I’m down on movies lately. I don’t watch them, except when I
do, but when I do I tend to tap out early. I don’t care. Yesterday I watched The
Secret of The Whistler, directed by George Sherman, from 1946. Earlier
this year, I watched five or so of the Whistler films, based on the radio show,
all starring Richard Dix, each time out playing a different character in a
different story (always hosted by a silhouette who insists on being called The
Whistler). At first it seemed that Dix could play anybody – victim, hero,
villain, but then somewhere along the line he was assigned villain duty
exclusively. Such was the case with The Secret of The Whistler and this
very fun series of hour-long thrillers began to seem dull to me. Oh, movies.
What happened?
* * * *
For a very long time now I’ve been meaning to dive headlong
into the work of Stephen Sondheim. What little of his work I’ve been exposed to
– West
Side Story, a song here and there taken out of context (most powerfully
a performance of “Send in the Clowns” by Judi Dench), Tim Burton’s film of Sweeney
Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, of which I remain an
unapologetic fan – but only recently have I taken steps in that direction by
ordering a bunch of original cast recordings of many of his most significant
shows. They arrived yesterday, and almost immediately I put on Company.
Quite a good place to start, it seems to me, as even to my novice ears it
sounds like Sondheim in his purest form. I’m no good at writing about music, it
being something I’ve never written about before, and know nothing about as far
as the making of it goes (Sondheim grabbing hold of me first and foremost as a
lyricist), so I can only go so far with this, but I quite liked “Sorry-Grateful”
and “Getting Married Today” and “Being Alive” and I kind of couldn’t stand “Tick
Tock” which may not even count as a thing…well, this could go on. My most
damning opinion – damning of me, I
mean – is my at best indifference to “The Ladies Who Lunch,” which I gather is
rather beloved. There’s something about the super-brassy Broadway Lady song -- a
genre which, in the popular shape that allows me to recognize it as such, was I’m
guessing invented by Sondheim -- that my body rejects. “The Ladies Who Lunch”
being an Elaine Stritch show-stopper, well, I’m a slave to my emotions, what
can I tell you.
Not long after I put on Assassins. I have to tell you that,
after a long week of work, and being 41 years of age as I am, and sitting in a
recliner as I was, I did suddenly find myself napping during this darkest of
all Sondheim musicals (it feels like it tops even Sweeney Todd on that count). I fell asleep very
early, during “The Ballad of Booth” and woke up in time to hear from “Unworthy
of Your Love” on. I thought the latter, and its immediate follow up “The Ballad
of Guiteau” to be pretty spectacular, and “Everybody’s Got the Right,” the show’s
closer, as well. “The Ballad of Guiteau” must be something to see performed
live. It sounds to me like it asks a lot of its singer. I poked around the
internet later and saw that Sondheim is in the final stages of getting his
newest musical, Bunuel, based on the Spanish surrealist’s films The
Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie and The Exterminating Angel,
into shape, and one of the actors who’s been workshopping it, Matthew Morrison,
said in an interview that the songs are so challenging that he had trouble
sleeping the nights before he was going to have to perform them. I can imagine.
I mean, I can’t, but I can.
* * * *
On Sunday morning I learned, as did everyone else, that
Walter Becker had died. I knew only a handful of Steely Dan songs, but liked
what I knew, mostly anyway. Someone on Twitter said that Steely Dan had put out
“at least six perfect albums” or words to that effect, and upon checking my CDs
I was surprised to learn that I owned three of them (I thought I only had two).
I put on Katy Lied and listened to it straight through. I’m not going to
pretend to be able to say anything new or interesting about this band, but off
the top of my head I can think of no other rock band that achieved any kind of
mass popularity whose sound was as idiosyncratic and unreproducible. They
shouldn’t have been popular, but, thankfully, now and again, these things
happen.
* * * *
Over the past two days, I’ve read 200 pages of Ill
Will, Dan Chaon’s newest thriller. More about it when I’m done, but
even when I’m choosing something to read with that hope that it will be
escapist in some way, the book winds up being incredibly sad, and mortally
chilling. Ill Will involves in part the death by cancer of the
protagonist’s wife – this horrible experience is something Chaon himself has
gone through. This story so far exists side by side, through a structure of
jumbled timelines, with a wild serial killer plot, or a maybe serial killer plot. It’s all been incredibly engaging, even
if it makes my head droop with existential grief from time to time.
* * * *
Tonight I finished reading Some Came Running by
James Jones. The novel is 1,266 pages long, and it took me months and months
and months to read. Not because it’s a difficult book, but because I know
myself, and if I hadn’t supplemented this mammoth with other books I’d never
finished it. But now I’ve finished it.
I’d seen the great Vincente Minelli film version years ago,
which only peaked over my shoulder from time to time, as a scene from the novel
reminded me of its cinematic brother, either because it was similar or because
it very much wasn’t. Minelli diverged pretty significantly from Jones’s novel
in the last chunk: a character dies in the novel who lives in the film, and a
character who dies in the film lives in the book. These are no small things,
and change my emotional involvement a lot – not the level of it, but in the
type. Jones’s novel is, finally, like all long novels worth a damn, almost a
living, breathing experience, rather
than merely a book one has read. At times, it felt like the house I slept in.
Strengthening this is the feeling I got that as I read I was seeing Jones
struggle to hammer this crazy thing into some kind of shape, to try to find his
style – which here is full of intentional repetitions and ungrammatical prose,
a violent assault of adverbs and, sometimes, some of the cleanest and most
moving prose I’ve read all year (see the passage describing the death of the
main character’s father).
Jones also seems to be fighting with himself on moral
grounds. One thing I remembered clearly from the Minelli film is Ginnie, the
character played by Shirley MacLaine, a poor, simple good-time gal who other
characters insult mercilessly. At one point, Dean Martin, as ‘Bama, calls her a
pig. In the film, Minelli’s love of Ginnie seemed complete, to the point where It
almost seemed like he wanted to lift her out of the film and get her away from
all these assholes. This is all in the novel too, except that the abuse of
Ginnie is more brutal and lasts a lot longer, and, by the end, Jones seems to
be losing the battle he’s been waging with himself. He doesn’t want to hate
Ginnie, but in the end I think he might.
Some Came Running is also unique in that it ends with an
extended epilogue that actually strengthens the book, rather than having a
negligible impact on what has come before it, which in my experience is usually
the outcome. The epilogue is twinned with the prologue (not so unusual) but
also mirrors in some way the novel that Dave, the novel’s protagonist, has
spent most of the novel trying to write, and, also, I think, refutes the themes
he was trying to get into it. It’s a brilliant six pages, and ends the novel
with a shiver.
Anyway. Twin Peaks is about to start.
Bill, I thoroughly enjoyed this and can't wait for the other installments. That is all. Keep it up.
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