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The Skin of Our Teeth (1942)

par Thornton Wilder

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Presents the text of the 1943 Pulitzer Prize-winning play in which the Eternal Family, George and Maggie Antrobus, their children Gladys and Henry, and their maid Sabina, endure thousands of years of near disasters.
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I’m not sure how much I liked The Skin of Our Teeth, Thornton Wilder’s second most well-known play..

I should stipulate, reading a play is a very different thing from seeing a play. I don't have much experience reading plays and mentally transmuting the written words and actions to that ancient medium, so take all I say here with a grain of salt. I'm sure the performances would outweigh my imagination.

The Skin of Our Teeth is metaphor many layers deep. The story, such as it is, has the Antrobus family facing three ideas of "the end of the world". First, the ice age, second, the Flood of Noah, and third, a war, reminiscent of WWII, which the play was written during. The metaphorical part here: the family lives in New Jersey. The family is both ancient man and the 20th-century nuclear family.

The fourth wall is broken time and time again. Wilder doesn’t let you forget you’re in a play. (More than anything, in these moments, I think Wilder is saying more about theater at the time than anything else.)

The outcome, the moral, the defining idea, is that humanity always recovers. But the other side of Thornton Wilder's coin is that humanity continues to make the same mistakes over and over again. A husband cheats, a boy murders, the rabble rouses, yet humanity continues. Men learn of true women (for that is the reason the universe was put in motion), children are born, grow, die, and the philosophers continue their march like hours on a clock.

It’s a fine philosophy of a play. Maybe go see it as one, rather than reading about it in a book. ( )
  gideonslife | Jan 5, 2023 |
we saw the Lincoln Center production of this a couple of weeks ago, and were surprised by the darkness of the last act. But it's right there in the script, allowing the director to emphasis or not emphasis it. The edition I read has a Forward by Paula Vogel, which emphasizes the way Wilder departs from the conventions of theater in his day, and how that freedom of form affected the writers after him. And there's an afterword by Tappan Wilder, nephew of the writer, outlining the process and difficulties encountered in the creation and staging of the play, along with some photographs from the production. ( )
  ffortsa | Jun 16, 2022 |
First, let’s just say this play is nuts… but in a clever, clever way, with preposterousness and humor. Written at a time when the world is increasingly at war (1941-1942), Wilder delivered a message of survival and self-betterment despite facing calamities, centuries after centuries, even if it’s barely by the skin of our teeth.

In Act I, the Antrobus family, George and Maggie with children Gladys and Henry, and their perpetual maid, Sabina confronts the great ice age. Valuing intellect with an eye towards the future, George invites in refugees of Homer, Moses, the Muses, and a doctor. To make room for the refugees, he takes out the family pets – a dinosaur and a mammoth. (Get it? Haha.) Meanwhile, he has invented the wheel, alphabet, and math. This was my favorite act.

In Act II, George has been elected the President of the Mammals party (vs. other species) and was partying at a convention where two of every species gathered. Naturally, the act ends with the great flood.

In Act III, they have just survived the war. Their son Henry was a general of the enemy side. The need to recover from war is physical (a nifty straightening out the house on stage) and mental (rebuilding of the family unit, despair). The source of comfort is books! I.e., knowledge. Everyone puts on the same outfit as the first act. The cycle continues – the resiliency of the human species.

Style wise, this play was revolutionary in its days employing audience engagement, having the actors playing the actor’s roles and themselves and even critiquing aspects of the play (most affecting in Act III), and the occasional stage manager participation. Its non-standard format resulted in audiences leaving the show early (confused?), so much so that the Playbill was updated with a leaflet to better explain the context of the play.

As I read the Afterword of Wilder’s hopes and the message he seeks to deliver, I thought of the present day – the threat of nuclear war, multiple major natural disasters throughout the world, and ethnic/racial/religious hatred towards each other. A side of me feel as though we just might be heading towards the end of an act with a dooming disaster in the horizon. But Wilder’s point is that we keep going, we persevere. We return to books for guidance. Amongst George’s closing statements: “…We’ve come a long ways. We’ve learned. We’re learning...” Seeing the world as it is now, that last bit is quite an understatement. There is a crap-ton to learn yet!

What a play. When I was done, I sat there holding the book thinking how thoroughly complete and perfect it is. I sure hope to see it performed someday.

Two quotes:

On inventions, this was so creative:
Telegraph Boy: ‘Then listen to this: ‘Ten tens make a hundred semi-colon consequences far-reaching.’
Mrs. Andrews: ‘The earth’s turning to ice, and all he can do is make up new numbers.’
Telegraph Boy: ‘Well, Mrs. Antrobus, like the head man at our office said: a few more discoveries like that and we’ll be worth freezing.’

