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[Horn Honks]
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[Shawn Narrating]
The life of a playwright is tough.
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It’s not easy, as some people seem to think.
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You work hard writing plays, and nobody puts them on.
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You take up other lines of work to try to make a living -
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I became an actor -
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and people don’t hire you.
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So you just spend your days doing the errands of your trade.
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Today I’d had to be up by 10:00 in the morning...
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to make some important phone calls.
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Then I’d gone to the stationery store to buy envelopes. Then to the Xerox shop.
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There were dozens of things to do.
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By 5:00 I’d finally made it to the post office...
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and mailed off several copies of my plays...
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meanwhile checking constantly with my answering service...
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to see if my agent had called with any acting work.
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In the morning, the mailbox had just been stuffed with bills.
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What was I supposed to do? How was I supposed to pay them?
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After all, I was already doing my best.
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I’ve lived in this city all my life.
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I grew up on the Upper East Side...
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and when I was 10 years old I was rich, I was an aristocrat...
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riding around in taxis, surrounded by comfort...
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and all I thought about was art and music.
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Now I’m 36, and all I think about is money.
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It was now 7:00...
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and I would have liked nothing better than to go home and have my girlfriend Debby...
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cook me a nice, delicious dinner
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But for the last several years our financial circumstances...
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have forced Deb by to work three nights a week as a waitress.
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After all, somebody had to bring in a little money
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So 7 was on my own.
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But the worst thing of all was that I’d been trapped by an odd series of circumstances...
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into agreeing to have dinner with a man I’d been avoiding literally for years.
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His name was Andre Gregory.
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At one time he’d been a very dose friend of mine...
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as well as my most valued colleague
in the theater.
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In fact, he was the man who had first discovered me...
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and put one of my plays on the professional stage.
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When I’d known Andre, he’d been at the height of his career as a theater director
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The amazing work he did with his company,
the Manhattan Project...
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had just stunned audiences throughout the world.
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But then something had happened to Andre.
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He dropped out of the theater He sort of disappeared.
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For months at a time, his family seemed only to know that he was traveling...
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in some odd place like Tibet,
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which was really weird because he loved his wife and children.
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He never used to like to leave home at all.
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Or else you’d hear that someone had met him at a party and he’d been telling people...
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that he talked with trees or something like that
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Obviously, something terrible had happened to Andre.
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[Piano: Light Jazz]
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The whole idea of meeting him made me very nervous.
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I mean, I really wasn’t up for that sort of thing.
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I had problems of my own.
I mean, I couldn’t help Andre.
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Was I supposed to be a doctor, or what?
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[Piano Continues]
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- Hello.
- Hello.
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- Here you go.
- Thank you.
60
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- Yes, sir.
- Ah, sir, my name is Wallace Shawn.
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I’m expected at the table of Andre Gregory.
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That table will be a moment, sir.
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If you like, you may have a drink at the bar.
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[ Woman Laughing ]
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[ Chattering ]
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- Good evening, sir.
- Uh, could I have a club soda, please?
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I’m sorry, sir.
We only serve Source de Pavilion.
68
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Oh that d be fine, thank you
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When I’d called Andre, and he’d suggested that we meet in this particular restaurant..
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I’d been rather surprised, because Andre’s taste used to be very ascetic..
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even though people have always known that he had some money somewhere.
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I mean, how the hell else could he have been flying off to Asia and so on...
73
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and still have been supporting his family?
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The reason I was meeting Andre was that an acquaintance of mine, George Grass field...
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had called me and just insisted that I had to see him.
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Apparently, George had been walking his dog in an odd section of town the night before...
77
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and he’d suddenly come upon Andre...
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leaning against a crumbling old building
and sobbing.
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Andre had explained to George that he’d just been watching...
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the Ingmar Bergman movie Autumn Sonata...
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about 25 blocks away..
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and he ’d been seized by a fit of ungovernable crying...
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when the character played by Ingrid Bergman had said...
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7 could always live in my art, but never in my life. ”
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Wally!
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- Wow.
- My God.
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[ Wally Chuckling ]
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[ Wally Narrating ] I remember, when I first started working with Andre’s company...
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I couldn’t get over the way the actors would hug when they greeted each other
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“Wow. Now I’m really in the theater,”
I thought.
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Well, you look terrific.
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Well, I feel terrible. [Laughing]
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[Wally Laughing]
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Good evening, sir. Nice to see you again.
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Thank you. Good evening.
Ah,1 think HI have a spritzer, if I could.
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- Yes, sir.
- Thank you.
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[ Wally Narrating ]
I was feeling incredibly nervous.
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I wasn’t sure I could stick through an entire meal with him.
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Great.
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So we talked about this and that.
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He told me a few things about Jerzy Grotowski...
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the great Polish theater director..
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who was a friend and almost like a kind of a guru of Andre’s.
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- [ Indistinct Chattering ]
- He’d also dropped out of the theater
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Grotowski was a pretty unusual character himself.
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Atone time, he’d been quite fat, then he’d lost an incredible amount of weight...
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and become very thin and grown a beard.
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- Your table is ready, if you feel like sitting down.
- Oh.
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- Oh.
- Yes. Thank you.
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[ Wally Narrating ] I was beginning to realize that the only way to make this evening bearable...
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would be to ask Andre a few questions.
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Asking questions always relaxes me.
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In fact, I sometimes think that my secret profession...
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is that I’m a private investigator,
a detective.
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I always enjoy finding out about people.
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Even if they’re in absolute agony, I always find it very... interesting.
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- By the way, is he still thin?
- What?
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Grotowski. Is he still thin?
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Oh. [ Chuckles ] Absolutely.
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Oh, waiter?
Uh, I think we can do without this.
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- Yes, sir.
- Thank you.
122
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What about this one?
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[ Laughing ]
Seven swimming shrimp.
124
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- Ready for your order?
- Ah, yes.
125
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Uh, the Galuska - How - How do you prepare that?
126
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[ Wally Narrating ] Andre seemed to know an awful lot about the menu.
127
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- Dumpling with raisins, blanched almonds.
- I didn’t understand a word of it.
128
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- Very good, I think.
- Hmm.
129
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No, I - I think I’ll have the Cailles aux Raisin, the quail.
130
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- Very good.
- Oh, quails! I’ll have that as well.
131
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- Two
- Great
- Great!
132
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And then I think, to begin with, the Terrine de Poissons.
133
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- Yes.
- What is that?
134
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Uh, it’s a sort of pate -light, made offish.
135
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- Does it have bones in it?
- [ Chuckles ] No bones.
136
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Perfectly safe.
137
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Well, um - What is the, um, Bramborova Polevka?
138
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It’s a potato soup. It’s quite delicious.
139
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Oh, well, that’s great. I’ll have that.
140
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- Thank you very kindly.
- Thank you very much.
141
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Well.
[ Laughing ]
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When was the last time that we saw each other?
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[ Wally Narrating ] So we talked for a while about my writing and my acting...
144
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and about my girlfriend, Debby
145
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And we talked about his wife, Chiquita, and his two children, Nicolas and Marina.
146
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[Andre Laughing ]
And I’d stayed back in New York.
147
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[ Wally ] Finally, I got around to asking him what he’d been up to in the last few years.
148
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Oh, God. I’m just dying to hear it.
149
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- Really?
- Really.
150
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At first, he seemed a little reluctant to go into it...
151
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so I just kept asking, and finally he started to answer
152
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...conference on paratheatrical work then.
153
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And, uh, this must have been about five years ago...
154
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and, uh, Grotowski and I were walking along Fifth Avenue and we were talking.
155
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You see, he’d invited me to come to teach that summer in Poland.
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You know, to teach a workshop to actors and directors and whatever.
157
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And I had told him that I didn’t want to come, because, really, I had nothing left to teach.
158
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I had nothing left to say. I didn’t know anything.
159
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I couldn’t teach anything.
160
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Exercises meant nothing to me anymore.
161
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Working on scenes from plays seemed ridiculous.
162
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I - I didn’t know what to do. I mean, I just couldn’t do it.
163
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So he said, “Why don’t you tell me anything you’d like to have if you did a workshop for me.
164
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No matter how outrageous. And maybe I can give it to you.”
165
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So I said,
“Well, if you could give me...
166
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“40 Jewish women who speak neither English nor French -
167
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“either women who’ve been in the theater for a long time and want to leave it..
168
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“but don’t know why...
169
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“or young women who love the theater, but have never seen a theater they could love.
170
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“And if these women could play the trumpet or the harp...
171
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and if I could work in a forest, I’d come.”
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[ Laughing ]
173
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A week later, or two weeks later, he called me from Poland.
174
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And he said, “Well, 40 Jewish women -that’s a little hard to find.”
175
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But he said, “I do have 40 women. They all pretty much fit the definition.”
176
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And he said, “I also have some very interesting men...
177
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but you don’t have to work with them.
178
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“These are all people who have in common the fact that they’re questioning the theater.
179
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“They don’t all play the trumpet or the harp, but they all play a musical instrument.
180
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And none of then speak English.”
181
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And he’d found me a forest, Wally.
182
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And the only inhabitants of this forest were some wild boar and a hermit.
183
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So that was an offer I couldn’t refuse.
184
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I had to go.
185
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So, I went to Poland, and it was this wonderful group of young men and women.
186
00:12:02,972 --> 00:12:05,975
And the forest he had found us was absolutely magical.
187
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You know, it was a huge forest.
188
00:12:08,061 --> 00:12:09,979
I mean, the trees were so large...
189
00:12:10,063 --> 00:12:14,484
that four or five people linking their arms couldn’t get their arms around the trees.
190
00:12:14,567 --> 00:12:18,071
So we were camped out beside the ruins of this tiny little castle...
