His mother loved the theater.
She introduced him to Broadway.
She took him to see touring companies of hit shows when he
was seven.
He visited New York annually, to catch the latest comedies
and musicals.
He wrote numerous plays at camp.
Feed that into a computer, and it spits out:
Playwright.
Sorry, Mr. Computer.
Not this time.
It‘s not that I wound up a lawyer or a landscaper or a lathe
operator. I did become a writer. But a writer for television. Not for Broadway. Never wrote a play. Didn’t even think about it.
How come?
What I wrote yesterday was meant to be a preamble to a study
of that question, but it preambled too long, and became a post of its own. I am not sorry about that, because I got to
remind myself of some memorable moments with my mother, and that was enjoyable. Hopefully, not just for me.
Besides, who wants to talk about what, in some hidden recess
of their aspirational mechanism, they may have wanted to do but didn’t? And
“Besides Number Two”, the answer to why I never wrote plays is simple:
“Because I did something else instead.”
Something that was satisfying and remunerative and, arguably
most importantly, after the initial “breaking-in” period, available.
In relatively short order – though it seemed like forever at
the time – I became a valued commodity in television, and very quickly – and
some, like my agent whose income increases parasitically with his clients’ would
say wisely – my focus became locked
on my career advancement in the medium that believed I was worth paying. And paying handsomely at that.
So there was the economic reason. Combined with “It was easier to advance my
reputation in one medium than to
throw it away and start from scratch in another.”
Also, no small thing, though all of these may sound like
excuses, because to some I-will-leave-it-to-you-to-determine degree they are, from the time I started attending
plays to when I began working professionally, theater noticeably changed.
As with movies, plays, having become prohibitively expensive
to produce, began relying on the lavish spectacle (“You can’t see that on television!”) and the “tried and true” – banking
predominantly on revivals, and new plays from reliable hitmakers of the past.
The preceding sentence somehow got hijacked and went a
different way than I expected it to.
What I was planning to say was
that theater, as an meaningful art form and the Mecca for all serious, aspiring
writers, became increasingly marginalized in our culture, partly because the
inflated cost to attend priced out the less affluent and the young, but also
because, compared with other entertainment options, the idea of theater came to seem stodgily out of date. With the exception of the youthful audience
at The Book of Mormon, which I
recently saw, the median age of audiences going to the theater is “almost
dead.”
Theater is slow.
Messaging is instant. It’s hard
to compete.
Another minor but meaningful point is this. Once you’ve commit to one form of creative endeavor, and I shall herein include blog
writing, your mind lasers in unilaterally on what it is you have selected to do. You work on a television series, and your
mind is afire, in a frantic search for episode ideas. There are no brain cells left to think about plays.
So, there’s all that. But these are generic explanations. How ‘bout the personal stuff?
Okay. (After writing “okay”, I heaved a substantial and
revelatory sigh.)
Somebody once suggested that, since I wrote half-hour
scripts, I was a sprinter, as compared to playwrights (or screenwriters) who,
maintaining the metaphor, would be marathon runners.
My critic was focusing on the length of the script, which, for me, at least, is not the
issue. That’s just more paper. Longer till you can get up from writing.
I like
writing. And though of course there’s a
different template involved, templates can be learned, and I’m a really good
learner.
The problem is not length, but depth. Writing for the theater, you are asking people
to pay money and sit there for two or more hours. What insight or original perspective do you
have to impart – “you” meaning I – that is worthy of the audience’s precious time
and money?
That one, I never figured out.
This failure is most likely a matter of attitude. When I can’t do something, or at least have
not done it yet, I idealize the
undertaking at hand, exaggerating its difficulties, making its accomplishment
realistically, in my self-sabotaging mode of thinking, beyond my capacities. At such moments, unhelpful thoughts go
buzzing through my mind:
“I am ‘television
deep’. Writing plays, you need to be ‘theater deep.’”
“I am ‘television’ interesting. To write plays, you have to be
“two-and-a-half hour, with one intermission”, interesting.
“Who do I think I am, (PLACE NAME OF SUCCESSFUL PLAYWRIGHT
HERE)?”
The funny part is that I see plays – I saw four of them
during our recent visit to New York – and none of them were all that
wonderful. When I imagine a play, I imagine
it flawless. No play is.
What they are, however, is finished.
And sold. And onstage, being
performed for an audience.
Some of them even win prizes, even though there are gaping
holes in the storytelling, the comedy is considerably less than “first tier
sitcom” funny, and they include
extended patches of nap-inducing boredom.
I guess they mark them “on the curve.”
The simple message is this:
If you believe you can do it – not
“Then you can do it”, I am not Tony Robbins – but at least you have a
shot. If you, however, for whatever
reason, don’t believe you can do it,
because what you’re doing is accessible and rewarding, plus you’re
temperamentally risk-averse, and besides, what you’re doing is not that terribly
different from that other thing, then
there’s a good chance
You won’t even try.
I’ll be honest with you.
I liked the post about my mother better.
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