Rogersand Hammerstein's South Pacific
In Rogersand Hammerstein's South Pacific, the main theme
is racial
prejudices. The two main characters, Emile de Becque and Nellie
Forbush are
faced with these problems as they attempt a relationship. Two
other minor
characters, Lt. Joe Cable and Liat, are faced with the same
dilemma. Both
Nellie and Joe Cable have a hard time copping with their own
racial prejudices;
Joe loves Liat, yet cannot marry her because she is Tonkinese ;
Nellie loves
Emile, but cannot marry him because of his former Polynesian
wife. It is these
prejudices that set the state for what might be the most
significant scene in
the production. In act 2, scene 3, Nellie reveals her prejudices
to Emile.
I can't help it. It isn't as if I could give
you a good reason. There is no reason. This
is emotional. It's something that is born in me.
She looks to Cable for help in describing what she feels, but he
offers no help.
Emile tells her that it is not born in her, that it cannot be
born in her.
Nellie, who is crying, runs off. Emile is left with Joe, who is
thinking over
his own relationship with Liat. Emile asks him why he and Nellie
think that
these prejudices are born in them. Joe, giving him the product
of his thoughts,
tell him "It's not born in you."
It is at this point that Joe Cable begins singing
"Carefully Taught," a
character song in which Joe is able to vent his frustrations and
anger about his
own prejudices. The music is slightly upbeat, which helps to
illustrate that by
singing this song, he is beginning to feel better. The words
that Joe sing tell
the audience that he realizes that prejudices aren't born within
someone, but
taught to them.
You've got to be taught to be afraid
Of people who's eyes are oddly made,
And people who's skin is a different shade –
You've got to be carefully taught!
…To HATE all the people your relatives hate –
You've got to be carefully taught! (II,iii)
Joe realizes that there would be no prejudices in the
world if it nobody
were to teach it to the children. He sees that if nobody had
even spoken
against other races or people that were different, he would have
no problem with
marrying Liat. He realizes that he actually does not feel these
things at all
and the ideas that have been planted in his head can be as easily
uprooted as
they were planted. Joe, feeling better, sits down and listens to
Emile begin to
speak.
Emile tells Joe that it was prejudice that he had been
running away from
and it was prejudice that had found him again. He finishes
"Carefully Taught".
He sings of being cheated in the past and being cheated out of
love again. He
sings that it is the fault of "a MEAN little world of MEAN little
men (II,iii)."
He sings that he will hold on to this island "and be free – and
alone(II,iii)."
It is this part of the song that offers a perfect segue into
Emile's next song,
"This Nearly Was Mine."
Joe alludes to the fact that he will probably marry Liat
after all by
saying that all he cares about is on the island and so he plans
to stay there.
Emile agrees with him that if all you care about is right there
on that spot,
then it is a good place to be, but if what you care about is
gone, there is no
place to be. It is at this point that he adds his voice to the
music that has
been going on under the dialogue, singing "This Nearly Was Mine",
a love song
that shows how much Nellie's refusing marriage has affected him.
The song he sings is about things lost and giving up hope
of ever being
happy again. He sings of having one love, one girl, one dream,
and each of
those things would be in his paradise, which he nearly had. He
poetically sings
of how Nellie flew into his heart, only to fly away. He
remembers things like
kisses, and time spent with her, but realizes that these things
will be no more.
The song is very sad and the music magnifies that emotion of
sadness to a higher
degree.
After Emile has finished singing, Joe sees the
opportunity to take
advantage of the situation. He asks Emile if he would reconsider
going on the
spy mission with him, now that he has nothing to risk losing.
Emile agrees and
they set off to tell Captain Brackett that they will be doing the
mission after
all.
Act 2, scene 3, is a very important scene in South
Pacific because it
tackles the problem of social prejudices as well as puts Emile
into danger by
sending him off on a mission to spy on the Japanese. The scene
puts forth a
social message as well as furthering the plot. It is because of
Emile's
acceptance of the mission that helps Nellie realize that her
prejudices are
stupid and that she's giving away everything that is important to
her because of
someone else's preconceived notions of people. By examining some
of the social
problems of the time (and even now), Act 2, scene 3, proves to
be one of the
most significant of the production.
. Rogers and Hammerstein& apos;s South Pacific
In Rogers and Hammerstein& apos;s South Pacific, the main theme
is. little
men (II,iii)."
He sings that he will hold on to this island " ;and be free – and
alone(II,iii)."
It is this part of the song that offers