The Persecution and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as Performed by the Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of the Marquis de Sade


1h 55m 1967
The Persecution and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as Performed by the Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of the Marquis de Sade

Brief Synopsis

Asylum inmates stage an unsettling play about the French Revolution in this adaptation of the legendary stage production.

Film Details

Also Known As
Marat/Sade
Genre
Drama
Adaptation
Historical
Release Date
Jan 1967
Premiere Information
New York opening: 22 Feb 1967
Production Company
Marat Sade Productions
Distribution Company
United Artists
Country
United Kingdom
Location
England, United Kingdom
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel The Persecution and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as Performed by the Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of the Marquis de Sade by Peter Weiss (trans. by Geoffrey Skelton and Adrian Mitchell of Die Verfolgung und Ermordung Jean Paul.

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 55m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color (DeLuxe)

Synopsis

In the early 19th century it becomes fashionable for Parisians to attend the theatrical performances given as a form of therapy by inmates of mental institutions. In the bathhouse at the asylum of Charenton, where the Marquis de Sade is destined to spend the last years of his life, an audience arrives to witness a play with music directed by de Sade, in which he has an imaginary conversation with the embittered writer Jean-Paul Marat, one of the motivating forces behind the French Revolution. Soaking in his tub, Marat calls for violent upheaval as the only means to effect social reform. De Sade, conversely, remains the pessimistic individualist: firm in his conviction that revolutions solve nothing, he expounds the theory that violence is beneficial only if used for personal gratification. During the course of the play, Charlotte Corday travels alone from Caen to Paris. Upon her arrival at the home of Marat, she calls three times before being admitted. Once in Marat's presence, she draws a dagger from between her breasts and pierces his chest as he sits in his tub. As the play ends, de Sade tries to advise the spectators that there are no ready answers to the questions raised; the polemical debate has been offered only to stimulate thought and guide the observer to his own personal conclusion. But the 30-odd patients who have performed the various roles have too strongly identified with their parts and their oft-repeated revolutionary cry for freedom. Consumed by an insane fury that has nearly surfaced several times in the course of the play, they turn upon their guards, their keepers, their audience, and even themselves.

Film Details

Also Known As
Marat/Sade
Genre
Drama
Adaptation
Historical
Release Date
Jan 1967
Premiere Information
New York opening: 22 Feb 1967
Production Company
Marat Sade Productions
Distribution Company
United Artists
Country
United Kingdom
Location
England, United Kingdom
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel The Persecution and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as Performed by the Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of the Marquis de Sade by Peter Weiss (trans. by Geoffrey Skelton and Adrian Mitchell of Die Verfolgung und Ermordung Jean Paul.

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 55m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color (DeLuxe)

Articles

Marat/Sade


Boasting one of the longest titles in both theatrical and cinematic history, The Persecution and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as Performed by the Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of the Marquis de Sade -- better known as Marat/Sade - originated in April of 1964 as a stage production by West Berlin's Schiller Theater. A smash hit, the play by Peter Weiss was staged in English by Peter Brook (translated by Geoffrey Skelton) with the Royal Shakespeare Company and made it to Broadway in late 1965.

These two popular English versions featured a trio of stars, Patrick Magee (as the Marquis de Sade), Ian Richardson (as Jean-Paul Marat), and Glenda Jackson (as Charlotte Corday), who would reprise their roles for the 1967 film along with many of the other RSC performers. Brook returned as director with a script adapted by Adrian Mitchell, retaining the audacious and sometimes abrasive staging of the live version.

One of the film's greatest assets proved to be its striking, experimental cinematography by David Watkin, who had recently worked on Help! (1965) and would go on to such films as Catch-22 (1970) and The Devils (1971), eventually winning an Academy Award for his work on Out of Africa (1985). On this film, he and Brook came up with the idea of shooting with just two cameras, one remaining static and the other roving handheld among the actors to capture the unstable nature of the performers themselves. Financed for under $500,000 by United Artists, the production was shot in a whirlwind 17 days (just two days over its original schedule) at Stage B of England's Pinewood Studios, stepping into the space just after the shooting of Charles Chaplin's A Countess from Hong Kong.
< BR> Though you don't have to be a history major to follow the action of Marat/Sade, it certainly helps to have a grasp of the basic history behind it as the story involves two separate moments in history blurring together. In the Charenton Asylum during the rule of Napoleon after the French Revolution, the Marquis de Sade directs a staging of events fifteen years earlier in which the radical journalist Jean-Paul Marat was stabbed to death by Charlotte Corday in his bath in 1793. The asylum director, Coulmier, believes the production will reinforce his bourgeois political views and attends with his family, but de Sade's unorthodox methods and the obvious unreliability of the actors result in an increasingly disturbing experience for everyone involved.

