“Through more than thirty years of writing and behavior,
Simon has shown us how easy it is to be a snake.” So ends an attack on me of a
good many years ago on Salon by Charles Taylor, showing how easy it is to misjudge
me from a widely held but unexaminedly researched, lazily hostile point of
view.
People who have unprejudicedly read my criticism in
magazines, or collected in book form, must know how mistaken dear Mr. Taylor
is. “Dear” because he has, however belatedly and unintentionally, given me this
occasion to set things to right.
Let me begin with the most commonplace attacks on me as an alleged
disburser of gratuitous vitriol, a view of which a little more honesty and
effort would have revealed me, on the contrary, as a good praiser frequently as
well. In fact, one would probably find a positive review for every four or five
negative ones, which seems perfectly justified when you consider how much trash
is being offered on stage and screen, and only a little less so in literature.
But that would not be viewed as a
legitimate proportion by the typical reviewers, who find it more profitable to
gush than to discriminate, of which, in any case, they are rarely capable.
So let me start with the serpentine view of me, most
conveniently promulgated on the basis of my satirical remarks about something
which the poor actors could not control. But are not performers in shows and movies
supposed to be appealing,
indeed exemplars of something all of us strive for, or do we
go to the theater and cinema to
look at unsightliness? Except, of course, where the latter is predicated, or do
we want the witches in “Macbeth” played by or acted as gorgeous women?
The old Hollywood dedicated to glamour knew what it was
doing all right, even if its notion of beauty wasn’t always of the subtlest
kind. This has changed, with populism insisting that it would rather look
democratically at a homely Zoe Kazan or Jessica Hecht than romantically at a
Laura Osnes, Laura Denanti, or Katrina Lesk. And yes, if we desire sets and
costumes—again with meaningful exceptions—to be beautiful,
why not the faces and figures of performers? Are they not
part of the spectacle? Or do young women aiming for stage or screen careers
grow up yearning to be Barbra Streisands? Heaven help us, maybe they do. Still,
I would like to think that, however unavowedly, they would rather be a Jane
Fonda or a Sharon Stone.
Note that this does not mean that acting talent does not
come first, only that aesthetics should not lag too far behind. Yet does not
some of my wit at their expense hurt the actors’ feelings? No doubt it does,
but that is the consequence of being a public figure and of lack of
self-criticism. The early Maggie Smith and the greatly gifted Judi Dench would
not have gone out for parts that required beauty queens, or else would have
used their talents to make us believe that they could. Suffice it to say that I
have never praised an actress for nothing but looks alone, take for example
this from an early review of “Les Enfants du Paradis”:
“Maria Casares as the desperate wife. Who else could have
made nagging, choking, marathon jealousy look so touching, lovable, even
heroic? How that plain face of hers can become transfigured with the humblest
happiness; how, in the agonies of rejection and anger, its ugliness remains profoundly
human.”
Next comes the accusation of my alleged enjoying
curmudgeonliness overmuch. There is no denying that writing a well-turned,
well-deserved slam is fun, but so is a convincing rave. The only rather less
enjoyable thing is writing a mixed review, chiefly neither praise nor
disparagement. But even that should be readable as a specimen of justness, of
the agility in sorting out the good and the not good in the mediocre. One must
make the merely tolerable resonate as well as the enthusiastic, albeit with a lesser
clangor.
What I would ask from any reader—and I admit it is no small
thing—is to have checked out one of my critical collections in a library or
bookstore, without necessary purchase, but enough to elicit either approbation
or censure. As an example of a truly positive review, consider in “John Simon on
Theater” the notice of “Private Lives” on pages 810-11, or that of “Barrymore”
on pages 667-68, or yet that of “Comic Potential” on pages 782-84. Only someone
who truly enjoys to accord praise could have written any one of those. Even
some of what can be read standing up in a bookstore will dismiss the notion of
me as an attack dog.
If you try to decide whether not to boggle at my negative
reviews, try those of two other productions of “Private Lives,” pages 36-38 or
284-87. The latter takes apart Elizabeth Taylor’s Amanda, but should provide
good enough reasons for doing so. As for my alleged homophobia, consider the
praise lavished on some known homosexual playwrights or performers, of which
you can find plentiful examples. I believe I acknowledged their talents quite
irrespective of their, yes, private lives.
None of the foregoing, however, is intended as an elaborate
justification of my criticism or me as an individual. I am sure that disagreement
with my critiques is not excluded. Certainly perfection eludes me as much as it
does the next person, though perhaps a little bit less than it does other
reviewers, especially those in the dailies. If you want to use this very blog entry
as inducement to proclaim disagreement, by all means do so. I am all for
private or public debate as one of the best sources of discoveries. I only wish
I had a better outlet for reviews than afforded by my blog entries and occasional
magazine publication, especially now that The Weekly Standard has bitten the
dust. The one thing I am perfectly confident about is that my views are
thoroughly clear, unlike, say, those of French and American structuralists and
semioticists. Also devoid of talking (or writing) from both corners of my
mouth.