191
00:12:18,154 --> 00:12:22,492
and we would eat around this great stone slab that served as a sort of a table.
192
00:12:22,575 --> 00:12:25,787
And our schedule was that usually we’d start work around sunset...
193
00:12:25,870 --> 00:12:28,748
and then generally we’d work until about 6:00 or 7:00 in the morning.
194
00:12:28,831 --> 00:12:31,209
And then, because the Poles love to sing and dance...
195
00:12:31,292 --> 00:12:34,587
we’d sing and dance until about 10:00 or 11:00 in the morning.
196
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And then we’d have our food, which was generally bread, jam, cheese and tea.
197
00:12:39,342 --> 00:12:42,720
And then we’d sleep from around noon to sunset
198
00:12:44,055 --> 00:12:46,015
Now, technically, of course -
199
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Technically, the situation is a very interesting one...
200
00:12:48,601 --> 00:12:51,437
because if you find yourself in a forest with a group of 40 people...
201
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who don’t speak your language, then all your moorings are gone.
202
00:12:55,274 --> 00:12:57,193
What do you mean exactly?
203
00:12:57,277 --> 00:13:00,029
Well, what we’d do is just sit there and wait...
204
00:13:00,113 --> 00:13:03,324
for someone to have an impulse to do something.
205
00:13:03,408 --> 00:13:06,661
Now, in a way that’s - that’s something like a theatrical improvisation.
206
00:13:06,744 --> 00:13:09,747
I mean, you know, if you were a director working on a play by Chekhov...
207
00:13:09,831 --> 00:13:13,084
you might have the actors playing the mother, the son and the uncle...
208
00:13:13,167 --> 00:13:16,629
all sit around in a room and do a made-up scene that isn’t in the play.
209
00:13:16,713 --> 00:13:18,715
For instance, you might say to them..
210
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“All right. Let’s say that it’s a rainy Sunday afternoon on Sorin’s estate...
211
00:13:22,135 --> 00:13:24,345
and you’re all trapped in the drawing room together.”
212
00:13:24,429 --> 00:13:26,389
And then everyone would improvise -
213
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saying and doing what their character might say and do in that circumstance.
214
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Except that in this type of improvisation - the kind we did in Poland -
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the theme is oneself.
216
00:13:37,942 --> 00:13:40,403
So, you follow the same law of improvisation...
217
00:13:40,486 --> 00:13:43,906
which is that you do whatever your impulse, as the character, tells you to do...
218
00:13:43,990 --> 00:13:46,743
but in this case, you are the character.
219
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So there’s no imaginary situation
to hide behind...
220
00:13:50,330 --> 00:13:53,416
and there’s no other person to hide behind.
221
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What you’re doing, in fact, is you’re asking those same questions...
222
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that Stanislavsky said the actor should constantly ask himself as a character:
223
00:14:01,549 --> 00:14:05,094
Who am I? Why am I here?
224
00:14:05,178 --> 00:14:08,765
Where do I come from, and where am I going?
225
00:14:08,848 --> 00:14:13,144
But instead of applying them to a role, you apply them to yourself.
226
00:14:13,227 --> 00:14:15,480
- Hmm.
- Or, to look at it a little differently...
227
00:14:15,563 --> 00:14:17,607
in a way, it’s like going right back to childhood...
228
00:14:17,690 --> 00:14:20,651
where a group of children simply come into a room or are brought into a room -
229
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without toys - and begin to play.
230
00:14:23,071 --> 00:14:26,783
Grown-ups were learning how to play again.
231
00:14:26,866 --> 00:14:30,661
So, you would, uh, all sit together somewhere...
232
00:14:30,745 --> 00:14:33,456
and, uh, you would play in some way.
233
00:14:33,539 --> 00:14:36,626
- But what would you actually do?
- Well, I could give you a good example.
234
00:14:36,709 --> 00:14:40,129
You see, we worked, uh, together for a week in the city...
235
00:14:40,213 --> 00:14:42,256
before we went off to our forest.
236
00:14:42,340 --> 00:14:44,675
And of course,
Grotowski was there in the city too.
237
00:14:44,759 --> 00:14:47,512
I heard that every night, he conducted something called a beehive.
238
00:14:47,595 --> 00:14:49,514
loved the sound of this beehive...
239
00:14:49,597 --> 00:14:52,642
so a night or two before we were supposed to go off to the country...
240
00:14:52,725 --> 00:14:55,812
I grabbed him by the collar, and I said, “Listen, about this beehive.
241
00:14:55,895 --> 00:14:57,939
“You know, I’d kind of like to participate in one.
242
00:14:58,022 --> 00:15:00,817
Just instinctively I feel it would be something interesting.”
243
00:15:00,900 --> 00:15:03,903
And he said, “Well, certainly.
In fact, why don’t you, with your group...
244
00:15:03,986 --> 00:15:06,614
lead the beehive instead of participating in one?”
245
00:15:06,739 --> 00:15:10,618
You know, I - [ Laughing ] I got very nervous, you know, and I said, “Well, what is a beehive?”
246
00:15:10,701 --> 00:15:13,371
He said, “Well, a beehive is..,
247
00:15:13,454 --> 00:15:16,332
at 8:00 a hundred strangers come into a room.”
248
00:15:17,333 --> 00:15:19,794
I said, “Yes?” He said,
“Yes, and whatever happens is a beehive.”
249
00:15:19,877 --> 00:15:23,089
I said, “Yes, but what am I supposed to do?”
He said, “That’s up to you.”
250
00:15:23,172 --> 00:15:26,926
I said, “No, no. I really don’t want to do this.
I’ll just participate.”
251
00:15:27,009 --> 00:15:30,721
And he said,
“No, no. You lead the beehive.”
252
00:15:30,805 --> 00:15:32,849
Well, I was terrified, Wally.
253
00:15:32,932 --> 00:15:36,269
I mean, in away, I felt on stage^
254
00:15:37,353 --> 00:15:39,689
I did it anyway.
255
00:15:39,772 --> 00:15:42,150
God. Well, tell me about it.
256
00:15:42,275 --> 00:15:46,320
You see, there was this song - I have a tape of it. I can play it for you one day.
257
00:15:46,404 --> 00:15:49,615
And it’s just unbelievably beautiful.
258
00:15:49,740 --> 00:15:54,495
You see, one of the women in our group knew a few fragments of this song of Saint Francis...
259
00:15:54,579 --> 00:15:57,707
and it’s a song in which you thank God for your eyes...
260
00:15:57,790 --> 00:16:01,002
and you thank God for your heart, and you thank God for your friends...
261
00:16:01,085 --> 00:16:03,045
and you thank God for your life.
262
00:16:03,129 --> 00:16:06,132
And it, uh - It repeats itself over and over again.
263
00:16:06,215 --> 00:16:08,176
And this became our theme song.
264
00:16:08,259 --> 00:16:10,261
I really must play this thing for you one day...
265
00:16:10,344 --> 00:16:14,765
because you just can’t believe that a group of people who don’t know how to sing...
266
00:16:14,849 --> 00:16:18,561
could create something so beautiful.
267
00:16:18,644 --> 00:16:23,274
So, I decided that when the people arrived for the beehive...
268
00:16:23,357 --> 00:16:26,152
that our group would already be there singing this very beautiful song...
269
00:16:26,235 --> 00:16:30,072
and that we would simply sing it over and over again.
270
00:16:30,156 --> 00:16:34,994
One of the people decided to bring her very large teddy bear, you know.
271
00:16:35,077 --> 00:16:37,079
Well, she’s a little afraid of this event.
272
00:16:37,163 --> 00:16:39,415
And somebody wanted to bring a - a sheet.
273
00:16:39,498 --> 00:16:42,251
And somebody else wanted to bring a large bowl of water...
274
00:16:42,335 --> 00:16:44,545
in case people got hot or thirsty.
275
00:16:44,629 --> 00:16:46,923
And somebody suggested that we have candles -
276
00:16:47,006 --> 00:16:51,135
that there be no artificial light, but candlelight.
277
00:16:51,219 --> 00:16:53,763
And I remember watching people preparing for this evening.
278
00:16:53,846 --> 00:16:56,098
Of course, there was no makeup, and there were no costumes...
279
00:16:56,182 --> 00:16:58,768
but it was exactly the way that people prepare for a performance.
280
00:16:58,851 --> 00:17:02,021
You know, people sort of taking off their jewelry and their watches...
281
00:17:02,104 --> 00:17:05,274
and stowing it away and making sure it’s all secure.
282
00:17:05,358 --> 00:17:08,277
And then slowly people arrived, the way they would arrive at the theater -
283
00:17:08,361 --> 00:17:11,072
in ones and twos and 10s and 15s and what have you.
284
00:17:11,197 --> 00:17:14,242
And we were just sitting there, and we were singing this very beautiful song.
285
00:17:14,325 --> 00:17:17,662
And people started to sit with us and started to learn the song.
286
00:17:17,745 --> 00:17:22,917
Now, there is, of course, as in any performance or improvisation...
287
00:17:23,000 --> 00:17:25,461
instinct for when things are gonna get boring.
288
00:17:25,545 --> 00:17:29,465
So, at a certain point - It may have taken an hour to get there, an hour and a half-
289
00:17:29,549 --> 00:17:33,594
I suddenly grabbed this teddy bear and threw it in the air...
290
00:17:33,678 --> 00:17:37,223
at which 140 or 130 people suddenly exploded.
291
00:17:37,306 --> 00:17:40,309
You know, it was like a - a Jackson Pollock painting, you know.
292
00:17:40,393 --> 00:17:44,814
Human beings exploded out of this tight little circle that was singing the song.
