27 May 2023

'Greatness Thrust Upon Them'

by Kirk Woodward

[James F. Broderick (b. 1963), who lives in Glen Ridge, New Jersey. is a writer and a professor of English. (Glen Ridge, in Essex County in northern New Jersey, is a little over 15 miles east of New York City and two miles south of Montclair, in the environs of which much of the theater work of Kirk Woodward, the author of this report, is staged.  Kirk lives in Little Falls, 3½ miles north of Montclair in neighboring Passaic County.) 

[A former journalist and editor, Broderick has performed in a few Shakespeare plays (and has directed twice) with The Saint James Players of the Saint James Episcopal Church in Upper Montclair, a troupe with which Kirk has also worked.  (At least once, Kirk and Broderick worked together at SJP—on a production of Shakespeare’s As You Like It, which Kirk directed in September 2017, and which I saw.)


[Broderick has published a few books, but his first play, The Hamlet Experience, was staged Off-Off-Broadway at the New York Theater Festival in November 2021.  The play was described in NYTF publicity as “a 75-minute contortion of Shakespeare’s masterpiece treated as a comedy that doesn’t know it’s a tragedy. . . .  [W]hat’s it all mean?  The director has no idea, the actors have lost their place, the writer expects the plot to be clear.”


[According to a post by the Jersey City-based Hudson Shakespeare Company, Greatness Thrust Upon Them had its origins eleven years ago:


In 2012, James Broderick . . . encountered a new experience for him but not new to many parents – driving his daughter to participate in a community theater production.

 

James’ daughter was playing Miranda in a production of “The Tempest” at the St. James Players in [Upper] Montclair and one day the director of the production asked James if he would be interested in playing a part. . . .  While he taught English and Journalism for years and spoke in front of crowds of students all the time, James had no acting experience and even less experience with Shakespeare’s language.  Swallowing his fear, he proceeded to learn the small, but pivotal role of Gonzalo.  Fear soon turned to sheer enjoyment as he discovered the play and the Bard with his daughter.

 

As James learned his part, he got to speak with the other adults in the cast and to his amazement found that many were like him, day professionals who also took time for a side career in theater.  An author of several books, he thought about exploring the subject of people with day jobs doing Shakespeare in their spare time.  What he found was a different animal.

 

These people didn’t just do this in their spare time but was at times a lifelong vocation supplemented by day jobs.  Very often, the same “community theater” actors were doing small roles in local film and television.  A community of often unsung, non-union professionals who were more than willing to share what theater and what Shakespeare meant to them. 


[Broderick took the opportunity to speak with actors about their experiences on stage with William Shakespeare.  “The result,” concluded the HSC post, “was the basis for ‘Greatness Thrust Upon Them: Non-professional Actors and Directors Discuss Their Encounters With Shakespeare,’ a new book that interviews . . . several actors from around the country about their insights, sacrifices, and delights in performing the Bard.” 


[A note about the book’s title—a popular and seemingly ubiquitous quotation from Act II, Scene 5 of the Shakespearean comedy Twelfth Night.  The fuller quotation is: “In my stars I am above thee, but be not afraid of greatness.  Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon ’em.”


[The lines are part of a letter supposedly written by Countess Olivia to Malvolio, her steward.  The pompous, egotistical, and self-important Malvolio reads the letter thinking that it suggests Olivia’s in love with him and is encouraging him to better himself.  What the duped steward doesn’t know is that the letter was, in fact, written by his fellow servants in an effort to play a cruel joke on him by advising him to do things that actually annoy the countess.


[While today, those who use Shakespeare’s famous lines, especially the last clause, do so in all seriousness, the poet’s original sense is to make Malvolio, the target of the words, a figure of ridicule as he’s mocked for his very pomposity, egotism, and self-importance.


[Broderick’s Greatness is available on Amazon in Kindle and Paperback versions and appeals not only to the Shakespeare or theater enthusiast, but presents inspirational accounts of everyday people pursing their dreams even if a full-time day job pays the bills.]


My friend David Semonin (1941-2010), about whom I’ve written in this blog (see “Saints of the Theater” on Rick On Theater, 30 December 2011), had a way of asking questions that stick in the mind. One day, probably after he had seen one too many local theater productions, he asked, “What’s the justification for community theater?”

At the time and place he asked that question (decades ago in Louisville, Kentucky), admittedly there wasn’t a lot of outstanding non-professional theater (or professional for that matter – Actors Theater of Louisville was barely on the horizon at that time). Theater has its skilled professionals. What do amateurs bring to the table?

There’s an historical answer to David’s question, or rather several connected answers. Theater in the United States in the nineteenth century was dominated by European dramatic models and by melodrama (not necessarily bad in itself, but at that time presented in heavily stereotyped ways). Few American plays from that period hold much interest today.

As the twentieth century began, another negative factor presented itself: powerful theatrical producers created what basically were cartels, severely limiting what could be presented on the professional stage and by whom. One response was the Little Theatre movement, usually said to have begun around 1910 (with antecedents), in which local non-professional groups created theaters of their own, outside the reach of the producers’ control.

Meanwhile playwriting began to stir, and in the early twentieth century the plays of Eugene O’Neill (1888-1953), among others, led to an increase of interest in theatrical experimentation and to a wider exposure of significant drama to the public. Some independent theaters spearheaded innovations; others replicated them.

Community theater, as many of these efforts were called, served as a sort of “declaration of independence” from economic and artistic restrictions. Theater was not to be produced just by an elite; anyone could do it.

Nowadays the picture is more complex and we can visualize it as a sort of sliding scale between completely amateur productions at one end and Broadway products at the other. “Community theater” today usually refers to the most amateur end of the scale, and that’s what David was talking about.

The word “amateur” unquestionably provides the basis for one answer to David. It doesn’t mean second-rate (or worse), it doesn’t mean less good than something else, it doesn’t mean naïve or shoddy. It comes from the Latin word “amator” or “lover,” from the verb “amare” meaning “to love” – a strong, passionate word.

An amateur, then, is a person who’s fallen in love with an activity, and that’s what so often happens in theater – one is “stage struck,” overwhelmed by a powerful attraction. This was certainly the case for me. I was fifteen when my friend Perry Baer invited me to a Saturday morning work call at Louisville Children’s Theatre (now Stage One, a very fine professional operation).

I found everything there that I needed in order to survive high school and find a direction for my life, and I couldn’t be happier about it. That same feeling – that passionate love for theater – finds expression in a book called Greatness Thrust Upon Them (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2014; available on Amazon) by a friend of mine, James F. (Jim) Broderick, with whom I’ve recently worked on a directing project.

Jim had the idea of talking to non-professionals (27 of them) across the country about their experiences acting in plays by William Shakespeare (1564-1616). (I know two of the people interviewed, John Bylancik and Lisa Stoeffel.) Although Shakespeare’s plays are performed at all levels of theater, they are by no means simple to produce and perform for anyone, so they provide plenty of material for discussion.

Jim’s book suggests a kind of answer to David’s question above. Basically, David was looking at the result of the process of producing plays, the productions themselves, which are of variable quality (as is all theater, as a matter of fact) and can on occasion be awful – and, of course, sometimes not.

Jim’s book, on the other hand, emphasizes more the values of the process itself. Community theater, his book suggests, enriches and sometimes even transforms the people involved in it. (If the result is worthwhile productions, of course, that is a welcome plus.)

One factor David may not have considered when he challenged the value of community theater is the range of experience one can find in a given cast. When he asked his question, decades ago, I suspect there were not many people in the local theater scene with formal training in drama.

