The House of Bernarda Alba (Spanish: La casa de Bernarda Alba) is a play by the Spanish dramatist Federico García Lorca. Commentators have often grouped it with Blood Wedding and Yerma as the Rural Trilogy. Garcia Lorca did not include it in his plan for a "trilogy of the Spanish land" (which remained unfinished at the time of his murder).[1]
Garcia Lorca described the play in its subtitle as a drama of women in the villages of Spain. The House of Bernarda Alba was Garcia Lorca's last play, completed on 19 June 1936, two months before his assassination during the Spanish Civil War. The play was first performed on 8 March 1945 at the Avenida Theatre in Buenos Aires.[2][3] The play centers on the events of a house in Andalusia during a period of mourning, in which Bernarda Alba (aged 60) wields total control over her five daughters Angustias (39 years old), Magdalena (30), Amelia (27), Martirio (24), and Adela (20). The housekeeper (Poncia) and Bernarda's elderly mother (María Josefa) also live there.
The deliberate exclusion of any male character from the action helps build up the high level of sexual tension that is present throughout the play. Pepe "el Romano", the love interest of Bernarda's daughters and suitor of Angustias, never appears on stage. The play explores themes of repression, passion, and conformity, and inspects the effects of men upon women.
Plot summaryUpon her second husband's death, domineering matriarch Bernarda Alba imposes an eight-year mourning period on her household in accordance with her family tradition. Bernarda has five daughters, aged between 20 and 39, whom she has rigidly controlled and prohibited from any form of relationship. The mourning period further isolates them and tension mounts within the household.
After a mourning ritual at the family home, eldest daughter Angustias enters, having been absent while the guests were there. Bernarda fumes, assuming she had been listening to the men's conversation on the patio. Angustias inherited a large sum of money from Bernarda's first husband, while Bernarda's second husband has left only small sums to his four daughters. Angustias' wealth attracts a young, attractive suitor from the village, Pepe el Romano. Her sisters are jealous, believing it unfair that plain, sickly Angustias should receive both the majority of the inheritance and the freedom to marry and escape their suffocating home.
Minerva Mena in La casa de Bernarda AlbaYoungest sister Adela, stricken with sudden spirit and jubilation after her father's funeral, defies her mother's orders and dons a green dress instead of remaining in mourning black. Her brief taste of youthful joy shatters when she discovers that Angustias will be marrying Pepe. Poncia, Bernarda's maid, advises Adela to bide her time: Angustias will probably die delivering her first child. Distressed, Adela threatens to run into the streets in her green dress, but her sisters manage to stop her. Suddenly they see Pepe coming down the street. Adela stays behind while her sisters rush to get a look, until a maid hints that she could get a better look from her bedroom window.
As Poncia and Bernarda discuss the daughters' inheritances upstairs, Bernarda sees Angustias wearing makeup. Appalled that Angustias would defy her orders to remain in a state of mourning, Bernarda violently scrubs the makeup off her face. The other daughters enter, followed by Bernarda's elderly mother, Maria Josefa, who is usually locked away in her room. Maria Josefa announces that she wants to get married; she also warns Bernarda that she'll turn her daughters' hearts to dust if they cannot be free. Bernarda forces her back into her room.
It is revealed that Adela and Pepe are having a secret affair. Adela becomes increasingly volatile, defying her mother and quarreling with her sisters, particularly Martirio, who reveals her own feelings for Pepe. Adela shows the most horror when the family hears the latest gossip about how the townspeople recently tortured a young woman who had delivered and killed an illegitimate baby.
Tension explodes as family members confront one another, leading to Bernarda pursuing Pepe with a gun. A gunshot is heard outside the home. Martirio and Bernarda return and imply that Pepe has been killed. Adela flees into another room. With Adela out of earshot, Martirio tells everyone else that Pepe actually fled on his pony. Bernarda remarks that as a woman she can't be blamed for poor aim. A loud noise is heard; Bernarda immediately calls for Adela, who has locked herself into a room. When she doesn't respond, Bernarda and Poncia force the door open. Poncia's shriek is heard. She returns with her hands clasped around her neck and warns the family not to enter the room. Adela, not knowing that Pepe survived, has hanged herself.
The House of Bernarda Alba by the senior generation of Hamazkayin "Arek" Theatre.[4]The closing lines of the play show Bernarda characteristically preoccupied with the family's reputation, not registering that Adela and Pepe had an affair due to her moral code. She insists that Adela has died a virgin and demands that this be made known to the whole town. Bernarda forbids her daughters to cry.