293
00:17:44,897 --> 00:17:47,900
And before I knew it, there were two circles, dancing, you know -
294
00:17:47,984 --> 00:17:51,320
one dancing clockwise, the other dancing counterclockwise...
295
00:17:51,404 --> 00:17:53,573
with this rhythm mostly from the waist down.
296
00:17:53,698 --> 00:17:58,035
In other words, like an American Indian dance, with this thumping, persistent rhythm.
297
00:17:59,453 --> 00:18:01,414
[ People Chuckling ]
298
00:18:02,665 --> 00:18:05,876
Now, you could easily see,
’cause we’re talking about group trance...
299
00:18:06,002 --> 00:18:10,464
where the line between something like this and something like Hitler’s Nuremberg rallies...
300
00:18:10,548 --> 00:18:12,758
is, in a way, a very thin line.
301
00:18:15,052 --> 00:18:19,098
Anyway, after about an hour of this wild, hypnotic dancing...
302
00:18:19,223 --> 00:18:22,435
Grotowski and I found ourselves sitting opposite each other in the middle of this whole thing.
303
00:18:22,518 --> 00:18:24,979
And we threw the teddy bear back and forth.
304
00:18:25,062 --> 00:18:27,607
You know, on one level, you could say this is childish.
305
00:18:27,690 --> 00:18:29,942
And I gave the teddy bear suck, suddenly, at my breast.
306
00:18:30,026 --> 00:18:33,195
And then I threw the teddy bear to him, and he gave it suck at his breast.
307
00:18:33,279 --> 00:18:35,698
And then the teddy bear was thrown up into the air again...
308
00:18:35,781 --> 00:18:39,076
at which there was another explosion of form into... something.
309
00:18:39,160 --> 00:18:41,996
And these - What was it like? You know, this is the -
310
00:18:42,079 --> 00:18:45,624
There’s something like a kaleidoscope, like a human kaleidoscope.
311
00:18:45,708 --> 00:18:50,004
The evening was made up of shiftings of the kaleidoscope.
312
00:18:50,087 --> 00:18:52,089
Now, the only other things that I remember...
313
00:18:52,173 --> 00:18:54,091
other than constantly trying to guide this thing...
314
00:18:54,175 --> 00:18:58,721
which was always involved with either movement, rhythm, repetition or song -
315
00:18:58,804 --> 00:19:00,931
Or chanting, because, uh, two people in my group...
316
00:19:01,015 --> 00:19:03,059
had brought musical instruments, a flute and a drum...
317
00:19:03,142 --> 00:19:05,102
which, of course, are sacred instruments -
318
00:19:05,186 --> 00:19:07,730
was that sometimes the room would break up...
319
00:19:07,813 --> 00:19:11,108
into six or seven different things going on at once.
320
00:19:11,192 --> 00:19:14,111
You know, six or seven different improvisations...
321
00:19:14,195 --> 00:19:18,032
all of which seemed, in some way, related to each other.
322
00:19:18,115 --> 00:19:21,494
It was - It was like a magnificent cobweb.
323
00:19:22,828 --> 00:19:26,999
And at one point, I noticed that Grotowski was at the center of one group...
324
00:19:27,083 --> 00:19:29,919
huddled around a bunch of candles that they’d gathered together.
325
00:19:30,002 --> 00:19:33,130
And like a little child fascinated by fire...
326
00:19:33,214 --> 00:19:37,343
I saw that he had his hand right in the flame
and was holding it there.
327
00:19:37,426 --> 00:19:40,304
And as I approached his group, I wondered if I could do it.
328
00:19:40,388 --> 00:19:45,267
I put my left hand in the flame and I found I could hold it there for as long as I liked...
329
00:19:45,351 --> 00:19:47,770
and there was no burn and no pain.
330
00:19:47,853 --> 00:19:51,982
put when I tried to put my right hand in the flame, I couldn’t hold it there for a second.
331
00:19:52,066 --> 00:19:56,987
So Grotowski said, “If it burns, try to change some little thing in yourself.”
332
00:19:57,071 --> 00:20:00,574
And I tried to do that. Didn’t work.
333
00:20:00,658 --> 00:20:05,204
Then I remember a very, very beautiful procession with the sheet..._
334
00:20:05,287 --> 00:20:07,790
and there was somebody being carried below the sheet.
335
00:20:07,873 --> 00:20:10,960
You know, the sheet was like some great biblical canopy.
336
00:20:11,043 --> 00:20:15,214
And the entire group was weaving around the room and chanting.
337
00:20:16,590 --> 00:20:19,343
And then at one point, people were dancing...
338
00:20:19,427 --> 00:20:21,762
and I was dancing with a girl...
339
00:20:21,846 --> 00:20:24,390
and suddenly our hands began vibrating near each other-
340
00:20:24,473 --> 00:20:26,392
like this - vibrating, vibrating.
341
00:20:26,475 --> 00:20:29,937
And we went down to our knees, and suddenly I was sobbing in her arms...
342
00:20:30,020 --> 00:20:34,316
and she was sort of cradling me in her arms, and then she started to cry too.
343
00:20:34,400 --> 00:20:36,819
And then we - then we just hugged each other for a moment.
344
00:20:36,902 --> 00:20:40,197
And, uh, then we joined the dance again.
345
00:20:40,281 --> 00:20:43,784
And then at a certain point, hours later...
346
00:20:43,868 --> 00:20:46,829
we returned to the singing of the song of Saint Francis...
347
00:20:46,912 --> 00:20:49,290
and that was the end of the beehive.
348
00:20:50,666 --> 00:20:54,837
And then, again, when it was over, it was just like the theater after a performance.
349
00:20:54,920 --> 00:20:58,132
You know, people sort of put on their earrings and their wristwatches...
350
00:20:58,215 --> 00:21:00,176
and we went off to the railroad station...
351
00:21:00,259 --> 00:21:04,346
to drink a lot of beer and have a good dinner.
352
00:21:04,430 --> 00:21:07,224
Oh, and there was one girl, who wasn’t in our group...
353
00:21:07,308 --> 00:21:10,769
but who just wouldn’t leave, so we took her along with us.
354
00:21:10,853 --> 00:21:12,563
[ Chuckling ]
355
00:21:12,646 --> 00:21:14,607
Huh.
356
00:21:19,695 --> 00:21:23,240
God. Well, tell me some of the other things
you did with your group.
357
00:21:23,324 --> 00:21:27,036
Well - Oh, I remember once when we were in the city...
358
00:21:27,119 --> 00:21:30,581
we tried doing an improvisation - you know, the kind that I used to do in New York.
359
00:21:30,664 --> 00:21:33,083
Uh, everybody was supposed to be
on an airplane...
360
00:21:33,167 --> 00:21:35,961
and they’ve all learned from the pilot there’s something wrong with the motor.
361
00:21:36,045 --> 00:21:39,006
But what was unusual about this improvisation...
362
00:21:39,089 --> 00:21:42,760
was that two people who participated in it... fell in love.
363
00:21:42,843 --> 00:21:44,762
They’ve, in fact, married.
364
00:21:44,845 --> 00:21:47,556
And when we were -Yeah, out of fear...
365
00:21:47,640 --> 00:21:50,893
of being on this plane, they fell in love...
366
00:21:50,976 --> 00:21:53,062
thinking they were going to die at any moment.
367
00:21:53,145 --> 00:21:56,815
And when we went to the forest, these two disappeared...
368
00:21:56,899 --> 00:21:59,360
because they understood the - the experiment so well...
369
00:21:59,443 --> 00:22:03,197
that they realized that to go off together in the forest was much more important...
370
00:22:03,280 --> 00:22:06,742
than any kind of experiment the group could do as a whole.
371
00:22:06,826 --> 00:22:10,120
So, uh, about halfway through the week...
372
00:22:10,204 --> 00:22:12,414
we stumbled into a clearing in the forest...
373
00:22:12,498 --> 00:22:15,918
and the two of them were fast asleep in each other’s arms.
374
00:22:16,001 --> 00:22:18,754
It was around dawn, and we put flowers on them...
375
00:22:18,838 --> 00:22:21,966
to let them know we’d been there, and then we crept away.
376
00:22:22,049 --> 00:22:25,344
And then on the last day of our stay in the forest, these two showed up...
377
00:22:25,427 --> 00:22:28,305
and they shook me by my hands, and they thanked me very much...
378
00:22:28,389 --> 00:22:31,100
for the wonderful work they’d been able to do, you see.
379
00:22:31,183 --> 00:22:34,270
- [Laughs ]
- They understood what it was about.
380
00:22:34,353 --> 00:22:37,815
I mean, that, of course, poses the question of what was it about.
381
00:22:39,149 --> 00:22:42,611
But it has - has something to do with living.
382
00:22:45,322 --> 00:22:48,075
And then on the final day of our stay in the forest...
383
00:22:48,158 --> 00:22:50,703
the whole group did something so wonderful for me, Wally.
384
00:22:50,786 --> 00:22:53,038
They arranged a christening -a baptism - for me.
385
00:22:53,122 --> 00:22:55,457
And they filled the castle with flowers.
386
00:22:55,541 --> 00:22:57,960
And it was just a miracle of light...
387
00:22:58,043 --> 00:23:01,922
because they had literally set up hundreds of candles and torches.
388
00:23:02,006 --> 00:23:04,842
I mean, no church could have looked more beautiful.
389
00:23:04,925 --> 00:23:08,053
There was a simple ceremony, and one of them played the role of my godmother...
390
00:23:08,137 --> 00:23:10,139
and another played the role of my godfather.
391
00:23:10,222 --> 00:23:13,893
And I was given a new name. They called me Yendrush.
392
00:23:13,976 --> 00:23:17,396
And some of the people took it completely seriously...
