The Books: Finders Keepers: Selected Prose 1971-2001: ‘Yeats as an Example?,’ by Seamus Heaney

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On the essays shelf (yes, there are still more books to excerpt in my vast library. I can’t seem to stop this excerpts-from-my-library project. I started it in 2006!)

NEXT BOOK: Seamus Heaney’s Finders Keepers: Selected Prose 1971-2001.

The Irish literary landscape is filled with the statuary of giants, casting long shadows. Any Irish writer has to contend with these monoliths, either by dismissing them, embracing them, emulating them, or covering them with profane graffiti. You know, everyone is different. It’s a fact of the landscape and trying to ignore the statues would be like pretending you lived by the ocean when, in fact, you lived in Kansas. I love hearing contemporary Irish authors discuss these monoliths. It always yields some pretty awesome quotes. These guys of the Irish Literary Revival are almost a century dead now. Their influence continues. It can be daunting to pick up a pen at all, surrounded by those giants. Is this what Harold Bloom was talking about when he talked about “the anxiety of influence”?

Seamus Heaney, as both a poet and a scholar, grappled constantly with those statues. By grappling, I mean writing. He covered so many of them in essays and op-ed columns and book reviews throughout his life. It’s wonderful to hear someone so accomplished in his own right, who had really dug through the dirt (his imagery) to find his own voice, his own specific Ulster Irish voice/context/vocabulary … to turn his insightful gaze on James Joyce or Patrick Kavanagh or John Synge. Heaney, of course, was not only interested in Irish voices. There are many pieces in Finders Keepers (as well as the other prose collections) that have nothing to do with Irish concerns. His scope was wide, universal – and yet he never lost his love for the specific: the specific voice coming from a specific context. These can be complicated issues now, when things like “nationality” is called into question, or at least treated with condescension in certain circles. “Universality” can be another way of erasing our differences, and it is our differences that help create us, give us voice. Heaney was very sensitive to these things, since he had been raised in an environment that seemed to (and in fact did) have a vested interest in erasing his difference from the face of the earth. He was British, not Irish. His Irish-ness had no place in the canon. We’ve gone over all that before. Still, it makes for some marvelous reading.

“Yeats as an Example?” was a lecture he gave in 1978 at the University of Surrey.

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Yeats can be a very complicated figure, especially if you take him seriously (as you really must.) Some years back, I read Yeats’ poetry in its entirety, in chronological order. It was an illuminating experience. I joked about having to get through his early stuff here – much of it is, quite frankly, terrible. When he starts to ‘come out’, when he gives up the fairies and the “cloud-pale eyelids”, and the great poems start emerging, the ones still taught in school today, it comes as a shock. It’s incredible. Goosebump-worthy. He was devoted to his work for his entire life. There were no fallow periods. He was tireless. He wrote what he felt like writing, but he also felt a huge obligation to the time itself, to helping create a sense of Irish-ness as a valid means of self-expression. He was a poet, he was a propagandist. He was an aristocrat, and privileged, and romanticized the Irish peasantry, but still never wanted to become one of those poor Gaelic-speaking priest-ridden individuals. He was a Protestant, with anti-Catholic feelings. He was a complex guy. Here’s one of my big Yeats posts.

Heaney put the question mark into the title of his lecture deliberately (and he explains why). Through the course of the lecture, he walks us through Yeats’ development, as artist, activist, theatre-owner, Irish Revival giant, champion of others (Synge, Joyce, etc.) But how is Yeats an “example”? What does Heaney think about it? How should we evaluate him, and how should we follow him? Heaney feels that Yeats’ example lies in the fact that his work, ultimately, is life-affirming. With all of the pomposity and balderdash that is there in the work, the fairies and twilights and twinkling beings and ghosties, etc., there was a commitment to the life force, to the beauty and warmth that is possible in human beings, if we just paid closer attention. And Yeats managed to do so through years of unbelievable tumult, the Irish civil war, partition, the Great War, etc. His poems are not Pollyanna-ish. (Well, some of the early ones are, when he was prioritizing his Irish-ness in order to make a point, to carve out a space for Irish-ness in literature and culture.) Yeats was not really a happy person, and had a tormented love life (understatement), but he never gave up, he kept writing, he kept working. And in his activity, Heaney finds the example for all artists.

