Clearly, justice must be the same for all, but is this not
true also of morality? Yet for some people, under certain circumstances, this
is hardly the case. There exist certain persons by whom morality can be
uncontestedly flouted.
Profession has much to do with it. One of the callings where
truthfulness, i.e., morality, is cheerfully trampled on, is, of course,
advertising. Which, even more than social intercourse, elicits unconditional
superlatives. The only thing that could achieve honesty in much advertising
would be consumer skepticism among a vast majority of people. Too bad that the
human brain does not come with the motto “Caveat emptor” imprinted upon it.
Scarcely behind advertising in lack of morality, i.e.,
truthfulness or honesty, is politics, where that virtue is practiced with
notable parsimony. Or, in the case of someone like Donald Trump, where, it seems
to me, its cousin amorality thrives from bottom to top, by which I mean his
hair, its color quite possibly trumpery. I consider its lack of morality equal
to that of a codpiece for Elizabethan trousers, or a microphone for toady’s pop
singers.
But, to be sure, not only Trump’s blondness may infringe on
morality; a passel of others of his shenanigans are far guiltier, as are those
of a good many politicians. Most
smelling of hypocrisy is politicians’ abuse of religion. Hardly one who does
not claim God to go arm in arm with him, backed up by little more than Sunday
churchgoing. Christianity provides a standard moral masquerade. Not that I
dispute the zeal of born-again Christians and Tea Partiers, but I wonder
whether it is not, like taking up arms against the government,
self-righteousness or self-interest: a facile grab for power among the socially
and morally underprivileged. Holier than thou is usually less than holy.
This is not to say that genuine religiosity among politicos
is out of the question; there must, after all, be a needle in some haystack. I
just wish it weren’t in numerous cases so ostentatious and perfunctory, a set
of down-at-heal cliches.
But the presumable apogee of immorality thrives among
lawyers. The criminal lawyers at
any rate seem at the very least amoral by profession. If you attend a play in
which the word “lawyer” is so much as mentioned, you are assured of a gust of audience laughter. The only
thing comparable is when one character, after a lengthy tirade by another,
responds with “No shit?” But even that is becoming less sure-fire than
“lawyer.”
True immorality does invade seemingly unlikely places such
as sports. Although much
reprehended and steadily contested, doping will, I suspect, never be wholly
uprooted. But there are other ways of cheating as well, in a field you were not
expecting it. After all, is not sport, going all the way back to ancient Greece,
supposed to be a noble, unblemished pursuit of excellence, implied by the very
word “sportsmanlike”?
Based
on the assumption of mens sana in corpore sano, our athletes are meant to be
looked up to not only on the playing fields, in stadiums, swimming pools, ball
parks, arenas and wherever else professional sports are practiced, but even in
the private lives of these glorified and spectacularly remunerated winners,
enjoying adulation from millions of fans. Unfortunately, the mens sana is
harder to come by than the corpus sanus.
In their private lives, we get everything from wife beaters to victims of
fabricated muggings near the 2016 Rio Olympics. In Ryan Lochte’s apology even
the recurrent term “overexaggerated” for lying is a moral fiasco.
I will skip over such heroes of our times as rock stars, of
whose moral grandeur Jimi Hendrix offered as sole example their having taught
countless groupies how to give better head. But what about actors then, the
nearest approximation to rock stars? Are they not likely to carry the pretense
of their finest roles over into their daily lives? There has of course been the
notion that big stars, like their producers, enjoy the privilege of the casting
couch, whereby pretty women get their roles, especially in the movies, on their
performance on that piece of furniture rather than on screen or stage. This, by
the way, is a histrionic area in which nowadays handsome young men seem to have
rather taken over in defiance of the phrase “ladies first.” In any case, in our
more permissive era, any type of sex advancing one’s status is considered
perfectly comme il faut.
Certainly sleeping with the director has become pretty much
established, almost de rigueur, which reminds me of the case of a famous
British actress telling me that she does not figure in the memoirs of a famous
director with whom she would not go to bed, whereas another, equally famous but
also more willing actress prominently does.
All of which brings me to my profession: what about morality
in critics? I have been praised by an academic as the one critic who writes
exactly what he thinks, which I would consider a minimal requirement for the
job, but given what most of today’s reviewers are like, may indeed be a
distinction. These reviewers—they scarcely rate the honorific critic—let pass
altogether too much twaddle, it hardly matters whether out of fear of losing their
jobs or out of authentic benightedness
and genuine poor taste.
In his biography of Pauline Kael, Brian Kellow quotes her as
saying about film criticism, “You don’t have to know what John Simon does to be
the best at it,” by which criterion she certainly qualifies as one of the best.
I maintain that no kind of ignorance is bliss in criticism, and that there less
is definitely not more. What is most often held against me, along with alleged
homophobia and undeniable taste for good looks in performers is, I’m afraid
wit, which admittedly hurts the recipient but regales the discriminating
reader.
In his interesting anthology “The Critics Say . . .” Matt Windman quotes Elisabeth
Vincentelli (formerly of the Post, now of the Times) about me: “He’s such a
great stylist and writer, but his meanness is just too much. It was delicious
to read, but sometimes it got in the way of his critical acumen and that kind
of spoiled the pleasure in reading him. I didn’t feel like there was any
generosity behind it. He often wrote about very real issues that nobody else
would touch—the stuff that’s very tricky to deal with—but he wrote about it
with such a lack of empathy.’
Well, I wouldn’t trade my lack of empathy for all the king’s
horses and all the prevalent critical horseshit. I take comfort from the good
things Woody Allen says about me in the new, excellent biography, “Woody,” by
David Evanier. In spite of my rather sharp criticism of some of his movies , he
thinks that “Simon’s film criticism would endure more than that of any other
critic.” And in my copy of the book he wrote “To John Simon—Thank you for
keeping me and all of us in movies and theatre honest, Woody Allen.”
And so, I
think, the truly moral critic can adapt Falstaff’s “I am not only witty in
myself, but also the cause that wit is in other men” as “I am no only honest in
myself, but also the cause that honesty is in other men.” And women, too—ask my
friend Betty Buckley, or, were she alive today, Madeline Kahn, who had her
breasts diminished because of something I wrote about them.