I have no numbers to prove that the situation is different today, but I suspect it would be a rare community theater production today that doesn’t have one or more persons in the cast or the theater staff who has had formal theater training, or at least substantial experience in professional-quality shows.

There are gems throughout Jim’s book which leave me with an expanded understanding of what acting at the local level can be like, and what people there can achieve. The interviewees in Greatness are thoughtful, committed, and perceptive, with a generosity of spirit that is heartening – exactly the kind of people we need in our world. Here are a few observations the book suggests.

Obviously, everyone interviewed had a first encounter with Shakespeare; no one is born knowing his plays. The stories in Greatness tend to follow a generally shared trajectory. There’s an introduction to Shakespeare, maybe from parents, maybe at school. At that point what we might call “the Shakespeare experience” “takes” or it doesn’t.

Then there’s some kind of opportunity actually to perform one of the plays, reading it aloud or even being recruited into performing it. Then the person, typically, is hooked. As Michael Callahan, who actually didn’t have his first experience with Shakespeare until he was retired, says, “People often get sort of drafted into the theater.”

Then, frequently (and fortunately), there’s often some reinforcing experience, typically at the hands of an inspiring teacher or an understanding director. Seth Meriweather gives one example:

I remember the director said “Let’s be professional about this [production of Richard III] and help these people watching this play” – that stuck with me, the value of performing, and what you can bring to an audience, how important it was to perform as well as you can for the audience.

Greatness demonstrates how strong the impulse can be to create theater. Dennis Brestensky, a teacher, tells how in 1997

half a dozen students came into my office, closed the door, and said rather forcefully, “We want to do a Shakespeare play. We want to form a Shakespeare club called the Lion Players. We want to do a full-length play every spring, and we want you to be behind us. Not as director, but as advisor, supporter, and cheerleader.”

In Greatness there’s plenty of evidence that the right director can make an enormous difference. For me stories of this kind are interesting and suggestive. Jay Tilley for example says that “The way Bob [Smith] liked to direct, when one scene was ending, another was already beginning – a very brisk pace.”

Noelle Fair, working on a speech from A Midsummer Night’s Dream, “got so overwhelmed with it that I think I broke down during one of our final rehearsals. . . . My director came to me and said ‘I know why you’re having problems with it. It was written to be bad. Play it like a bad actor.’” The advice was exactly appropriate for the speech.

Meredith Zahn says, “I remembered one thing my acting coach told me – just pick an objective and stick to it.” Whole acting classes boil down to exactly that.

Sometimes it’s not a person but a film or video that helps someone persevere in their efforts to perform Shakespeare’s plays. The name that comes up frequently in this regard in Greatness is Kenneth Branagh (b. 1960), who has made six movies from Shakespeare’s plays, as well as one film about a troupe performing Hamlet, the marvelous A Midwinter’s Tale (1995), which by itself might be enough to convince anyone to try their hand with the Bard.

Seeing films of the play you’re in, actually, is a fraught subject. Several actors in the book mention how helpful it was for them to see videos of other performances of the plays they were doing. As a director I urge actors not to do this, so their performances can be their own rather than a copy of someone else’s.

Is Shakespeare a special case? I still don’t think so, but I’m giving the question thought. I will add that David Neal, in the book, vehemently agrees with me, and Tony Pisculli says:

I think it’s a distraction. If you are playing Richard II, and you go see Ian McKellen’s production, you’re not going to be doing yourself any favors. It’s an impossible measuring stick. Plus, that was that production, and this is our production.

Sometimes it’s other actors who provide needed support, through their encouragement or through observation, and sometimes through the advice they give. Many interviewees cited as an asset something that as a director I always resist in a show, which is for actors to coach each other. John Bylancik says:

I actually sought out a lot of help from anybody in the cast who had done any other show before. I cornered anybody, backstage and in-between rehearsals. Every line I think I ran by somebody who clearly knew a lot more than I do.

I’m not about to abandon my policy that actors should never coach each other, but I might need to be more sensitive to the amount of help actors might need, either from me or from other (hopefully authorized) people.

Inspiration from others doesn’t have to come in the form of advice. Susan Nelle says:

You know what I love? I didn’t understand this until recently. I really love the rehearsal process – even more than performing. That’s the creative process, that’s where the learning comes in. . . . Learning to play with those people, working out the things you need to tell the story, that’s the hard work of rehearsal. In a good rehearsal process, you’re exploring what makes it come alive, what moves it. If it’s not alive, it’s just someone standing up there reading from a textbook.

Help can come from many other sources, some unlikely, as Michael Callahan illustrates:

One of the other things that helped was, we were rehearsing in a local high school, and the drama teacher had a comic book of [Twelfth Night] . . . . [S]he said “This might help you,” and she handed me a comic book of the play. They have the lines, and then they have an explanation of what they mean. She said “Here’s what I give my students. This might help.” And it did.

We don’t use words in the identical way that people did in, say, 1600. Add to that the fact that Shakespeare is a supreme poet, both lyric and dramatic, and then add the problems involved in getting an audience both to hear the words and to understand them, and we have quite a mix.

John Kuhn says that

it was hard as heck to figure out what was being discussed, given the use of a lot of different poetic elements that I was unfamiliar with. It was extremely challenging figuring out the meaning. On the other side, there were those pearls of expression that have become well known, and which are almost too poetic to be expressed. So I went back and forth between thinking “Oh my gosh, what does that mean?” to “Oh my gosh, that’s beautiful!” I remember just being daunted. I was intimidated by the language even as I was being overwhelmed by the power and beauty of language. Both extremes.

Susan Nelle says:

One of the first things you have to do if you want to honor the language is to break it down, really try to understand it. In the language, Shakespeare gives you the emotions. You don’t have to manufacture the emotions, the language will tell you the state of mind that the speaker is in, as well as the facts of the story. It made me appreciate even more good writing – even good American writing. . . . That’s the thing about Shakespeare’s language – you have to learn to trust it. It is everything. Everything will fit in and around it if you are true to the language.

John Bylancik recounts:

I felt really compelled to try to get the language right. The memorization, the learning of the lines was something I never had to do before. My daughter actually helped me out the most, giving me mnemonic help in terms of memorizing, chunking the text, tying it to emotion, tying it to reaction – just real acting skills.

Many stress how important it is to understand what a line means – something I find has to be the first step in rehearsals for a Shakespeare play. Nate Pain says he learned that

the biggest thing is getting an understanding of what you’re saying. The language he was writing in is so far removed from the language we use today. It’s not so much the words you are speaking, it’s how you are saying it, your actions, your body language. That’s what can make or kill a Shakespeare production, in my opinion – creating an understanding, an understanding for the audience so they can know what’s happening.

The results is well worth the effort. Interviewees attested that acting in a Shakespeare play can bring about a level of understanding the plays that just reading them can’t. Meredith Zahn says,

I went to that first rehearsal and we did a cold read – Shakespeare plays are meant to be performed. As soon as I read with the other actors, it all made sense to me. And I was like, “I get what I’m saying now! Oh my gosh, it makes sense!

Participating in productions can pay off, of course, in insight about specific plays. John Bylancik says of The Tempest:

I think for me there’s a definite forgiveness and a “second chance” theme that kind of runs through it. Everything from Ariel being released from the tree to the young lovers at the end being discovered, the play moves from worst-case to best-case.

That’s solid observation. Dennis Brestensky says,

The thing I really liked about Shakespeare – he had a rounded view of life. Some of the literature we were reading [at his school] was negative, but even though Shakespeare wrote tragedies, he had a great vision of the world, of the comedy and joy of life. You’d cry when you read his works, but you’d also laugh.

