I"m way behind, and dropping into the middle of a discussion, but speaking of the last few administrations, here's a NYT piece by Gore Vidal. It's about Edmund Morris's new biography of Ronald Reagan.
I plan to memorize the Wodehouse line and use it frequently.
Is today your birthday? If it is, Happy Birthday, Steven!
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September 26, 1999, Sunday Editorial Desk
A Biographer Writes Himself Into the Picture
By Gore Vidal
Fiction versus biography. Fact versus invention. A mine field. Tread warily. I have a vague recollection of a conversation several years ago with Edmund Morris. I was still waiting for the second volume of his splendid life of Theodore Roosevelt. What had happened? Postponed. Why? He told me. I would have fallen to the floor had I not been able to clutch at a passing console, courtesy of P.G. Wodehouse.
Reagan? Yes! Total access was mentioned. Every day. No secrets. A seat beside the throne. I warned: 'You will need hardship money. Battle pay.' I visualized a broken biographer, eyes glazed, sleep-famished after days listening to the most awesomely boring man ever to be chief magistrate. I knew. I was there. Back in the 50's, early 60's, I saw strong men faint, powerful women defenestrate themselves whenever Ron entered a room all-aglow with highly polished anecdotes culled from recent Reader's Digests and golden oldie Saturday Evening Posts.
Since none of us knew then that the wealthy used-car dealers he quietly consorted with were planning to make this very good actor (point never to be lost sight of) into a governor of California and that they would, in turn, attract a group of even greater financial interests to make him President, we steered clear of him as we did of his friend Robert Taylor, reputedly the second most boring member of the Screen Actors Guild. Nancy, on the other hand, was bright . . . .
But to work. I had the impression that Morris had no idea of what Hollywood was all about: particularly the Hollywood of the studios where actors were not-so-highly paid puppets held to rigid contracts, their every move literally supervised by, in Ron's case, the Brothers Warner. More than one of Ron's directors called me after he was elected President, horrified at this astonishing bit of national miscasting. All they could hear themselves saying was, Hit your mark, Ron! No, not there. There!
I don't think Morris suspected any of this. A President who was not interested in politics was something odd; he also read no books, knew no history. Nevertheless, full of folksy charm, he could 'communicate' masterfully on TV whatever message had been crafted for him, from that evergreen favorite 'the Russians are still coming' to let's cut the capital gains tax for the rich as well as any tax on corporate profits because a rising tide sinks all boats, or whatever the conventional wisdom was.
In due course, Morris was on the case. Day after day, he must have been told, yet again, about Ron's truly important life as president of SAG. The intricacies of the Ida Lupino Warner Brothers' contract of 1937, no, it must have been '36, ever fresh in his perfect anecdotal memory. Of all our Presidents, he appears to have been, for his handlers and managers, the least trouble. Only occasionally would obsession undo him. Nicaragua. Contras. Red Menace in the Americas. In fact, he was approaching what looked to be a disastrous ending to his Presidency when he gave Congressional testimony -- on film, naturally -- about the role he played in the Iran-contra affair where he must have thought dealing, illegally, with our enemy Iran was child's play compared to dealing with Bette Davis when she went on strike against Warner Brothers. ('I never called Jack Warner 'Jack.' He was always Mr. Warner. The greatest man I ever knew.') Ayatollah Khomeini was a pussycat compared to Davis on the rampage; incidentally, our greatest screen actress was a hard New England liberal, who always referred to Reagan as 'little Ronnie Reagan,' quite ignoring how good he was acting the part of an alcoholic playboy in her memorable weepy 'Dark Victory.' In any case, Reagan sailed through his testimony on a wave of 'I don't remembers.'
What was Edmund Morris to do with such a subject? In Reagan, the masters of the media had found their most obliging President. Whatever corporate America wanted, corporate America had finally got. Small marginal lefty papers like The Nation might mock this beloved paladin of all that was good in America, shining upon its hill, but for eight years no one was allowed to give the game away. We were told he was on top of everything; he was widely read; with an innate instinct for high diplomacy. Finally, he had a sense of fairness that included even the downtrodden 1 percent that owns most of the wealth of the country as well as a lot of that of the rest of the world. It took a man of saint-like compassion to realize that when taxed the rich feel pain, bleed.
The myth of this Wizard of Oz was furiously sustained on all sides. Now a serious historian was given a crack at him and found . . . Nobody there. This is the dilemma for Morris and his publisher. How do you write about no one without giving away the game about how and why Presidents are selected?
I believe at some point on Morris's long road to Damascus, he had his vision: This is all fiction. So, obligingly, Morris has fictionalized himself, too. He appears as a character in scenes from the past where he could not have been but has sufficiently researched so that he could reinvent himself as the hero was inventing himself, with a little help from his friends and agents at M.C.A. I think this is a superb solution even though, as a historical novelist, I would never have dared to be so avant-garde. But then, I've never dealt with an American President whose life owed so little to Parson Weems and so much to Pirandello. Can't wait to read the book! |