Along with Auden and Shakespeare, Yeats is my favorite poet. Cloud-pale eyelids and all.

It’s quite a long lecture, I’ll excerpt just a bit of it. The launching-off point was a profile of Yeats, written by his contemporary George Moore, where Yeats really does come off as an unbelievable poser. But that was part of his point, his declaration of independence. Heaney goes into that.

Excerpt from Finders Keepers: Selected Prose 1971-2001, ‘Yeats as an Example?’ by Seamus Heaney

The conscious theatricality of this Yeats, the studied haughtiness, the affectation – this kind of thing has often put people off. This is the Willie Yeats whom his contemporaries could not altogether take seriously he was getting out of their reach, the Yeats whom Maud Gonne called ‘Silly Willie’ and whom W.H. Auden also called ‘silly,’ in his 1939 elegy: ‘You were silly like us, your gift survived it all.’ But in setting the silliness in relation to the gift, Auden went to the heart of the matter – survival. What Moore presents us with is a picture of Yeats exercising that intransigence which I praised earlier, that protectiveness of his imaginative springs, so that the gift would survive. He donned the mantle – or perhaps one should say the fur coat – of the aristocrat so that he might express a vision of a communal and personal life that was ample, generous, harmonious, fulfilled and enhancing. The reactionary politics implied by Yeats’s admiration of the Coole Park milieu are innocent in the original sense of that word, not nocent, not hurtful. What is more to the point is the way his experience of that benign, paternalistic regime and of Lady Gregory’s personal strengths as conserver of folk culture and choreographer of artistic talent issued in a poetry whose very music is a guarantee of its humane munificence. The silliness of the behaviour is continuous with the sumptuousness of the poetry of the middle period. Yeats’s attack upon his own middle class really springs out of disappointment: why aren’t they taking the lead culturally now that they are in the lead economically? Of course Moore is right to say he belongs to them, and of course Yeats’s pretensions looked ridiculous to his contemporaries. But this was his method of signifying his refusal to ‘serve that in which he no longer believed.’

When Joyce rebelled, he left by the Holyhead boat and created his drama by making a fictional character called Stephen Dedalus point up and repeat the terms of his revolt. When Yeats rebelled, he remained – Joyce scorned such ‘a treacherous instinct for adaptability’ – but he still made a new W.B. Yeats to tread the streets and stage of Dublin, a character who was almost as much a work of imagination as Stephen Dedalus. In order to fly the philistinism of his own class and the pious ignorance of another creed, Yeats remade himself, associated himself with cold, disdainful figures, of whom Charles Stewart Parnell was the archetype and ‘The Fisherman’ was a pattern. The solitude, the will towards excellence, the courage, the self-conscious turning away from that in which he no longer believes, which is Dublin life, and turning towards that which he trusts, which is an image or dream – all the drama and integrity of his poem ‘The Fisherman’ depend to a large extent upon that other drama which George Moore so delightedly observed and reported:

Maybe a twelve-month since
Suddenly I began,
In scorn of this audience,
Imagining a man,
And his sun-freckled face
And gray Connemara cloth,
Climbing up to a place
Where stone is dark with froth,
And the down turn of his wrist
When the flies drop in the stream—
A man who does not exist,
A man who is but a dream;
And cried, “Before I am old
I shall have written him one
Poem maybe as cold
And passionate as the dawn.”

We are moving from what other people saw to what Yeats himself envisaged. I have said enough, I think, about the outer man and what he intended, so it is time to consider the inwardness of the poems instead of the outwardness of the stance.