AdaptationsStage adaptations include:
- 1973: English adaptation by Tom Stoppard. It premiered at the Greenwich Theatre with Robin Phillips as the director.[5]
- 1979: Birjis Qadar Ka Kunba (The family of Birjis Qadar), a Hindi adaptation by Raghuvir Sahay.[6]
- 2004: Bnat Lalla Mennana (The daughters of Lalla Mennana), a Moroccan adaptation by the Takoon theatre group. It was made into a TV series in 2012.[7]
- 2012: Emily Mann's adaptation into Iranian setting. It opened at the Almeida Theatre under the director Bijan Sheibani, starring Shohreh Aghdashloo as Bernarda.[8]
- 2018: Australian adaptation by Patricia Cornelius for Melbourne Theatre Company.[9] It was staged at the Fairfax Studio and featured Melita Jurisic as Bernadette (Bernarda).[10][11]
- 2023: Adaptation by Alice Birch at the Royal National Theatre, with Harriet Walter as Bernarda Alba.[12]
Film and television
Film and television adaptations include:
- 1976: BBC production of the same title in English, directed by Claude Whatham, with Mary Morris as Bernarda.[13]
- 1987: Film adaptation of the same title, directed by Mario Camus.[14]
- 1991: TV film adaptation of the same title in English, directed by Núria Espert, with Glenda Jackson as Bernarda.[15]
- 1991: Rukmavati ki Haveli (Rukmavati's mansion), a Hindi film adaptation set in Rajasthan, directed by Govind Nihlani.[16]
Other
Other adaptations include:
- 1967: Las Desenamoradas, a ballet adaptation by Eleo Pomare, featuring music by John Coltrane.[17]
- 2000: Bernarda Albas Haus, an opera adaptation by Aribert Reimann.[18]
- 2006: Bernarda Alba, a musical adaptation by Michael John LaChiusa. It opened at Mitzi Newhouse Theater with Phylicia Rashad as Bernarda.[19]
- ^ Maurer, Christopher. (1992). Introduction. Three Plays. By Federico García Lorca. Trans. Michael Dewell and Carmen Zapata. London: Penguin. p. ix ISBN 0-14-018383-3.
- ^ Styan, J. L. (1981). Modern Drama in Theory and Practice: Volume 2, Symbolism, Surrealism and the Absurd. Cambridge University Press. p. 90. ISBN 052123-0683.
- ^ Londré, Felicia Hardison (1984). Federico García Lorca. Frederick Ungar Publishing Company. pp. 33. ISBN 080442540X.
- ^ ""The House of Bernarda Alba" Performed (Lebanon)". 22 February 2016.
- ^ Gardner, Lyn (2009-04-29). "The House of Bernarda Alba". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2024-07-17.
- ^ गोयल, डॉ आरती 'लोकेश'. रघुवीर सहाय के गद्य में सामाजिक चेतना: Raghuvir Sahay ke Gadya mein Samajik Chetna (in Hindi). Notionpress.
- ^ Jay, Cleo (2013). "Acting up: performance and the politics of womanhood in contemporary Morocco". Journal of African Cultural Studies. 25 (3): 305–318. doi:10.1080/13696815.2013.819777. ISSN 1369-6815. JSTOR 42005330.
- ^ Kellaway, Kate (2012-01-29). "The House of Bernarda Alba – review". The Observer. ISSN 0029-7712. Retrieved 2024-07-17.
- ^ Woodhead, Cameron (4 June 2018). "Mother smothers, but daughters are lost in MTC House of Bernarda Alba". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 14 August 2019.
- ^ Byrne, Tim (2 June 2018). "The House of Bernarda Alba". Time Out. Retrieved 14 August 2019.
- ^ Croggon, Alison (6 June 2018). "The silence of atrocity: The House of Bernarda Alba". Witness Performance. Retrieved 14 August 2019.
- ^ "The House of Bernarda Alba | National Theatre". www.nationaltheatre.org.uk. Retrieved 2024-07-17.
- ^ "BBC Programme Index". genome.ch.bbc.co.uk. 1976-07-28. Retrieved 2024-07-17.
- ^ Smith, Paul Julian (1996). Vision Machines: Cinema, Literature, and Sexuality in Spain and Cuba, 1983–1993. Verso. p. 20. ISBN 1-85984-079-5. JSTOR 24487859.
- ^ O'Connor, John J. (1991-12-18). "Review/Television; A Tyrannical Widow And Her 5 Daughters". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2024-07-17.
- ^ Hood, John W. (2000). The Essential Mystery: The Major Filmmakers of Indian Art Cinema. Orient Longman. pp. 459. ISBN 81-250-1870-0.
- ^ Kisselgoff, Anna (16 February 1981). "Dance: Pomare's "Las Desenamoradas"". The New York Times. p. 17. Retrieved 16 January 2011.
- ^ Latham, Alison (2004). "Bernarda Albas Haus ('The House of Bernarda Alba')". The Oxford Dictionary of Musical Works. Oxford University Press. p. 17. ISBN 0198610203. Opera in three acts by Aribert Reimann to a libretto by the composer after Enrique Beck's German translation of Federico Garcıa Lorca's play La casa de Bernarda Alba (1936) (Munich, ...
- ^ Brantley, Ben (7 March 2006). "Sex and a Monster Mother Seething in Sunny Spain". The New York Times. Retrieved 28 October 2008.
- Lima, Robert. The Theatre of Garcia Lorca. New York: Las Americas Publishing Co., 1963.
- Full text of the play in Spanish
- Spanish: El sentido trágico en La casa de Bernarda Alba, y algunas relaciones con Yerma y Bodas de Sangre, de Lorca.