With a Tony Award already under his belt for the play, Peter Brook was primarily known for his stage productions but had also proven his mettle as a filmmaker with his definitive film version of Lord of the Flies (1963). After this film his adventurous energy scarcely waned as he went on to a caustic black-and-white 1971 version of King Lear and the acclaimed Meetings with Remarkable Men (1979), not to mention an ambitious epic-length adaptation of his stage version of The Mahabharata (1989). The idea of turning Marat/Sade into a film actually occurred to him while he and the cast were in the midst of a seven-hour recording session for the cast album at Caedmon Records in New York, as he realized the close-knit relationship between them all could easily translate to the big screen.

Equally comfortable in the world of confrontational theater was Irish actor Patrick Magee, probably best known to general film fans for his roles in Stanley Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange (1971) and Barry Lyndon (1975). Boasting one of the most distinctive voices in any medium, Magee inspired Samuel Beckett to write for him and, after joining the RSC, was handpicked by Harold Pinter for The Birthday Party. However, he was no stranger to the more gothic side of European cinema either, accepting colorful roles in productions like Francis Ford Coppola's Ireland-set Dementia 13 (1963), Roger Corman's The Masque of the Red Death (1964), and scene-stealing turns in a pair of Amicus horror anthologies in 1972, Tales from the Crypt and Asylum.

Now cemented in pop culture for his leading role in the original BBC production of House of Cards, Ian Richardson originated the role of Jean-Paul Marat on the Broadway stage (after playing the Herald in the British production) and made history there as the first actor to appear nude on the New York stage, the subject of well-publicized publicity photos at the time. The majority of his screen and stage appearances have consisted of Shakespearean roles, with notable film appearances including Brazil (1985) and Dark City (1998). However, American TV viewers of a certain age will always remember him for asking one immortal line in a classic mustard commercial: "Pardon me, would you have any Grey Poupon?"

Already a seasoned veteran of the RSC's recent Theater of Cruelty experiments, Glenda Jackson had already won positive notices for her stage role in Separate Tables and was soon to become an international star in Ken Russell's Women in Love (1969), which netted her an Oscar for Best Actress. She returned to an insane asylum again at the end of her next film for Russell, The Music Lovers (1970), but the rest of her career has been more subdued thanks to a famous turn as Queen Elizabeth I on television and standing as a long-running member of Parliament.

In total, the cast of both the stage and screen versions of Marat/Sade totaled 41 including such familiar character actors as Freddie Jones, who also appeared in And the Ship Sails On (1983) and The Elephant Man (1980) among many others, and John Steiner, who enjoyed a very busy career acting in Italian films like Tenebre (1982) and Shock (1977) before becoming a real estate agent in Beverly Hills. In an unusual arrangement at the time, all of the cast members divided 33.3% of the profits among themselves in addition to their salaries, though the major players received a larger share than some of the others.

Upon its release, Marat/Sade was marketed heavily to universities and drama schools as well as the usual art house audiences. United Artists even mandated that the original full title be used in all newspaper ads and on theater marquees, though they finally hit an insurmountable obstacle when Beverly Hills ordinances prevented them from widening the marquee of the Fine Arts Theatre to accommodate it. Thus the shortened name was finally made official, and it has remained attached to the film ever since.

