan itineraryrestrictedto the cityside of the river.Having traversedFlorneighborhoods, they would have reached ence's affluentnineteenth-century Piazza Zuavi, proceeding down the spacious tree-linedpromenades of the Cascine to the theater'strue entrance: a bridge of riverboats,lit by torches held by boatmen (fig.6).63 Boat-bridgeswere one of the most ancient formsof military bridging,so the symbolismof movingacross the rivertowarda "theaterof war" as ifone were a soldiercould not have been loston the audience. But the primary aim was surelysymbolic.I quote froma contemporarysource: For thisnew typeof theatera new methodof entrywas essential.The theaterof the a phanhermetic temple:willitbe,amidstthenightlights, Alberetaisa kindofinaccessible themythsthatWagnerconceivedfortheBayreuthstagebutwith recreating tasmagoria newmeansthanthoseofwhichhe disposed?Here we are dealingnotwithmyth, entirely thelatteris sufficiently poeticto partakeof Nevertheless, butwithcontemporary history. ofmyth.64 theappearanceand fascination Traversingthis bridge, standing under a celestial X formed by beams of light projected fromopposite sides of the Arno, the spectatorwould have gazed down the riverand over thecity'srooftopsupon such monumentsas Giotto'sbell tower. He would then have completed his "walk on the water," ascended a broad stairway,and passed through a triumphalgatewayof fasces marked with the Roman numeral twelve(dating the spectacle according to the revolutionarycal104 REPRESENTATIONS This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions FIGURE 6. Giannetto Mannucciand MaurizioTempestini, boat bridgeentrancetoTheateroftheMasses,pen and inkdrawing, di massee 18 BL,"Scenario 1934;GuidoSalvini,"Spettacoli 3, no. 5 (May,1934):251-55.As indicatedin thisearlydesign,theinitialplan wasfora doubleboatbridge.As lateas 22 March1934,Blasetti pleadedwithlocalmilitary authorities foradditionalboats,fearing A dearth thata singlebridgecouldnothandlethemassofspectators. ofboatsensuredtheadoptionofa singlebridgesolution. endar). Beyondthe gatewaylay the cementbookswithbayonetsand, beyond them,the mistyswirlof theassembledcrowdsurroundedbytheTuscanlandscapeand underthenightsky.There,theheartofthehermetic templewouldat lasthavebeenreached:a placeofmasscommunion wherethedistinction between membersof the priesthoodand merebelieverswas maintained, even as they rubbedshouldersand mergedintoa singlecommunity. 18 BL's firstand onlyperformance tookplace on 29 April1934,one week of theLittoriali. aftertheopeningdayceremonies The sell-outaudienceassembledaccordingtoplanand thebridge,thevariousmassingpoints,and thebooklitauditoriumall seemto haveinfusedtheassembledspectators withthesense thattheythemselves weretheprotagonists of Mussolini'smasstheater:"There werenot3,000actors,"observedone audiencemember, "but23,000."65 The twohourshowbeganwiththestageand theseatingarea veiledina curtainofsmoke. At theappointedhour,a call to ordersoundedovertheloudspeakersand the lightsand smokewereextinguished, exposingto viewtheimmensestage,the surrounding landscape,and thenightsky.The first oftheplay'sthreeactsbegan withthe trumpetcalls fromthe openingbarsof Renzo Massarani'sorchestral 18BL This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 105 score, Squilli e danzeper ii 18 BL.66 Then came the broadcast of the spectacle's leitmotif,"The Captain's Testament,"a World War I hymnassociated with the Alpine brigades instrumentalin Italy'svictoryover Austria in the battle of the Piave River. The action may be summarized as follows.Act 1, scene1. The location and volume of the chorus of voices oscillateas a lightscans the rightportion of the stage,findingbodies, barbwire,and gallopinghorses.Suddenly the rumbleof an 18 BL Fiat truckis heard and, as itcrossesoverthe horizonline,artillerybarrages lightup the nightsky.A spotlightrevealsthe truck'sdestination:severalhundred second-line Italian soldiers to whom its driver,Ugo Ceseri, delivers rationsand mail. The truck's nickname, "Mother Cartridge-Pouch" (Mamma Giberna),is shouted out in the course of a dialogue.67Scene2. New volleysare firedin the distance as a machine-gunbattle has front-lineItalian soldiers pinned against barbed wire on the middle hilltop. The truck now rambles up the slope, its armored shield riddled bybullets.Snippetsof dialogue can be heard interwoven withmechanicalsounds. The driverheaves food sacksintoa trenchand continues down the backside of the slope out of view.Scene3. The truckreappears around the corner of the third hill. The twilightreveals that it is brimmingover with young soldiers who are being transportedto the front.Several dozen 18 BLs followin itswake and unload theirsoldiers,whojoin in an assault across the top of the ridge. Machine-gun battles startand stop until victoryis at hand. Far behind the firsthill, an Italian flag is hoisted against the light of a sign that announces the conquest of Trento and Trieste.Ceseri's truckleads a parade of 18 BLs over the horizon towardthe flag,accompanied bysong. End of act 1. The transitionbetweenWorldWar I and the labor strikesof 1922 is marked by the firingof a curtainof red fireworksover the public. Act2, scene1. Beyond the red rain,the repositionedstage lightsreveala new landscape on the lefthand side of the stage. Strewnacross itare abandoned workimplements,batteredhaystacks,rottingproduce. Factorysirenssound but theirwail is soon distortedinto the squawk of rustygears and the electronicgrowlof a howlingmob. Ceseri and his mechanic attemptto unload their 18 BL's cargo. They preach against the strikeand become the targetof a mob of strikersbrandishinga red flag. The mob's"mechanicalhowl"-the phrase is fromthescript-grows to deafeningproportionsas the strikersbatterthe truckand leave the mechanic unconscious. At thisinstantthe truck'sengine startsup. The circleof strikersopens up and Ceseri can be heard cryingout for revenge as the truckflees into a gully.Scene2. A banquet table bearing the word "PARLIAMENT" appears atop the central hillock.Seated at the table are politiciansrepresentingthe liberal,socialist,and popular parties.Some wear black tuxedos and oversizetop hats thathang down over their eyes; others are sloppilydressed and full of rhetoricalbluster.The strikersrally round them, remainingsilent except for an occasional chorus of "Long live the people's representatives!"Soon all conversationhas ceased and the 106 REPRESENTATIONS This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions onlynoises thatcan be heard are those of knivesclangingon plates. An applause thenringsout. A socialistpoliticianstandsup to begina speech. Instead of a voice, however,the sound of a barrel organ issues fromhis mouth: a wind-up organ, likethatemployedbybeggarswithmonkeys,playingthe Dance of the Seven Veils fromthe opera Salome.Behind him, hundreds of slogan-bearingballoons float into the sky"filledwithemptypromises."The barrel organ churns away forseveral minutes,afterwhichitbegins to wind down as a newsboycriesout headlines announcing the foundationof fascistgroups. The music stops. One of the elders croaks the words of Luigi Facta before the March on Rome: "But what do these Fascistswant?" At this instantMother Cartridge-Pouchthundersdown the hill and overturnsthe tables of parliament.AfterwardCeseri harangues the mob: "One hundred and thirtymillionin damages to farmingthanksto the socialist dictatorshipin the Bologna region! Workers,when willyou freeyourselvesfrom leaders?" Scene3. Fire alarms ring out. Fascisthymnsare sung your mystifying far away and nearby.A factoryis ablaze in the leftcorner of the landscape. Ceseri's 18 BL, filledwithblackshirts,goes to therescue but is ambushed byan armed socialistmob. Bullets flyand, when the ambush is over,darkness redescends. In the twilightone can see the fascistdead being heaped onto the platformof Ceseri's truck,as if an altar. The truckrolls up to the