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Robert M. Young Online Writings
Mrs Klein by Nicholas Wright
reviewed by Robert M. Young
There were many moving moments and many distressing ones in Mrs
Klein. For me there was one which was almost unbearable. There had been a reparative
phase in the intense and often violent dialogue between Mrs Klein and her daughter,
Melitta Schmideberg, and it seemed almost safe to draw breath. Then Mrs Klein spoke
tenderly to her daughter, as daughter, but went on cruelly to distinguish her from her
role as Dr Schmideberg, the psychoanalyst who fought her mother bitterly in public. 'But I
am Dr Schmideberg', her daughter retorted with bitterness and defiance. 'And I am Melanie
Klein', her mother roared. I felt nearly blown away - all the power and originality of
that formidable psychoanalyst at the height of her powers was being used to crush her
daughter.
What was so powerful and frightening about that moment was the
simultaneity of roles: mother/daughter, great woman/insolent junior colleague. Each was
trapped in roles which shifted from line to line and moment to moment; each used
psychoanalytic insight to rise above her worst self or appeared to do so, since this
often turned out to be a rationalization for new defensiveness and cruelty towards the
other. Each desperately needed the other but would attack any good moment as soon as it
was clearly there. It is, then, a very Kleinian play, operating simultaneously at many
levels, with powerful emotions coming thick and fast. I cannot say what someone with no
experience of psychoanalysis would make of it, but for me it rang perfectly true.
As the play begins, we find Mrs Klein with her back to us, and Paula
Heimann being told things about the contents of a box. Then Mrs Klein finds a poem, sobs,
holds out her hand for comfort. Paula Heimann comes to her, kneeling. Mrs Klein goes on in
this vein and then says brightly, 'That's enough for today' and produces tea. We learn
minutes later that they have never met before and that Mrs Klein has bestowed on the
younger woman (Klein is fifty-two, Heimann thirty-four) the role of house-sitter, editor,
secretary, general factotum.
There are many moments like that when we discover just how odd,
presumptuous, mean (Klein locks everything up, including the liquor cabinet, when she goes
away) and spiteful the three characters can be. Melitta Schmideberg is horrid but
desperate. Mrs Klein is a monster but pathetically in need of love. Paula Heimann is
apparently deferential but triumphs in the end and gets what she wants: to become Mrs
Klein's confidante and analysand and to replace her only friend, Melitta, in the role of
Mrs Klein's daughter.
The play is set in Mrs Klein's sitting-room, and I saw it performed in
the small Cottesloe Theatre, so intimate a space that at one point, when Melitta sobbed, I
felt that it was someone in the audience who was unable to suppress expression of the
powerful feelings that I, too, was having.
They made life seem so impossible, insight so fickle, so useless in
one's own life if anything a burden more than a solace. This was made more poignant
when it became clear that Mrs Klein had analysed Melitta in her teens, as she had her son,
Hans, whose death in a climbing accident provided the occasion for the action of the play.
Melitta thinks she has deduced that it was suicide and sets out to use this knowledge to
destroy her mother. She then thinks better of it and seeks to retrieve the letter before
Mrs Klein has read it. She does so, only to give it back in a fit of retaliation at her
mother's cruelty. Paula Heimann seeks to smooth things over and even constructs an
alternative, less devastating, account of the son's death, only to evoke Mrs Klein's
jealousy when it turns out that Hans had an older woman lover and was thereby perhaps free
of his mother's control when he died.
We are repeatedly startled, as when we learn that Paula and Melitta are
dear friends; when Melitta dramatically relinquishes her key, never to darken her mother's
doorway again, only to tell Paula that she always makes that gesture and always retrieves
the key. And so it goes on and on, like Sartre's hell in No Exit. The
performances are excellent, though Paula's (Zoë Wanamaker) face in repose was a bit too
sardonic for my taste, and Gillian Barge did not fully inhabit Mrs Klein's histrionics.
