by Marcella
Kearns, MCT Guest Educator
Recently, on a whim, I asked a fellow coffee shop patron if he
knew anything about P.G. Wodehouse. I was beginning research
for JEEVES IN BLOOM, Margaret Raether's second adaptation of
Wodehouse's Jeeves stories, and we were in a chatty space. He
shook his head.
"British writer?" I prompted.
"Oh, yeah. Winnie the Pooh…?"
"Jeeves."
"Oh. Oh, yeah! Ask Jeeves! On the
internet. The search engine. Not around anymore,
though."
"Yes, in a way." (It's been shortened to "Ask.com.")
"Jeeves. He was a butler, right?"
"Not exactly, no-"
Then it hit.
"He knew everything."
"Yes," I said. "Yes. He knew everything."
He knew everything. That someone to whom Sir Pelham
Grenville Wodehouse himself was unfamiliar could nevertheless nail
the defining feature of one of his creations tickled me.
Nearly a century after Wodehouse's beloved characters Bertie
Wooster and his valet, Jeeves, appeared in print for the first
time, this master-servant pair continues to find new life and
loving audiences in all media. Short stories and novels
remain in print around the world. Jeeves and Wooster stories
have been adapted into films, television series, and plays over the
course of several decades. For those who don't know the man,
Wodehouse's work, at least, continues to occupy a place in
Stateside pop culture. What about his stories sticks for
us? What, exactly, is the appeal, a century after he was
coming into his own as a writer?
Craft and Style
Wodehouse had a keen instinct for the
theatrical in both plot and word, and it's from that point that I
launched a search which would take me through biographies, several
Jeeves collections, and delightful conversations with playwright
Margaret Raether and actress Karen Estrada.
By the mid-1920s, Wodehouse was established on both sides of the
Atlantic as England's premier comic writer. While he often
gravitated to the short story, he was no stranger to writing for
the theatre. In the later teens, in fact, he began to
collaborate with Guy Bolton and Jerome Kern, among other greats of
the early 20
th-century American musical theatre, to
serve as lyricist and co-librettist on Broadway projects. The
team of Bolton, Kern, and Wodehouse served to set a new standard
for the seamless integration of lyrics, music, and book into a
cohesive story-something musicals hadn't heretofore made much of a
priority. Essentially, they helped mature the form.
Wodehouse credited the stage with helping him hone his own craft
in prose: "I've found that writing musical comedy has taught me a
lot," he wrote to his friend Bill Townend. "In musical comedy
you gain so tremendously in Act One if you can give your principal
characters a
dramatic entrance instead of just walking
them on."
1
Even as Raether attests that plotting
is the most difficult part of her playwriting process, she praises
Wodehouse for his ability to craft an airtight, improbable sequence
of events and seeks to nail that spirit of screwball comedy in her
own work. "My favorite word to write is 'pandemonium,'" she
shares. "It's in all of my scripts. It's good to be on
hand for the first production because then I can help work out what
happens. 'What do you want here?' I'm asked.
'Pandemonium!' I say."
Wodehouse's writing style seems as effortless in its complexity
as his plotting. His work is peppered with allusions to
literature, the quirkiest of images, unabashed Edwardian slang, and
sentence construction that gives any actor a breath-support
workout. Karen Estrada, who will play the socialite Madeline
Bassett in JEEVES IN BLOOM at MCT, rhapsodizes about the richness
of Wodehouse's text: "I love the 'Britishness' of it: the slang
'eggs and b' instead of eggs and bacon, for instance. He
writes lyrics and poetry, prides himself on G & S turns of
phrase and cleverness." Raether echoes the praise,
pinpointing what for her draws us to the language: "It's a fabulous
combination of silly funny and smart funny. Wodehouse's
wordplay is brilliant. And we get the benefit of both.
Even as we laugh at the joke, we pat ourselves on the back for
getting it."
Escape
Neatly plotted comedy and sharp prose aside, Wodehouse's work is
Exhibit A in the argument for flat-out escape as a major benefit of
fiction. As common a purpose for entertainment as it is, the
balm of escape is often unacknowledged. Wodehouse's world
purposefully keeps the worst of reality at bay. Many of his
stories sit squarely in an idyllic pre-war Edwardian England in
which social struggles are distant, if not invisible. In a
BBC broadcast honoring Wodehouse in 1961, Evelyn Waugh likened
Wodehouse's world to Eden. Biographer Robert McCrum quotes
the novel
Something Fresh as insight into Wodehouse's
intentional removal from the cares of the world: "Other people
worried about all sorts of things-strikes, wars, suffragettes,
diminishing birth-rates, the growing materialism of the age, and a
score of similar subjects. Worrying, indeed, seemed to be the
twentieth century's specialty. Lord Emsworth never
worried."