summitof the stage's central crest. Two hundred fascistsconverge upon the truck,arranging themselvesin formationand standingmutelyat attention(fig.7). Over the horizona whitelight glows withever increasingintensity.From out of the light,a "metallicand clear voice" (Mussolini's) interruptsthe funereal silence, calling out: "Heroes of the war and martyrsof the revolution!""Present,"theyanswer."To whom does Italy belong, to whom Rome?" "To us," theyanswer. But the chorus of voices is no longerisolated. Black shirtsshoutout "to us" fromall sides of the auditoriumand stage. Led bya truckconvoy,theyparade out across the landscape and converge over the horizon line, where their silhouettesvanish into the light. Act 2 has ended; the March on Rome has begun. The finalact of 18 BL concerns one of the centerpiecesof fascistdomestic policy: the draining of the Pontine marshes,the reclamationof marshland for purposes of farming,and the constructionthereof fascistnew towns.Since these events project the action of 18 BL ten years forward,Blasettidevised a second interludeto markthe shiftfromtheearly 1920s to 1932 duringwhicha squadron of airplanes overflewthe crowd and dropped broadsheetscelebratingthe principal accomplishmentsof fascistrule.68Act3, scene1. The lightsdrop and a heroic dance music sounds. The stage is aswarmwithchildren,who wend theirway up over the horizon followingfurrowscut into the land by peasants,whose tools are in view.The children are followedby one hundred athletesin formation,who performa gymnasticdance withlances and bows: emblems of the "human reclamation"accomplishedbyfascisteducation. Scene2. Offin a hollow to the left,a swamp comes into view under a faintgreenish spotlight.Filled withreeds and 18BL This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 107 7. "Act3, Scene2: Present!," pressphoto,1934."In the from darksilence... a beamshinesforthevermorebrightly behindthehillofthespectacle.Evermorenumerousfascist convergefromall directions in evergreater squadronsmutely numbers.Theygatherroundthealtarand biersofthemartyrs. theyforma square";fromtheoriginal Rigid,at attention, script,"18 BL: Spettacolodi masseperil popolo,"Gioventis fascista 4, no. 8 (15 April1934): 13.Source:BlasettiArchive. FIGURE withvoicesof croakingsintermingled bubblingwithmud,it emanatesfroglike "Billionsspentto uglify departone mutters, rumorand doubt.As thegymnasts hungryforwar, generations arebeingfashioned, therace!Violentand ignorant continuesuntil,atop the slaughter,and excess.. ." The rumor-mongering appearsin profile figureon horseback hightest pointon thestage,a monumental beamsoflight:theCommander. He utterstwosteelywords: againstintersecting "Qui.Colmata." (Here. Landfill.)A legionof trucksroarsup and beginsto fillin the swamp.The Commanderrotates180 degreesand issues an order to a squadronofbulldozerson theothersideofthestage:"In threedays,theroadto Littoriawillcrossthisvoid.Wewillworkall night."Scene3. The entirestageis lit. on theright, On theleft,thefilling thebulldozersand trucks operationcontinues; canbe seentilling Hereand therepacksofworkers theland. carveouta highway. A factory whistlesounds,markingtheend of thenightshift.The truckshead backtotheirshedsas revolutionary songsaresung.The stageisleftemptyexcept whosebanteris overheardas theyawaita ridefromMother fora fewstragglers nowrebaptized OldCartridge-Pouch. StilldrivenbyCeseri,she Cartridge-Pouch, arrivesfromoffstage them right,batteredand torn.Althoughable to transport 108 REPRESENTATIONS This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions halfwayacross the stage,her motoris blownand soon begins spewingsmoke. All effortsat revivalfailand, instead of abandoning her,theydecide to push her up to the lip of the firstswamp. As she wobbles toward the precipice,trucksfilled withworkersarriveon the scene. They surround her and shut offtheirengines. or the The left hillock is now ablaze "in the mode of dazzling transfigurations head of Moses" amidst the dead silence.69Ceseri stands at the center of this funerealcompositionand proclaims:"She has foughtthewar,the revolution,and thebattleof land reclamation.Now she willsupportthe highwayto Littoria."The old truck is pushed over the precipice and buried, as Ceseri prophecies her return:"In threedays she willreturnto her duties anew, myold lady. Forever!" The trucksdepart and pass above her,barelyvisible,as the sound of marching drums is heard, blended withmusic. White buildings flickerin the distance as Italy marches offtoward the cityof the future: Littoria,firstof the fascistnew towns.A trumpetcall heard offin the distanceechoes back withredoubled force. War,revolution,reconstruction:thesewere the threegreatthemesof 18 BL's theaterof and forthe masses. However crude itsunfoldingof these themesmay sometimes seem, the spectacle aspired to elevate contemporaryhistoryto the statusof mythby means of a hybridstagecraftmerginghyperrealismwithallegory,and even politicalcaricature.70In an era when the transitionfromsilentto talkingfilmswas being completed,it triedto adapt to the stage the use of layered soundtracks,cinematiclightingtricks,and editing techniques such as montage and the rapid crosscuttingof scenes.7' But, forall its attemptsto transportcinematicsensationsto the stage,18 BL also setout to transcendthecinema and forge a hallucinatorynew dramaticform.It set out to achieve a higher,more distinctivelyfascistformof tragicpathos, "to embody the real and the symbolicsimultaneously,creatinga kindof actualized mysticalexperience . .. of a heroicsubject In the words of Corrado Sofia,one of 18 BL's authors,it sought matter."72 to reawakenthesameenthusiasm expressedbycrowdsin sportsarenasand perhapsto thanthecinema,becauseactualvoicesand humanfigures succeedinbeingmoreseductive The attraction. and theopen air thatsurroundsthestage,are all sourcesof instinctual cinemathrusts thespectator intoa darkroom.On thescreenitpresentsflatand colorless forms,ratherthanto an and scientific figures.By itsnatureit is tiedto documentary factsin mystery.73 capableofenveloping imagination Sofia's theorizationis exemplaryinasmuch as fascism'sattitudetoward the film medium had been ambivalentfromthestart.On theone hand, fascismcelebrated cinema as the state's"mostpotentweapon"; on the other,an aversiontowardthe medium itselfpromptedfascismto singleout the theateras the privilegedfascist art and to place theatricalvalues at the centerof fascistpolitics.Film,Sofia suggests,is by its verynature a decadent medium. It attenuatesthe bond between spectators'and performers'bodies, reducing the world to a series of flat and colorless projectionsmeant forsilentand solitarycontemplation.The theaterof 18BL This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 109 masses,on thecontrary,restoresto thebodyitscentralrole and in so doing forges mutually seductiverelationbetween representationand reality, a transformative, art and life.The mass audience and mass performersleave behind the cloistered interiorsof the old theaterand cinema in order to stand before one another in actual timeand space, under the open sky.Withinthisnaturalsettingan "instinctual attraction"between them can break down the barrierbetween auditorium and stage, provokingthe sortof healthycontagionfosteredbyathleticeventsor mass rallies. And the spectacle itselfis designed to excite such primordial passions. Plot is stripped down to its minimal constituentelements: hero versus antihero,black versusred versuswhite.Actionsare simple,readilyaccessible,and anchored in the historicalpresent.The poetic word is subordinated to the mysterious play of images and rhythms.74 Physicalactions,optical tricks,acrobatics, effectsand affectsoccupythe place of honor magic,fireworks... in short,external And the once held in the theaterby the values of individualityand interiority.75 end result toward which this complex of techniques strivesis