Angela Laio, whose ethnicity is Asian, pointed out a surprising benefit of doing Shakespeare plays – that it’s easier to achieve non-traditional casting in them:

I think my ethnicity hasn’t been a barrier when it comes to being cast in Shakespeare plays. Since his work has been around for so long, there have been countless examples of directors taking risks with his work, and casting non-traditionally in terms of race and gender. People are not as surprised when they see “ethnic” actors playing traditionally “Caucasian” roles in Shakespeare’s plays.

Actors cite the freedom Shakespeare gives actors to explore ways of doing their roles since he gives relatively few stage directions. As Angela Liao says, “You say to yourself, why not try it this way?”

One major answer to David Semonin’s question, “Why community theater at all?” may be the way theater enriches the lives of the people who participate it. Many interviewees in Greatness saw benefits in their lives outside theater as a result of performing Shakespeare.

Sometimes the results are surprising. Meredith Zahn sees performing Shakespeare as strengthening her religious faith; Lisa Stoeffel sees it as a part of her church’s outreach. Colin Goode, an Anglican priest, says:

When I played Friar Lawrence [in Romeo and Juliet], a friend of mine came to me after the show and said “That was really good – you missed your vocation!” My head began to swell. I thought he was going to say “You should have been an actor.” Instead, he said “You should have been a Franciscan friar!”

More generally Peter Howell says:

Well, the performing and literary arts have enriched my life immeasurably, partially by offering insights into the human condition, and partially by offering escape into other people’s stories, which are generally more interesting and more revealing of the human condition than my own. To say nothing of having given me the opportunity to have gotten friendly with a number of creative and really wonderful people.

Rick Kenney studied drama at Catholic University (Washington, D.C.), where Susan Sarandon (b. 1946) was in his class. She went on to become a fine and notable professional actor, but what Kenney says has a wider application. His teachers, he says,

took the approach that the way to become a good performer, actor, theater person, is to learn a lot about life, the world, everything that matters to human beings. The technical stuff you can learn on the job. The emphasis wasn’t on the craft, but absorbing as much as you can about life. It was the liberal arts approach – drama for its own sake, not to prepare for a career, but to enrich your life. We were told to be a true “amateur” – do it for the love of it.

In a society in which the liberal arts as a whole are being increasingly devalued as a part of education, community theater may not need more justification than that.

[Many ROTters may know this, but the British don’t use ‘amateur’ with the same negative connotation that we do in the U.S.  A case in point: when I was stationed in Berlin with the army and helped start a theater group at the air base, we sort of modeled it after a similar group the British forces had.  Their troupe was called BATS, which was an acronym for the British Amateur Theatre Society. 

[One of our founding members was the British wife of a U.S. Air Force NCO, and she wanted to name our group TAT to emulate the British group—but we went with the Tempelhof American Theatre because of the derogatory sense of ‘amateur’ in American usage. (See “Berlin Memoir,” Part 8, 13 April 2017.)

[Kirk’s etymology of the word as derived from Latin is certainly correct, but readers might note that the word itself is French and means simply “a lover of something.”  (A romantic or sexual lover, by the way, is amant/amante.)

[Now, here are some personal responses I had while reading Kirk’s report on Greatness Thrust Upon Them:

•  When Kirk raises the likelihood that some participants in a community theater today will have had some professional training or experience, I wonder if that wouldn’t be especially true in communities in or near large cities with a professional theater scene or a college with a strong arts program. 

Montclair, New Jersey—the community in which Kirk lives and in whose vibrant theater scene he participates—is an excellent example, I’d think.  It’s about a half hour from New York City by car and less than three-quarters of an hour by train.  Montclair State University has a theater and dance department and offers bachelor’s and master’s degrees in theater; Montclair High School has an active theater and performing arts program as well.  There are probably dozens of small theater groups, plus theater troupes at many local churches, all around the Montclair area.

(When Kirk and I were at college in the mid- and late 1960s, our rural college town didn’t have a community theater as far as I knew—and the university also didn’t have much of a theater program.  When I got to the State University College at Oneonta, New York, in the late ’80s—Oneonta is a similarly isolated town—where the college had a large theater department, the town had a very active community theater.)

  Kirk asserts: “Greatness demonstrates how strong the impulse can be to create theater.”  This statement reminds me of a remark I made in my report on documentary theater (“Performing Fact: The Documentary Drama,” 9 October 2009): “The drive to perform . . .—to teach or explain events of import to the community—is as old as performance itself.  The first . . . performance, the precursor of the . . . drama, must have occurred the first time a Neanderthal hunting party danced around the campfire to replay the day’s success.” 

Leonardo Shapiro, the director on whom I’ve blogged often, frequently spoke of the theater as our descendent of the tribal campfire, around which the community gathered to tell its stories and recount its history.  “Culture is a story told around a fire,” Leo declared in a 1991 essay in the Performing Arts Journal.  “It is the conversation between the young and old.  It is the fire on your face and the cold on your back.  The link between your experience and mine”

  When Kirk wrote about actors getting advice from other actors or members of the company, and then added that he discourages this practice, I was prompted to add “especially unsolicited advice/coaching.”  Even solicited help from someone other than the director is a problem, I think.  It’s a matter of too many cooks—and too many voices giving (potentially contradictory) notes and instruction to the actors. 

This can be an awful temptation in a college-theater setting when a cast member might find him- or herself acting with one of his or her teachers or students.  I had both experiences as an MFA student at Rutgers: I was in one production with my longtime acting teacher and one with a student of my own.  My teacher never coached me or gave me advice—she had her own role to work on, after all—and I didn’t advise my student on her work, either.

  Kirk’s quoting one of the interviewees about learning to work with the other actors reminded me of the late Aaron Frankel, a teacher I studied with at HB Studio, “quoting” Martha Graham (I imagine it was really a paraphrase): “Don’t come on stage to give; come on stage to take” (i.e., from the other performers, to respond to what they “send”).

  The anecdote about the Shakespeare comic book brought to mind my earliest encounter with The Bard.  I read one of his plays—I’m pretty sure it was Romeo and Juliet—in 8th-grade English class, but I think I must have tried to read some of the plays before that on my own.  (Around that time, my mother had given me her high school volume of collected works of Shakespeare—still with her bookplate in it bearing, of course, her maiden name.)

Sometime when I was in middle school, the mother of one of my friends was an amateur actor, and she was in a production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream or Twelfth Night at the Carter Barron Amphitheater in Washington, D.C.’s Rock Creek Park.  I’m pretty sure that was my first Shakespearean performance, and I took the Shakespeare volume and followed along with the performance. 

After that, I may have read other Shakespeare plays, probably the comedies, but the unfamiliar language, the complex structure, and the poetry made it hard for me to follow the stories.  Someone suggested—I can’t imagine I came upon this on my own—I read Charles and Mary Lamb’s Tales from Shakespeare, and that was a lot easier to read, even in the 18th-century prose in which the Lambs wrote, and I could then read the 16th-century texts of the originals more easily because I knew the plot.  It’s not a comic book, but I think the point’s the same. 

  The next quotation, about another actor’s difficulty following the poetry, reminded me of something from back in Kirk’s and my college days.  Our college director used to say, before every first rehearsal of a Shakespeare play—or maybe at the auditions: “Shakespeare was just a hack!”  When I mentioned this response to Kirk, he suggested that it was: “He needed to feel Shakespeare was something he could handle – maybe?”  I think he said it so that The Bard would seem something we could handle without being intimidated by his iconic stature. 