393
00:23:17,479 --> 00:23:19,648
and some of them found it funny.
394
00:23:19,732 --> 00:23:22,985
But, uh, I really felt that I had a new name.
395
00:23:24,236 --> 00:23:27,990
And then we had an enormous feast,^ with blueberries picked from the field...
396
00:23:28,073 --> 00:23:30,701
and chocolate someone had gone a great distance to buy...
397
00:23:30,784 --> 00:23:32,828
and raspberry soup and rabbit stew.
398
00:23:32,911 --> 00:23:35,956
And we sang Polish songs and Greek songs...
399
00:23:36,040 --> 00:23:38,959
and everybody danced for the rest of the night.
400
00:23:39,043 --> 00:23:41,170
- Hmm.
- Oh, I have a picture.
401
00:23:43,756 --> 00:23:46,759
See, this was - Let’s see.
402
00:23:47,760 --> 00:23:50,679
Oh, yeah.
This was me in the forest. See?
403
00:23:50,763 --> 00:23:53,432
- God!
- That’s what I felt like.
404
00:23:54,433 --> 00:23:56,393
[ Chuckling ]
405
00:23:56,477 --> 00:23:58,771
- That’s the state I was in.
- God.
406
00:23:59,772 --> 00:24:03,651
Yeah. I remember George, uh, told me he’d seen you around that time.
407
00:24:03,734 --> 00:24:06,028
He said you looked like you’d come back from a war.
408
00:24:06,111 --> 00:24:09,531
Yeah, I remember meeting him. He, uh -He asked me a lot of friendly questions.
409
00:24:09,615 --> 00:24:11,867
I think I called you up, too that summer, didn’t I?
410
00:24:11,951 --> 00:24:13,869
Huh.
411
00:24:13,952 --> 00:24:16,956
think I was out of town.
412
00:24:17,039 --> 00:24:20,709
Yeah, well, most people I met thought there was something wrong with me.
413
00:24:20,793 --> 00:24:24,088
They didn’t say that, but I could tell that that was what they thought.
414
00:24:24,171 --> 00:24:26,298
But...
415
00:24:26,382 --> 00:24:31,095
you see, what I think I experienced... was...
416
00:24:31,178 --> 00:24:33,931
for the first time in my life...
417
00:24:34,014 --> 00:24:36,517
to know what it means to be truly alive.
418
00:24:36,600 --> 00:24:38,560
Now, that’s very frightening...
419
00:24:38,644 --> 00:24:41,146
because with that comes an immediate awareness of death...
420
00:24:41,230 --> 00:24:43,148
’cause they go hand in hand.
421
00:24:43,232 --> 00:24:46,694
You know, the kind of impulse that led to Walt Whitman, that led to Leaves of Grass.
422
00:24:46,777 --> 00:24:49,238
That feeling of being connected
to everything...
423
00:24:49,321 --> 00:24:51,657
means to also be connected to death.
424
00:24:51,740 --> 00:24:53,909
;And that’s pretty scary.
425
00:24:53,992 --> 00:24:58,539
But I really felt as if I were floating above the ground, not walking.
426
00:24:58,622 --> 00:25:01,250
You know, and I could do things like go out to the highway...
427
00:25:01,333 --> 00:25:05,254
and watch the lights go from red to green and think, “How wonderful.”
428
00:25:05,337 --> 00:25:08,632
- [ Wally Chuckles ]
- And then one day, in the early fall...
429
00:25:08,716 --> 00:25:11,218
I was out in the country, walking in a field...
430
00:25:11,301 --> 00:25:14,763
and I suddenly heard a voice say, ‘‘Little Prince.”
431
00:25:14,847 --> 00:25:17,641
Of course, The Little Prince was a book that I always thought of...
432
00:25:17,725 --> 00:25:19,643
as disgusting, childish treacle.
433
00:25:19,727 --> 00:25:22,980
But still, I thought, “Well, you know, if a voice comes to me in a field” -
434
00:25:23,063 --> 00:25:25,399
This was the first voice I had ever heard.
435
00:25:25,482 --> 00:25:27,443
Maybe I should go and read the book.
436
00:25:27,526 --> 00:25:29,862
Now, that same morning I’d got a letter...
437
00:25:29,945 --> 00:25:32,281
from a young woman who’d been in my group in Poland.
438
00:25:32,364 --> 00:25:34,616
And in her letter she’d written, “You have dominated me.”
439
00:25:34,700 --> 00:25:36,702
You know, she spoke very awkward English.
440
00:25:36,785 --> 00:25:39,788
So she’d gone to the dictionary, and she’d crossed out the word “dominated”...
441
00:25:39,872 --> 00:25:42,791
and she’d said,
“No. The correct word is ‘tamed.’”
442
00:25:42,875 --> 00:25:46,086
And then when I went to town and bought the book and started to read it...
443
00:25:46,170 --> 00:25:50,215
I saw that “taming” was the most important word in the whole book.
444
00:25:50,299 --> 00:25:54,178
By the end of the book, I was in tears, I was so moved by the story.
445
00:25:54,261 --> 00:25:56,889
And then I went and tried to write an answer to her letter...
446
00:25:56,972 --> 00:25:58,974
’cause she’d written me a very long letter.
447
00:25:59,057 --> 00:26:02,478
But I just couldn’t find the right words, so finally I took my hand...
448
00:26:02,561 --> 00:26:05,397
I put it on a piece of paper, I outlined it with a pen...
449
00:26:05,481 --> 00:26:08,317
and I wrote in the center something like, “Your heart is in my hand.”
450
00:26:08,400 --> 00:26:10,027
Something like that.
451
00:26:10,110 --> 00:26:12,154
Then I went over to my brother’s house to swim...
452
00:26:12,237 --> 00:26:14,656
’cause he lives nearby in the country
and he has a pool.
453
00:26:14,740 --> 00:26:16,742
And he wasn’t home.
I went into his library...
454
00:26:16,825 --> 00:26:19,870
and he had bought at an auction the collected issues of Minotaure.
455
00:26:19,995 --> 00:26:24,416
You know, the surrealist magazine? Oh, it’s a great, great surrealist magazine of the ’20s and ’30s.
456
00:26:24,500 --> 00:26:27,544
And I never-You know,
I consider myself a bit of a surrealist.
457
00:26:27,628 --> 00:26:30,214
I had never, ever seen a copy of Minotaure.
458
00:26:30,297 --> 00:26:32,591
And here they all were, bound, year after year.
459
00:26:32,674 --> 00:26:36,053
So, at random,
I picked one out, I opened it up...
460
00:26:36,136 --> 00:26:39,473
and there was a full-page reproduction
of the letter “A”...
461
00:26:39,556 --> 00:26:41,642
from Tenniel’s Alice In Wonderland.
462
00:26:41,725 --> 00:26:45,020
And I thought, that-Well, you know, it’s been a day of coincidences...
463
00:26:45,104 --> 00:26:47,856
but that’s not unusual that the surrealists would have been interested in Alice...
464
00:26:47,940 --> 00:26:49,942
and I did a play of Alice.
465
00:26:50,025 --> 00:26:54,279
So at random,
I opened to another page...
466
00:26:54,363 --> 00:26:57,866
and there were four handprints.
467
00:26:57,950 --> 00:27:00,869
One was Andre Breton, another was Andre Derain...
468
00:27:00,953 --> 00:27:03,539
the third was Andre -I’ve got it written down somewhere.
469
00:27:03,622 --> 00:27:07,543
It’s not Malraux. It’s, like, someone -Another of the surrealists.
470
00:27:07,626 --> 00:27:12,506
All A’s, and the fourth was Antoine de Saint-Exupery...
471
00:27:12,589 --> 00:27:14,633
who wrote The Little Prince.
472
00:27:14,716 --> 00:27:17,219
And they’d shown these handprints to some kind of expert...
473
00:27:17,302 --> 00:27:20,138
without saying whose hands they belonged to.
474
00:27:20,222 --> 00:27:24,059
And under Exupery’s, it said that he was an artist...
475
00:27:24,143 --> 00:27:26,436
with very powerful eyes...
476
00:27:26,520 --> 00:27:30,357
who was a tamer of wild animals.
477
00:27:30,440 --> 00:27:32,651
I thought,
“This is incredible, you know.”
478
00:27:32,734 --> 00:27:36,488
And I looked back to see when the issue came out.
479
00:27:36,572 --> 00:27:40,409
It came out on the newsstands May 12, 1934...
480
00:27:40,492 --> 00:27:44,746
and I was born during the day of May 11, 1934.
481
00:27:45,831 --> 00:27:51,003
So, well, that’s what started me on, uh, Saint-Exupery and The Little Prince.
482
00:27:58,677 --> 00:28:01,138
Now, of course, today -
483
00:28:01,221 --> 00:28:04,683
today I think there’s a very fascistic thing
under The Little Prince.
484
00:28:04,766 --> 00:28:07,019
You know, I -Well, no, I think there’s a kind of-
485
00:28:07,102 --> 00:28:12,524
[ Laughing ] I think a kind of S.S. totalitarian sentimentality in there somewhere.
486
00:28:12,608 --> 00:28:15,360
You know, there’s something, you know-
that-
487
00:28:15,444 --> 00:28:17,613
that love of, um -
488
00:28:17,696 --> 00:28:22,117
Well, that masculine love of a certain kind of oily muscle.
489
00:28:22,201 --> 00:28:25,454
You know what I mean?
I mean, I can’t quite put my finger on it.
490
00:28:25,537 --> 00:28:29,166
But I can just imagine some beautiful S.S. man...
491
00:28:29,249 --> 00:28:31,251
- loving The Little Prince.