the forgingof a charismaticcommunity,a microcosmof the fascistizedItalian nation: "the fusion of thousands and thousands of souls withina single frameworkof ideas and events."76 Such at least was the theoreticalmatrixwithinwhich the creatorsof 18 BL were operating: a modernistmatrixindebted to Bontempelli'snotion of "magic realism"and to hiswritingson theaterand sport.77UnfortunatelyforBlasettiand his collaborators,18 BL fellshortof fulfillingthese ambitions.The new theater of the masses was applauded, praised for its audacity and patrioticsentiments, but it was just as oftendismissedas a resounding flop. To make mattersworse, the latterverdictwas trumpetedbyCorrado Sofia,who launched a seriesof fierce attacksagainstBlasettifromthe pages of Quadrivio.78 Already in the monthspreNow Sofia came out ceding the performancethere had been hintsof rivalry.79 of of acts: of having a list "treasonous" accused Blasetti into the open and long been a poor directorto startwith;of havingneedlesslydestroyedthe lead 18 BL truck;of developingthe spectaclearound machinesand mechanized voices when and of havingwanted "to Italians were "staunchenemies of machine-worship";80 month" when "revolutionsmustbe in little more than a revolutionizeeverything prepared carefullyin even the most minimalparticulars."8' Blasetti responded angrilyin La tribuna,acceptingblame for18 BL's failingsbut calling attentionto Sofia'svolte-face:onlyweeks beforeSofia was takingfullcreditforthe spectacle; now he pretended to have been disaffectedfromthe start.82A counterattackfollowed severaldayslaterand featuredsuch accusationsas thatBlasetti'strueambition in 18 BL had been to gain forhimselfa governmentpension.83This in turn provoked yet another furious rejoinder, as well as intercessionson Blasetti's behalf byLeo Bomba and Gherardo Gherardi.84 As mighthave been anticipated,technicalproblemscontributedtheirshare to the mixed reception that greeted 18 BL. The vast stage had diminished the 110 REPRESENTATIONS This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions audience's abilityto participatein everyaction. Able to hear but unable to see, manyspectatorswould feel no "instinctualattraction"towardthe mass of protagonists on stage. Instead of being transportedinto an unstable realm where the domain appeared permethresholdbetween realityand some magical/mythical able, theywould be left,like Bontempellihimself,witha lingering"sense of emptiness,depression, and coldness."85Visibilityproblems were aggravated by the discontinuousnatureof the narrative,and bythe oftenawkwardsynchronization between the soundtrackand the eventson stage. Not least of all, there was the performance'sfinale,which Blasettihad not been able to rehearse. In a neardisastrous Pirandellian twist,Mother Cartridge-Pouchhad changed her mind about being buried at the last momentand for several tense minutesthe comto roll her over intothe swamp. bined forcesof a dozen actorsproved insufficient In the end theydid succeed, but only afterBlasettiswitchedoffthe lightsand summoned a second truck.When the lightscame back on Mother CartridgePouch was in her grave, but many spectatorshad already departed and the intended tragiceffecthad been buried long before the truck.86 Technical deficienciesthere were, but at the heart of the controversysurrounding 18 BL loomed the deeper question of whethera machine was a fitting hero for the fascisttheater.Some young members of the crowd thought not, greetingthe event'sconclusion withcries of "What the hell do we care about a The objectionwould be repeated oftenin theensuingmonthsof debate, truck?"87 alwaysin tandem withcriticismof the collectivedraftingof 18 BL's script.(For the fascistimaginationmechanizationand collectivizationwere indissociable.)In the words of the novelistUgo Ojetti,"The idea of makinga machine intoa hero, whetherthat,as some say (but I doubt), of Mussolini,or instead of Marinettior Pavolini,is a stupididea.... Artis man. Machineswithoutmen are soullesswood and metal; and theyare mass-producedas equal, nay,identical."88Ojetti'saversion to mechanical heroes is motivatedby the fear that they summon up the specterof a soulless mass society:a societyfounded not on the values of nationalism but on those of internationalism.Such a societyhad a name, and other commentatorswould proveless reticentregardingitsidentity:mechanicalheroes To "are well suited to peoples forwhom the machine has become a religion. draw near to such mentalitiesmakes it more difficultto uproot the error committedby those who, aftera cursorylook at our affairs,would liken our RevoluFor these and other like-mindedviewers,the tion to the Russian revolution."89 recourse to a mechanical protagonistand the collectiveauthorshipof the script Like its enemy twin,fascismwas raised grave doubts about fascism'sspecificity. committedto building an industrialmass society,whichis to say a societydependent upon the close interconnectionbetween machines and human beings. Yet fascismalso claimed to stand in oppositionto Marxistmaterialism,utilitarianism, and collectivism,and in favorof values associated withvague termssuch as soul, spirit,beauty,heroism,individualism,and Latinity.Could such values, however 4. 18BL This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions defined,be fullyreconciled withmechanizationand industrialization?Perhaps not for a culturalconservativesuch as Ojetti,but forcommittedmodernistslike the creatorsof 18 BL the answerwas affirmative. The spectacle'sdetractorswere rightin at least one importantrespect: 18 BL was indeed haunted by Soviet antecedents.The machine as protagonistof mass actions had long been one of the heroic themes of Soviet culture,a factamply a contemporarybestIi voltodel bolscevismo, documented in Rene Ffildp-Miller's theater.It claimed the revolutionary Soviet sellerthathad devoted twochaptersto thatunder socialism"the imitationof machineshas been raised to the statusof a sacrament,comparable to the imitationof Christ,"and discussed at lengthSoviet experimentswithcollectiveauthorship.90The Sovietinterestin developing modernist forms of epic founded upon the interactionbetween machinery and human masses would also have reached Blasettiand his cohortsvia the cinema. Eisenstein'stheoreticalwritingswere available in translationand, by the early 1930s, Italian cinema clubs had startedto exhibithis silentfilms,fromTheBattleto the quasi-documentaryThe GeneralLine, whose final parade of shipPotemkin tractorswas a probable source for 18 BL.91 But an even more direct source of inspirationwere the Soviet revolutionaryfestivals,avant-gardeexperimentsin mass pageantrythat had stimulatedgreat interestin Italy during the cultural debates of the early 1930s.92 Among these, the most immediatelypertinentis oftheWinterPalace, a collectivelyauthored reenactmentof perhaps The Storming the eventsof October 1917 cast in the same hyperrealistyetallegorizingmold as 18 BL. Performedin Petrograd'sPalace Square in 1920 before a public of nearly 100,000, this multimediaspectacle surrounded its 8,000 protagonistswithgunAnd as can be seen in fire,artillery,rockets,and a panoply of lightingeffects.93 its climactic and episode featured photographs, drawings several contemporary a white truckcarryingthe fleeingKerenskygovernmentwitha platoon of Red Armytrucksin hot pursuit.Other parallels could be cited fromworks such as ofLiberatedLabor and Meyerhold'sHistoryof Three Yurii Annenkov'sTheMystery in FUl6p-Miller'saccount,"200 cadets fromthe the latter involving, Internationals, cavalryschool, 2300 soldiers,sixteencannons, fiveairplanes withreflectors,ten mounted reflectors,armored trains,armored cars, motorcycles,field hospitals, etc.,not to mentionvariousmilitarybands and choruses."94(The proletariantheaters of Erwin Piscator and Ernst Toller, also well known in fascistItaly,could also be cited in this regard.)95But, however considerable the direct impact of Sovietprecedentsmighthave been, itis essentialto emphasize thatthe "haunting" of 18 BL is more than a simple question of influence.The drama is builtupon a series of binaryoppositionsthatbetraysimilaritiesbetween fascismand its Bolsheviktwin,even as theyattemptto institutedifferences.