Yet the poetry is cast in a form that is as ear-catching as the man was eye-catching, and as a writer, one is awed by the achieved and masterful tones of that deliberately pitched voice, its bare classic chases, its ability to modulate from emotional climax to wise reflection, its ultimate truth to life. Nevertheless, the finally exemplary moments are those when this powerful artistic control is vulnerable to the pain or pathos of life itself.

But I have to say something about why I put the question mark after the title of this lecture. ‘Yeats as an Example’ was the title of an appreciative but not ecstatic essay that W.H. Auden wrote in 1940, so my new punctuation is partly a way of referring back to Auden’s title. But it is also meant to acknowledge the orthodox notion that a very great poet can be a very bad influence on other poets. What Yeats offers the practising writer is an example of labour, perseverance. He is, indeed, the ideal example for a poet approaching middle age. He reminds you that revision and slog work are what you may have to undergo if you seek the satisfaction of finish; he bothers you with the suggestion that if you have managed to do one kind of poem in your own way, you should cast off that way and face into another area of your experience until you have learned a new voice to say that area properly. He encourages you to experience a transfusion of energies from poetic forms themselves, reveals how the challenge of a metre can extend the resources of the voice. He proves that deliberation can be so intensified that it becomes synonymous with inspiration. Above all, he reminds you that art is intended, that it is part of the creative push of civilization itself: from ‘ Adam’s Curse’ to ‘Vacillation’ and on until the last poems, his work not only explicitly proclaims the reality of the poetic vocation but convinces by the deep note of certitude registered in the proclamation itself.

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Happy Birthday, John Garfield

Now THAT is a movie star.

One of my favorite actors, as well as an early inspiration to me because of his devotion to The Group Theatre and its ideals. “Julie” Garfield lived in my imagination long before I had seen any of his films.

A couple of things to read:

The Jewish Brando, by J. Hoberman.

Must-read: Kim Morgan’s piece on John Garfield, with clips of Kim interviewing John Garfield’s daughter.

There are so many good roles in his short career (on stage and film): the brawny hot sex-on-a-stick of Postman Always Rings Twice, he’s sweaty and impassioned in We Were Strangers, the beauty and power-play of Humoresque with Joan Crawford (and watch his violin playing in it: he trained for months. Also, his old Group Theatre colleague Ruth Nelson has a killer cameo playing Garfield’s mother). I love his electric debut in Four Daughters. From the first second he walks into that house, you ache to be close to him, you want more of him. He has an authenticity that is undeniable. He is a harbinger of what is to come, he predicts Brando and all the rest, 10 years before. I dislike Gentleman’s Agreement, except for Dean Stockwell and John Garfield. John Garfield, born Jacob Julius Garfinkle, changed his name to sound less Jewish, and never played an openly Jewish character (although it is certainly implied in Four Daughters) until Gentleman’s Agreement, Hollywood’s proud-of-itself expose of anti-Semitism. Gregory Peck is a self-righteous drip in the film, but watch Garfield. He only has a couple of scenes. Once again, just like in his debut, he strolls onto that sound stage, chows down a meal at the kitchen table, bantering, laughing, drinking coffee, and makes everyone else look like self-serious actor-nerds. His presence is so palpable, so real that he brings the casual reality of the modern American Jew to the screen in a way that Peck’s torturous journey never could. Garfield is just so present.

He always made things more real, just by showing up.

And I’m with Kim.

The man was a hero.

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“I’m Not Angry.” Really? You sure about that?

Another entry in one of my favorite song-genres: The Bad Sport Breakup Song.

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“I would commit suicide if I were in this position.”

A really charming and funny post, written by my pal Matt Zoller Seitz, on watching “Aliens” with a bunch of kids at his son’s slumber party. None of the kids had seen it before. The title of this post is a quote from one of the kids, said during a tense moment in the movie (which basically means every second of it.)

Someday I’ll write my post about Hicks!

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Supernatural: Season 2, Episode 13: “Houses of the Holy”

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Directed by Kim Manners
Written by Sera Gamble

Faces. It’s all about the Faces. You know Kim Manners studied and knew his Cassavetes.