- [ Wally Laughs ]
492
00:28:31,335 --> 00:28:33,962
Now, I don’t know why, but there’s something wrong with it. It stinks.
493
00:28:34,046 --> 00:28:36,298
[ High-pitched Laughing ]
494
00:28:39,885 --> 00:28:44,264
Well, didn’t George tell me that you were gonna do a play that was based on The Little Prince?
495
00:28:44,348 --> 00:28:47,559
Hmm. Well, what happened, Wally..
496
00:28:47,643 --> 00:28:50,228
was that fall I was in New York...
497
00:28:50,312 --> 00:28:53,774
and I met this young Japanese Buddhist priest named Kozan...
498
00:28:53,857 --> 00:28:56,360
and I thought he was Puck from the Midsummer Night’s Dream.
499
00:28:56,443 --> 00:28:58,695
You know, he had this beautiful, delicate smile.
500
00:28:58,779 --> 00:29:00,739
I thought he was the Little Prince.
501
00:29:00,822 --> 00:29:04,243
So, naturally, I decided to go off to the Sahara desert...
502
00:29:04,326 --> 00:29:07,829
to work on The Little Prince with two actors and this Japanese monk.
503
00:29:07,913 --> 00:29:09,831
You did?
504
00:29:09,915 --> 00:29:14,878
Well, I mean, I was still in a very peculiar state at that time, Wally.
505
00:29:14,962 --> 00:29:18,340
You know, I would - I would look in the rearview mirror of my car...
506
00:29:18,423 --> 00:29:21,260
and see little birds flying out of my mouth.
507
00:29:22,302 --> 00:29:26,598
And I remember always being exhausted in that period.
508
00:29:26,682 --> 00:29:30,769
I always felt weak. You know, I really didn’t know what was going on with me.
509
00:29:30,852 --> 00:29:34,773
I would just sit out there all alone in the country for days...
510
00:29:34,856 --> 00:29:38,026
and do nothing but write in my diary.
511
00:29:38,110 --> 00:29:40,946
- And I was always thinking about death.
- Huh.
512
00:29:41,029 --> 00:29:43,031
But you went to the Sahara.
513
00:29:43,115 --> 00:29:45,200
Oh, yes, we went off into the desert...
514
00:29:45,284 --> 00:29:47,411
and we rode through the desert
on camels.
515
00:29:47,494 --> 00:29:49,413
And we rode and we rode.
516
00:29:49,496 --> 00:29:51,915
And then at night we would walk out under that enormous sky...
517
00:29:51,999 --> 00:29:54,084
and look at the stars,
518
00:29:54,167 --> 00:29:57,713
I just kept thinking about the same things that I was always thinking about at home -
519
00:29:57,796 --> 00:29:59,881
particularly about Chiquita.
520
00:29:59,965 --> 00:30:03,343
In fact, I thought about just about nothing but my marriage.
521
00:30:05,303 --> 00:30:07,639
And then I remember one incredibly dark night...
522
00:30:07,723 --> 00:30:10,976
being at an oasis, and there were palm trees moving in the wind...
523
00:30:11,059 --> 00:30:14,771
and I could hear Kozan singing far away in that beautiful bass voice.
524
00:30:14,855 --> 00:30:17,566
And I tried to follow his voice along the sand.
525
00:30:17,649 --> 00:30:19,568
[ Laughing ]
526
00:30:19,651 --> 00:30:22,654
You see, I thought he had something to teach me, Wally.
527
00:30:24,239 --> 00:30:26,241
And sometimes I would meditate with him.
528
00:30:26,324 --> 00:30:29,327
Sometimes I’d go off and meditate by myself.
529
00:30:30,662 --> 00:30:33,582
You know,
I would see images of Chiquita.
530
00:30:33,665 --> 00:30:35,917
Once I actually saw her growing old...
531
00:30:36,001 --> 00:30:38,628
and her hair turning gray in front of my eyes.
532
00:30:38,712 --> 00:30:43,717
And I would just wail and yell my lungs out
out there on the dunes.
533
00:30:46,762 --> 00:30:50,682
Anyway, the desert was pretty horrible.
534
00:30:50,766 --> 00:30:52,684
It was pretty cold.
535
00:30:52,768 --> 00:30:56,229
We were searching for something, but we couldn’t tell if we were finding anything.
536
00:30:56,313 --> 00:30:58,357
You know that once Kozan and I -
537
00:30:58,440 --> 00:31:00,942
we were sitting on a dune, and we just ate sand.
538
00:31:01,026 --> 00:31:03,445
No, we weren’t trying to be funny. I started, then he started.
539
00:31:03,528 --> 00:31:07,324
We just ate sand and threw up. That’s how desperate we were.
540
00:31:07,449 --> 00:31:11,119
In other words, we didn’t know why we were there. We didn’t know what we were looking for.
541
00:31:11,203 --> 00:31:14,289
The entire thing seemed completely absurd, arid and empty.
542
00:31:14,373 --> 00:31:17,834
It was like, uh -like a last chance or something.
543
00:31:17,918 --> 00:31:20,295
Huh.
544
00:31:20,379 --> 00:31:22,631
So what happened then?
545
00:31:22,714 --> 00:31:25,509
Well, in those days...
546
00:31:25,592 --> 00:31:27,886
I went completely on impulse.
547
00:31:27,969 --> 00:31:31,139
So on impulse I brought Kozan back to stay with us in New York...
548
00:31:31,223 --> 00:31:34,768
after we got back from the Sahara, and he stayed for six months.
549
00:31:34,893 --> 00:31:38,814
- And he really sort of took over the whole family, in a way
- What do you mean?
550
00:31:38,897 --> 00:31:43,151
Well, there was certainly a center missing in the house at the time.
551
00:31:43,235 --> 00:31:45,737
There certainly wasn’t a father, ’cause I was always thinking...
552
00:31:45,821 --> 00:31:49,282
about going off to Tibet or doing God knows what.
553
00:31:49,366 --> 00:31:51,701
And so he taught the whole family
to meditate...
554
00:31:51,785 --> 00:31:55,997
and he told them all about Asia and the East and his monastery and everything.
555
00:31:56,081 --> 00:32:00,585
He really captivated everybody with an incredible bag of tricks.
556
00:32:00,669 --> 00:32:03,463
He had literally developed himself, Wally...
557
00:32:03,547 --> 00:32:08,301
so that he could push on his fingers and rise off out of his chair.
558
00:32:08,385 --> 00:32:10,345
I mean, he could literally go like this -
559
00:32:10,429 --> 00:32:12,681
You know, push on his fingers and go into like a headstand...
560
00:32:12,764 --> 00:32:14,891
and just hold himself there with two fingers.
561
00:32:14,975 --> 00:32:17,310
Or if Chiquita would suddenly get a little tension in her neck...
562
00:32:17,436 --> 00:32:20,689
well, he’d immediately have her down on the floor, he’d be walking up and down on her back...
563
00:32:20,772 --> 00:32:23,817
doing these unbelievable massages,
you know.
564
00:32:24,943 --> 00:32:26,945
And the children found him amazing.
565
00:32:27,028 --> 00:32:30,282
I mean, you know, we’d visit friends
who had children...
566
00:32:30,365 --> 00:32:32,451
and immediately he’d be playing with these children...
567
00:32:32,534 --> 00:32:34,536
in a way that, you know, we just can’t do.
568
00:32:34,619 --> 00:32:37,372
I mean, those children -just giggles, giggles, giggles...
569
00:32:37,455 --> 00:32:40,876
about what this Japanese monk was doing in these holy robes.
570
00:32:40,959 --> 00:32:43,920
I mean, he was an acrobat, a ventriloquist...
571
00:32:44,004 --> 00:32:46,548
a magician, everything.
572
00:32:46,631 --> 00:32:48,592
You know, the amazing thing was that...
573
00:32:48,675 --> 00:32:51,052
I don’t think he had any interest in children whatsoever.
574
00:32:51,136 --> 00:32:53,388
None at all.
I don’t think he liked them.
575
00:32:53,471 --> 00:32:55,557
I mean, you know, when he stayed with us...
576
00:32:55,640 --> 00:32:58,393
in the first week, really, the kids were just googly-eyed over him.
577
00:32:58,477 --> 00:33:01,396
But then a couple of weeks later, Chiquita and I could be out...
578
00:33:01,479 --> 00:33:04,441
and Marina could have flu or a temperature of 104...
579
00:33:04,524 --> 00:33:07,110
and he wouldn’t even go in and say hello to her.
580
00:33:07,194 --> 00:33:10,697
But he was taking over more and more.
581
00:33:10,780 --> 00:33:13,408
I mean, his own habits had completely changed.
582
00:33:13,492 --> 00:33:18,246
You know, he started wearing these elegant Gucci shoes under his white monk’s robes.
583
00:33:18,330 --> 00:33:20,373
He was eating huge amounts of food
584
00:33:20,457 --> 00:33:23,919
I mean, he ate twice as much as Nicolas ate, you know?
585
00:33:24,002 --> 00:33:26,546
This tiny little Buddhist when I first met him, you know...
586
00:33:26,630 --> 00:33:29,591
was eating a little bowl of milk -hot milk with rice -
587
00:33:29,674 --> 00:33:32,302
was now eating huge beef.
588
00:33:34,262 --> 00:33:36,932
It was just very strange.
589
00:33:37,057 --> 00:33:40,560
You know, and we had tried working together, but really our work consisted mostly...
590
00:33:40,644 --> 00:33:45,440
of my trying to do these incredibly painful prostrations that they do in the monastery.
591
00:33:45,524 --> 00:33:48,610
You know, so really we hadn’t been working very much.
592
00:33:48,693 --> 00:33:54,032
Anyway, we were out in the country, and we all went to Christmas mass together.