(Elided bythisbinarism is fascism'strue historicalnemesis,liberal democracy.)The red strikersparade, The metallic fight,and chantchorusesjustliketheirblack-shirtedcounterparts.96 howlof theirvoicesechoes themechanicalroar of the fascists'trucks.Both groups 112 REPRESENTATIONS This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions collectives,and both constitutethemselvesin a are presentedas undifferentiated choral dialogue witha leader's mechanized voice. This said, itmakes a substantialdifferencewhetherthe voice in question consistsof a wind-up barrel organ playingthe tune of Salome'sDance of the Seven Veils,or insteadissues forthfroma livingequestrianstatuein the formof metallic orders. What I mean is thatwhile the detractorsof 18 BL may have been right about the work's Soviet resonances, they were blind to the contrast it was attemptingto enforcebetweenfascistand Bolshevikattitudestowardmachinery. I willtermthisa distinctionbetweenmechanization and For purposes of simplicity, metallization (even thoughit mustbe noted thatthe distinctionis hardlyabsolute, due to an increasingculturaland politicalconvergencebetween fascistItalyand StalinistRussia during the 1930s). Mechanization had been one of the driving forcesbehind the Sovietrevolutionarytheater.It was identifiedwithan effortto stripthe stage bare and disclose its most intimateworkings.Instead of a factory of seductivemythsand illusions,theproletarianstagewould therebybecome both of contemporarysociety,and a place where an instrumentforthe demystification alternatefuturescould be staged and produced: in short,a factoryin which the workingmachines,and efficientinteractionbetweenmechanized actor/workers, a transparentscenic apparatus would exemplifythe communistsocietyof the future. Since the actor-workerrepresented the ideal citizen of this future republic,contemporarydramatistssuch as Meyerholdsought to transformhim or her intoa utopian subjectidenticalto theclasslessand sexlesseconomic subject the revolutionwas attemptingto forge. Inspired by theireconomistcolleagues, studiesof Taylorand othersa model forthe theyfound in the motionefficiency reduction of "the work of acting" to a series of biomechanical functions: a machinelikedisciplinewhose objectiveswere economy,rhythm,and deliberateness. This "mechanico-technologicalreconstructionof man's daily life" was viewed not as dehumanizingor deindividualizingbut, on the contrary,as emancipatory.Mechanizationwas the means to a utopian end: the creation of a body withoutfatigue(the robot) and of a societyfreed fromthe burden of alienating work (communism). The creatorsof 18 BL were also strivingto shape a new societywithinand outside the confinesof the theater,and for them, no less than the Soviets,the productionprocess wasjust as integralto the revolutionaryspectacle as the final product. Yet, committedto the fascistideal of an absolute theater that would collapse the boundaries between the real and the ideal, theyviewed Soviet-style mechanizationas the foe of a theatrical"imaginationcapable of envelopingfacts in mystery." The functionof mass theateras theyconceived it was at once ritual and inaugural:"ritual"to the extentthatbyhavingactorstoo young to have participatedin the March on Rome reenact the battlesof theirfathers,it hoped to generations;"inaugural" bridgethe gap betweenthe pre-and post-revolutionary to the extentthatthe spectaclewas organized in such a way as to offera preview 18BL This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 113 of a futurefully"fascistized"society.Accordingly,the production of 18 BL was organized along strictmilitarylines. The two thousand actors,mostlymembers of the GUF and Fasci Giovanili(although soldiers,Balilla, and Giovani Italiane participated),were divided into armylikeunits, each assigned a number and placed under the leadership of a war veteran.And theirtrainingas Thespians was indistinguishablefrommilitarytraining.The director,functioningas a surrogate Duce, oversawthese war games as if a fieldcommander,linked by wiring to the entireexpanse of the stage: oftelephonecontrols, a network signals, bells,and variegated In a centralcabincontaining inhisgrip.Fromtime fatefirmly the"director" havethespectacle's will,likea commander, oftheaction,portionsofthelandscapeor detailson to time,dependingon theunfolding a position, a communications trench, a hilltop.The "vision" thestagewillbe illuminated: willthusbe unbrokenand synthetic.97 The authority,omniscience,and ubiquitygrantedthe directorbythe networkof cables was not limitedto the stage. Strictlyfigurative"wires"joined him to the city and the PNF, all of whom made a show of contributing authorities,the military, resources,manpower,and technicalassistancein order that"the vision"be realized without impediment.98And from the start Blasetti had made clear his demands for absolute authority:"Nothingthat I have requested can be diminished in scale or granted without full cooperation.... The execution of produc- tion orders must be absolutely military,which is to say immediate, without hesitationor need for discussion."99Heroic acts of the collectivewill were the order of the day and, whetheractual or imagined,constituteda spectacle in and of themselves.Rehearsalscarriedon late intothe night.In an ostentatiousdisplay of fascism'srevoltagainst the lifeof ease and comfort,the stage and auditorium were completed afterweeks of continuousday and nightshiftsbya construction crewdesigned to embodytheideals of discipline,class collaboration,and national mobilization.Similarideals extended to the audience, segmentsof whicharrived on special trainsunder theaegis of thefascistyouthand after-work organizations. Even in the domain of ticketsales there were to be no "inopportune contradictionsor privileges."18 BL would inauguratea genuine mass art form,so no complimentaryticketswere distributed.'00Visibilitywould be comparable from all sectorsof the auditorium in order to ensure that one perspectivealone would emerge by the spectacle'send: a unifiedcollectivevisionordered and organized bya single director/dictator. Withinthesettingof thissocietyin a stateof perpetualmobilization,machines are notjust tools to be used by human protagonists.Their functionis a higher one, that of servingas idealized doubles of both the collectiveand its director/ commander. I employ the word "doubles" because, contraryto Soviet practice, two parallel dramatic universescoexist on stage in 18 BL: one human and one mechanical-one involvingtheinterplayof men withtheirleaders; the otherthat 114 REPRESENTATIONS This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions trucks.Like theirhuman of Mother Cartridge-Pouchwithher "chorus" of fifty counterparts,machines are treated as irreducibleentitiesin 18 BL. They are mechanical "individuals"who can be organized into larger collectivegroupings or totalities(or placed in the serviceof a totalityas prostheticdevices), but who cannot be broken down into a series of interchangeablefunctionsor parts. This permitsfascistmachineryto take on human attributes principleof irreducibility such as age, gender,will-power,and courage. It also ensures thatany minglingof and not the exchange man and machine willassume the formof "identification" machines stand for of parts or functions.Withinthiseconomyof identification, an ideal: not thatof a body withoutfatigueor of a societywithoutalienation,but instead the distinctivelyfascistideal of constant exertion and fatigue coldly resisted. . . in otherwords,"metallization."'0' Metallizationis a paradoxical concept whose tentaclesextend