may write a century of sonnets, or Dante paint a picture
of an angel, without considering the publisher or
picture-dealer. But there is one of the arts—the
art of the drama—which can never be disassociated
from its concomitant business—the business
of the theatre. It is impossible to imagine a
man making anything which might justly be called a
play merely to please himself and with no thought
whatever of pleasing also an audience of others by
presenting it before them with actors on a stage.
But the mere existence of a theatre, a company of
actors, an audience assembled, necessitates an economic
organisation and presupposes a business manager; and
this business manager, who sets the play before the
public and attracts the public to the play, must necessarily
exert a potent influence over the playwright.
The only way in which a dramatist may free himself
from this influence is by managing his own company,
like Moliere, or by conducting his own theatre, like
Shakespeare. Only by assuming himself the functions
of the manager can the dramatist escape from him.
In all ages, therefore, the dramatist has been forced
to confront two sets of problems rather than one.
He has been obliged to study and to follow not only
the technical laws of the dramatic art but also the
commercial laws of the theatre business. And
whereas, in the case of the other arts, the student
may consider the painter and ignore the picture-dealer,
or analyse the mind of the novelist without analysing
that of his publisher, the student of the drama in
any age must always take account of the manager, and
cannot avoid consideration of the economic organisation
of the theatre in that age. Those who are most
familiar with the dramatic and poetic art of Christopher
Marlowe and the histrionic art of Edward Alleyn are
the least likely to underestimate the important influence
which was exerted on the early Elizabethan drama by
the illiterate but crafty and enterprising manager
of these great artists, Philip Henslowe. Students
of the Queen Anne period may read the comedies of
Congreve, but they must also read the autobiography
of Colley Cibber, the actor-manager of the Theatre
Royal. And the critic who considers the drama
of to-day must often turn from problems of art to problems
of economics, and seek for the root of certain evils
not in the technical methods of the dramatists but
in the business methods of the managers.
At the present time, for instance, the dramatic art in America is suffering from a very unusual economic condition, which is unsound from the business standpoint, and which is likely, in the long run, to weary and to alienate the more thoughtful class of theatre-goers. This condition may be indicated by the one word,—over-production. Some years ago, when the theatre trust was organised, its leaders perceived that the surest way to win a monopoly of the theatre business was to get control of the leading theatre-buildings throughout the country