2
Estrada and Raether both reflect on
that delicious retreat-the safety and dazzle of Wodehouse's
fictional England-when I speak with them. "It was such a
strange time," laughs Estrada. "They had money and nothing to
do, so they could collect weird things and have bizarre passions
and pursuits. What does Madeline do? Nothing."
The worst of Madeline's travails are in firming up to whom she's
engaged. Raether muses, "I've always been fascinated by the
fact that during a tremendous depression-people didn't resent
movies about this kind of thing. They didn't want to burn
down the cinema. For them, it was fun to visit a world where
everyone wears those divine gowns to dinner." Her reflection
takes the analysis one step further. "Perhaps it isn't just
the clothes or the social status. In fact, there is perhaps
something satisfying about the fabulously wealthy getting into a
tizzy, into fabulously ridiculous predicaments."
Did this ideal world, this attractive place to escape, ever
exist? Herbert Warren Wind recalls a gathering of Wodehouse
and friends at the Patio, a restaurant in Westhampton Beach, in the
early 1970s. As a friend asked Wodehouse that very question,
the writer, then a long-term exile from England, replied.
Oh, it very definitely
existed. When I was living in London around the turn of the
century, a good many of the young men dressed in morning coats,
toppers, and spats-or spatterdashes, to give them their full
name. I wore them myself when I paid afternoon calls. I
don't know why spats went out of favor. They were very
comfortable, you know. Awfully warm. Anyway, when I
started writing my stories, Bertie was a recognizable type.
All the rich young men had valets. Funny how fast a type
disappears! After the war, there wasn't nearly so much money
around, so the young men had to go out and find jobs, and this sort
of pulled the rug out from under a whole way of life.
3
With the rug pulled out from a "whole way of life," Wodehouse
provided-still provides-a haven. He wrote to Townend, "There
is the problem of whether to ignore the upheaval in English life
and go on doing Blandings Castle and Jeeves stuff or try to do
something modern… I believe people having a rotten time in England
like reading of the days when there were butlers and so on."
4 Certainly, what sold was escape-what audiences
craved and needed given their own circumstances.
Reliability
Providing what was needed: that thought led me back to Bertie
and Jeeves themselves, characters recognizable even to the
unindoctrinated, and the question of their enduring appeal.
Estrada discusses the characters as warmly as though she's
discussing old friends: "Bertie is absolutely aware of his
own stupidity most of the time. How he relies on
Jeeves! We never hear anything from Jeeves' point of view
[Bertie narrates the fiction], but we can tell how he has made the
entire arc of the story work for himself." Raether puts it
another way: "In his own aristocratic way, Jeeves has fun.
Bertie offers more scope for his talents than anyone less talented
at getting himself into difficulties." Indeed, Jeeves'
ability to plot a path that will extricate Bertie and neutralize a
conflict with the best possible outcome for all players (including
himself) appears superhuman, his knowledge and observation
omniscient. We, as audience, can't help but wonder how much
of a kick he gets out of it.
Jeeves isn't alone in his reliability, however. Bertie
Wooster adheres to a strict personal code-
never let a friend
down-that invariably costs him sleep, time, reputation, and
money (fortunately, the latter is in ready enough supply).
His code has a knack for landing him in trying and comically ripe
scrapes on behalf of his friends, true, so Bertie is fortunate to
have Jeeves; but both together bring a heart and brain to a puzzle
that readers and audiences can be certain will manage to win the
day.
Perhaps that's one key to Wodehouse's lasting appeal. His
world, light-hearted, carefree, is five-star in the way of
fictional escapes. His language is searingly funny, his
comedy deft. But his heroes-Bertie Wooster and Jeeves-are
true to those they serve: friend, family, employer.
And audience.
1 Wodehouse's letter to William Townend
(1922) quoted in Wodehouse: A Life by Robert McCrum (2004), 150
2 Something Fresh quoted by McCrum, 116.
3 Wodehouse quoted in The World of P.G. Wodehouse by Herbert
Warren Wind (1971), 98.
4 Wodehouse's letter to Townend (1950) quoted by McCrum,
374.