deep into contemporarymass culture,but whose crucialimportanceto fascismI willnow limit myselfto sketchingout in some finalremarks.Unlike the sexless stage machines of the Russian theater,the mechanicalhero of 18 BL is neitheran emblem of an atemporal utopia nor a specimen of advanced engineering. She is simply a mother truck: a plain, utilitarianvehicle destined for obsolescence, a carrier thatwilleventuallybe used up. The first "pouch" for young soldier-"cartridges" mass-produced Fiat truck,she embodies the fascistmasses, even when singled out with respect to the other trucks.'02Her mass identityis confirmedby two furthersigns: her gender-the masses were alwaysfeminizedin contemporary propaganda-and by her placementunder a relayof male governorsextending fromCeseri to Blasettito Mussolini.But if feminized,whythen should she be a mother?A clue is provided by the sole other female presence in 18 BL: Salome. Temptress and decapitator in Oscar Wilde's play and Richard Strauss's opera, Salome is conjured up in order to forge a symboliclink between the menace of decadent sensualityand Marxian materialism.'03Her dance, garbled and parodied bya barrelorgan, becomes a strip-teaseakin to the denuding of Sovietstage withitsfalse promisesof a techno-mechanicalutopia. Againstsuch seductiveillusions importedfromEngland, Germany,and Austria-indeed against sexuality as such-18 BL elaborates the chaste metalliccountermythof the Latin mother truck: an autocarro tipo normale whose norm is heroic service, dedication, and incessantwork. Able to bear the feverishexploitsof 1917, 1922, and 1932 with icy coolness, she succumbs in the end only to be transfiguredinto a symbolof national sacrifice.Like her figurative"sons,"the soldiersof World War I and the March on Rome, Mother Cartridge-Pouchlaysdown her body in a finalgesture of self-offering thatliterallypaves the wayto futureglory. 18 BL thus ends on somethingof an elegiac note. The vehicle thathad come to personifyfascism'sresistanceto fatiguesubmitsto nature'siron law of degeneration over time via an act of fruitfulsacrifice.And this at the culminating momentof a workin whose tableaux the promiseof a transfigurednational col18BL This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 115 lectivityis alwaysshadowed bythe menace of dissolutionand loss. Fascismnever ceased reflectingupon decline,whetherin the domain of the body or the history of peoples. Having littlefaithin the abilityof science or technologyto decisively alter humankind'stemporalpredicament,secular and anticlericalat its origins, the movementtried to practicewhat it called "realism,"a skepticalanti-idealist turn of mind withties to Bergsonian phenomenology.This said, it was deeply fearfulthat"realism"could lead back to a sense of sadness and fatigue,in short, back to the ethos of decadentismand materialismthatthe revolutionclaimed to have overthrown.National skepticism,melancholy,and mourning were symptomsof the liberal-democratic/socialist paralysisthathad preceded the March on Rome, and against them fascismpreached a gospel of constantactivity, cheerful and self-creation, eternalyouth,even goingso faras to inventsecularotherworlds forthe preservationof itsmartyrs.It was in thisspiritthatan earlyversionof the . ~~~ ~~~~ ~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FIGURE 8 (left).Xanti Schawinsky, "1934-XI I," poster;Annitrenta: Artee culturain Italia (Milan, 1983), 487. FIGURE 9 (right).R. Bertelli,Continuous ProfileofMussolini,wood, early 1930s. Photo: collectionof Paul Sullivan. 116 REPRESENTATIONS This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions scriptfor18 BL had proposed thatMotherCartridge-Pouchbe resurrectedafter threedays of burial. But in the finalversionof the spectacle,the perilsof ending on an elegiac note were evaded bymeans of a less batheticdevice: a swiftshiftin focus away from the burial scene toward fascism'spresent achievementsand futurepromise.The mothertruckmayhave passed away,capitulatingto the inexorable realityof aging,but fascismis alwaysalreadyon the move and the ideal of metallizationshe once embodied has been fullytransposedintothe human realm byii Duce. The viewersof 18 BL did not need to have thisfinaltranspositionexplained to them.The mostfleetingallusionswould do. A metallicvoice heard over loudspeakers,an equestrianprofile,and a slogan or twowere enough to insinuatethat Mussolini was the spectacle'ssecretprotagonist.'04Such economy of means was possible because by the mid 1930s fascismhad begun to fillits ideological voids witha totalitariancult. This was not a traditionalcult of personalitybut rathera modernistcult of the dictator'smetallizedbody as missile,as axe, as man of the crowd, as hero with a thousand faces, as helmet,as mask, as head with a 360degree gaze (figs. 8 and 9). In this vast proliferationof images, fascistartists decomposed and recomposed fascism'smost original though paradoxical creation: the mythof an individualwho could stand at the centerof a reconstructed universe; a being, at once hyperphallicand hyperchaste,who might reconcile man withmachine,individualwithmass, matterwithspirit;a deusexmachinafor the gigantictheaterof modern revolution. Notes 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. I wishto acknowledgethe supportof the National HumanitiesCenterand the Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation during the time that this essay was written.I would also liketo thankMaryHunterand Donald Raleigh fortheirhelp with,respectively,the musicologicaland Slavic portionsof thisessay'sargument;and, especially, Mara Blasettifor her makingavailable to me the manuscriptmaterialsand photographs in her collection. All future referencesto documents held in the Blasetti archiveare designatedwiththe initialsBA. ScottNearing,Fascism(New York,n.d.), 58. "La finedi un regno,"Criticafascista 9, no. 18 (15 September 1931): 343. Bruno Spampanato, "La rivoluzione del popolo," Criticafascista 10, no. 21 (1 November 1932): 403. inRevolutionary Movement Quoted fromLynnMally,CultureoftheFuture:TheProletkult Russia (Berkeley,1990), 125. Russianand SovietTheater:1905-1932, trans.Roxanne Cited in KonstantinRudnitsky, Perman,ed. Lesley Milne (New York, 1988), 41. Platon Kerzhentsev,CreativeTheater;cited in ibid.,45. Jeffrey Schnapp, "Epic Demonstrations:The 1932 Exhibitionof the FascistRevoluand Politics,ed. R.l. Golsan (Hanover, N.H., 1992), 3; but tion,"in Fascism,Aesthetics, 18BL This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 117 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 118 Stanford ItalianReview see also Barbara Spackman, "The FascistRhetoricof Virility." 8, nos. 1-2 (1990): 81-102. The phrase "eclettismodello spirito"is from Mussolini's inaugural speech for the Italian Academy on 28 October 1929. On this subject see Giuseppe Carlo Marino, L'autarchiadellacultura(Rome, 1983), 3-17. Passing referencesto 18 BL may be found in Emanuela Scarpellini,Organizzazione (Florence, 1989), 238-40; Adriano AprA's teatralee politicadel teatronell'Italiafascista Blasetti:Scritti sul cinema(Venice, 1982), 31; Giovanni Lazintroductionto Alessandro deltaculturae dell'arte (Naples, 1979), 22-23; Enzo Maurri,Rosescarlatte zari,I Littoriali bianchi(Rome, 1981), 77-78; and Mario Verdone, "Spettacolo politicoe 18 e telefoni cultura,e politica,ed. Renzo De Felice (Turin, 1988), 483-84. BL," in Futurismo, withfascism,Georges Bataille'stheorizationis often Due perhaps to his own affinities strongerthanthatof the Frankfurtschool. As a pointof entrysee "The Psychological 1927-1939, ed. Alan Stoekl Structureof Fascism,"in VisionsofExcess:SelectedWritings, (Minneapolis, 1985), 137-60. I have in mind a research agenda not unlike thatwhichinformsthe work of Diane in ofa FascistCulture:TheRealistMovement Ghirardo Ruth Ben-Ghiat'sTheFormation Italy,1930-1943 (Ph.D. diss., Brandeis University,1991); and, across