By Nathaniel Thompson
Marat/Sade

Marat/Sade

Boasting one of the longest titles in both theatrical and cinematic history, The Persecution and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as Performed by the Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of the Marquis de Sade -- better known as Marat/Sade - originated in April of 1964 as a stage production by West Berlin's Schiller Theater. A smash hit, the play by Peter Weiss was staged in English by Peter Brook (translated by Geoffrey Skelton) with the Royal Shakespeare Company and made it to Broadway in late 1965. These two popular English versions featured a trio of stars, Patrick Magee (as the Marquis de Sade), Ian Richardson (as Jean-Paul Marat), and Glenda Jackson (as Charlotte Corday), who would reprise their roles for the 1967 film along with many of the other RSC performers. Brook returned as director with a script adapted by Adrian Mitchell, retaining the audacious and sometimes abrasive staging of the live version. One of the film's greatest assets proved to be its striking, experimental cinematography by David Watkin, who had recently worked on Help! (1965) and would go on to such films as Catch-22 (1970) and The Devils (1971), eventually winning an Academy Award for his work on Out of Africa (1985). On this film, he and Brook came up with the idea of shooting with just two cameras, one remaining static and the other roving handheld among the actors to capture the unstable nature of the performers themselves. Financed for under $500,000 by United Artists, the production was shot in a whirlwind 17 days (just two days over its original schedule) at Stage B of England's Pinewood Studios, stepping into the space just after the shooting of Charles Chaplin's A Countess from Hong Kong. < BR> Though you don't have to be a history major to follow the action of Marat/Sade, it certainly helps to have a grasp of the basic history behind it as the story involves two separate moments in history blurring together. In the Charenton Asylum during the rule of Napoleon after the French Revolution, the Marquis de Sade directs a staging of events fifteen years earlier in which the radical journalist Jean-Paul Marat was stabbed to death by Charlotte Corday in his bath in 1793. The asylum director, Coulmier, believes the production will reinforce his bourgeois political views and attends with his family, but de Sade's unorthodox methods and the obvious unreliability of the actors result in an increasingly disturbing experience for everyone involved. With a Tony Award already under his belt for the play, Peter Brook was primarily known for his stage productions but had also proven his mettle as a filmmaker with his definitive film version of Lord of the Flies (1963). After this film his adventurous energy scarcely waned as he went on to a caustic black-and-white 1971 version of King Lear and the acclaimed Meetings with Remarkable Men (1979), not to mention an ambitious epic-length adaptation of his stage version of The Mahabharata (1989). The idea of turning Marat/Sade into a film actually occurred to him while he and the cast were in the midst of a seven-hour recording session for the cast album at Caedmon Records in New York, as he realized the close-knit relationship between them all could easily translate to the big screen. Equally comfortable in the world of confrontational theater was Irish actor Patrick Magee, probably best known to general film fans for his roles in Stanley Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange (1971) and Barry Lyndon (1975). Boasting one of the most distinctive voices in any medium, Magee inspired Samuel Beckett to write for him and, after joining the RSC, was handpicked by Harold Pinter for The Birthday Party. However, he was no stranger to the more gothic side of European cinema either, accepting colorful roles in productions like Francis Ford Coppola's Ireland-set Dementia 13 (1963), Roger Corman's The Masque of the Red Death (1964), and scene-stealing turns in a pair of Amicus horror anthologies in 1972, Tales from the Crypt and Asylum. Now cemented in pop culture for his leading role in the original BBC production of House of Cards, Ian Richardson originated the role of Jean-Paul Marat on the Broadway stage (after playing the Herald in the British production) and made history there as the first actor to appear nude on the New York stage, the subject of well-publicized publicity photos at the time. The majority of his screen and stage appearances have consisted of Shakespearean roles, with notable film appearances including Brazil (1985) and Dark City (1998). However, American TV viewers of a certain age will always remember him for asking one immortal line in a classic mustard commercial: "Pardon me, would you have any Grey Poupon?" Already a seasoned veteran of the RSC's recent Theater of Cruelty experiments, Glenda Jackson had already won positive notices for her stage role in Separate Tables and was soon to become an international star in Ken Russell's Women in Love (1969), which netted her an Oscar for Best Actress. She returned to an insane asylum again at the end of her next film for Russell, The Music Lovers (1970), but the rest of her career has been more subdued thanks to a famous turn as Queen Elizabeth I on television and standing as a long-running member of Parliament. In total, the cast of both the stage and screen versions of Marat/Sade totaled 41 including such familiar character actors as Freddie Jones, who also appeared in And the Ship Sails On (1983) and The Elephant Man (1980) among many others, and John Steiner, who enjoyed a very busy career acting in Italian films like Tenebre (1982) and Shock (1977) before becoming a real estate agent in Beverly Hills. In an unusual arrangement at the time, all of the cast members divided 33.3% of the profits among themselves in addition to their salaries, though the major players received a larger share than some of the others. Upon its release, Marat/Sade was marketed heavily to universities and drama schools as well as the usual art house audiences. United Artists even mandated that the original full title be used in all newspaper ads and on theater marquees, though they finally hit an insurmountable obstacle when Beverly Hills ordinances prevented them from widening the marquee of the Fine Arts Theatre to accommodate it. Thus the shortened name was finally made official, and it has remained attached to the film ever since. By Nathaniel Thompson

Quotes

And what's the point of a revolution without general copulation?
- Marquis de Sade

Trivia

Notes

The Royal Shakespeare Co. repeats its original stage performance for the film. Also known as Marat/Sade or Marat-Sade.

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States Winter February 22, 1967

The play opened in London August 20, 1964.

Released in United States Winter February 22, 1967