3 THEATRE AND MUSIC-HALL To Erik Satie T HE theatre in France, to quote Alphonse Daudet on the monarchy, is “a great dead old thing.” The music-hall is a great young thing which is dying. As a matter of habit and to amuse a friend from the provinces, visiting in Paris, we still go occasionally to the theatre: Opera; Gaiete-Lyrique or Ba-ta-Clan. We hear “Padmavati”; “Chout”; or “T’en fais pas!” Alas, what boredom! A romantic repertory; conventional gestures; nothing living, moving, happening, which makes one cry out. Today France should get the first prize for bad acting. One has only to see, after a performance of the Cid or of Horace, these gentlemen of the Comedie-Frangaise, in smoking coats, stomachs sticking out, congratulating each other in the wings, to be aware of this agony and to understand at once why it is legitimate to be bored in an orchestra chair. Novelty is a microbe which directors, managers, actors, elec tricians, stage directors, door keepers, prompters, pursue and destroy every time that it shows the tip of an ear behind the curtain. I beg you, make way for the dust, the mummies, the glory of past centuries. How comfortable it is to talk among the dead and with what eloquence does Rameses II talk with M. Millerand! Before the war, from 1912 until the end of August, 1914, there was a leap forward, and there were those who wished to drag the coach out of the mire. Whatever they did, I congratulate them. Leon Bakst revolutionized the usual conception of cos tumes and of stage decoration. Nijinsky’s sensual interpretation of “l’Apres-Midi d’un Faune” called forth a storm of cat calls.