the Atlantic, Miti credenzee valorinella stabilizzazione Pier Giorgio Zunino's L'ideolog'adelfascismo: Il teatrofase rappresentazione: delregime(Bologna, 1985); PietroCavallo's Immaginario cistadipropaganda(Rome, 1990); and Klaus Theweleit'spsychoanalyticstudyof FreiMale Fantasies(Minneapolis, 1987-89). korpsofficers, These plays, entitledCampodi maggio(1930), Villafranca(1931), and Cesare(1939), (Florence, 1954). are reprintedin GiovacchinoForzano,Mussolini,autoredrammatico De Felice comments:"There can be no doubt that ... the three historicaldramas resultingfromMussolini'scollaborationwithForzano bear witnessto Mussolini'stendency to projectivelyidentifyhimselfand his actionswithhistory'ssolitaryman who is conscious not only of his great missionbut also of having to accomplish it amidst the incomprehensionand moral inadequacy of those who surround him and ought to have been of assistance; conscious also of having to act by capitalizing on and exploitingeveryopportunityin a more dramaticrace event even than that against death: the race against 'cyclicalrecursion"'; Mussoliniil duce,vol.I, Gli anni del consenso,1929-1936 (Turin, 1974), 32. On at least one occasion, Mussolinieven found the timeto make suggestionsforthe revisionof a dramatictext:the tragedySimma,by Francesco Pastonchi,to whom he offeredthe thought (borrowed fromAnatole France): "Caress your sentence: she willend up smilingback at you"; citedin OperaomniadiBenitoMussolini,eds. Edoardo Susmel and Duilio Susmel (Rome, 1978), 42:92. On the Corporazione dello Spettacolo'shistorysee Scarpellini,Organizzazione teatrale, 131-64. The government'sbias towardregulationof theaterproducers and not the contentof theirwork has been examined by Mabel Berezin, "The Organization of PoliticalIdeology: Culture,State,and Theater in FascistItaly,"AmericanSociological Review56 (October 1991): 639-5 1. The best source on the historyand teachingsof the Filodrammaticheis Il teatrofilodrammatico (Rome, 1929), edited bythe "UfficioEducazione Artisticadella Direzione Centrale dell'OND," but largelyauthored byAntonio Valente. The philodramaticcelebrationsof politicalanniversarieswere particularlycriticized by the advocates of a modernistfascisttheater.A case in point is Augusto Consorti: "These re-evocations(which can hardly be referredto as 'representations')ought to be harmonized with the same criteriathat have guided the organizers of the REPRESENTATIONS This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. Exhibitionof the Revolution";"Rievocazione,"L'Italia vivente3, no. 18 (28 October 1933): 9. 101, 99, 107. O.N.D., Il teatrofilodrammatico, 249. teatrale, All the cited figuresare fromScarpellini,Organizzazione The repertoryof the Carri di Tespi is furnishedbyScarpellini,ibid., 365-69. Carlo Lari, "I Carri di Tespi,"Comoedia15, no. 7 (15 July-15August 1933): 36; Paolo Orano, I Carridi Tespidell'O.N.D.(Rome, 1937), 17. A complete technicaloverviewof the Thespian cars is found in Carrodi Tespi,a pamphlet published bythe Opera Nazionale Dopolavoro in 1936. Also worthconsulting are Mario Corsi,Ii teatroall'apertoin Italia (Milan, 1939), 263-88; and Orano, I Carri di Tespi. e ii teatro(n.p., 1986), 107. Giovanni Isgr6,Fortuny Orano, I Carridi Tespi,19. On the science of worksee Anson Rabinbach,TheHumanMotor:Energy,Fatigue,and (New York, 1990). theOriginsofModernity Orano, I Carridi Tespi,19-20. C[orrado] P[uccetti]in "I Carridi Tespi,"Gentenostra9, nos. 47/48(13-26 September 1937): 7; Orano, Carridi Tespi,56. Ibid. As noted earlier,open-air spectacleswere hardlyinventedby fascism.Followingthe lead of theoristssuch as Edward Gordon Craig and Sheldon Cheney,Ettore Romagnoli had, forinstance,revivedthe Greek theaterof Siracusa earlier in the century. But it was under fascismthatopen-air theaterreceived a fullconsecrationand governmentalsupport (on whichsubjectsee Corsi,Il teatroall'apertoin Italia). 67. teatrale, Scarpellini,Organizzazione Cited in ibid., 149. SIAE speech, Rome, 28 April 1933; Mussolini,Operaomnia,44:5 1. Ibid., 44:50. F. M. Marinetti,"Fondazione e manifestodel Futurismo,"Teoriae invenzionefuturista, ed. Luciano De Maria (Milan, 1983), 11. di Sal6 On Pavolini'scareer and biographysee ArrigoPetacco,Pavolini:L'ultimaraffica (Milan, 1982); and Marco Palla, Firenzenel regimefascista,1929-1934 (Florence, 1978), 171-230. On the Littorialisee Ugoberto Alfassio and Marina Addis Saba, Culturaa passo dei Littorialideltaculturae dell'arte(Milan, 1983); Giovanni romano:Storiae strategie Lazzari, I Littorialidella culturae dell'arte(Naples, 1979); and Ruggero Zangrandi,Il (Milan, 1962), alla storiadi una generazione Contributo ilfascismo: lungoviaggioattraverso esp. 381-87. Cited from page 9 of a letteraddressed to Mussolini by Achille Starace, dated 19 March 1935, and writtenin response to a proposal byCesare Maria De Vecchi,Ministerof Public Instruction,thatthe GUF and Littorialibe placed under the supervision of his ministry;Benito Mussolini, personal papers, microfilm815, reel 230 #1222B, Universityof Chicago Library. Starace to Mussolini,19 March 1935, p. 4; in ibid. Pavolini,"Fascistigiovanial lavoro,"Il bargello,1 April 1934, 1. Ibid. ValentinoBompiani, "Invitoeditorialeal romanzo 'collettivo,"'Gazzettadelpopolo,14 ofFascistCulture,185-229. March 1934, 3. On fascistrealismsee Ben-Ghiat,Formation Berta, son of the owner of the Berta foundries,was slain for appearing in a black shirtbefore the population of San Frediano (Florence's main proletarianneighbor18BL This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 119 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 120 hood) rightafterthe fascists'murderof the communistleader Spartaco Lavagnini. Immortalizedas a "martyrof the revolution"in fascistsong, Berta would stillfigure in the central episode of act 2 of 18 BL, in which a commemorationof the fascist dead is accompanied bythe singingof "Hanno ammazzato GiovanniBerta,"a ballad promisingfaithin Mussoliniand the defeat of Lenin. The source forthisidea mayhave been "II vecchiocamion"byLeo Bomba, published in the midstof L'Italia vivente'scampaign fora revolutionaryfascisttheater.Bomba, a fascist squadrist, had fondly recalled and, indeed, humanized the squadrons' trucks:"It's impossibleto disentanglethe memoryof days past from that fastand noisycarcass which we never viewed merelyas a means of transportation";L'Italia vivente3, no. 18 (28 October 1933): 6-7. See, forinstance,Mario Sironi'scollages TheYellowTruck(1919) and UrbanLandscape withTruck(1920-23). Corrado Sofia describesthe compositionalprocess in "II parere di uno degli autori: TRADIMENTO!," Quadrivio,6 May 1934, 3. In his tirade against collectiveauthorship, Sofia subsequentlyclaims thathe produced a full screenplayof his own, even thoughthe scriptpreservedin theBA containsonlyfiveof the nine tableaux referred to in itstitle18 BL: Misteroin 9 quadri. Many decades later,Blasettiwould assertthatMussolinihad personallychosen him to directthe spectacle:"[Mussolini]imagineda showfora crowdof 20,000 spectators and he wanted me to directit. I made a show called 18 BL, the name of a truck.... It was the biggestfiascoin the historyof internationaltheater.This was ... the only timeBlasettireceived the congratulationsof Mussolini.... He said: 'This has demonstrateda power of initiative,of force,of resistance,of steadfastness.ExtraordiDuringFascism, nary"'; cited in Elaine Mancini, Strugglesof theItalian FilmIndustry 1930-35 (Ann Arbor,Mich., 1985), 113. Archivalrecords indicate,on the contrary, thatit was Pavoliniwho organized 18 BL and made the keypersonnel decisions. The scriptspreservedin BA are thoseof De Feo, Lisi, Melani, Sofia,and Venturinithe lattertwo servingas Blasetti'smain sources. The degree to whichBlasettitook it upon himselfto introduceelementsfromhis prior filmsinto the finalscreenplayis hard to determine.In any event,the keymodificationsof the various scriptsresulted fromthe practicalitiesof staging18 BL. sceThe quotation is fromAlbertoBoero's firstscreenplay,cited fromSole: Soggetto, neggiatura,noteper la realizzazione,ed. Adriano AprA and Riccardo Redi (Rome, 1985), 27. Two recentEnglish discussionsof 1860 are Angela Dalle Vacche's in TheBodyin the inItalianCinema(Princeton,N.J., 1992), 96-120; and Marcia Mirror:ShapesofHistory Cinema,1931-1943 (Princeton,N.J., Landy's Fascismin Film: TheItalian Commercial 1986), 183-87. As Pavolini describes it, the enterprisewas carried out withcityand militaryhelp; "Fascistigiovanial lavoro," 1. 