Until the nineteenth century, nearly all tragedies were written in verse. Even at the beginning of the Victorian era, some dramatists, including Robert Browning, John Westland Marston, and Thomas Noon Talfourd, were still writing verse dramas.
The "New Dramas" that became prominent in the second half of the century introduced greater levels of realism while also probing important social issues. Verse dramas fell out of favor, but with the dawn of the twentieth century many poets attempted to return to the old format, albeit with a modern twist.
Following the lead of such writers as Edna St. Vincent Millay, the American poet Archibald MacLeish, attempted numerous verse dramas, at last penning a major hit with J.B., a dramatization of the Biblical story of Job that in 1959 won both the Pulitzer Prize for drama and the Tony Award for Best Play.
In addition to taking inspiration from the Bible, the play also draws on Goethe's Faust, which is itself indebted to the Book of Job. After a dedication, Faust has a prelude in a theatre, in which a playwright, a director, and a comic actor have a discussion about the piece they are about to perform. Similarly, MacLeish begins J.B. with the following exchange:
MR. ZUSS: This is it.
NICKLES: This is what?
MR. ZUSS: Where they play the play, Horatio!
NICKLES: Bare stage?
MR. ZUSS: Not in the least.
The old actor Mr. Zuss (whose name sounds suspiciously like Zeus) then takes on the role of God while his companion Nickles (or perhaps "Old Nick") plays Satan. This is similar to the Prologue in Heaven that Goethe provides for Faust in which Satan and God discuss a good man much as they do Job in the Bible, and of course in J.B. as well. MacLeish has the two actors put on masks and ascend to a platform before they set the scene for Job, now known as J.B.
Rather than being a figure from the distant past, J.B. is a successful American businessman with a large family, all of whom are thankful for what they have. In fact, the play even stages a traditional Thanksgiving meal, with J.B. carving a turkey for his family. His wife worries, though, that his gratitude in only superficial. She tells him:
A child shows gratitude the way a woman
Shows she likes a pretty dress --
Puts it on and takes it off again --
That's the way a child gives thanks:
She tries the world on. So do you.
As in the Biblical story, J.B. then loses everything. His children are all killed, his body is afflicted by disease, and the whole world becomes a hellscape not unlike the earth after World War Two. J.B. is visited by three friends, like Job, but they are dressed like tramps who formerly were a clergyman, a doctor, and perhaps a historian.
Though the action of the play closely follows the Biblical story, MacLeish links it to his own audience, which had gone through a Great Depression, a global war, and even the nuclear annihilation of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
It's a play that might be ripe for a revival in 2025.