Melitta (Francesca Annis) was perfect doomed never to escape her mother's immense
shadow and never able to give and receive the love they both needed. When Melitta reveals
that she has gone into analysis with Klein's arch-enemy, Edward Glover, Klein throws a
glass of piss/wine in her face, and tries to force the torn-up shit/letter into her mouth,
lunging at her and shouting that Melitta is a poisoner. Within moments she composes
herself.
None of this will be news to readers of Phyllis Grosskurth's fine,
though overinterpretative, biography (Hodder & Stoughton; Karnac paperback),
graciously acknowledged in the programme and script. It is hard to believe that endurable
and creative lives can emerge from these relationships, but we have the work of these
women and the Kleinian tradition to show that they can. Even so, it is ghastly. I have
heard people who knew Mrs Klein say that she wasn't like that; she didn't lock up the
drinks, etc. Surely this is not the point of drama. The point is: is it moving and
illuminating of human nature? I would place this play alongside Duet for One as a
fine, dramatic rendering of what is best in psychoanalysis. If you cannot see the play,
then the text is well worth reading (Nick Hern Books, 87 Vauxhall Walk, London SE11 5HF,
£4.50).
Speaking of Mrs Klein's ability to compose herself, I found it hard to
compose myself as the play ended. I had found it devastating. I had had the same feeling
almost unable to stand or move, or to speak for some time on two other
occasions near the time I saw Mrs Klein. Both were about parent/daughter
relationships, and both shared the desolating effect of parents' vocations on children. In A World Apart, Ruth First's teenage daughter cannot comprehend her mother's
devotion to the cause of black liberation and her detention by the South African
authorities. How can a cause be set against the child's sense of abandonment and her need
to see into the secrets and secret places of her mother's work? The story is told from the
child's point of view, and is more moving than I can say. The comfort the child needs is
given by a devoted black woman servant, who perforce neglects her own children while
holding on to Ruth First's. It is through her relationship with the black woman's family
that the child learns to begin to share her mother's commitment to black liberation.
Unlike Melitta Schmideberg, Ruth First's daughter, Shawn Slovo, was able to transform her
suffering into creative work. She wrote the script of the film about her relationship with
her mother, while the three women who played the mother, child and black servant
Barbara Hershey, Johdi May, Yvonne Bryceland shared the Golden Palm at Cannes.
Babette's Feast (based on an Isak Dinesen short story) must seem
a strange film to set alongside Mrs Klein and A World Apart. In this case
there were two daughters, and their lives were blighted by a religious vocation. Their
father had been the leader of an obscure and austere Scandinavian Christian sect, and the
girls had carried on his work into spinsterhood. Each had a chance to marry one to
a dashing army officer, the other to a singer but the father stood in their way.
After his death, they continued to serve the and dwindling sects ageing members.
Into their lives came a refugee from the Paris Commune (sent to this
remote place by the singer), who worked for many years as an unpaid, devoted and brilliant
servant and then had a major win on the lottery which promised to take her away. To
celebrate, she prepared a feast, and what a feast it was! The photography of it is
amazing. To the feast came the army officer, now a general, and it was only he who could
really appreciate and name the great delicacies and wines that were served. The members of
the sect had sworn not to be influenced by the meal not to be corrupted by the
Devil's work. But they were changed by it at a deeper level in spite of themselves;
profound reparative work was done with respect to their bickerings, the sisters' lives and
the general's nostalgia. And Babette, having spent her entire winnings on the feast, had
shown what she could create, was at peace, and stayed in the village. The film ends with a
sense of profound fulfilment and stoicism, with the most affecting things happening
beneath the consciousness of the main characters.
Parents and children, the ravages of parents with careers, vocations,
causes whether psychoanalytic, political or religious. All these produce great
insight, great struggles, great artistry. And people endure, trying to know, to bear and
to transcend the burdens they carry, put into other people, and can sometimes and to some
degree take back into themselves after undergoing some detoxification and transformation
into something life-affirming. Art affirms and reminds one of these possibilities and
hopes.
Reprinted from Free Associations No. 17 (1989), pp. 146-49.
1608 words
Copyright: The Author
Address for correspondence: 26 Freegrove Road, London N7
9RQ
robert@rmy1.demon.co.uk
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