On the one hand, “Houses of the Holy” is a very bizarre episode, undeniably powerful and yet strange, a slight anomaly: it seems downright kooky compared to the rest of what has been going on in the season. Its very anomaly-ness is why it ends up working, especially in light of Season 4 when the angels arrive. It’s a tease, it provides a strange kind of hope for “deliverance”, that word – very important (still) … and then when the angels arrive, well, you wish they’d go back where they came from. “Houses of the Holy” is the first real evidence of the huge 5-season arc. Sera Gamble drops bread crumbs on the path, crumbs that won’t be picked up for two more years.

Continue reading

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February 2015: Viewing Diary

Two Days, One Night (2014; Jean-Pierre Dardenne, Luc Dardenne). My friend Dan referred to the movie as a “Sunday school lesson” and, you know, I can see his point. But I found it absolutely riveting, one of the best portraits of depression, that’s for sure, that I’ve ever seen. I wrote about Marion Cotillard’s Oscar-nominated performance here. I was wiped OUT at the end of Two Days, One Night. I needed a nap.

Calvary (2014; John Michael McDonagh). Brendan Gleeson won Best Actor in the British Independent Film Awards. I thought he should have been nominated for an Oscar. The rest of the cast is excellent, too.

Supernatural, Season 2, Episode 13, “Houses of the Holy” (2007; Kim Manners). Re-watched in preparation for the re-cap, which is still pending. You know. February. I was kinda busy.

Supernatural, Season 4, Episode 1, “Lazarus Rising” (2008; Kim Manners). Watched in tandem with “Houses of the Holy,” due to the angel connection.

Supernatural, Season 4, Episode 2, “Are You There, God? It’s Me, Dean Winchester” (2008; Phil Sgriccia). Again, connecting it to “Houses of the Holy.”

Supernatural, Season 4, Episode 4, “Metamorphosis” (2008; Kim Manners). Along with the angel thing, started with “Houses of the Holy,” I was also interested in Season 4 because they started with the famed Red camera in Season 4 (and only used it until Season 6). There’s a reason why there was such a sharp drop-off of image quality in Season 7 when they went digital. But boy, Season 4 is absolutely cinematic: that camera is incredible.

Supernatural, Season 4, Episode 5, “Monster Movie” (2008; Robert Singer). One of my favorite episodes in the whole series.

Supernatural, Season 4, Episode 6, “Yellow Fever” (2008; Phil Sgriccia). Ditto.

John Wick (2014; Chad Stahelski, David Leitch). So excellent. Discussed it here.

Supernatural, Season 4, Episode 8, “Wishful Thinking” (2008; Robert Singer). The moaning teddy bear blowing his “brains” out is one of the stupidest funniest things I have ever seen in my life.

Supernatural, Season 10, Episode 12, “About a Boy” (2015; Serge Ladouceur). So good. Watched it twice.

What’s Your Number? (2011; Mark Mylod). I’d watch Anna Faris in anything. I think she’s quite brilliant. And Chris Evans is totally appealing. It’s kind of funny to see a man have to play a Manic Pixie Dream Girl, which is what his character is. His character makes no sense. He is merely a female fantasy. They’re good together though: I wish it had been more about the two of them together, becoming friends, avoiding the reality of their growing attraction. The movie felt too much obligation to its Plot. The one scene where the two get drunk, play basketball, and jump in Boston Harbor, etc., was wonderful, my favorite section in the movie. Anna Faris is so talented. I love her.

Supernatural, Season 4, Episode 9, “I Know What You Did Last Summer” (2008; Charles Beeson). Somehow, because of “Houses of the Holy” and the impending re-cap, I found myself unofficially giving Season 4 a re-watch.

Supernatural, Season 4, Episode 10, “Heaven and Hell” (2008; J. Miller Tobin). Killer episode.