  The comments by the Asian-American actress about her ethnicity enhancing the production harked back to comments I made on a few Shakespeare productions with racially mixed casts, such as Andre Braugher’s Iago and Franchelle Stewart Dorn’s Cleopatra—both at the Folger in D.C. (see “Othello” in “Some Out-Of-Town Plays from the Archive,” 22 December 2020, and “Antony and Cleopatra” in “Three Plays from the Shakespeare Theatre from the Archives,” 26 April 2020, respectively).

Tom Stoppard’s Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead isn’t Shakespeare, but it’s Shakespeare-derived and the characters are Shakespeare’s, so the black-white Rosencrantz and Guildenstern in Jon Jory’s production at the Actors Theatre of Louisville in 1970 qualifies, and it said, among other things—when other characters mixed the two courtiers up—that they’re so interchangeable that even race isn’t enough to distinguish them.

  The interviewee who said that actors should learn about all aspects of life, not just theater, echoes my advice to a high school student in Maplewood, New Jersey, who gave up a trip to Paris for a chorus role in a community theater production.  I told her that there’d always be another production—she was a pretty talented young actress and would have had no trouble getting cast in local shows—but a trip to Paris (especially her first one!) could be life-altering and would benefit her forever.  (Mine was: see “An American Teen in Germany,” Part 1, on Rick On Theater, 9 March 2013).   

I’ve also taken a stand against being an undergraduate theater major (see “Liberal Arts in the Real World,” 24 July 2010).  Many young actors with whom I studied and worked had been theater majors in college—some even as early as high school.  I invariably found these actors limited not only in their artistic abilities, but, more importantly, in their general knowledge of literature, history, philosophy, and science.

This had two repercussions in their work.  First, they had less factual knowledge on which to draw when studying a role and, second, they had a narrower basis for their experience of life—an experience that is indispensable for any artist, particularly an actor. The best actors with whom I worked had all had the most eclectic intellectual backgrounds, though not all got them from college. (Many of the actors I met, especially the older ones, were self-educated. Others had studied diverse fields in school, including chemistry, law, and history—and one or two former divinity students.)

My own work as an actor and director is riddled with incidents where I drew on the most improbable knowledge.  In the referenced post, I proceed to describe some diverse instances of this phenomenon.]


22 May 2023

Tom Hanks, Novelist

 

[On 9 May 2023, publisher Alfred A. Knopf released The Making of Another Major Motion Picture Masterpiece, a novel by actor Tom Hanks.  On 12 May 2023, Jeffrey Brown, the arts correspondent for PBS NewsHour, interviewed Hanks about his book and making movies.   

[Below is a transcript of Brown’s conversation with the actor and author, followed by a review of the novel from the Washington Post.] 

TOM HANKS ON HIS DEBUT NOVEL, ‘THE MAKING OF ANOTHER MAJOR MOTION PICTURE MASTERPIECE’
by Jeffrey Brown and Anne Azzi Davenport 

You could be forgiven for not knowing about the blockbuster film, “Knightshade: The Lathe of Firefall.” That’s because it’s a fictional film at the center of a new novel, "The Making of Another Major Motion Picture Masterpiece," written by Tom Hanks. Jeffrey Brown sat down with Hanks in New York to talk about his book and his love of making movies. It’s for our arts and culture series, CANVAS.

Geoff Bennett, “PBS NewsHour” Co-Anchor: You could be forgiven for not knowing about the new blockbuster film "Knightshade." That’s because it’s a fictional film at the center of a new novel starring, or make that written by, Tom Hanks.

This is Hanks’ first novel. And, earlier this week, he talked with Jeffrey Brown in New York about it and his own love of making movies for our arts and culture series, Canvas.

Tom Hanks, Actor and Writer [in a scene from “Saving Private Ryan”]: ‘I’m a schoolteacher.’

Jeffrey Brown: Take a blockbuster film, one starring, say, Tom Hanks.

Tom Hanks [“Saving Private Ryan”]: ‘Sometimes, I wonder, if I have changed so much, my wife is even going to recognize me whenever it is I get back to her.’

Jeffrey Brown: We know Hanks and perhaps the famous director, but what of all those names in the credits? One day, Tom Hanks the author realized he had a story to tell about them.

Tom Hanks: My editor said: "You should write a novel next."

And I said: "You are right. I should. What should it be about?"

(LAUGHTER)

Tom Hanks: And he said: "You live in a pretty rarefied world that would be an interesting thing to read about. Everybody just assumes they like movies and they know how movies are made." He said: "Well, and isn’t that something to write about?"

And I said: "You are exactly right." And right at that moment, the book landed in my head.

Jeffrey Brown: The result? The making of another major motion picture masterpiece, part send-up, all love letter to an industry.

Where does your ambition come to write a novel like that?

Tom Hanks: Well, I can’t help it. I wake up with stories in my head and I wake up with questions that I want to ask of people.

I know this is new to everybody.

Jeffrey Brown: Hanks draws on what he knows from his storied career.

Tom Hanks [“Philadelphia”]: ‘An excellent lawyer.’

Jeffrey Brown: Two-time Oscar winner for "Philadelphia" in 1993 and "Forrest Gump" 1993 a year later, some 100 films, from the youthful "Big" [1988], through "Saving Private Ryan" [1998], to, more recently, "A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood" [2019].

Tom Hanks [“A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood”]: ‘. . . my neighbor.’

Jeffrey Brown: Which brought us together in 2019.

Hanks is a world-famous star, but one who loves the process and the stories of people behind it.

Tom Hanks: I do this thing. Like, when I’m watching particularly an old movie, right, a movie made before 1959, and there’s a crowd scene, and it takes place at night, and they shot it on the back lot at Paramount, OK?

Jeffrey Brown: A place you are familiar with.

Tom Hanks: I am familiar with. I shot "Bosom Buddies" [ABC, 1980-82] on the back lot of Paramount.

Tom Hanks [“Bosom Buddies”]: ‘See, it’s all perfectly normal.’

Tom Hanks: If there is a taxi and a bus and pedestrians, every single one of those people showed up from their apartments, their houses.

Jeffrey Brown: They had to get there.

(CROSSTALK)

Tom Hanks: Had to get there. They had to be put in wardrobe. They had to be told what to do. They had to stand around and wait. They had to drive on the thing. They had to do all this stuff.

And at the beginning of every shot, there is a moment of controlled chaos. Quiet, quiet, quiet. We’re rolling, we’re rolling, we’re rolling. Background, and action. That has gone into every single shot in motion picture history.

The mechanics of that, to me, is as fascinating as those kind of like documentaries of how it is made. How is it made? Well, it’s made very — over a long haul with very particular tasks that have to be solved.

Jeffrey Brown: The novel follows the making of the making of a film in 2020 filled with rich characters, including director Bill Johnson, chapter headings direct from the film process itself, even pages from the fictional screenplay.

But Hanks goes further to give us a big story that begins in 1947 and a made-up comic book which would lead to the made-up film decades later.

Tom Hanks: Comic books were the original versions of storyboards for motion pictures, so that now, when you read storyboards for movies . . . 

Jeffrey Brown: Oh, you see it that way, of course, right.

Tom Hanks: Yes. Yes, exactly, and particularly the comic book at the end.

This would literally be like these storyboards that you would see closeups of eyes, something like that, somebody floating up like that. The script gives you a description of what you’re going to see, but the storyboards are actually what you are going to see.

Jeffrey Brown: And a novel is a form of telling us how that works.

Tom Hanks: Exactly. Yes.