On women, from Mrs. Antrobus:
“It’s a bottle. And in the bottle’s a letter. And in the letter is written all the things that a woman knows.
It’s never been told to any man and it’s never been told to any woman, and if it finds its destination, a new time will come. We’re not what books and plays say we are. We’re not what advertisements say we are. We’re not in the movies and we’re not on the radio.
We’re not what you’re all told and what you think we are:
We're ourselves. And if any man can find one of us he’ll learn why the whole universe was set in motion.” ( )
1 voter varwenea | Sep 13, 2017 |
Of the works which won Wilder the Pulitzer Prize, this is the best of the three, which is really saying something. As always, he synthesizes philosophy, culture, and humor in remarkably compressed, intelligent writing, and in ‘The Skin of Our Teeth’ he was at the peak of his powers. The first couple of pages set the stage for apocalyptic absurdity, with ‘modern’ suburban man inventing the wheel and the alphabet while facing an ice age and living amid dinosaurs and mammoths. There are looming catastrophes in acts two and three as well, which sparks humanity’s age-old questions: Why live? Why hope? Is everything we’ve done, everything we’ve worked for, ultimately for nothing?

This play is a revolution, and it’s ironic that because of his language (and perhaps the over-exposure of ‘Our Town’ in high school drama classes), Wilder is considered ‘quaint’. Aside from the deep questions, there is a darkness here – rape, murder, violence, adultery, and suicide all surface over the course of the play. As in ‘Our Town’, Wilder zooms out and has characters not only directly addressing the audience, but talking about the content of the play, as well as having one character share her low opinion of it. In style and content this play would influence Beckett, Williams, Miller, and probably many others.

Written in 1942, it was perfect for the time, with one theme being how people dehumanize others - and yet it’s timeless. But who is evil here? As extinction looms, the ordinary suburban family thinks oh, if only all these people were out of our way, what a better world it would be, or oh, those others won’t feel pain and suffering as deeply as we would in their places, as they view them from positions of greater comfort. The insidiousness in humanity that leads to Hitler and Mussolini starts with these kinds of thoughts, and are probably within us all.

And yet we persevere. Our best hope? Act three shows it to be books, and learning, and those from our past who were most enlightened, and who reach out to us over time to impart wisdom, and to warn us of the mistakes their generation made. Are they successful in doing this? There are no easy answers here, and the play may be a litmus test. Many early viewers found it “defeatist” and left the theater before it was over, possibly having been also overwhelmed by the absurdity of it at a time when other performances were light comedies or musicals. The recurrence across the three acts may have you concluding the same thing. And yet Wilder himself was an optimist, and saw it as a message of hope. Personally, I think it says that we are our own enemy, and yet we must hope – and while this paradox is absurd, it’s the reality of our condition.

Easily 5 stars. Stunning and a must-read.

Quotes:
On fathers and daughters; this from the mother:
“Don’t you know your father thinks your perfect? Don’t you know he couldn’t live if he didn’t think you were perfect?”

On fortune telling:
Fortune Teller: “I tell the future. Keck. Nothing easier. Everybody’s future is in their face. Nothing easier.
But who can tell your past, eh? Nobody!
Your youth, - where did it go? It slipped away while you weren’t looking. While you were asleep. While you were drunk? Puh! You’re like our friends, Mr. and Mrs. Antrobus; you lie awake nights trying to know your past. What did it mean? What was it trying to say to you?”

On love:
Sabina: “There’s that old whine again. All you people think you’re not loved enough, nobody loves you. Well, you start being lovable and we’ll love you.”

On Man’s achievements in the face of possible annihilation; I loved these lines:
Telegraph Boy: ‘Then listen to this: ‘Ten tens make a hundred semi-colon consequences far-reaching.’
Mrs. Andrews: ‘The earth’s turning to ice, and all he can do is make up new numbers.’
Telegraph Boy: ‘Well, Mrs. Antrobus, like the head man at our office said: a few more discoveries like that and we’ll be worth freezing.’

On women; go Thornton:
Mrs. Antrobus:
“It’s a bottle. And in the bottle’s a letter. And in the letter is written all the things that a woman knows.
It’s never been told to any man and it’s never been told to any woman, and if it finds its destination, a new time will come. We’re not what books and plays say we are. We’re not what advertisements say we are. We’re not in the movies and we’re not on the radio.
We’re not what you’re all told and what you think we are:
We're ourselves. And if any man can find one of us he’ll learn why the whole universe was set in motion.” ( )
1 voter gbill | May 23, 2015 |
The Skin of Our Teeth is one of Thorton Wilder's plays. Although not as well known as Our Town, it certainly holds up its own.

Granted, poetry and plays are not my favourite forms of literature. It's not that I dislike them, it's just that I often lose my patience with them. I also find that there is a greater disparity between the best and worst of both poetry and plays. Rarely do you find something that's in the middle in terms of quality.

I have to admit that I preferred Our Town. Although the plot of this play was certainly interesting - it follows an unusual family that manages to live through all of the world's biggest events - I found it easier to relate to Our Town. The message was great - history repeating itself and whatnot - but it's still second on the list.

There was an amazing humour in these characters though. I loved how they would turn to the audience to issue the occasional sarcastic line. It was clear that this play didn't take itself too seriously, and it was really all the better for that! ( )
  mrn945 | Sep 26, 2011 |
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Presents the text of the 1943 Pulitzer Prize-winning play in which the Eternal Family, George and Maggie Antrobus, their children Gladys and Henry, and their maid Sabina, endure thousands of years of near disasters.

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