Supernatural, Season 4, Episode 18, “The Monster at the End of This Book” (2009; Mike Rohl). Boy, Season 4 was good.

Supernatural, Season 4, Episode 19, “Jumping the Shark” (2009; Phil Sgriccia). The behavior in this episode, from all three brothers, is so rich that I almost pass out from too much sugar.

Supernatural, Season 10, Episode 13, “Halt and Catch Fire” (2015; John F. Showalter). Watched out in Los Angeles. I already can’t remember any of it.

Out in Los Angeles, I watched the first two episodes of Jinx. My brother was like, “You, of all people, have GOT to watch this!” It was a nice night in Santa Monica, after the filming of the movie. My nephew Cashel sat at the table behind us, Melody and Emmett were asleep upstairs, and Bren and I watched the two episodes. It is fascinating and I can understand why everyone has been telling me to check it out.

The Imitation Game (2014; Morten Tyldum). I finally saw this one and am absolutely floored that this was nominated for Best Picture. (Side note on the Oscars: I do not treat them like a sporting event, because I understand that no one CAN actually win. It’s ART.) But The Imitation Game is extremely conventional, and actually pretty shoddy in its construction. The flash-forwards were handled in a very banal way, and there were scenes when I was confused as to where I was in time. I’m baffled, in general, by the film’s accolades, unless it’s just for the soppy sentimentalized reason that Turing was gay and persecuted for it. Fine, he was gay and persecuted: make a better movie out of his story. One of the billboards for the movie said something like: “HONOR THE MAN. HONOR THE FILM.” So if I don’t like Imitation Game, it means somehow I’m dishonoring Turing’s memory, or anti-gay or something? Please. I have read a couple of fantastic books on those code-breakers who worked on cracking the Enigma. Fascinating bunch. You’d never know it from The Imitation Game. The Imitation Game does not help us understand what the hell Turing invented, and HOW it worked. It does not care to show us his brilliance and analytical skills. It is more interested in his schoolboy crush on another boy, and his Aspie-ish behavioral patterns. Ugh. So condescending. I thought Benedict Cumberbatch was fine, although he over-acted a bit, and I actually enjoyed Keira Knightley, despite the fact that I am not a fan (especially in period stuff – I thought her best performance was in Bend It Like Beckham). Mark Strong can do no wrong. HUGE crush on that guy.

Still Alice (2014; Richard Glatzer, Wash Westmoreland). Pretty straightforward film, and also pretty conventional (faces blur out when the disease starts to take hold of her, yawn), but Julianne Moore is excellent. It’s all rather terrifying. And Kristen Stewart broke my heart a little bit. Her recitation of the monologue in Angels in America, and the WAY she did it? I felt like I was holding my breath the whole entire time. Go, Kristen Stewart. Have you read the great interview in Interview magazine? Patti Smith interviews Kristen Stewart. And my friend Dan told me: did you know that only ONE woman in their 50s has been awarded the Best Actress statue? That would be Shirley Booth for Come Back Little Sheba. The 50s is the blackout period for actresses, when nobody wants to see them, when parts dry up and disappear, so Julianne Moore’s win is significant in that way, small inroads being made all the time. And yes, she is excellent and heartbreaking. Thought Alec Baldwin was very good too.

Farewell to Hollywood (2015; Henry Corra, Regina Nicholson). A documentary I had to review for The Dissolve. I had to take a walk afterwards, saying to myself, “What the FUCK did I just watch.” I felt dirty. My review here.

Supernatural, Season 10, Episode 8, “Hibbing 911” (2014; Tim Andrew). “Jodeo!” “Jodeo?” So entertaining.

Floating Weeds (1959; Yasujiro Ozu). It was a snowy day. I was home from Los Angeles. I canceled a couple of things because it looked too nasty out there to drive. I curled up in my armchair and popped in Ozu’s Floating Weeds. It’s such an amazing film. Funny and calm and poignant and then enormously emotional. It’s also a wonderful story about acting and theatre-folk, one of the best. That final family scene is such a killer. How did Ozu do it? His films are not flashy, his camera does not move, and yet within the formal structure of his stories … huge emotion is possible. It’s also so funny. I always look forward to the dame sharpening the razor with the leather strop, staring at her customer with dead eyes. She’s terrifying and hilarious.

