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About Last Night

Terry Teachout on the arts in New York City

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Archives for 2004

TT: You have your orders

December 7, 2004 by Terry Teachout

I have the whole day off, starting now and ending Wednesday morning when the alarm clock detonates. No plays, no deadlines, no appointments, no performances, no dates, no nothing.


I was discussing my upcoming day off with the Bass Player, my fellow workaholic, and we agreed that whatever the phrase “a day off” may mean, it definitely does not mean thinking of useful stuff to do today that I could in point of fact do tomorrow.


Instead, it means:

– Sleeping late.


– Sitting in my small but elegantly appointed living room, listening to CDs I’m never going to review and/or reading a book purely for my pleasure.


– Not writing anything.


– Taking an unscheduled stroll to nowhere (but only if I feel like it).


– Looking at and meditating on the Teachout Museum, asking myself which piece I like best right this minute.


– Not writing anything.


– Dining at Good Enough to Eat and hoping my favorite waitress is on duty.


In light of all these caveats, allow me to repeat my recent set of instructions to the readers of “About Last Night”: if I post anything more today, don’t read it.


You may, however, send me a testy e-mail telling me to log off at once (or words to that effect).


Later. I’ve got a rendezvous with the sandman.


P.S. Did I mention not writing anything?

TT: Words into pictures

December 7, 2004 by Terry Teachout

Here’s a paragraph I wrote last year, apropos of Robert Benton’s film version
of The Human Stain:

I’ve seen any number of first-rate movies made out of novels I’ve never read. To Have and Have Not, In a Lonely Place, The Night of the Hunter, Vertigo, True Grit: all are important to me in their varied ways, and I’m sure the books on which they were based are worth reading, too. (Well, maybe not To Have and Have Not.) So why haven’t I checked out the originals? Because the films are so satisfying in their own right that I feel no need to know their sources. From time to time I’ve made a point of doing so, and usually been disappointed–James Ellroy’s L.A. Confidential and Nick Hornby’s High Fidelity, for instance, aren’t nearly as effective on the page as on the screen.

I recalled these words the other day as I read a posting on Lance Mannion‘s blog. Mannion is a fan of Charles Portis’ True Grit, the novel on which the 1969 movie is based, and he posted this scene from the book, an encounter between Rooster Cogburn, a federal marshal, and Lucky Ned Pepper, the bandit he’s been chasing:

Lucky Ned Pepper said, “Well, Rooster, will you give us the road? We have business elsewhere!”


Rooster said, “Harold, I want you and your brother to stand clear! I have no interest in you today! Stand clear and you will not be hurt!”


Harold Permalee’s answer was to crow like a rooster, and the “Cock-a-doodle-doo!” brought a hearty laugh from his brother Farrell.


Lucky Ned Pepper said, “What is your intention? Do you think one on four is a dogfall?”


Rooster said, “I mean to kill you in one minute, Ned, or see you hanged in Fort Smith at Judge Parker’s convenience! Which will you have?”


Lucky Ned Pepper laughed. He said, “I call that bold talk for a one-eyed fat man!”


Rooster said, “Fill your hands, you son of a bitch!” and he took the reins in his teeth and pulled the other saddle revolver and drove his spurs into the flanks of his strong horse Bo and charged directly at the bandits. It was a sight to see. He held the revolvers wide on either side of the head of his plunging steed. The four bandits accepted the challenge and they likewise pulled their arms and charged their ponies ahead.


It was some daring move on the part of the deputy marshall whose manliness and grit I had doubted. No grit? Rooster Cogburn? Not much!

This is the big scene in the film of True Grit–the one everybody remembers–and if you’ve seen it, you’ll realize that Marguerite Roberts, who wrote the screenplay, lifted the dialogue straight from the novel. I’m not saying it’s more effective on paper. Once you’ve seen it on the screen, with John Wayne and Robert Duvall staring one another down across a clearing, you can’t imagine it any other way. But it’s not the pictures you remember: it’s the words. And while Wayne and Duvall speak them with exquisite appropriateness, they wouldn’t have had anything to say had Portis not written those exact words in the first place.


Now, I’m not out to start the gazillionth argument so far this week on the auteur theory of filmmaking. That’s soooo Sixties (and Seventies and Eighties and Nineties). Instead, I have a different question to ask: ought a critic to be responsible for examining the source material of the films he reviews?


In one sense, of course, it doesn’t matter who wrote the words spoken by Wayne and Duvall in True Grit: the important thing is that they’re the right words. What I’m wondering is whether a critic can do his job properly without having direct knowledge of the extent to which a film adaptation of a pre-existing novel draws on its source.