Jeffrey Brown: In 2017, Hanks published a book of short stories titled "Uncommon Type" [Alfred A. Knopf, 2017].

We spoke then about the move to fiction, and now, with the more ambitious storytelling of a novel, about how it differs from his work in film.

As novelist, you are the storyteller.

Tom Hanks: A novelist, I get to do the whole shebang, and I get to get into the heads of the people and the motivations of the people and the weaknesses of the people, as well as the strengths.

A lot of time, actors are given way too much credit for the end result of the movie that they are in. But, in fact, we shot that one day. I mean, we twisted ourselves in a knot in order to give unto the camera something that was ephemeral only and logical only unto ourselves.

And then a director and a screenwriter and an editor and a whole phalanx of people ends up taking that and sometimes twisting it around just enough, moving it around, so it becomes something a little different than what you brought to it. And I could walk you through any of the movies that I have been in, in which, on the day that I shot it, I was just trying to carry an idea from one room into the next.

But in the final moment of the film, with the rest of the story, with the other performances, with the cut, with the score, it has become a much, much, much more important building block in the movie than I ever anticipated.

Jeffrey Brown: The making of a movie, as we see in your novel, looks like a series of plans and then accidents, right . . .

(LAUGHTER)

Tom Hanks: Yes.

Jeffrey Brown: . . . piled on top of each other.

When you look at the arc of a career, how much planned, how much accident, how much serendipity do you see?

Tom Hanks: Well, I’m going to say that, in the younger days, I actually thought there was a ton of stuff that you could control or you could make happen, that you could force, manifest into it, like, I’m going to wear it like this, I’m going to say it like this, and I’m going to make this decision, and this movie will impact that movie.

The fact is, you begin at square one every time. Nothing you have done up to that point warrants anything that you can assume is going to be in the palm of your hand going into it. You can only show up on time. You can only know the text to the — and I don’t mean just your own dialogue. I mean know the material that you’re making.

Jeffrey Brown: You still — you really feel that? I mean, after the success, Tom Hanks walks into — and that says something?

Tom Hanks: I will tell you this. Sometimes, there’s a number of people that can walk in and allow the thing to be made in the first chance.

I’m going to — I’m going to drop my own name like I’m a big shot.

Jeffrey Brown: OK.

Tom Hanks: OK. They get in and say, we got Hanks.

Jeffrey Brown: Right.

Tom Hanks: So, therefore, we’re going to get our — we will get our financing. Why? Because we got Hanks. We’re OK. We got Hanks.

And then I show up and we start . . .

Jeffrey Brown: That’s how I’m feeling right now.

Tom Hanks: OK. I’m glad.

Jeffrey Brown: I got Hanks. Yes. Yes.

Tom Hanks: OK.

But then, once you start doing that, you realize that, well, you got the financing, but that doesn’t guarantee you the output. It doesn’t necessarily warrant the theme of the movie that you make is good enough in order to withstand people’s attention for two and half-hours, better about 110 minutes.

(LAUGHTER)

Tom Hanks: I find the 110-minute movie is an awfully good movie, just under two hours.

Jeffrey Brown: You planning to keep writing?

Tom Hanks: Oh, yeah, yeah. I can — yeah. I don’t know what, but I like to consider myself to be a writer with a day job.

(LAUGHTER)

Tom Hanks: And the day job is pretty glamorous sometimes.

Tom Hanks [“Asteroid City”]: ‘Where are you?’

Actor [“Asteroid City”]: ‘Asteroid City.’

Jeffrey Brown: Tom Hanks returns to his day job in June in the film "Asteroid City" [directed by Wes Anderson; to be released 23 June 2023 by Focus Features].

For the “PBS NewsHour,” I’m Jeffrey Brown in New York.

Amna Nawaz, “PBS NewsHour” Co-Anchor: And there is much more online, where Tom Hanks talks about the writers strike and the changing economics of his industry.

You can see that on our YouTube page [Tom Hanks on the writers strike in Hollywood - YouTube].

[In his more than 30-year career with the PBS NewsHour, Jeffrey Brown has served as co-anchor, studio moderator, and field reporter on a wide range of national and international issues, with work taking him around the country and to many parts of the globe.  As arts correspondent he has profiled many of the world's leading writers, musicians, actors, and other artists.

[Among his signature works at the NewsHour: a multi-year series, “Culture at Risk,” about threatened cultural heritage in the United States and abroad; the creation of the NewsHour’s online “Art Beat”; and hosting the monthly book club, “Now Read This,” a collaboration with the New York Times.

[Anne Azzi Davenport is the Senior Producer of CANVAS at PBS NewsHour.]

*  *  *  *
TOM HANKS’S FIRST NOVEL SHOWS THE HARD WORK BEHIND MOVIE MAGIC”
by Ron Charles 

[Ron Charles’s review of Tom Hanks’s first novel, The Making of Another Major Motion Picture Masterpiece, was posted on the Washington Post website on 2 May 2023 (Tom Hanks details a 'Major Motion Picture Masterpiece' in first novel - The Washington Post).]

‘The Making of Another Major Motion Picture Masterpiece’ is an engaging story about a big crew putting together a blockbuster

Against the tanned hordes of Hollywood grifters, cads, creeps, prima donnas, egomaniacs and nepo babies, Tom Hanks stands like a warrior clad in decency and girded in goodness. A two-time Academy Award winner [Best Actor awards for Philadelphia (1994) and Forrest Gump (1995)] whose films have grossed $10 billion, Hanks is the living embodiment of our hopes that nice guys finish first.

For more than 40 years — on stage, TV and big screen — Hanks has worked as an actor and producer. He can remember what it’s like to sweat for attention, and he knows what it’s like to run from the paparazzi. He’s partnered with the industry’s biggest movers and shakers, and he’s been attended to by the army of dressers, caterers and personal assistants who toil away in the shadows to keep the stars shining.

How easily Hanks could have published a memoir detailing those decades of experience: Just imagine the riotous anecdotes about Ron Howard, Sally Field, Meg Ryan, Denzel Washington, Julia Roberts, Steven Spielberg, the Coen brothers and anybody else who is or was anybody in contemporary entertainment. Perhaps someday we’ll get that memoir, but it’s unlikely to be as charming or as spiritually revealing as his debut novel, which has the self-mocking title “The Making of Another Major Motion Picture Masterpiece.”

As you might expect from such an amiable author, this is not a story set in Harvey Weinstein’s toxic Hollywood. So far as I can tell, Hanks’s book is not a roman à clef or a camouflaged tell-all or a sly act of disguised payback. Instead, it’s a novel shot in pastel tones, as though the movie trade were based in Lake Wobegon. Except for a few nods to entrenched sexism, the industry’s well-documented abuses are elided in favor of concentrating on the better angels of its nature. With any luck, Hanks’s next novel will be about D.C.

“The Making of Another Major Motion Picture Masterpiece” starts gently, even slowly, in the voice of Joe Shaw, a film professor in Bozeman, Mont. Through a series of unlikely turns — which is the trajectory of almost everything in this story — Shaw has attracted the attention of Bill Johnson, one of the country’s most successful writer-directors. During the coronavirus pandemic, Johnson invites Shaw to observe the filming of his next project to write “a book to explain the making of movies.”

Hanks knows a lot about the behavior of actors, but fortunately he knows very little about the writing of academics, so his novel is mercifully unlike anything a professor of film studies would compose. Shaw delivers the rest of this story as an omniscient narrator, deftly moving from scene to scene and, along the way, helpfully explaining production jargon for a lay audience.

But before we get anywhere near the movie set — or the present day — Shaw presents what is essentially a 70-page novella set in 1947.