Do You Believe in Miracles? The Story of the 1980 U.S. Hockey Team (2001; Bernard Goldberg). I own this one. I watched it on February 22, of course, but I watch it all the time. Goosebumps.

It Follows (2014; David Robert Mitchell). This one hasn’t come out yet but the buzz has already been deafening from Sundance and other festivals. Sometimes buzz is annoying. I try to tune it out. I have been assigned to review this one for Ebert. It opens in a couple of weeks. I won’t give anything away, all I can say is: the buzz, this time, was well-deserved.

Letter to an Unknown Woman (1948; Max Ophüls). What to even say about this movie. One of the most disturbing portraits of unrequited love ever put onscreen. Joan Fontaine. Amazing. Louis Jourdan – who just died – is heartbreaking, fantastic. The whole movie puts you through the wringer. And absolutely stunning to look at too.

The Widowmaker (2015; Patrick Forbes). I reviewed this documentary about heart disease for Rogerebert.com. It’s very effective and I learned a lot.

Zero Dark Thirty (2012; Kathryn Bigelow). Excellent film. I own it. Mark Strong again. “This is real … tradecraft.” I am mainly confused as to why I wasn’t recruited into the CIA out of high school.

Supernatural, Season 10, Episode 14, “The Executioner’s Song” (2015; Phil Sgriccia). Superb.

Lucy (2014; Luc Besson). Had missed this one on its initial release. Boy, Scarlett Johansson appearing in Under the Skin and Lucy in the same year? She’s doing everything right. Lucy is a thriller with a sci-fi twist, and has Besson’s stamp of expertise: he knows how to make a thriller. He knows how to film car chases (bless his soul: I love a good car chase). I also love any movie that involves French policemen, one of my little quirks. And Johansson is excellent. I loved her performance.

My Winnipeg (2007; Guy Maddin). Out now on Criterion, My Winnipeg is both a documentary and a memoir. It’s fictionalized, it’s a fairy tale, it’s a mythology, a mythologizing of the city where Maddin grew up, still lives there, cannot escape. I saw it in the movie theatre upon its first release and was captivated by it. Watching it it’s like you are lulled into a dream-state. There really is no other movie like it. And Guy Maddin cast the great Ann Savage, who hadn’t made a movie in … 50 years or something like that … to play his mother. Very glad Criterion brought this one out – it was very hard to find otherwise.

The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby (2014; Ned Benson). There are actually three films that go under the same title: “Them,” “Her,” and “Him”, each one telling the story from a different point of view, Rashomon style. I watched “Them,” and I really feel I need to see the others before I can make an assessment. The acting is very good. The story is extremely simple: a couple breaks up after a terrible event in their marriage. He starts to basically stalk her, unable to get over the ending of the relationship. She moves back home with her parents and tries to figure out what she wants to do with her life. I didn’t care for the scenes with Viola Davis, but again, maybe there’s more to it in the other two films. Definitely well worth a watch.

Touching the Void (2003; Kevin Macdonald). Based on Joe Simpson’s book of the same name, Touching the Void is a haunting and unforgettable piece of film-making. The re-creations are superb. The story harrowing. I’ve seen it before, but had just been discussing it with my cousin Mike, so I popped it in again.

