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Augustine (Big Hysteria) by Anna Furse
review in SF Weekly by Karen Macklin (July
24, 2002)
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A thought-provoking drama about a 19th-century "hysteric" victimized
by a misguided psychoanalyst
BY KAREN MACKLIN
- The Shee Theatre Company makes a grand entrance into the San Francisco
scene this week with English playwright Anna Furse's semibiographical account
of a late-19th-century "hysteric." The historical character Augustine,
documented as a 15-year-old housemaid who went mad with hysteria, was placed
under the care of a big-shot Parisian neurologist, Professor Jean-Martin
Charcot, who experimented on and displayed her in his very own lunatic
asylum, aptly called the "Museum of Suffering." The play begins
with a chilling scene of Augustine writhing in anguish on her bed of misery
inside the hospital, and follows her gross deterioration as Charcot pricks
her with needles, hypnotizes her, and tortures her with excessive doses
of random drugs, including liberal prescriptions for "ovarian compression."
Her symptoms (which only worsen with treatment) are
rage, incoherence, epileptic fits, colorblindness, and sharp pains beneath
her breasts and across her lower abdomen. While Charcot is entirely transfixed
on what he sees as a bizarre physical manifestation of insanity, a young
Sigmund Freud -- seen here, fictitiously, as a student of Charcot's --
begins to challenge the professor's theories on grand hystérie with
his own psychoanalysis and dream interpretations. A solid piece of compelling
and thought-provoking drama, Augustine is a piercing snapshot of a frighteningly
misogynous era of medical history during which women were treated -- and
paraded around -- like lab rats. Under Virginia Reed's impeccable direction,
the cast of four proves an explosive ensemble, with the mesmerizing Laura
Hope (as Augustine) at its helm. Reed makes good use of the playing space,
bringing photographs, live violin music, and well-choreographed dances
of madness into the Exit's petite arena. The woman-centered Shee company's
debut
production hits the bull's-eye with this meaningful exploration, and sets
high expectations for its future endeavors.
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- NOTE: (email received February 1,2005) I dont know if you bother changing
archived stuff, but, as a historian of Charcot and the Salpetriere school,
I came across the following review.
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- The reviewer has bizarrely claimed that Furse made up the fact that
Freud was a student of Charcot's. Your reviewer is in error. It is indeed
very well known and for that matter exhaustively documented that Freud
was indeed a student of Charcot's for some time. Freud wrote an obit of
charcot which appears in Freud's published complete works, and indeed it
is very unlikely that Freud would have come up with his own ideas about
psychoanalysis and hysteria if Freud had not been a student of Charcot's.
It is moreover true to say that Charcot's current fame, at least in psychoanalytic
circles and pyschological circles, is very laregly due to the fact that
Freud WAS a student of Charcot's. It is therefore demonstrably wrong and
somewhat baffling that your reviewer doesnt recognise this
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- Anyhow, it's a nice quick crit neverthless
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- Sincerely
Jonathan Marshall, PhD, MA
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