We’re introduced to Robby Andersen, a sweet little boy living in the sweet little town of Lone Butte, Calif. Robby idolizes his errant uncle, who was traumatized by serving as a firefighter in World War II. When Robby eventually becomes a successful comic book creator, one of his stories is about his uncle’s horrific experience in the Pacific. Decades later, Robby’s comic book — cleverly excerpted in the pages of this novel — serves as the inspiration for a character in Bill Johnson’s new superhero movie, “Knightshade: The Lathe of Firefall.”

That lengthy opening section, titled “Source Material,” asks for a lot of emotional investment in people we will not see again for a very long time. One wonders if a less famous debut novelist would have been afforded so much runway.

But before we get anywhere near the movie set — or the present day — Shaw presents what is essentially a 70-page novella set in 1947.

We’re introduced to Robby Andersen, a sweet little boy living in the sweet little town of Lone Butte, Calif. Robby idolizes his errant uncle, who was traumatized by serving as a firefighter in World War II. When Robby eventually becomes a successful comic book creator, one of his stories is about his uncle’s horrific experience in the Pacific. Decades later, Robby’s comic book — cleverly excerpted in the pages of this novel — serves as the inspiration for a character in Bill Johnson’s new superhero movie, “Knightshade: The Lathe of Firefall.”

That lengthy opening section, titled “Source Material,” asks for a lot of emotional investment in people we will not see again for a very long time. One wonders if a less famous debut novelist would have been afforded so much runway.

The marquee will blaze with one name, but in these chapters, there is no hierarchy: “At some point, and there’s no telling when that moment is, someone is responsible for the whole movie,” we’re told. “Everyone has the most important job on the movie.” Johnson, Hanks’s star-making director, is well drawn, but he gets less attention here than the staff members who do everything from casting actors to schlepping sandwiches.

Allicia Mac-Teer, an African American producer known in the industry as Al, is the real power and planner behind the throne. But years ago, she was just a front desk manager at a Garden Suite Inn near the Richmond airport. There she impressed Johnson by making sure his favorite frozen yogurt was available late at night. That’s the kind of indispensable initiative that a great director notices. Somehow, Al knew in her bones that Hollywood isn’t about being the most beautiful or even the most talented. “Making movies,” she announces, “is about solving more problems than you cause.” A star is born.

That lesson is so important to this novel — and presumably to Hanks — that it’s essentially repeated in the success story of Ynez Gonzalez-Cruz. She’s struggling to make ends meet as a taxi driver when she happens to pick up Al for a ride to the location for “Knightshade.” Recognizing Ynez’s attentive, problem-solving spirit, Al hires her as her permanent driver, then as her personal assistant. If you’ve been paying attention, you know where this is going, but that doesn’t make it any less gratifying.

Although this novel is a love letter to the industry, it’s not entirely toothless. Even the most glamorous stars in this universe are subject to the ordinary laws of physics. Indeed, the pompous actor playing Firefall, a young man named O.K. Bailey, gets hilariously skewered. He demands banana pancakes, “not pancakes with bananas”; tells his gorgeous, repulsed co-star that they shouldn’t sleep together until after the shooting; refers reverently to his “process”; and announces to the exasperated cast, “I’ve got no ego.” After decades of enduring such irritating artistes, Hanks seems to have somehow typed this wickedly funny section entirely by eye-rolling.

It’s no spoiler to reveal that “Knightshade: The Lathe of Firefall” will survive O.K. Bailey — and stalkers and jealous spouses and even the untimely death of a cast member. But blockbuster status is not preordained. After all, in the months before Opening Day — or streaming — a movie is just “a billion shards of glass that have to be assembled piece by piece into a mirror.” The longer you watch Hanks create that glittery surface, the harder it is to look away.

[Ron Charles reviews books and writes the Book Club newsletter for the Washington Post.]

17 May 2023

Suzan-Lori Parks on the Covid Pandemic

 

[When New York City Mayor Bill DiBlasio declared New York City the “epicenter” of the pandemic on Thursday, 19 March 2020, Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Suzan-Lori Parks gave herself an assignment: write a play a day during the first year of the crisis.

[That project became Plays for the Plague Year, a chronological depiction of the life of Americans during a health emergency.  The program is an assemblage of short plays, scenes, monologues, and songs, covering whatever people got up to between that March date three years ago to 13 April 2021.]
 
PLAYWRIGHT EXPLORES PANDEMIC IN ‘PLAYS FOR THE PLAGUE YEAR’
by Jeffrey Brown and Anne Azzi Davenport 

[Jeffrey Brown’s interview with playwright Suzan-Lori Parks (b. 1963) was aired on the PBS NewsHour on 21 April 2023 (Playwright Suzan-Lori Parks explores the pandemic in ‘Plays for the Plague Year’ | PBS NewsHour).  It was prompted by the production of Parks’s performance piece Plays for the Plague Year, composed during the enforced isolation of the COVID pandemic.

[A note on the text below: for some reason, PBS didn't publish the usual NewsHour site with a transcribed text of the interview formatted and superficially copy-edited.  I've had to use another site with a transcription of the video text, but it's in all-caps, has no paragraphing (each sentence is its own paragraph), and sparse identification of the speakers, so I had to use the video itself as a trot. 

[As if was doing this, I also found that some passages were omitted from the online transcript entirely, and one passage in the transcription didn’t exist on the video.  (Almost all the scenes from performances, that were seen as background sequences in the video, were excluded.  I inserted them here.)  I’ve done my best to remedy these oversights (so the text in this post is partly PBS’s and partly mine).]

Geoff Bennett (“NewsHour” anchor): Is it too soon to explore the pandemic through art?

Not if you’re Suzan-Lori Parks, who wrote a short ‘play a day’ while sitting at home for 13 months and has now turned those into a full-length performance [3 hours] at New York’s Public Theater [Joe’s Pub, 18 April-30 April 2023].

It’s part of a “very big year” for one of the country’s most acclaimed playwrights. Jeffrey Brown has the story for our arts and culture series, CANVAS.

Actors in Scene (singing): “I play the writer” [Suzan-Lori Parks] / “I play the hubby” [Greg Keller] / “I play the kid” [Leland Fowler] . . .

Jeffrey Brown: Suzan-Lori Parks both plays and is the writer of “Plays for the Plague Year” . . .

Actors in Scene (singing): . . . “I play the muse” / “I play the stalker” / “I play the principal in the school” . . . .

Brown: . . . a series of songs and scenes.

Actor: “Sit down, catch your breath . . . .”

Brown: Small personal moments . . .

Actor: “I’ll make you some tea and I’ll put some honey in it.”

Brown: . . . and big collective traumas . . .

Actor: “I was just wanting to alert people because I’m a doctor . . .”

Brown: . . . that take us through the first year of the COVID pandemic.

Actor: “. . . and then, I got sick from the virus.”

Actor (Keller): “She says that you probably have it, too.”

Actor (Parks): “Oh, great.”

Brown: It’s based on an assignment Parks gave herself in real time: be present, observe, write every day.

Suzan-Lori Parks: It’s a way to . . . keep watch, if you will. You know, it’s a way to bear witness. It’s a way to say, ‘Yes, this happened. I’m watching and I’m going to write it down.’

Parks (walking through stage set with Brown): I have a bookshelf very much like this . . .”

Brown: It’s also about the roles we all play every day.

Parks (in the set): I have a typewriter, the Olivetti Valentine . . . .”

Brown: And for Parks – who often writes on an old red typewriter – it really is a new role . . .