I’m of two minds about this matter. In my review of The Human Stain, I went on to say:

Conversely, I almost always recoil with anticipated horror from movies based on great novels that I know and love, for the perfectly good reason that they aren’t necessary. I don’t need to see what the characters in The Portrait of a Lady or The Age of Innocence look like: I already know. As I’ve said before in this space, a great work of art is complete in and of itself, and can only be effectively translated into a different medium by being subjected to a radical imaginative transformation, the ultimate object of which is the creation of a new art work that can be fully experienced and appreciated without reference to its source. Anything short of that is a waste of time.

That much I’ll stand by. But then I added:

Somewhere in between these extremes lie those films based on “important” novels that aren’t any good. I suspect Philip Roth’s The Human Stain belongs in this category, but I don’t know because I haven’t read it, and don’t plan to. I’m one of those unfortunate folk who is allergic to most of the Major American Novelists who came of age in the Fifties. Roth, Bellow, Mailer, Updike: all leave me cold as last month’s fish. My guess, however, is that Robert Benton and Nicholas Meyer, the director and screenwriter of The Human Stain, have made a good-faith effort to preserve the essence of Philip Roth’s novel–and that this is why the movie doesn’t work….

Looking back on this passage, it now strikes me as more than a little bit irresponsible for me to have made such a wild guess instead of reading the book. On the other hand, full-time film reviewers (of which I’m not one) rarely have sufficient time to do the research that would allow them to intelligently compare film adaptations to their sources. The classics, yes–we all at least pretend to have read them–and it’s also taken for granted that film-to-source comparisons will be made in the case of Gone With the Wind-type blockbusters, if only because the first thing everybody wants to know about such films is how faithful the screen version is to the original book. But when it comes to old movies adapted from obscure novels, who bothers? I think I remember Sarah mentioning somewhere that she’d read In a Lonely Place, but I can’t say I know anyone who’s read all of The Night of the Hunter.


Again, though, does it really matter? Film, after all, is a radically collaborative process in which creative responsibility can only be assigned tentatively and on a case-by-case basis. This is something that all but the most rabid auteuristes accept as a given–but it’s also one of the reasons why most of us prose-oriented types have a sneaking suspicion that film is by definition a lesser art form than the novel. We like the idea that every word of a novel is personally written by the person who signs it (even though we also know that an anonymous editor may well have played a more or less substantial part in its creation), just as the billionaires among us will happily pay more for a Rembrandt than a studio-of-Rembrandt, even though the collaboratively produced painting might be better in aesthetic quality (or physical condition) than the bonafide solo effort.


In short, most of us stubbornly persist in believing in aesthetic heroes, a belief which I think goes a long way toward explaining why the auteur theory caught on. It goes against human nature to accept the attributional ambiguity inherent in the process of making films, in the same way that you’d think less of, say, Schubert’s “Unfinished” Symphony were some musicologist to discover that it had been orchestrated by a student of the composer. Is that logical? Not really. It’s the work that matters, not the attribution–yet there’s a difference between knowing that to be true and feeling it in your bones. It takes a special kind of confidence to buy an unsigned painting without a provenance, based solely on the evidence of your eye. Most of us aren’t nearly so sure of ourselves. We like to see that signature in the lower right-hand corner.


As for me, I’m delighted to find out that Charles Portis wrote the words that John Wayne and Robert Duvall spoke in the climactic scene of True Grit, and I’m more inclined as a result to read his novel than I was last week. Even so, I reluctantly confess that I’m even more inclined to pull the DVD off the shelf and watch the movie yet again, and maybe even show it to one of my women friends who’s never before seen a Western and insists they can’t possibly be any good. Were there world enough and time….


UPDATE: Lance Mannion responds, interestingly.

TT: Special double almanac

December 7, 2004 by Terry Teachout

The sun’s gone dim, and

The moon’s turned black;

For I loved him, and

He didn’t love back.


Dorothy Parker, “Two-Volume Novel”

“Avoid any girl who you think looks even hotter when she is miserable. You will destroy each other.”


Manhattan Transfer, “The Emotionally Unavailable Alcoholic’s Guide to Holiday Romance”

TT: This is my life

December 6, 2004 by Terry Teachout

In addition to sleeping for ten hours on Friday, doing the same on Saturday, seeing two plays, unwrapping the latest addition to the Teachout Museum (about which more later), and dining with Maccers (who is, as I’d been told, the last word in peachy), I spent the weekend updating the “Teachout in Commentary,” “Second City,” “Teachout Elsewhere” and “TT-OGIC Top Five” modules of the right-hand column. Take a look and see what’s new.


