Johan Johan The Husband

The Merry Play between Johan Johan the Husband, Tyb his Wife, and Sir Johan, the Priest is a Tudor era farcical comedic interlude written in 1520 and first published in 1533 by English playwright John Heywood. It relates the tale of a common Englishman of who believes his wife to be cheating on him with the local priest. The play can be said to contain elements of a medieval morality play, but as the characters are not simple abstract personifications of a vice or virtue, Johan Johan can be seen to forge a link between the simpler morality plays of the medieval period, and the complex drama of the early modern period.[1]

Synopsis

Dramatis personæ

Plot

Johan Johan opens with the titular character alone in his poorly kept home, wondering after the whereabouts of his wife, Tyb, and debating whether he should beat her when she arrives. However, when she does come home, she is instantly domineering, and he is instantly submissive. Johan believes his wife has been with the local priest, Sir Johan, and claims that he is a well known knave. Tyb, however, claims to have been making a pie with Sir Johan and several other women’s help. She then produces the pie as evidence.

Tyb orders Johan to go invite the priest to sup with them, but not before she makes him carry out all the domestic chores in preparation for Sir Johan’s arrival. Johan goes to Sir Johan’s house, where he and the priest converse, and Johan is relieved to hear that the priest has chastised Tyb for her treatment of Johan, and believes that Tyb is furious with him for his words. The priest initially refuses to come, but Johan convinces him, believing the priest a friend.

Once at home, Tyb sends Johan out to fetch water in a pail, and it is revealed during his absence that the priest has been lying to him, and that Tyb and Sir Johan intend to make a fool of him. Johan returns with no water, as the bucket has a “cleft” in it. Tyb tells him to repair it, and Sir Johan produces two wax candles for the work. The priest and Tyb then go to eat pie at the table together, while Johan is left to polish and rub the hard wax candles alone by the fire so they will be soft enough to repair the cleft.

Tyb and Sir Johan finish the entire pie, then mock Johan when he complains, pretending that they gave him some. Johan has had enough by this point, so he fights with both of his tormentors, throwing them out. Johan does not have long to enjoy his victory, however, as his anxiety over what the two will do now that they are alone together quickly sends him out the door after them.

Themes/Motifs

Johan Johan has a clear central message against allowing wives, and indeed women in general, too much leniency. The main character, Johan Johan, is, until the ending, completely ineffectual in his attempts to control his wife, and it is from this reversal of the laws of the early modern English household that the play derives its conflict. To theatre goers of the time, this would have been a significant role reversal, and the constant emasculation of Johan would have been extremely humorous.[2]

First and foremost, this play was meant to entertain its audience, with vulgar humour and reversed expectations. It has little to criticize about the society it portrays. However, as a relatively early Renaissance work, its influence on later pieces of the period can be seen in many significant plays, especially the character of the domineering wife. This theme is present in notable Renaissance plays such as Epicœne, or The silent woman, by Ben Jonson , and The Taming of the Shrew by William Shakespeare. Clearly this reversal of roles was a popular source of comedy and conflict in early modern England.

Genre

As a Tudor period play, Johan Johan represents a transition between medieval morality play, and Renaissance theatre. While the characters are flat, they are presented as fully realized humans, rather than in a typical morality play, such as Everyman, in which the characters are named for what they represent, such as Fellowship, Kindred, and Good Deeds. Johan Johan still contains a traditional moral message however, concerning the dangers of female sexuality,[3] and lacks the moral complexity of a true Renaissance play like The Tragedy of Mariam, by Elizabeth Tanfield Cary, in which the correct course of action for the characters is not always clear.

Publication

Johan Johan was first published in 1533 in Folio format. There are no other notable publications.[4] It is notable that the play contains a negative portrayal of a catholic priest during a time of religious upheaval, The Reformation, which may have contributed to its popularity. The English schism with the Catholic Church in the early 1530s may have contributed to it being chosen for publication.

Influences

References

  1. Database of Early English Playbooks http://deep.sas.upenn.edu/index.html
  2. Borowska-Szerszun, Sylwia. (2007). "The Unruly Household in John Heywood's Johan Johan". Studia Anglica Posnaniensia: International Review of English Studies 43.
  3. Borowska-Szerszun, Sylwia. (2007). "The Unruly Household in John Heywood's Johan Johan". Studia Anglica Posnaniensia: International Review of English Studies 43.
  4. Database of Early English Playbooks http://deep.sas.upenn.edu/index.html
  5. Craik, T.W. (1950). "The True Source of John Heywood's 'Johan Johan'". The Modern Language Review 45(3), 289-295.

External links

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