Parks (singing and playing guitar): “I had a dream last nigh – it was gorgeous . . . .”

Brown: . . . for the first time she herself acts and sings and plays guitar in one of her plays.

Brown: Did you have any fear, trepidation, putting yourself into the story like this?

Parks: Yes. I have so much fear, so much trepidation. And I think a lot of us realized during the first year or so of the pandemic is that there were things we were afraid of, are afraid of, and that we had to really look at those things.

And so I looked at a lot of those things and one of them was, ‘Oh, I’m putting myself in the story.’

Actors (scene from “Topdog/Underdog”): “I’m gettin’ too old to be sleepin’ in that chair, man.” “It’s my place – you don’t got no place.”

Brown: Now 59, Parks is best known for her play, “Topdog/Underdog,” in which two brothers, named ‘Lincoln’ and ‘Booth,’ are bound by family ties and the burden of American history.

Actor (“Topdog/Underdog”): We put aside a hundred dollars for the rent.  A hundred a week times four weeks makes the rent and we don’t want the rent spent.”

Brown: It won the 2002 Pulitzer Prize for Drama, making Parks the first African-American woman to receive that honor, and last fall had a 20th anniversary revival on Broadway [Golden Theatre, 20 October 2022-15 January 2023].

Actor (scene from “The Harder They Come”): “You stealin’ from me!” (Ensemble sings.)

Brown: Part of a busy, attention-getting year for Parks that included her theater adaptation of the 1972 hit reggae film, “The Harder They Come” [Public Theater, 15 March-9 April 2023], and a new play premiered at Minneapolis’ Guthrie Theater titled “Sally & Tom” [1 October-6 November 2022] – that’s Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson – set in both past and present.

“Plays for the Plague Year,” produced at New York’s Public Theater, is her most personal yet and includes experiences at home with her real-life husband, Christian Konopka and their son, now-11-year-old Durham, who’s suddenly as tall as his mother.

Actor (singing in “Plays for the Plague Year”): “I play the guy named Paul.”

They and many other actual people are portrayed onstage by a group of actors who take a variety of roles in short ‘plays’ . . .

Actor (Parks): “I’m scared.  I’m sorry.”

Brown: . . . that unfold chronologically.

Actor (Keller): “I’m sorry, too.”

Parks: It’s really a celebration of everyday things, whatever was happening.

My office is at the kitchen table in our one bedroom apartment, so I was writing at one end of the kitchen table, at the other end of the kitchen table there was our then eight-year-old son who was doing remote schooling like so many kids, and he was having his remote schooling things happen, you know, all that kind of glitching and all this stuff and trying to get used to it. So the play might be about that.

Actor: “I don’t got time to be dead. I have important work to do.  I’m a principal . . . .”

Brown: Also given voice onstage: a number of those lost during the pandemic.

Actor: “. . . And I have kids looking up to me . . . .”

Brown: Parks has honored them with their own short scenes.

Actor: “. . . I’m their example. I can’t let them down.”

Brown: And the social justice protests after the killings of Breonna Taylor [March 2020, Louisville, KY] and George Floyd [May 2020, Minneapolis, MN].

Actors: “You see me lyin’ here? You see a knee on my neck?” “I see it.  It’s real.”

Parks: A lot of people, in this country especially, we think that to grieve, you know, bad things, would bring us down. The opposite is true.

When we look with love and with interest and curiosity towards something that . . . something difficult that happened, we are released from its power to weigh us down.

Brown: But your way to do that as a playwright is to write them into the play and bring them onstage.

Parks: Well, yes. That’s the way the world works.

Brown: The way the world works or the theater world?

Parks: Well, all the world’s a stage. The writer writes them into the play.

That’s why we’re here. We’ve been written into a play. Isn’t it fun?

Brown: The two of us?

Parks: Sure.

Brown: This is a play, right?

Parks: Sure, yeah.  (Laughs.)

Brown: But, is this the way you think about life?

Parks: Oh, yes, yes.  That’s really what’s been going on.  We’ve been written into a series of plays.

You know, that’s what “Plays for the Plague Year” really is looking at: how reality is made.

Brown: That feels like a good definition of all Parks’ work, in fact: exploring how our individual and collective reality is made.

One guide in shaping that approach: none other than James Baldwin [Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, MA; 1981-85], who first suggested to Parks, then in college and writing short stories, that she try writing a play.

Parks: I never would have gotten into playwriting had it not been for Mr. Baldwin

Brown: But, I mean, that is a high-level mandate.

Parks: He suggested that I might be good at what I do, and I didn’t have the heart to prove him wrong. Yeah.

I mean, someone has faith in me – it means a lot to me.

Brown: Parks, the daughter of a college professor and army officer, came to see her work as a calling.

Parks: My parents used to tell me – because we travel all around the world: ‘You are an ambassador of your race,’ meaning we travel to a lot of places where people hadn’t met black people before.

And as an adult, now I realize I’m an ambassador of . . . one of the ambassadors of the human race. And I’ll take that on.

Brown: One thing I was wondering about with this play is . . . is the question: is it too soon?

Parks: Maybe it’s too soon. Ummm . . . I don’t think so. The reactions we’re getting from the audience, it feels like it’s time.

Why stuff the stuff down? Why shove it down and not think about it? Until when?

That’s one of the reasons why I’m on stage. I’m not saying ‘yeah, go reflect on the pandemic,’ you know, ‘go over there’ - no, I’m like, ‘I’m here with you.’

Brown: And so “with you” that audience members are invited to reflect on their experience of lockdown by filling out cards about what they want to remember – or forget.

For the PBS NewsHour, I’m Jeffrey Brown at the Public Theater in New York.

[In his more than 30-year career with the PBS NewsHour, Jeffrey Brown has served as co-anchor, studio moderator, and field reporter on a wide range of national and international issues, with work taking him around the country and to many parts of the globe.  

[As arts correspondent, Brown has profiled many of the world’s leading writers, musicians, actors, and other artists.  Among his signature works at the NewsHour: a multi-year series, “Culture at Risk,” about threatened cultural heritage in the United States and abroad; the creation of the NewsHour’s online “Art Beat”; and hosting the monthly book club, “Now Read This,” a collaboration with the New York Times.

[Anne Azzi Davenport is the Senior Coordinating Producer of CANVAS at PBS NewsHour.]

*  *  *  *
A SOUNDTRACK OF OUR PANDEMIC-ERA LIVES
by Maya Phillips 

[Plays for the Plague Year started previews in Manhattan’s East Village at the Public Theater’s Joe’s Pub on 5 April and opened on 18 April; it closed on 30 April.  Maya Phillips’s New York Times review of the three-hour performance ran on 19 April 2023 (sec. C [“Arts”]).]

A work by Suzan-Lori Parks explores stories from more than a year of Covid. 

Upon entering Joe’s Pub at the Public Theater for Suzan-Lori Parks’s “Plays for the Plague Year,” audience members are handed a Playbill, a pencil and two yellow notecards, each with a question about the pandemic: “What would you like to remember?” “What would you like to forget?” The responses are placed in a basket from which they are picked and read during the show. At my performance, someone wrote that they’d like to forget “fear and worry, foreground and background.” People in the audience murmured in assent.

We’d all probably like to forget our own experiences of fear and worry during that first year of zealous hand-washing and ever-changing mask mandates. Parks, however, made a project of remembering: For that first pandemic year, she resolved to write a play a day about “whatever happens,” including the mundane goings-on in her apartment, the deaths of friends and strangers, and the Black Lives Matter protests.

