Playwright Marcel Dubé | ||
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Zone is a French-language three-act play written by French-Canadian author Marcel Dubé. Written when Dubé was 21 and based on memories of his childhood, Zone revolves around a gang of teenaged Québécois criminals who sell contraband cigarettes, and the internal conflicts that ultimately tear the group apart. The title "Zone" refers to the fact that each of the smugglers are stuck in a zone of society from which it is almost impossible to escape.
Contents
Cast
The original production of Zone was directed by Robert Rivard.
Characters
Summary
Tarzan assembles a group of teenagers who, under the stress of their familial or economic situations, agree to sell cigarettes smuggled into Canada from the United States. Ciboulette, the youngest of the group and the only female, is in love with Tarzan, but does not reveal this despite Tit-Noir urging her to. Tarzan risks capture by crossing the Canada–US border with contraband cigarettes. While the others wait for Tarzan to return, Passe-Partout attempts to supplant Tarzan as the gang's leader, and disobeys Tarzan's instructions by stealing a wallet from a passerby, who is actually a detective, Ledoux. Tarzan returns to the hideout but Ledoux arrives at the gang's hideout and arrests the teenagers with a police brigade.
The second act begins in the police station's interrogation room. Each member is questioned individually. During the interrogations, the police receive a call informing them that a border patrol guard was murdered earlier that day. The police chief interrogates Passe-Partout, who reveals that Tarzan had crossed the border that day. Under the impression that the other gang members have betrayed him, Tarzan confesses to the murder of the border guard.
In the third act, Tarzan escapes from jail and confesses his affection for Ciboulette. Ciboulette suggests a makeshift marriage in the hideout, but Tarzan refuses, not wanting to make his believed certain death more painful than it needs to be. Tarzan runs off into the night, followed by police. Heard shortly thereafter are several gunshots, ending in silence with Roger standing over. The curtain closes on Ciboulette lying over Tarzan's corpse.
Inspiration
Dubé based Zone in part on a past experience illegally crossing the Canada-US border.
Analysis
Zone takes place in a "squalid" environment, familiar territory for Dubé, whose works often dealt with the social disorder in French Canada at that time. The characters in Zone, trapped within the poverty of their social milieu, resort to "adolescent ideals" in an attempt to escape. Laroche suggests that the teenaged gang members are play-acting as the characters they saw in films. Dubé's characters reveal their deepest thoughts and feelings in their dialogue, reflecting their underlying helplessness. The irony is that the gang, who began engaging in criminal activities to escape the societal "grey zone" they inhabit, are ultimately punished by the same society that offered them no support. Although the characters in Zone work in a collective, they tear each other apart through internal rivalries and betrayal, rendering them incapable of standing up to society, represented in Zone by the police who interrogate the gang.
Reception
Edwin Hamblet critiqued "Zone" for its abrupt and cursory conclusion, suggesting that Dubé often struggles with concluding his plays effectively and pointed out the contrived nature of the plot developments. Despite this criticism, "Zone" received significant recognition in 1953, being honored with the Grand Prix for the best Canadian play at the Victoria National Drama Festival. Additionally, it garnered the Calvert, Sir Barry Jackson, and Louis Jouvet awards.