593
00:33:54,115 --> 00:33:56,368
You know, he was all dressed up in his Buddhist finery.
594
00:33:56,493 --> 00:34:00,455
And it was one of those - one of those awful, dreary Catholic churches on Long Island...
595
00:34:00,538 --> 00:34:04,543
where the priest talks about communism and birth control.
596
00:34:04,626 --> 00:34:08,588
And as I was sitting there in mass, I was wondering, “What in the world is going on?”
597
00:34:08,672 --> 00:34:10,632
I mean, here I am. I’m a grown man...
598
00:34:10,715 --> 00:34:13,343
and there’s this strange person living in the house, and I’m not working -
599
00:34:13,426 --> 00:34:16,972
You know, I was doing nothing but scribbling a little poetry in my diary.
600
00:34:17,055 --> 00:34:21,518
And I can’t get a job teaching anymore, and I don’t know what I want to do.
601
00:34:21,601 --> 00:34:27,148
When all of a sudden a huge creature appeared, looking at the congregation.
602
00:34:27,232 --> 00:34:31,653
It was about, I’d say, 6’8” -something like that, you know...
603
00:34:31,736 --> 00:34:34,698
and it was -it was half bull, half man...
604
00:34:34,781 --> 00:34:36,908
and its skin was blue.
605
00:34:36,992 --> 00:34:40,662
It had violets growing out of its eyelids and poppies growing out of its toenails.
606
00:34:40,745 --> 00:34:44,499
And it just stood there for the whole mass.
607
00:34:44,583 --> 00:34:47,002
I mean, I could not make that creature disappear.
608
00:34:47,085 --> 00:34:50,088
You know, I thought, “Oh, well. You know, I’m just seeing this ’cause I’m bored.”
609
00:34:50,171 --> 00:34:55,343
You know, close my -I could not make that creature go away.
610
00:34:55,427 --> 00:34:59,347
Okay. Now, I didn’t talk with people about it, because they’d think I was weird...
611
00:34:59,431 --> 00:35:04,936
but I felt that this creature was somehow coming to comfort me...
612
00:35:05,020 --> 00:35:08,315
that somehow he was appearing to say...
613
00:35:08,398 --> 00:35:12,986
“Well, you may feel low and you might not be able to create a play right now...
614
00:35:13,069 --> 00:35:17,032
“but look at what can come to you on Christmas Eve. Hang on, old friend.
615
00:35:17,115 --> 00:35:19,993
“I may seem weird to you, but on these weird voyages...
616
00:35:20,076 --> 00:35:22,037
"weird creatures appear.
617
00:35:22,120 --> 00:35:26,041
It’s part of the journey. You’re okay. Hang in there.”
618
00:35:31,379 --> 00:35:33,715
By the way, uh, did you ever see...
619
00:35:33,798 --> 00:35:37,469
that play, uh, The Violets are Blue?
620
00:35:39,304 --> 00:35:41,222
No.
621
00:35:41,306 --> 00:35:44,517
Oh, when you mentioned the violets, it-it reminded me of that.
622
00:35:44,601 --> 00:35:47,562
It-It was about, um, people...
623
00:35:47,646 --> 00:35:50,732
being, uh, strangled on a - on a submarine.
624
00:35:50,815 --> 00:35:53,068
Hmm.
625
00:35:57,030 --> 00:36:01,993
[ Sighs ] Well, so that was –
[ Chuckles ] that was Christmas.
626
00:36:02,077 --> 00:36:04,746
What happened after that?
627
00:36:04,829 --> 00:36:07,791
- Do you really want to hear about all this?
- Yeah.
628
00:36:07,874 --> 00:36:11,544
Well, around that time...
629
00:36:14,673 --> 00:36:18,468
I was beginning to think about going to India. And Kozan suddenly left one day.
630
00:36:18,551 --> 00:36:21,930
I was beginning to get into a lot of very strange ideas around that time.
631
00:36:22,013 --> 00:36:26,101
Now, for example, I’d developed this -Well, I got this idea which I -
632
00:36:26,184 --> 00:36:29,354
Now, it was very appealing to me at the time, you know -
633
00:36:29,437 --> 00:36:32,774
which was that I would have a flag,
a large flag...
634
00:36:32,857 --> 00:36:35,193
and that wherever I worked, this flag would fly.
635
00:36:35,318 --> 00:36:39,614
Or if we were outside, say, with a group, that the flag could be the thing we lay on at night...
636
00:36:39,697 --> 00:36:43,451
and that somehow, between working on this flag and lying on this flag...
637
00:36:43,535 --> 00:36:45,453
this flag flying over us...
638
00:36:45,537 --> 00:36:49,499
that the flag would pick up vibrations of a kind...
639
00:36:49,582 --> 00:36:52,335
that would still be in the flag when I brought it home.
640
00:36:52,419 --> 00:36:55,547
So I went down to meet this flag maker
that I’d heard about.
641
00:36:55,630 --> 00:36:57,674
And you know, there was this very straightforward-looking guy.
642
00:36:57,757 --> 00:37:02,554
You know, very sweet, really healthy-looking and everything. Nice big, blond.
643
00:37:02,637 --> 00:37:05,640
And he had a beautiful, clean loft down in the village with lovely, happy flags.
644
00:37:05,723 --> 00:37:09,185
And I was all into The Little Prince, and I talked to him about The Little Prince...
645
00:37:09,269 --> 00:37:13,148
these adventures and everything, how I needed the flag and what the flag should be.
646
00:37:13,231 --> 00:37:15,567
He seemed to really connect with it.
647
00:37:15,650 --> 00:37:18,153
So, two weeks later, I came back.
648
00:37:18,236 --> 00:37:21,948
He showed me a flag that I thought was very odd, you know...
649
00:37:22,031 --> 00:37:24,033
’cause I had, you know-well, you know...
650
00:37:24,117 --> 00:37:27,495
I had expected something gentle and lyrical.
651
00:37:27,579 --> 00:37:29,956
There was something about this that was so powerful...
652
00:37:30,039 --> 00:37:32,000
it was almost overwhelming.
653
00:37:32,083 --> 00:37:34,085
And it did include the Tibetan swastika.
654
00:37:35,587 --> 00:37:37,839
He put a swastika in your flag?
655
00:37:37,922 --> 00:37:40,633
No, it was the Tibetan swastika, not the Nazi swastika.
656
00:37:40,717 --> 00:37:43,094
It’s one of the most ancient Tibetan symbols.
657
00:37:43,178 --> 00:37:46,181
And it was just strange, you know?
658
00:37:46,264 --> 00:37:49,893
But I brought it home, because my idea with this flag...
659
00:37:49,976 --> 00:37:52,437
was that before I left -you know, before I left for India...
660
00:37:52,562 --> 00:37:56,357
I wanted several people who were close to me to have this flag in the room for the night...
661
00:37:56,483 --> 00:37:59,903
to sleep with it, you know, and then in the morning to sew something into the flag.
662
00:38:00,028 --> 00:38:04,073
So I took the flag into Marina, and I said, “Hey, look at this. What do you think of this?”
663
00:38:04,157 --> 00:38:06,910
And she said, “What is that? That’s awful.”
I said, “It’s a flag.”
664
00:38:06,993 --> 00:38:08,661
And she said, “I don’t like it*
665
00:38:08,745 --> 00:38:11,998
I said, “I kind of thought you might like to spend the night with it, you know.”
666
00:38:12,081 --> 00:38:15,043
But she really thought the flag was awful.
667
00:38:15,126 --> 00:38:19,464
So then Chiquita threw this party for me before I left for India...
668
00:38:19,547 --> 00:38:21,633
and the apartment was filled with guests.
669
00:38:21,716 --> 00:38:24,803
And at one point Chiquita said, “The flag, the flag. Where’s the flag?”
670
00:38:24,886 --> 00:38:28,890
And I said, “Oh, yeah. The flag.”
And I go and get the flag, and I open it up.
671
00:38:28,973 --> 00:38:32,852
Chiquita goes absolutely white and runs out of the room and vomits.
672
00:38:32,936 --> 00:38:36,231
So the party just comes to a halt
and breaks up.
673
00:38:36,314 --> 00:38:39,025
And then the next day I gave it to this young woman...
674
00:38:39,108 --> 00:38:41,736
who’d been in my group in Poland, who was now in New York.
675
00:38:41,819 --> 00:38:45,323
I didn’t tell her anything about any of this.
676
00:38:45,406 --> 00:38:47,826
At 5:00 in the morning, she called me up and she said...
677
00:38:47,909 --> 00:38:50,411
“I gotta come and see you right away.”
I thought, “Oh, God.”
678
00:38:50,495 --> 00:38:54,249
She came up, and she said, “I saw things -I saw things around this flag.
679
00:38:54,332 --> 00:38:57,335
“Now, I know you’re stubborn, and I know you want to take this thing with you...
680
00:38:57,418 --> 00:39:00,421
“but if you’d follow my advice, you’d put it in a hole in the ground...
681
00:39:00,505 --> 00:39:03,383
and burn it and cover it with earth, ’cause the devil’s in it.”
682
00:39:03,466 --> 00:39:05,385
I never took the flag with me.
683
00:39:05,468 --> 00:39:09,931
In fact, I gave it to her, and, uh, she - she had a ceremony with it...
684
00:39:10,014 --> 00:39:12,475
six months later, in France, with some friends...
685
00:39:12,559 --> 00:39:14,769
in which, uh, they did burn it.
686
00:39:14,852 --> 00:39:18,106
[ Laughing ] God.
687
00:39:18,189 --> 00:39:21,609
That’s really, really amazing.