Here, Parks performs a version of herself called the Writer, who creates plays each day while quarantining with her husband (played by Greg Keller) and their 8-year-old son (Leland Fowler) in their one-bedroom apartment.

What unfolds is some configuration of those plays, though “play” is too restrictive a word for these micro-performances, which take the forms of monologues, dialogues and songs. Parks, who also plays the guitar here, is joined onstage by seven other cast members in various roles and a band (Ric Molina, guitar; Graham Kozak, bass; Ray Marchica, percussion).

An accounting of each day — an electronic placard hanging above the stage flashes the date and title of each section, presented chronologically from March 19, 2020, to April 13, 2021 — provides the show with a built-in structure to link what often feels like a hodgepodge.

Parks wisely uses a series of shorthands to quickly bring us back to specific moments in those early pandemic days — an actor, for example, gliding past Parks in an ornate doublet and Tudor-style cap to signal theater closures, the cast hollering and clapping for a brief moment to signal the daily 7 p.m. cheer for frontline workers.

In the plays in which Parks isn’t writing or with her family, she’s talking to a dead Little Richard or negotiating with her Muse who, fed up with Covid, threatens to abandon her. In another, a character named Bob looks for a job. There’s one in which Earth, embodied by a woman wearing a crown of branches and holding a scepter, warns that the pandemic is only the beginning of the world’s disasters.

Ruth Bader Ginsburg appears, on the day of her death, as a triumphant Lady Liberty, and the virus, personified as a horror movie villainess named Corona, wheezes and stalks the stage in a black-gray-white ombré dress and virion headpiece with red “spikes.” The costume design, by Rodrigo Muñoz, is as imaginative and visually stunning as runway couture, especially the layered fabrics of the Muse’s handkerchief hem skirt, made to resemble scraps of paper with scribbled writings, and the 3-D elements, like the butterflies on Earth’s chiffon dress.

But not all days are created equal, and this three-hour production does feel as if we’re reliving a year’s worth of material. At least the variety in Parks’s script keeps things unpredictable enough to hold our attention.

The direction, by Niegel Smith, occasionally gets too darling, like the first scene, when the family members introduce themselves (“I am the writer. I am the hubby. I am the son.”) while passing a red paper heart to one another. But Smith, who also choreographed the show, does make organized chaos in the intimate space (design by Peter Nigrini), rotating characters on a tiny stage adorned with a few pieces of low-sitting furniture — table, armchair, dresser, lamp, rack covered in books.

The show’s music is as eclectic as the storytelling; the songs are short, plucky, with hints of folk, jazz and R&B. The surprising mash-up of genres include the doo-wop style of “Bob Needs a Job,” and the bluesy “Praying Now” soon picks up tempo, turning into an upbeat clap-and-stomp. Most aren’t particularly memorable, but the strongest songs — “RIP the King” and “Whichaway the World” — build with an alternating mix of spoken word/rap and soulful crooning from two performers in particular, Fowler and Danyel Fulton.

Sometimes it seems as if Parks is overreaching, as when she speaks to her former mentor, James Baldwin (perfectly embodied by Fowler, who replicates his posture and cadence of speech), so he can muse about American history. Or in a long ceremony during which the cast hands flowers to the audience at the end of a section about Breonna Taylor, played by Fulton; but Fulton’s performance is poignant enough on its own.

The playwright’s conversations with the dead, however, many of whom begin their scenes unaware or in denial of their demise, is the show’s most compelling motif. She speaks to several who are Black, especially those lost to Covid and those to police brutality. Through these post-mortems, Parks is asking trenchant questions about how we memorialize Black bodies. What would the dead say? How would they want to be remembered, if at all? So the Brooklyn educator Dez-Ann Romain, who died from complications of the coronavirus, snapping “Don’t make me speak of myself in the past tense,” and George Floyd asking, “Would I be safe if Harriet Tubman was on the 20?” become tragic self-written elegies. We’re watching the dead mourn themselves.

Then there’s Parks, who, even playing this version of herself, always feels earnest, as when she listens to the speeches of her characters, while sitting off to one side of the stage, leaning forward attentively. You can easily imagine this being the way Parks sees the world refracted back to her, conversing with the dead, building abstractions.

Unfortunately, her own domestic narrative feels flat by comparison. So “What’s the takeaway? What’s the concept? What’s the tone,” as the Writer’s TV producer asks her at one point during a conversation about the Writer’s plays project.

“Plague Year” never answers these questions; the Writer ultimately discovers that the plays “didn’t save us.” But this isn’t Parks renouncing her ambitious undertaking. She’s offering another way to think about the production, which isn’t always a cohesive work of theater: Perhaps it doesn’t have to.

Theater doesn’t save us, the Writer says, “but it does preserve us somehow,” so this piece still is a record. This is catharsis. It’s preservation.

[The question of what I’d like to remember or forget about the pandemic has intrigued me since I learned about it in the NewsHour segment and then again in the Times review.  Here’s my dilemma: I know what I’d want to write on the cards, but I don’t know in what category—remember or forget—to put my answer.

[I have two responses.  One is the complete and total selfishness of some (many? most?) of my fellow Americans when it came to following some simple guidelines (and, yes, mandates) to keep others, including the most vulnerable and at-risk, safe from infection.  I don’t know if I just want to forget those self-centered people I apparently live among, or to remember that indelible streak of total lack of care and concern for their fellows.

[The other answer I’d offer is the ridiculous—and apparently political—divisiveness that people subscribed to when it came to listening to the experts, scientists, doctors, and epidemiologists as they disseminated what they were learning about the virus.  This included the leaders—governors, mayors, and lawmakers—who took public stands against following any advice calculated to lower the likelihood of catching or spreading the disease.  They all seemed to want to make this a Red-Blue competition.

[#1 or #2?  Remember or forget?  Is a puzzlement—as someone once said.

[I saw several of Parks’s plays before I started writing reports on performances I’d seen.  After I started Rick On Theater in 2009, I’ve published a number of posts on her and her work (not all of them written by me).  Among them are:

•   “How America Eats: Food and Eating Habits in the Plays of Suzan-Lori Parks” by Kirk Woodward (5 October 2009)

   “A Playwright of Importance” by Kirk Woodward (31 January 2011)

   “On ‘Re-Imagining’ Porgy And Bess” (14 January 2012)

  The Death of the Last Black Man in the Whole Entire World” (1 December 2016)

   “The Red Letter Plays: In the Blood” (12 October 2017)

   “The Red Letter Plays: Fucking A” (17 October 2017)

   “The Red Letter Plays, Continued” by Kirk Woodward (1 November 2017)

[Maya Phillips is a New York Times critic at large.  She’s the author of the essay collection NERD: Adventures in Fandom From This Universe to the Multiverse (Atria Books, 2022) and the poetry collection Erou (Four Way Books, 2019), which was a finalist for the PEN Open Book Award and winner of the 2019 Balcones Poetry Prize and 2020 Poetry by the Sea book award.  She’s the recipient of a Hodder Grant from Princeton’s Lewis Center for the Arts and the 2020-2021 George Jean Nathan Award for Dramatic Criticism.

[She has a bachelor’s degree from Emerson College and her master's from Warren Wilson’s MFA Program for Writers.  Her poetry has appeared in Hayden’s Ferry Review, the Gettysburg Review, the Missouri Review, the New Yorker and the New York Times Magazine, among others, and her arts and entertainment journalism has appeared in the New Yorker, Vulture, Slate, The Week, American Theatre, Mashable, Polygon, and more.

[Phillips was the inaugural arts critic fellow at the Times.  She writes about theater, movies, TV, books, and nerd culture.  She lives in Brooklyn.]