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Saturday, December 12, 2009

Permission to Fail

I. In Praise of Shambling

"If only we were allowed to be in shambles more, to fail more, we might all produce a body of work that has a lot of good stuff in it—even if people dismiss some of our shambles as the biggest catastrophes in movie history."
--Jill Dawsey, "On Elaine May" (2009), discussing May's movie Ishtar (1987), the famous failure that tanked May's shambling but brilliant directing career

I saw Ishtar when it came out twenty-some years ago. I loved it. The two heroes, played by Dustin Hoffman and Warren Beatty (left), are mediocre middle-aged songwriters. Worse than mediocre: they stink. It takes a kind of genius to be truly bad, and they have it.

(Pop-songster Paul Williams wrote the atrocious melodies, as well as some of the lyrics with May. Williams wrote the Carpenters' hit "Rainy Days and Mondays", so he was well qualified.)

In the same article, above, Julian Myers points to one of Ishtar's great moments:
"Hoffman is on the ledge considering suicide. His girlfriend, played by Carol Kane, has just left him, with the killer line, 'If you never see me again, it’ll only be one time less a week than you see me now!' Beatty’s character comes out to save him, and consoles him by saying, 'Hey, it takes a lot of nerve to have nothing at your age.'"

Instead of the American/Hollywood myth of heroes who go West and make good, these guys in Ishtar go into the wilderness (a music gig in the Middle East), get involved a CIA tangle, and come out the same musical mediocrities.
But happier. Which is, of course, a kind of success.

I remember a hysterical note to the critics' negative reviews. Not to say Ishtar's a great movie, but it's got charm and is no worse than many flawed comedy films, which tend to be spotty anyway.

Even at the time, though, when the movie came out, I thought maybe some of the rancor toward it came from how contrary it was to the popular mood.
It was 1987, the heydey of Ronald Reagan.

Right: Iraqi President Saddam Hussein shakes the hand of Donald Rumsfeld, then special envoy of President Reagan, in Baghdad on December 20, 1983. (from the National Security Archive)

Some of us might have approved of Ishtar mocking CIA meddling (at this time, the USA was supporting Saddam Hussein in the Iran-Iraq War); but the movie also celebrates failures. Which was heresy, even to the "alternative" folks I knew, who were busy visualizing prosperity.

The '80s schtick, as I recall it, was that if you follow your bliss, you'll manifest your brilliance, or some such thing.
But what if you do what you love and you stink at it ...forever?
Who wants to watch movies about that?

II. My Shambling Life

I can't say I felt good about having nothing when I was in my twenties and saw that movie. But I didn't see any alternative that didn't involve doing stuff I really, really didn't want to do. Like get a full-time job.
It seemed my best option was to shamble along--or just to stall, like the blind camel in Ishtar that refuses to move.

I feel a lot better about it now.
When my mother killed herself seven Decembers ago, I spent many evenings sitting in the dark. Mostly stunned, but also taking stock of my life.
"I have nothing," I thought.
No career, no house, no car, no lover, no prestige...
It was weirdly freeing. Like, hey! I've succeeded: I've held out so long, the war for My Success is over. Now I can come out of the fox hole and have the place to myself.

It took a few more years before I had the emotional energy to use the freedom that comes with Nothing. It's like a "do what you want" permission slip.

Looking back at this past year, I see I really called on that freedom in making my first movies.
When I first started making Orestes and the Fly in the fall of 2008, the most misguided advice I got was that it was too ambitious for a first-time project: I was likely to fail and should start with something smaller.
But if you're already a failure, failure's not a problem!
Why not start big, if you want? And I did want.

I made sure to shore up that freedom by telling everyone that my first film was likely to be a total mess--and I meant it. Why wouldn't it be? In fact, it still surprises me that it came together at all, much less as well as it did. It's a bit of a shambles, yes, but I'm happy with it.
Happiness. That's the opposite of nothing.

III. Screwing Up [Courage]

When I was a kid, I thought it'd be great to live in a garret, be poor, and make art.
At mid-life, I live in a garret, I'm poor, and I make art.
By those standards, I'm a success.

Not to be too glib here. Having nothing is scarier when I think about getting old and sick, which feels more real since I've had some health problems this year.