688
00:39:23,278 --> 00:39:25,822
So, did you ever go to India?
689
00:39:25,905 --> 00:39:29,284
Oh, yes, I - I went to India in the spring, Wally...
690
00:39:29,367 --> 00:39:31,828
and I came back home feeling all wrong.
691
00:39:31,911 --> 00:39:36,374
I mean, you know, I’d been to India, and I’d just felt like a tourist.
692
00:39:36,457 --> 00:39:39,294
I’d found nothing.
693
00:39:39,377 --> 00:39:44,048
So I was - I was spending, uh, the summer on Long Island with my family...
694
00:39:44,132 --> 00:39:47,135
and I heard about this community in Scotland called Findhorn...
695
00:39:47,218 --> 00:39:50,763
where people sang and talked and meditated with plants.
696
00:39:50,889 --> 00:39:56,394
And it was founded by several rather middle-class English and Scottish eccentrics.
697
00:39:56,477 --> 00:39:58,813
Some of them intellectuals, and some of them not.
698
00:39:58,897 --> 00:40:01,316
And I’d heard that they’d grown things in soil...
699
00:40:01,399 --> 00:40:04,611
that supposedly nothing can grow in, ’cause it’s almost beach soil...
700
00:40:04,694 --> 00:40:08,865
and that they’d built - not built - they’d grown the largest cauliflowers in the world...
701
00:40:08,948 --> 00:40:10,908
and there are sort of cabbages.
702
00:40:10,992 --> 00:40:14,829
And they’ve grown trees that can’t grow in the British Isles.
703
00:40:14,913 --> 00:40:17,665
So I went there.
I mean, it is an amazing place, Wally.
704
00:40:17,749 --> 00:40:21,919
I mean, if there are insects bothering the plants...
705
00:40:22,003 --> 00:40:25,506
they will talk with the insects and, you know, make an agreement...
706
00:40:25,590 --> 00:40:29,719
by which they’ll set aside a special patch of vegetables just for the insects...
707
00:40:29,802 --> 00:40:31,930
and then the insects will leave the main part alone.
708
00:40:32,013 --> 00:40:34,015
- Huh.
- Things like that.
709
00:40:34,098 --> 00:40:36,601
And everything they do they do beautifully.
710
00:40:36,684 --> 00:40:39,479
I mean the buildings just shine.
711
00:40:39,562 --> 00:40:43,524
And I mean, for instance, the icebox, the stove, the car - they all have names.
712
00:40:43,608 --> 00:40:45,860
And since you wouldn’t treat Helen,
the icebox...
713
00:40:45,943 --> 00:40:48,279
with any less respect than you would Margaret, your wife...
714
00:40:48,404 --> 00:40:52,283
you know, you make sure that Helen is as clean as Margaret, or treated with equal respect.
715
00:40:52,367 --> 00:40:54,535
[ Wally Giggles ]
716
00:40:54,619 --> 00:40:59,123
And when I was there, Wally,
I remember being in the woods...
717
00:40:59,207 --> 00:41:03,878
and I would look at a leaf, and I would actually see that thing...
718
00:41:03,962 --> 00:41:07,173
that is alive in that leaf.
719
00:41:07,256 --> 00:41:10,259
And then I remember just running through the woods as fast as I could...
720
00:41:10,343 --> 00:41:12,845
with this incredible laugh coming out of me...
721
00:41:12,929 --> 00:41:18,101
and really being in that state, you know, where laughter and tears seem to merge.
722
00:41:18,184 --> 00:41:20,186
I mean, it absolutely blasted me open.
723
00:41:20,269 --> 00:41:23,356
When I came out of Findhorn, I was hallucinating nonstop.
724
00:41:23,439 --> 00:41:26,067
I was seeing clouds as creatures.
725
00:41:26,150 --> 00:41:28,778
The people on the airplane all had animals’ faces.
726
00:41:28,861 --> 00:41:32,907
I mean, I was on a trip. It was like being in a William Blake world suddenly.
727
00:41:32,990 --> 00:41:34,951
Things were exploding.
728
00:41:35,034 --> 00:41:39,372
So immediately I went to Belgrade, ’cause I wanted to talk to Grotowski.
729
00:41:39,455 --> 00:41:42,709
Grotowski and I got together at midnight in my hotel room...
730
00:41:42,792 --> 00:41:46,254
and we drank instant coffee out of the top of my shaving cream...
731
00:41:46,337 --> 00:41:50,425
and we talked from midnight until 11:00 the next morning.
732
00:41:50,508 --> 00:41:52,969
- God. What did he say?
- Nothing!
733
00:41:53,052 --> 00:41:55,096
I talked. He didn’t say a word.
734
00:41:55,179 --> 00:41:59,809
And – And then I guess really...
735
00:41:59,892 --> 00:42:03,938
the last big experience of this kind took place that fall.
736
00:42:04,022 --> 00:42:05,982
It was out at Montauk on Long Island...
737
00:42:06,065 --> 00:42:09,694
and there were only about nine of us involved, mostly men.
738
00:42:09,777 --> 00:42:12,780
And we borrowed Dick Avedon’s property
out at Montauk.
739
00:42:12,864 --> 00:42:16,033
And the country out there is like Heathcliff country.
740
00:42:16,117 --> 00:42:18,703
It’s absolutely wild.
741
00:42:18,786 --> 00:42:21,205
What we wanted to do was we wanted to take, you know -
742
00:42:21,289 --> 00:42:23,624
We wanted to take All Souls’ Eve,
Halloween...
743
00:42:23,708 --> 00:42:26,044
and use it as a point of departure
for something.
744
00:42:26,127 --> 00:42:29,630
So each one of us prepared some sort of event for the others...
745
00:42:29,714 --> 00:42:32,508
somehow in the spirit of All Souls’ Eve.
746
00:42:32,592 --> 00:42:35,511
But the biggest event was three of the people...
747
00:42:35,595 --> 00:42:38,014
kept disappearing in the middle of the night each night...
748
00:42:38,097 --> 00:42:40,475
and we knew they were preparing something big...
749
00:42:40,558 --> 00:42:42,560
but we didn’t know what.
750
00:42:42,643 --> 00:42:46,856
And midnight on Halloween, under a dark moon, above these cliffs...
751
00:42:46,939 --> 00:42:50,735
we were all told to gather at the topmost cliff and that we would be taken somewhere.
752
00:42:50,818 --> 00:42:55,156
And we did.
And we waited, and it was very, very cold.
753
00:42:55,239 --> 00:42:58,951
And then the three of them - Helen, Bill and Fred - showed up wearing white.
754
00:42:59,035 --> 00:43:03,080
You know, something they’d made out of sheets - looked a little spooky, not funny.
755
00:43:03,206 --> 00:43:07,877
And they took us into the basement of this house that had burned down on the property.
756
00:43:08,002 --> 00:43:12,089
And in this ruined basement, they had set up a table with benches they’d made.
757
00:43:12,173 --> 00:43:17,303
And on this table they had laid out paper, pencils, wine and glasses.
758
00:43:17,386 --> 00:43:22,683
And we were all asked to sit at the table and to make out our last will and testament.
759
00:43:22,767 --> 00:43:26,312
You know, to think about and write down whatever our last words were to the world...
760
00:43:26,395 --> 00:43:28,689
or to somebody we were very close to.
761
00:43:28,773 --> 00:43:31,442
And that’s quite a task.
762
00:43:31,526 --> 00:43:35,029
I must have been there for about an hour and a half or so, maybe two.
763
00:43:35,112 --> 00:43:38,533
And then one at a time they would ask one of us to come with them...
764
00:43:38,616 --> 00:43:40,618
and I was one of the last.
765
00:43:40,701 --> 00:43:43,120
And they came for me, and they put a blindfold on me...
766
00:43:43,204 --> 00:43:45,414
and they ran me through these fields -
two people.
767
00:43:45,498 --> 00:43:49,627
And they’d found a kind of potting shed -you know, a kind of shed, on the grounds...
768
00:43:49,710 --> 00:43:53,214
a little tiny room that had once had tools in it.
769
00:43:53,297 --> 00:43:56,342
And they took me down the steps, into this basement...
770
00:43:56,425 --> 00:44:01,305
and the room was just filled with harsh white light.
771
00:44:01,389 --> 00:44:04,934
Then they told me to get undressed and give them all my valuables.
772
00:44:05,017 --> 00:44:07,436
Then they put me on a table, and they sponged me down.
773
00:44:07,520 --> 00:44:12,024
Well, you know, I just started flashing on-on-on death camps and secret police.
774
00:44:12,150 --> 00:44:15,945
I don’t know what happened to the other people, but I just started to cry uncontrollably.
775
00:44:16,028 --> 00:44:20,575
Uh, then-then they got me to my feet and they took photographs of me, naked.
776
00:44:20,658 --> 00:44:23,452
And then naked, again blindfolded, I was run through these forests...
777
00:44:23,578 --> 00:44:26,789
and we came to a kind of tent made of sheets,
with sheets on the ground.
778
00:44:26,873 --> 00:44:28,916
And there were all these naked bodies...
779
00:44:29,000 --> 00:44:32,503
huddling together for warmth against the cold.
780
00:44:32,587 --> 00:44:34,755
Must have been left there for about an hour.
781
00:44:34,839 --> 00:44:37,967
And then again, one by one, one at a time, we were led out.
782
00:44:38,050 --> 00:44:40,052
The blindfold was put on...
783
00:44:40,136 --> 00:44:43,806
and I felt myself being lowered onto something like a stretcher.
784
00:44:43,890 --> 00:44:48,811
And the stretcher was carried a long way, very slowly, through these forests...
785
00:44:48,895 --> 00:44:54,692
and then I felt myself being lowered into the ground.