The Great Man’s Lady (1942; William A. Wellman). Barbara Stanwyck, Joel McCrea, Brian Donlevy. I actually had never seen this one. It’s in my Barbara Stanwyck box-set and I have an eternal crush on Joel McCrea, and love Wellman’s films. It’s a heartbreaking film about a woman who basically sacrifices herself and her happiness so that her man can be successful and reach his dreams. This is touted as a valid course for a woman to take. That outrageous-ness aside, I found the whole thing to be a bit shattering. The film is full of misunderstandings. You wish these people would just TALK to each other. Brian Donlevy is wonderful as the gambler who befriends Hannah (Stanwyck), and loves her, and stands by her, even though she is married to another man. Another fantastic element of The Great Man’s Lady is the production design. My God! The film takes place in: Philadelphia, the Wild pioneering West, a fictional place called Hoyt City, San Francisco, Sacramento and Virginia City. Each location with its own feel, its own architecture. The level of detail in production design is awe-inspiring: you really feel like you are getting a tour of the development of America in the latter half of the 19th century. Stanwyck is great, of course. I love when she skins the rabbit with one quick slice of the knife.

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R.I.P. Leonard Nimoy

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While I was never a Trekkie, I watched Star Trek growing up in their endless re-runs and can barely separate out the television show from my actual real-life childhood. They are my memories. Star Trek was like The Brady Bunch in that way: always on, everywhere, background noise, constant. Others can speak about the role of Spock and what it meant to them (the elegies have been coming fast and furious, and there are some great ones out there! The emotion is so palpable!), how deeply the role of Spock has gotten into our cultural DNA. (Alan Sepinwall’s piece about Spock is fantastic.)

My deepest thanks to Jessica Ritchey, for linking to this clip, of Leonard Nimoy reciting Hamlet’s “To be or not to be” soliloquy in Yiddish.

I met him one night at an event at the New School. He was there with director Stanley Donen. It was just a quick “Hi, how are you” kind of introduction, but he was one of those celebrities where it was impossible to believe that it was actually him, there in the flesh. His face, as Spock, with the ears and the eyebrows and the hair, is so much a part of our culture that seeing him outside of it, as just a regular elderly guy in a suit, laughing with Donen, that face, that look, is so distinct that it floated around in my head as I looked at the real-life guy. I thought, “Now THAT’S the role of a lifetime, if it’s an after-image forevermore.” And he handled it beautifully.

But the first thing I thought of today when I heard of Nimoy’s passing was of his lovely and touching performance as Golda Meir’s husband in the television event (member when we used to have those?) A Woman Named Golda. Ingrid Bergman played Golda Meir (and won the Emmy for it, and rightly so). A fascinating biopic, which showed her political journey, with her husband at her side (and then, not really at her side anymore). Their quiet and respectful intimate relationship is a huge reason why that movie works. Meir’s husband loves her. He is not a domineering husband, and doesn’t bitch and moan about why dinner wasn’t on the table. He was her supporter, her cheerleader, and yet … he missed her. She was gone so much. He wasn’t quite prepared to share her with everybody. But she needed to go where she needed to go. Over the course of the film, he needs to let her go. Nimoy and Bergman’s scene work is absolutely beautiful throughout, and the two of them both have to age about 30 years over the course of the film, and they do specifically and with very little fanfare. You believe that these two have been together for most of their lives.

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There were other non-Spock roles, and books, and music and poetry and photography … a lifetime as an artist. But it is for Spock that he will always be remembered. It is hard to even quantify that legacy, the mark he has made with just one role.

But today I thought of the sad and quiet domestic scenes in A Woman Named Golda, and how beautifully and gracefully Nimoy played support-staff to her powerhouse performance. Bergman needed the grounding mechanism of Nimoy’s performance: the guy who played that role needed to be earthiness personified, deeply connected to his emotions, a rock. Nimoy was.

RIP, fine actor.

Spock

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Review: The Widowmaker (2015)

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I reviewed the new documentary The Widowmaker, about heart disease and the battle over prevention vs. intervention in the cardiology community, for Rogerebert.com. It’s a fascinating story.

My review of The Widowmaker is here.

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Coffee Break?

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The Dark Knight, on a bitingly cold day, stalking through Times Square.

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Review: Farewell to Hollywood (2015)

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I reviewed the documentary Farewell to Hollywood for The Dissolve.

Have to call it like I see it.

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