Jim Jarmusch – remember I wrote about him? – did Paterson
his way.
The guy I am about to talk about also did it his way.
I did and I didn’t. I
did it my way to the extent that identifying fragments of me slipped into my
work, in my assigned work and inevitably more so when I was in charge. But I never blew the doors off and reinvented
the wheel in my own image if it were round and had spokes and if I reinvented
it it might not.
Not to dwell on this matter too long, but I’d say the reason
I did not ignite a creative explosion was because of fear of firing, fear of
failure, sure; but primarily, I think, it was because of a basic deficiency in
“originating vision.” (You can see why I
don’t want to dwell on it too long.)
I carefully studied my predecessors and when my opportunity
arrived, I provided my variational “take” on what had already been done. Did I break any sitcomical new ground?
Nyet.
The gentleman I am about to talk about did. And for that glittering
achievement I salute him, as well as Jim Jarmusch and everyone else who, despite the pressure
to conservatively “stay the course”, plotted their own artistical courses and
the world is immeasurably upgraded for their efforts.
I was originally introduced– not in the sense that I
actually met the guy but introduced through
his work – to longtime playwright (now Sir) Tom Stoppard while I was living in
England in 1967. In those felicitous days
when you could get seats to productions at the National Theater for less than (the equivalent of) a dollar, I
would sometimes, instead of shivering through the winter in my Hampstead
bedsitting room (where landlady Mrs. Tompkins rationed the heat) or blowing my
substitute teacher’s paycheck buying rounds of drinks at the Horse and Groom (I myself only drank one round, so I was – “Retroactive Sour
Grapes Alert!” – buying considerably more alcohol than I consumed), I hopped
onto the London underground and I went to a play.
It was then that I saw the original production of Stoppard’s
Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead.
And it unequivocally blew me away.
(Note: Two
plays awakened me to the possibility that comedy could be funny and smart at
the same time: Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead and Herb Gardner’s A Thousand Clowns. I laughed heartily at both shows and would
have laughed even harder had my jaw not been locked in the immovable “dropped”
position associated with responses of awe-strickenness, incredulity and delight.
Tom Stoppard writes magnificently about ideas. I can imagine his agent, urging him – for his
own good – to trod more commercially palatable terrain, but he didn’t.
“Come on, Tommy.
‘Love triangles.’ The audience
eats that up with a spoon.”
“I am interested in ideas.”
“Wake up and smell the box office. You’re a playwright, not a philosopher.”
“Could it be possible I’m both?”
And so he was for, now, going on half a century, as he
continues uncompromisingly plying his trade.
(While supplementing his theatrical income with lucrative uncredited
rewrites of the likes of Indiana Jones
and the Temple of Soup, or whatever.)
Rosencrantz and
Guildenstern Are Dead concerns the trembling uncertainty of human
existence. (“But with a little sex in it”,
as suggested in Preston Sturges’s Sullivan’s
Travels, a gent who, by the way, marched to his own inimitable drummer? No.)
Stoppard dramatizes the random unreliability of life by
having the two peripheral characters from Hamlet
engage a betting game of “coin flip” in which, to the consternation of the
participants, the coin turns up “Heads” ninety-two times in a row.
The lack of foreseeable predictability becomes so
torturously discombobulating to this increasingly frustrated duo, they wind up being
uncertain about everything, triggering
exchanges such as the following:
ROSENCRANTZ: The sun’s going down. It will be dark soon.
GUILDENSTERN: Do you think so?
ROSENCRANTZ: I was just making conversation.
That’s what I saw in 1967.
Flash Forward to 2016, and here’s (now Sir) Tom Stoppard, cusping on
eighty, still energetically working his side of the street, delivering an
intellectual exercise of a play I saw recently and enjoyed though not as much
as Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead
entitled The Hard Problem.
What’s it about?
It’s about the question: “Is there a discernible distinction
between the mind and the brain?”
But with a little sex in it?
Again – and still – no.
(There is a stage direction in which after a sexual
interlude, the female character Hilary is described as “wearing only a T-shirt,
which is long enough for modesty.” You
can sense the uncomfortable playwright blushing while he was typing that.)
Do you remember the movie Cocoon? At the end where
some people climb onto a spaceship and some scareder people do not? That’s me and the “creatives” who
unswervingly do their own remarkably individualized thing.
Though unable to join them,
I root exuberantly from the sidelines.
Given that he had Diana Rigg appear nude on stage in NIGHT AND DAY in 1988 or thereabouts, I doubt Stoppard was blushing about a long T-shirt. I saw THE HARD PROBLEM in its original London production. It was interesting, although I found the plot somewhat predictable. HAPGOOD was good fun - a spy story that began with an illustration of quantum mechanics using two spies, a briefcase, and some bathroom stalls. But NIGHT AND DAY and THE REAL THING are my favorites among his plays.
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