I started writing my sonnet yesterday about Independence Day but I grew bored of the topic after the first quatrain so most of the poem is actually about Sawdust and Tinsel, the 1953 Ingmar Bergman movie, which I've been watching again lately. I often think of the first part of the film, which is almost a standalone vignette, in which a group of soldiers flatter the elderly circus woman into thinking they lust after her so she does a striptease. But it's all a big joke which is compounded when her husband, the clown, shows up infuriated and carries her away naked, the two of them thoroughly humiliated. This is a thematic appetiser for the bulk of the film which continues to explore ideas of power relations between the sexes and the position of circus performers in society as they're brought into conflict with a more high brow theatre troupe. The leader of the troupe is outwardly generous and gracious but still throws in petty insults when speaking to the ringmaster. The circus needs to borrow costumes from the theatre because they'd lost many of theirs in a fire that happened before the action of the film begins. This may be the reason the ringmaster and his girlfriend are willing to submit to the casual verbal abuse but the circus people are also clearly dazzled by the magical atmosphere of the stage.
The leader of the troupe says that both the circus and the theatre are institutions at the fringe of society, that they both must dwell on the bottom levels, staying in cheap and dirty accommodations and being seen as disgusting by most of the population. But the theatre people clearly see themselves as superior to the circus people, which culminates in humiliation for both the ringmaster and his girlfriend, played by Harriet Andersson. God, she looks so fantastic in this movie.
All the conflicts between the sexes, between the clown and his elderly wife and between the ringmaster and his girlfriend, are rendered all but meaningless when most of their emotional and mental energies are dominated by the dynamic between society and their identities as circus performers. The story about sexual politics in the film is easy for anyone to-day to understand but the ideas about artists and society feel more remote from the 21st century. Though I don't think they necessarily are, truly. In the Middle Ages, jesters were either very clever or had mental impairments. To the spectator, it didn't much matter, either way the fool was someone to laugh at, to make a mockery of. There are cultures to-day where this is still very much in play, where certain classes of people are considered subhuman and deserving of ridicule just for being what they are. Both the ringmaster and his girlfriend attempt to escape by finding new lovers in town, only for it to lead to failure and further humiliation for them both.
Sawdust and Tinsel is available on The Criterion Channel.