18 March 1934, 4. Giuseppe Isani, "Nascita d'uno spettacolo,"L'Italia letteraria, Cipriano Giachetti,"II teatroai Littorialidi Firenze,"Comoedia16, no. 6 (June 1934): 8. Ruggero Orlando, "Che cos'e '18 BL,"' La tribuna,20 April 1934, 3. Blasetti,"Primeconsiderazionie proposte,"typescript,March 1934, BA. From an anonymous article,"Per lo spettacolodi masse,"Il bargello,4 March 1934, 3. Much of the post-performancepolemic would hinge on the links to Eisenstein: "Blasetti wanted all the figuresto be profiledagainst the sky,that is, in his usual manner,he imposed the cinematographicmannerismof viewingthingsfromdown REPRESENTATIONS This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions below a la Eisenstein . .. treatingthe spectatorslike the geese that inspired Eisenstein'spasse cinematicstyle";Sofia,"II parere di uno degli otto autori,"7. 55. Isani, "Nascita d'uno spettacolodi masse,"4. 56. In an unsigned articlepublished before the spectacle,Sofia had already expressed reservations: The impactof such an innovationon theatricaland musical practicesis hard to foresee. Given the exceptionallylarge number of spectators,Corrado Sofia, one of the creatorsof the 'mysteryplay,'had wished instead to normalize the highlighted voices; several newspaperboys would have commented upon the action as if the chorus in an ancient Greek play; eventsof capital importancewould have been announced bymeans of a towncrier; in the most allegorical and stylizedscenes-the parliamentarybanquet, for example-the banqueters would have employed megaphones to communicate withthe spectators.... The directordecided instead to transmiteven the choruses over loudspeakers by means of records, hoping to achieve an emotive forceequivalent to that possessed by live voices and songs: an aim which,if successfullyattained,willconstitutea notable precedent. 28 April 1932, 3. "Nel clima dei giovani,"Ii lavorofascista, 57. Blasetti,"Primeconsiderazionie proposte: Parte sonora,"2, BA. 58. Isani, "Nascita d'uno spettacolodi masse,"4. 1 April 59. Sergio Codelupi, "Un teatro per ventimilapersone a Firenze,"Ii telegrafo, 1934, 7. 60. "B. F.," "Esperimentodi teatro per ventimilapersone," Corrieredella sera,20 April 1934, 3. 61. General audience ticketscost 3 lire; reserved seating ticketscost 10, 25, or 50 lire. No freeticketswere distributed,and the onlydiscountavailable was fordopolavoristi, who could purchase 10 lireseats foronly8 lire. 62. Records concerningthe makeup of the audience are lacking.Press reportsnote the presence of Florentinecityleaders as well as Renato Ricci,Giacomo Paulucci di Calboli, and ArturoMarpicati.A note fromPavolinito Blasettihad promised thatEdda Mussoliniwould accompanyher husband Galeazzo Ciano to the performance. 63. Original plans were fora double boat bridge,as indicatedin Mannucci and Tempestini'sdrawings and in documents contained in the BA; Blasetti to Giovanni Poli, protocol #39, p. 1. The dearth of boats ensured the adoption of a single bridge solution. 64. Cipriano Giachetti,"La rappresentazionedel '18 BL' ha luogo stasera,"La nazione, 29-30 April 1934, 5. 6 May 1934, 1. 65. RaffaelloFranchi,"18 BL spettacolodi masse,"L'Italia letteraria, 66. The firstmovementof Squillie danzeperil 18 BL is designated as a solenne,consisting in a series of trumpetcalls accompanied by tam tams and slow drumming.Massarani's score was published in 1937 byEdizioni G. Ricordiin Milan. Fascista)and in draftspreserved in the 67. In the original script(published in Gioventit BA the truckwas named Mamma Gloriaand not Mamma Giberna.Sometime in late March, Blasettimusthave decided to shiftto the lattername. 68. The original plan was for two air squadrons to overflythe crowd. For reasons that may have to do withthe one-weekpostponementof the performance(due to rain), these two squadrons were reduced either to several airplanes or to a single one. Blasetti'snotesread as follows:"The airplanes,criss-crossedbythe multicolorbeams of the photoelectricprojectors,will scatterbroadsheets fromthe Popolod'Italia ... fora given time,afterwhichtheywillrapidlydepart towardthe leftand rightsides 18BL This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 121 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 122 of the stadium.When theyare faraway,the stage lightswillbe relitand athleteswill appear preceded bya livelyorchestralprelude"; "Primeconsiderazioni,"2, BA. Marcello Gallian, "Una notted'aprile,"Quadrivio,6 May 1934, 4. It is worthnotingthat 1930s culturein Italy,whetherfascist,apolitical,or antifascist, was haunted bythe convictionthatthe futureof art would hinge upon a resurgence of myth.In Bontempelli'swords,"The most urgenttask forour art is to forge new novecentista (Florence, 1974), 261. 18 BL's revolutionarymythis myths";L'avventura thuspartof a spectrumthatextendsfromBontempellianmagic realismto the metaphysicalcorpus of Giorgio De Chiricoand AlbertoSavinio. In a pre-performanceinterview,Blasettiwould declare: "Movies have accustomed spectatorsto seeing thingson a grand scale; theyhave habituatedthemto a sense of realism,to rapid shiftsbetweenscenes,to a vastnessof spaces and horizonsthatthe theatercannot provide. Here, precisely,it is a matterof creatinga theaterthatcan offerthose sensationsto the public"; (C[ipriano] G[iachetti],"I preparatividel teatro di masse,"La nazione,12 April 1934, 5. The statementis again Blasetti's,fromibid. Corrado Sofia, "Verso i Littorialidella cultura: Teatro di masse, 18 BL," La stampa, 21 February 1934, 3. Sofia had made a parallel argumentin "Cultura e sport nella 12, no. 2 (15 January 1934): 21-23. rivoluzionefascista,"Criticafascista In a contemporarydebate, the directorAnton Giulio Bragaglia had declared the paucityof words the definingattributeof the new mass theater: "Blasettiindicated to me thatthe words required for his spectaclewillbe few.And thatperhaps many will be transmittedby loudspeaker,which means that even the tenuous residue of theatricalvalues willbe mechanized.... Given the factthatthe drama of everyera has averaged twentyto thirtythousand words per play,thisdearth will ensure that the Spectacle for Masses willbe fundamentallydistinctfromthe theateras we have knownit"; "La parola nel teatro'per ventimila,"'Il giornaled'Italia,28 April 1934, 3. Earlier in the essay Sofia writes:"No stage,no stars,no dialogues encased withinthe usual three-sidedwalls. Not thatthe traditionaltheaterought to vanish . . . but we hope thatthe new theaterwillpermitpassions to be shared bythe mass of spectators and the young actorswho willact themout"; "Verso i Littoriali,"3. Ruggero Orlando, "Prove di 18 BL," La tribuna,26 April 1934, 3. novecentista, 223-69; 270Bontempelli'swritingswere later collected in L'avventura 94. It goes withoutsaying that historicalprecursorswere also invoked by 18 BL's creators.Sofia does not hesitateto definethe workas a mysteryplay: "Withmodern means . . . we are attemptingto compose a sacred representationthatwould place side by side on stage the passions of a people and its politicalfaith";"Verso i Littoriali," 3. Pavolini would reject all links to Roman and Renaissance pageantry but affirmthatthe "greattheaterof the ancientGreeks"was a worthyancestor; "Fascisti giovanial lavoro,"3. Sofia,"II parere di uno degli ottoautori,"3-4. See, for example, "Verso i Littoriali,"where Sofia states: "I am coordinatingwith Sandro De Feo the ideas put forwardbya committeeof squadrists,writers,students, and setdesigners"(3). The manuscriptscontainedin the BA suggest,to the contrary, thatthe roles of De Feo and Sofia in the draftingprocess were not unique. Sofia,"II parere di uno degli ottoautori,"3. Ibid., 4. Sofia also claimed thatcriticswere guiltyof a cover-up. "Passaggi a livello: 18 BL," La tribuna,9 May 1934, 3. "Il corago immaginario,"Quadrivio2, no. 29 (13 May 1934): 1-2. REPRESENTATIONS This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 84. Blasetti'sresponse, "Ancora sul 18 BL," appeared in La tribuna(15 May 1934): 3. It was preceded by Bomba's "Tradimento . . . tradimento!,"which was followed by a brieffinalblast fromSofia; "Ultimibaglioridel 18 BL," Quadrivio2, no. 30 (20 May 1934): 4; and byan even-handedessayby Gherardo Gherardi,"Difendo Blasetti,"Il restodi carlino,26 May 1934: 3. novecentista, 265. 