And the risk of failing in public still makes me feel sick.
I've had to face that all over again with the recent herring film, which bink is almost done editing.
It's the fourth little video I've conceived of, and it's the least coherent. It was meant to be a comedy sketch, and what do I know about that? Comedy is, I think, the trickiest, most delicate art, and one I've never practiced. The raw footage shows that.
I don't see any way to learn it, though, except to do it.

Right: "Mike Nichols and Elaine May," by Richard Avedon, 1960. From the back cover of the album An Evening with Mike Nichols and Elaine May, Mercury Records, 1960.

In a 2006 conversation between Mike Nichols and Elaine May, May said about the many mistakes she made as a first-time director (on A New Leaf),
"There’s no way to know unless someone teaches you or you screw up."

I usually opt for the "screw up" option. I don't know if the herring film will be a total shambles or not. Of course I hope bink manages to pull something charming together, but in a way, it won't matter if it's a failure. I'll make film #5 anyway.

Yeah, it does take a lot of nerve to have nothing at my age. But I trust that I'm building up a body of work--or a life--that might have some good stuff in it. Or if not--no guarantees--godwilling, I'll be happy doing it.

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[So far as I can see, Ishtar still hasn't been released on DVD. Just recently, however, it's become available to watch online at Netflix. I wrote this post without having watched it again, so I'd better do that.]

8 comments:

  1. Sweet. I'm not religious but I believe we have a duty to work toward taking joy in what we do with our lives and to notice happiness when it's with us. some variation of Forster's "only connect", perhaps.

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  2. Jeezuz, Ggrrrrl! Okay, whether you are okay with it or not, I am switching whatever submicroscopic vestige of a propensity I might have toward embracing or sucombing to a "religion" or "spirituality"--(as oposed to a "spiritual")--path and Becoming a "Frescan" acolyte. Don't fret, though, that's just some humor for ya. But, for real, i only read the first part of this post in depth and quick-skimmed the rest--(I'll have to do the "meta-reading" as per Vlad G. after I attend to some more mundane efforts)--and, i wanna tell ya you've always helped or made me laugh as well as cry and think and feel, even when i was too scared to engage. (I am crying literally with gratitude for that as I type this. What'd i tell ya last week? You ARE a great therapist). And I am not always easy to elicit laughter from. (Also am having some difficulty with grammatically acceptable English sentence structure today. So, you are my Captain Kirk and you have created a place where folks who have access to the internet, English language abilities and serendipity can go to get in touch with Life, and, for better or worse, you always have your Muse and your friends. And, if you need and want, I will feed you healthy stuff and Rice Krispy bars and share any helpful stuff i learn about good herbs and other natural remedies for what ails ya. Thank you for this incredible post!

    Love!

    Stefalala

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  3. ARTS: Thanks. I shy away from the word "duty" myself, but you bet, connect with joy, as much as you can!

    STEF: Hey! You're welcome. Do you remember Nichols and May from childhood? Seems the same people (our parents) listened to their records as listened to the Weavers and Pete Seegers, etc.

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  4. Hi Fresca: I'm new to the blog world. I got access to "Permission to Fail" from Deanna's blog. I really appreciate your statment: "I've succeeded: I've held out so long, the war for success is over. Now I can come out of the fox hole and have the place to myself." --We still live for our dreams but sometimes it is so nice to know that they aren't us.

    from Laura K.

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  5. Welcome to the blogosphere, Laura!
    Thanks for your comment. I love Deanna's way of thinking and am always pleased when she directs folks this-a-way.
    Yes, something freeing in knowing we are who we are.

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  6. Well, I read your whole post (thanks, Art Sparker) and loved it. I am going to link you to my blog so I will know when you've posted something great and essential - something I need to hear. Failure? Stumbling? Why the heck not?

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  7. Thanks, femminismo! And welcome.
    Warning: I post a lot of shambling stuff in between the "great and essential stuff"... : )

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  8. Artsparker linked to this post in a comment at my blog. I can see why. Thank-you for this. We learn best from doing. Sometimes the doing leads to success. Sometimes it leads to failure. But we always learn by doing.

    And sometimes we learn from others doings...especially when others write about their doings so well. :-)

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