I’ve got a piece-for-money to write this morning and yet another play to review tonight, but that doesn’t mean you won’t be hearing more from me as the day wears on. (Nor does it mean that you will.)

TT: Hostages to fortune

December 6, 2004 by Terry Teachout

I was talking with a bass-playing friend of mine about how much classical music meant to us, and it occurred to me after we parted to draw up a purely personal list of favorite works about which I have especially strong feelings. Here it is, with the caveat that I make no overarching claims for the significance of this list. I don’t think these are necessarily the greatest or most beautiful pieces of music ever written, but they are–right now–the pieces I love best and can’t imagine living without. Each one is linked to a CD version that I especially like:


– Bach Chorale Prelude “Schm

TT: Almanac

December 6, 2004 by Terry Teachout

“In the dress circle, Doctor Smith and Doctor Jakes enjoyed themselves as true Shakespeareans always enjoy themselves, arguing between each act about the reading of the parts, and the way the lines were said. Fortunately, they found plenty to disapprove of, or they would not have enjoyed themselves at all.”


Noel Streatfeild, Ballet Shoes (courtesy of Laura Lippman)

TT: Words to the wise

December 3, 2004 by Terry Teachout

“Giorgio Morandi: Late Paintings 1950-1964” closes Saturday at Lucas Schoormans Gallery. It’s the first Morandi exhibition in New York since 1981. God only knows when there’ll be another one. Please don’t miss it.


(To read what I wrote about this remarkable show last month in the Washington Post, go here.)


The gallery, which is at 508 W. 26th St., has just published an exquisite little catalogue. To order a copy, e-mail info@lucasschoormans.com, or call 212-243-3159. I suspect that supplies are limited, so don’t dally.

TT: The West did it (but Japan helped)

December 3, 2004 by Terry Teachout

Friday again, and I’ve reviewed two shows in today’s Wall Street Journal, the Roundabout Theatre Company’s Pacific Overtures and Playwrights Horizons’ Rodney’s Wife.


Pacific Overtures is a triumph:

This is one of the most entrancingly beautiful shows ever to come to Broadway. Even if you don’t like it, you won’t be sorry to have seen it.


Originally produced in 1976, “Pacific Overtures” tells the once-familiar story of the naval expedition led by Commodore Perry that opened Japan to the West in 1853–but tells it from the Japanese point of view. The characters are played by Asian-Americans (Perry is a giant monster in a mask). John Weidman’s book makes use of narrative techniques derived from Noh theater, while Mr. Sondheim’s iridescent score melds the spare, percussive textures of Japanese music with his own Ravel-perfumed harmonies.


What makes this production still more individual is that it has been staged and choreographed by a Japanese director, Amon Miyamoto. When I first saw it a few years ago at the Lincoln Center Festival, it was even sung in Japanese (with English supertitles). That deliciously distancing touch is gone from this English-language version, but Mr. Miyamoto and his designers have otherwise been careful to present “Pacific Overtures” in an idiomatically Japanese style, with simple d

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Terry Teachout

Terry Teachout, who writes this blog, is the drama critic of The Wall Street Journal and the critic-at-large of Commentary. In addition to his Wall Street Journal drama column and his monthly essays … [Read More...]

About

About “About Last Night”

This is a blog about the arts in New York City and the rest of America, written by Terry Teachout. Terry is a critic, biographer, playwright, director, librettist, recovering musician, and inveterate blogger. In addition to theater, he writes here and elsewhere about all of the other arts--books, … [Read More...]

About My Plays and Opera Libretti

Billy and Me, my second play, received its world premiere on December 8, 2017, at Palm Beach Dramaworks in West Palm Beach, Fla. Satchmo at the Waldorf, my first play, closed off Broadway at the Westside Theatre on June 29, 2014, after 18 previews and 136 performances. That production was directed … [Read More...]

About My Podcast

Peter Marks, Elisabeth Vincentelli, and I are the panelists on “Three on the Aisle,” a bimonthly podcast from New York about theater in America. … [Read More...]

About My Books

My latest book is Duke: A Life of Duke Ellington, published in 2013 by Gotham Books in the U.S. and the Robson Press in England and now available in paperback. I have also written biographies of Louis Armstrong, George Balanchine, and H.L. Mencken, as well as a volume of my collected essays called A … [Read More...]

The Long Goodbye

To read all three installments of "The Long Goodbye," a multi-part posting about the experience of watching a parent die, go here. … [Read More...]

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