85. Bontempelli,L'avventura 86. The best descriptionof the closingmomentsis thatof Giuseppe Longo: Blasettisends Men push together,but theircombinedstrengthis insufficient. reinforcementsbut to no avail. Then he turnsoffthe lightsin order to conceal a cinematographictrickfromthe public (but it remainsvisible): Mother Cartridge-Pouchis being pushed by another truck. The trickwas unrehearsed, but littledoes it mattersince nearlythreequartersof the audience membershave already departed. At last the other trucksappear and cover the carcass withloads of dirt. "18 BL a Firenze: Non e nato il teatrodi massa," Gazzettadi Messina,4 May 1934, 3. 87. The anecdote is reportedbySilvio D'Amico in "Teatro di masse: 18 BL," in Cronache does not seem to have been prevalent,however. delteatro2 (1964): 285. Such hostility In a letterto the author dated 14 April 1992, Luigi Preti (who at the time was a teenager) reports: "The young people were in large measure enthusiasticabout 18 BL because of Blasetti'sexcellentdirectorialskills,even if most didn't understand it fully." 88. Ugo Ojetti,I taccuini,1914-1943 (Florence, 1954), 435. Cf. Giuseppe Longo: "It is not withoutdanger thatone places at the centerof a heroic enterprisean inanimate being.... For reasons of temperamentwe Latins are not predisposed to exalting machinery";"18 BL a Firenze." 89. Claudio Massenti,"L'esperimentofiorentinodello spettacolo di massa," La tribuna, 15 May 1934, 3. Massentihad in mind workslike Emile Schreiber'sRomeapresMoscou (Paris, 1932), a studyof fascistItalyfilledwithcomparisonsto SovietRussia. trans.Giacomo Prampolini(2nd ed.; Milan, Il voltodelbolscevismo, 90. Rene Fiulop-Miller, book was 1931), 20-21. Publishedwitha prefacebyCurzio Malaparte,Fuilop-Miller's reprintedseveraltimesduring the late 1920s and early 1930s. 91. Eisenstein'sfilmsnever underwent general distribution,but their influence was, nonetheless,considerablejudging by the filmsexhibitedat the fascistLittoriali.As L'Italialetteraria, forhis theoreticalwritings, forinstance,ran a two-partessayentitled "Della formacinematografica"in its28 May 1934 (p. 5) and 4 June 1934 (p. 5) issues. 92. Press coverage of 18 BL oftenreferredto these experimentsand in "Spettacoli di masse e 18 BL," Scenario3, no. 5 (May 1934): 251-55, Guido Salvini even proposed a detailed comparativestudy.On the Sovietrevolutionaryfestivals,see VladimirTolstoy,Irina Bibikova,and Catherine Cooke, eds., StreetArtoftheRevolution:Festivals and Celebrations inRussia,1918-1933 (London, 1990); SzymonBojko, "Agit-propArt: The StreetsWere Their Theater,"in Stephanie Baron and Maurice Tuchman, eds., TheAvant-Garde in Russia, 1910-1930: NewPerspectives (Los Angeles, 1980), 72-76; and James Von Geldern, "Festivalsof the Revolution,1917-1920: Art and Theater in the Formationof SovietCulture" (Ph.D. diss., Brown University,1987). 93. A detailed eyewitnessaccount of the spectaclecan be found in Huntley Carter,The NewTheatreand CinemaofSovietRussia (New York, 1970), 106-9; but see also Fulop96-97, who notesthat"a writers'and directors'collective Miller,Il voltodelbolscevismo, workedon it and developed it" (96). Il voltodelboiscevismo, 94. Fuilop-Miller, 97. 18 BL This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 123 95. For a comparativestudyof mass theaterin SovietRussia, the WeimarRepublic, and auf derBithne?:Das MassenNazi Germany,see Hannelore Wolff,Volksabstimmung (Frankfurt,1985). Agitation theater als Mittelpolitischer 96. This doubling extends even to the spectacle'ssongs. "Hanno ammazzato Giovanni Berta,"forinstance,would have been familiarto the audience of 18 BL in both black and red flavors.In the soundtrackitsfirstverseswere: They have killedGiovanniBerta a fascistamong fascists, revenge,yes,revenge shall befallthe communists. In the communistversionitwould have opened: They have killedGiovanniBerta son of a war profiteer: long live the communist who stomped on his hands. 97. 98. 99. 100. 101. 102. 103. 124 1919-1945, ed. A. V. Savona and M. L. Straniero Cited fromCantidell'Italiafascista, (89-90). Such doublings are endemic: "The fascistrepertorydistinguishesitselffar less than it would have liked fromthe contemporaneousantifascistand democratic repertory.Indeed, itoftenadopts the same tonalitiesand the same linguisticcliches, and on occasion even had recourseto thesame songs,whichunderwentonlyminimal modification"(5). Yambo, "Fervidapreparazione dei Littoriali,"13 April 1934, 1. Since Florentinemunicipal records for this period are incomplete,it is difficultto establishthe precise contributionmade bycityauthorities.The Azienda Autonoma di Turismodi Firenze contributedat least 100,000 lire to the budget of the Littoriali, accordingto documentsfound in Florence'sArchiviodi Storia.The Comune of Florence also covered the electricalbill at the ParterreSan Gallo, and allocated 35,000 lire for "the preparation of some segmentsof Argin Grosso, Mortuli,and Isolotto streets"(quoted froma document,dated 2 March 1934, signed bythe Podesta'Paolo Pesciolini,Archiviodi Storia, Florence Prefecture,General Affairs,series 2, 1934, file87, envelope 2202). Cited from"Primeconsiderazionie proposte: Ufficio,"BA. Orlando, "Prove di 18 BL," 3. The metaphor of "metallization,"centralto Marinetti'swritings,is cited in the epilogue to WalterBenjamin's "The Workof Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction": "War is beautifulbecause it initiatesthe dreamt-ofmetallizationof the human ed. Hannah Arendt,trans.HarryZohn (New York, 1976), 241. body"; Illuminations, The metaphor also figuresprominentlyin the writingsexamined by Theweleit in (aus demTagebuch Male Fantasiesand in workssuch as ErnstJunger'sIn Stahlgewittern einesStosstruppfihrers) (Berlin, 1931). One contemporarypress account presentsthe 18 BL as the founding ancestor of Italian mass transportation;C[urio] M[ortari],"Teatro di masse: Lo spettacolo di staseraa Firenze,"La stampa,29 April 1934, 4. Salome is identifiedwith the so-called donna crisito be contrastedwith the donna on whichsubjectsee Victoriade Grazia, How FascismRuled Women:Italy, madre/truck, 1922-1945 (Berkeley,1992), 212-13. De Grazia notes: "To respond to the aesthetic mayhem unleashed by commercialculture,the fascistpropaganda machine, with REPRESENTATIONS This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions Mussolini'sapprobation,championed itsown standardsof femalebeauty: one ideal, the 'crisiswoman,' was negative;the other,whom we mightcall 'authenticwoman,' was positive"(212). 104. In 1860 Blasettihad employedthissame principleto even greatereffect.Garibaldi, the true protagonistof the film,appears in only a handful of framesand, when he does, his presence is fleeting. 18BL This content downloaded from 149.31.21.88 on Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:14:26 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 125
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