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Terry Teachout on the arts in New York City

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Archives for August 2009

OGIC: Lieblingized

August 6, 2009 by cfrye

A. J. Liebling is making me laugh out loud, a lot. His not-so-funny subject is wartime in Europe, specifically his brief life on a tanker that brought him from England to America in December 1941. His shipmates are a gaggle of Norwegians. He figures the chances of a German torpedo attack on them to be about 90 to one. What nobody’s expecting is the news they hear on December 7:

There is a difference of thirteen and a half hours between the time in Hawaii and Great Britain, and I was asleep before Grung, the radioman, picked up the first bulletin about the attack on Pearl Harbor. I heard the news when I went up on the bridge next morning. Bull, the third officer, pumped my hand and said, “We both allies now!” It felt more natural to be a belligerent on a belligerent ship than that anomalous creature, a neutral among belligerent friends.

Liebling’s observations of day-to-day human behavior during wartime are touching, even heartening. He’s drawn to the most life-goes-on strains of men’s responses to existential threat. A pilot on his ship who lost seven motorboats at Dunkirk remembers the port best for the motorbike races the soldiers there ran and bet on. The exigencies and uncertainties of war make people only more vividly themselves.
And what selves the Norwegian shipmen are. There’s the steward who’s keeping clear of schoolteachers:

The fellow, who was wearing a white jacket, was obviously a steward. He was of medium size but had long arms, so the jacket sleeves ended midway between elbow and wrist, baring the tattooing on his wide forearms. On the right arm he had a sailor and his lass above the legend, in English, “True Love.” The design on the left arm was a full-rigged ship with the inscription “Hilse fra Yokohama,” which means “Greetings from Yokohama.” His head was large and bald except for two tufts of red hair at the temples, looking like a circus clown’s wig. He had a bulging forehead and a flat face with small eyes, a turned-up nose, and a wide mouth. As soon as I got my breath, I said, “Passenger,” and he took me in charge with a professional steward’s manner, which, I afterward learned, he had acquired while working for a fleet of bauxite freighters that often carried tourists. The bauxite freighters had operated out of a port the steward called Noolians, and most of the tourists had been vacationing schoolteachers from the Middle West. Fearing emotional involvement with a schoolteacher, he had switched to tankers. “Tankers is safe,” he said. “No schoolteachers.” His name was Harry Larsen.

And the captain of few words:

At meals with Captain Petersen I had plenty of time for eating, because there was not much conversation. Once he said, as he began on his first plate of cabbage soup, “I have an uncle in New York who has been fifty-two years with the Methodist Book Concern.” Twenty minutes later, having finished his second helping of farina pudding, he said, “He came over in a windyammer.” On another occasion he said, “We had a Chinaman on the ship once. When we came to Shanghai he couldn’t talk to the other Chinamen.” After an interlude during which he ate three plates of lobscouse, a stew made of leftover meats and vegetables, he explained, “He came from another part of China.” And once, taking a long look at the shipowner’s portrait, he said, “I went to see an art gallery near Bordeaux.” After eating a large quantity of dried codfish cooked with raisins, cabbage, and onions, he added, “Some of the frames were that wide,” indicating with his hands how impressively wide they were. Once, in an effort to make him talk, I asked him, “How would you say, ‘Please pass me the butter, Mr. Petersen,’ in Norwegian?” He said, “We don’t use ‘please’ or ‘mister.’ It sounds too polite. And you never have to say ‘pass me’ something in a Norwegian house, because the people force food on you, so if you said ‘pass’ they would think they forgot something and their feelings would be hurt. The word for butter is smor.”

“Westbound Tanker” is collected in Just Enough Liebling. I’m happy to be only halfway through it. I got onto Liebling after reading James Marcus’s interview with Pete Hamill, who edited the new Library of America edition of Liebling. (If you’re reading The House of Mirth, as you should, you’ll be way ahead of me on this.)

TT: So you want to see a show?

August 6, 2009 by Terry Teachout

Here’s my list of recommended Broadway, off-Broadway, and out-of-town shows, updated weekly. In all cases, I gave these shows favorable reviews (if sometimes qualifiedly so) in The Wall Street Journal when they opened. For more information, click on the title.


Warning: Broadway shows marked with an asterisk were sold out, or nearly so, last week.


BROADWAY:

• Alfred Hitchcock’s The 39 Steps (comedy, G, suitable for bright children, reviewed here)

• Avenue Q * (musical, R, adult subject matter and one show-stopping scene of puppet-on-puppet sex, closes Sept. 13, reviewed here)

• South Pacific * (musical, G/PG-13, some sexual content, brilliantly staged but unsuitable for viewers acutely allergic to preachiness, reviewed here)

OFF BROADWAY:

• The Fantasticks (musical, G, suitable for children capable of enjoying a love story, reviewed here)

• Our Town (drama, G, suitable for mature children, reviewed here)

• Ruined (drama, PG-13/R, sexual content and suggestions of extreme violence, closes Sept. 6, reviewed here)

IN ASHLAND, OREGON:

• The Music Man (musical, G, very child-friendly, closes Nov. 1, reviewed here)

IN CHICAGO:

• The History Boys (drama, PG-13/R, adult subject matter, too intellectually complex for most adolescents, closes Sept. 27, reviewed here)

IN GARRISON, N.Y.:

• Pericles and Much Ado About Nothing (Shakespeare, PG-13, playing in repertory through Sept. 6, reviewed here)

CLOSING SOON ON BROADWAY:

• The Little Mermaid * (musical, G, entirely suitable for children, closes Aug. 30, reviewed here)

CLOSING NEXT WEEK ON BROADWAY:

• Mary Stuart (drama, G, far too long and complicated for children, closes Aug. 16, reviewed here)

TT: Almanac

August 6, 2009 by Terry Teachout

“There are only two roads that lead to something like human happiness. They are marked by the words: love and achievement.”
Theodor Reik, A Psychologist Looks at Love

CAAF: I am a Badger

August 5, 2009 by ldemanski

wiener.jpg
My 20th high-school reunion is this weekend, and I’m rushing around this morning packing my bags for the trip back to Wisconsin. I think you’re supposed to dread class reunions but other than wishing my bangs were a half-inch longer, that I wasn’t mid-breakout, and that I had, um, exercised more diligently for the past 20 or so years, I’m looking forward to it in a pretty uncomplicated way: Friends! Home! Bars! Cheese! I hardly get back to my hometown, Appleton, these days — my parents moved from there when I was 19 — but it’s still a main place with me: Not home exactly (that’s the bungalow with Lowell), but an epicenter.
The novel I’m writing is set in a sort-of Appleton; a city both like and unlike the place where I grew up. It’s strange because I inhabit that town imaginatively almost every day, but in other fundamental ways I no longer know the other city, the living city, as well as I wish I did — both because of what I’ve forgotten and because the city itself has grown, changed, moved on. And the faux Appleton that’s built up in my head is pervasive (persuasive?). This morning I was thinking about where I’d get coffee on this trip; I’ll be staying at a hotel downtown, and I thought, “Oh, you’ll just walk down to that little bakery down the street.” Then I remembered that the bakery doesn’t exist; I made it up.
In honor of the trip, and of homelands that both are and aren’t, here are two parts from James Tate’s “I Am a Finn,” taken from his book Distance from Loved Ones, which you should have along with his selected poems (which is to say, this is a longish excerpt; please don’t be angry with me, Mr. Tate!):

I am standing in the post office, about
to mail a package back to Minnesota, to my family.
I am a Finn. My name is Kasteheimi (Dewdrop).
Mikael Agricola (1510-1557) created the Finnish language.
He knew Luther and translated the New Testament.
When I stop by the Classé Café for a cheeseburger
no one suspects that I am a Finn.
I gaze at the dimestore reproductions of Lautrec
On the greasy walls, at the punk lovers afraid
to show their quivery emotions, secure
in the knowledge that my grandparents really did
emigrate from Finland in 1910–why
is everyone leaving Finland, hundreds of
thousands to Michigan and Minnesota, and now Australia?
…
But I should be studying for my exam.
I wonder if Dean will celebrate with me tonight,
Assuming I pass. Finnish literature
really came alive in the 1860s
Here in Cambridge, Massachusetts,
no one cares that I am a Finn.
They’ve never even heard of Frans Eemil Sillanpää,
Winner of the 1939 Nobel Prize in Literature.
As a Finn, this infuriates me.

Photo from Wiener Fest 2009 in Whitelaw, WI. Taken by Sarah Filzen.

TT: Snapshot

August 5, 2009 by Terry Teachout

Mike Nichols and Elaine May appear as the mystery guests on What’s My Line? on June 26, 1960:

(This is the latest in a weekly series of arts-related videos that appear in this space each Wednesday.)

TT: Almanac

August 5, 2009 by Terry Teachout

“You accept certain unlovely things about yourself and manage to live with them. The atonement for such an acceptance is that you make allowances for others–that you cleanse yourself of the sin of self-righteousness.”
Eric Hoffer, Working and Thinking on the Waterfront

CAAF: The classics

August 4, 2009 by ldemanski

Re-reading Michael Schmidt’s The First Poets: Lives of the Ancient Greek Poets. It’s a fascinating book — although in places it can read like 25 pounds of learning in a five-pound sack. A hazard of classical scholarship, I’d guess. A hazard of my own degree in, er, pop scholarship? I cannot read the following sentences without flashing on the linked-to image:

Orpheus married Eurydice on his return from the heroic journey with Jason and the Argonauts, having had sufficient adventure by then to want a quiet life. He and his bride settled in Thrace among the wild Cicones.

Please tell me I’m not the only one!

CAAF: Dorothy goes to Hollywood

August 4, 2009 by ldemanski

dorothy-parker-with%20dog.jpg A great post on TCM’s blog examines Dorothy Parker’s career as a screenwriter in Hollywood, including the 15 films she worked on with partner Alan Campbell. I knew Parker hated her time in Hollywood — as the post’s writer Moira Finnie notes, friends of Parker’s would later tell of coming across her at Hollywood parties crying into her drink, “I used to be a poet” — but Finnie goes beyond the usual anecdotes to look more particularly at the scripts Parker wrote and doctored. While she finds that “it’s difficult to discern a clear thread of Parker’s incisive wit” in the scripts, she does unearth sparkles of it here and there:

For Alfred Hitchcock’s Saboteur (1942), Dorothy Parker (without Campbell, apparently), was asked to spruce up the finished Peter Viertel and Joan Harrison script about the wrongly accused factory worker (Robert Cummings) running for his life from the police and the real fifth columnists. A memorable scene featuring some vexatious circus freaks debating whether or not they should hide the fugitives (a reluctant Priscilla Lane and Cummings), the dialogue among the romantically minded Bearded Lady, the argumentative Siamese Twins and the belligerent dwarf was written by Parker, to Hitchcock’s delight. Parker was even persuaded to appear in the film as a passenger in a scene with Hitchcock in a car passing by as the desperate kidnap victim Lane struggled with Cummings by the side of the road (seen above). “My,” Dorothy’s character murmurs, “they must be terribly in love.”

Related: At Jacket Copy, what Parker told the Paris Review about her time in Hollywood.

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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...]

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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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