786
00:44:54,775 --> 00:44:58,487
They had, in fact, dug six graves..
787
00:44:58,571 --> 00:45:01,240
eight feet deep.
788
00:45:01,324 --> 00:45:05,661
And then I felt these pieces of wood
being put on me.
789
00:45:05,745 --> 00:45:09,123
And I cannot tell you, Wally, what I was going through.
790
00:45:09,206 --> 00:45:12,543
And then the stretcher was lowered
into the grave...
791
00:45:12,627 --> 00:45:14,629
and then this wood was put on me...
792
00:45:14,712 --> 00:45:17,215
and then my valuables were put on me,
in my hands.
793
00:45:17,298 --> 00:45:20,092
And they’d taken, you know, a kind of sheet or canvas...
794
00:45:20,176 --> 00:45:22,678
and they’d stretched about this much
above my head...
795
00:45:22,762 --> 00:45:25,556
and then they shoveled dirt into the grave...
796
00:45:26,891 --> 00:45:31,520
so that I really had the feeling of being buried alive.
797
00:45:33,606 --> 00:45:36,484
And after being in the grave for about half an hour -
798
00:45:36,567 --> 00:45:39,820
I mean, I didn’t know how long I’d be in there -
799
00:45:39,904 --> 00:45:42,490
I was resurrected, lifted out of the grave...
800
00:45:42,573 --> 00:45:44,951
blindfold taken off, and run through these fields.
801
00:45:45,034 --> 00:45:49,497
And we came to a great circle of fire, with music and hot wine...
802
00:45:49,580 --> 00:45:51,666
and everyone danced until dawn.
803
00:45:51,749 --> 00:45:55,086
[ Chuckling ] And then at dawn...
804
00:45:55,169 --> 00:45:58,172
to the best of our ability, we filled up the graves...
805
00:45:58,255 --> 00:46:00,925
and went back to New York.
806
00:46:04,011 --> 00:46:07,723
And that was really the last big event. I mean, that was the end.
807
00:46:07,807 --> 00:46:09,809
I mean, you know, began Jo realize...
808
00:46:09,892 --> 00:46:12,561
I just didn’t want to do these things anymore, you know?
809
00:46:12,645 --> 00:46:17,108
I felt sort of becalmed, you know, like that chapter in Moby Dick...
810
00:46:17,191 --> 00:46:20,319
where the win dagoes out of the sails.
811
00:46:20,403 --> 00:46:23,155
And then last winter, without, uh, thinking about it very much...
812
00:46:23,239 --> 00:46:27,535
I went to see this agent I know to tell him I was interested in directing plays again.
813
00:46:27,618 --> 00:46:30,037
Actually, he seemed a little surprised...
814
00:46:30,121 --> 00:46:33,624
to see that Rip van Winkle was still alive.
815
00:46:39,297 --> 00:46:41,215
Mmm.
816
00:46:41,298 --> 00:46:43,300
God.
817
00:46:43,384 --> 00:46:45,261
I didn’t know they were so small.
818
00:46:45,344 --> 00:46:48,055
[Andre Chuckles]
819
00:46:48,139 --> 00:46:50,266
Well, you know, frankly..
820
00:46:50,349 --> 00:46:53,185
I’m sort of repelled by the whole story, if you really want to know.
821
00:46:53,269 --> 00:46:55,688
- What?
- Ah, you know -
822
00:46:55,771 --> 00:46:57,732
Who did I think I was. you know?
823
00:46:57,815 --> 00:47:02,486
I mean, that’s the story of some kind of spoiled princess, you know.
824
00:47:02,570 --> 00:47:04,864
Who did I think I was, the Shah of Iran?
825
00:47:04,947 --> 00:47:09,744
You know, I really wonder if people such as myself are really not Albert Speer, Wally.
826
00:47:09,827 --> 00:47:13,998
- You know, Hitler’s architect, Albert Speer?
- What?
827
00:47:14,123 --> 00:47:17,752
No, I’ve been thinking a lot about him recently because, uh, I think I am Speer.
828
00:47:17,835 --> 00:47:20,921
And I think it’s time that I was caught and tried the way he was.
829
00:47:21,005 --> 00:47:22,590
What are you talking about?
830
00:47:22,715 --> 00:47:26,594
Well, you know, he was a very cultivated man, an architect, an artist, you know...
831
00:47:26,677 --> 00:47:30,056
so he thought the ordinary rules of life didn’t apply to him either.
832
00:47:32,725 --> 00:47:36,562
I mean, I really feel that everything I’ve done...
833
00:47:36,645 --> 00:47:39,190
is horrific, just horrific.
834
00:47:39,273 --> 00:47:42,234
My God. But why?
835
00:47:42,318 --> 00:47:46,906
You see - You see, I’ve seen a lot of death in the last few years, Wally...
836
00:47:46,989 --> 00:47:49,283
and there’s one thing that’s for sure about death -
837
00:47:49,366 --> 00:47:51,827
You do it alone, you see.
That seems quite certain, you see.
838
00:47:51,911 --> 00:47:55,081
That I’ve seen. That the people around your bed mean nothing.
839
00:47:55,164 --> 00:47:58,125
Your reviews mean nothing. Whatever it is, you do it alone.
840
00:47:58,250 --> 00:48:02,296
And so the question is, when I get on my deathbed, what kind of a person am I gonna be?
841
00:48:02,379 --> 00:48:05,257
And I’m just very dubious about the kind of person who would have lived his life...
842
00:48:05,341 --> 00:48:07,259
those last few years the way I did.
843
00:48:07,343 --> 00:48:09,970
Why should you feel that way?
844
00:48:10,054 --> 00:48:14,517
You see, I’ve had a very rough time in the last few months, Wally.
845
00:48:14,600 --> 00:48:18,521
Three different people in my family were in the hospital at the same time.
846
00:48:18,604 --> 00:48:20,523
Then my mother died.
847
00:48:20,648 --> 00:48:23,651
Then Marina had something wrong with her back, and we were terribly worried about her.
848
00:48:23,734 --> 00:48:26,904
You know, so - so, I mean, I’m feeling very raw right now.
849
00:48:26,987 --> 00:48:30,157
I mean, uh - I mean, I can’t sleep, my nerves are shot.
850
00:48:30,241 --> 00:48:32,201
I mean, Pm affected by everything.
851
00:48:32,284 --> 00:48:36,413
You know, la-last week I had this really nice director from Norway over for dinner...
852
00:48:36,497 --> 00:48:38,707
and he’s someone I’ve known for years and years...
853
00:48:38,791 --> 00:48:41,085
and he’s somebody that I think I’m quite fond of.
854
00:48:41,168 --> 00:48:44,338
And I was sitting there just thinking that he was a pompous defensive„.
855
00:48:44,422 --> 00:48:46,841
conservative stuffed shirt who was only interested in the theater.
856
00:48:46,924 --> 00:48:50,386
He was talking and talking. His mother had been a famous Norwegian comedienne.
857
00:48:50,511 --> 00:48:54,849
I realized he had said “I remember my mother” at least 400 times during the evening.
858
00:48:54,932 --> 00:48:58,102
And he was telling story after story
about his mother
859
00:48:58,185 --> 00:49:01,063
You know, I’d heard these stories 20 times in the past.
860
00:49:01,147 --> 00:49:03,858
He was drinking this whole bottle of bourbon very quietly.
861
00:49:03,941 --> 00:49:06,026
His laugh was so horrible.
862
00:49:06,110 --> 00:49:09,738
You know, I could hear his laugh - the pain in that laugh, the hollowness.
863
00:49:09,822 --> 00:49:12,241
You know, what being that woman’s son
had done to him.
864
00:49:12,324 --> 00:49:16,036
You know, so at a certain point I just had to ask him to leave - nicely, you know.
865
00:49:16,120 --> 00:49:19,582
I told him I had to get up early the next morning, ’cause it was so horrible.
866
00:49:19,665 --> 00:49:22,084
It was just as if he had died in my living room.
867
00:49:22,168 --> 00:49:26,255
You know, then I went into the bathroom and cried ’cause I felt I’d lost a friend.
868
00:49:26,338 --> 00:49:28,507
And then after he’d gone,
I turned the television on...
869
00:49:28,591 --> 00:49:30,968
and there was this guy who had just won the something-something.
870
00:49:31,093 --> 00:49:34,555
Some sports event - some kind of a great big check and some kind of huge silver bottle.
871
00:49:34,638 --> 00:49:37,057
And he, you know - he couldn’t stuff the check in the bottle...
872
00:49:37,141 --> 00:49:40,352
and he put the bottle in front of his nose and pretended it was his face.
873
00:49:40,436 --> 00:49:42,688
He wasn’t really listening to the guy who was interviewing him...
874
00:49:42,813 --> 00:49:46,275
but he was smiling malevolently at his friends, and I looked at that guy and I thought...
875
00:49:46,358 --> 00:49:50,404
“What a horrible, empty, manipulative rat.”
876
00:49:50,488 --> 00:49:54,408
Then I thought, “That guy is me.
[ Laughing ]
877
00:49:54,492 --> 00:49:57,661
Then last night actually, you know, it was our 20th wedding anniversary...
878
00:49:57,745 --> 00:49:59,955
and I took Chiquita to see this show about Billie Holiday.
879
00:50:00,039 --> 00:50:03,584
I looked at these show business people who know nothing about Billie Holiday, nothing.
880
00:50:03,667 --> 00:50:07,296
You see, they were really kind of, in a way, intellectual creeps.
881
00:50:07,421 --> 00:50:11,258
And I suddenly had this feeling.
I mean, you know, I was just sitting there, crying through most of the show.
882
00:50:11,342 --> 00:50:14,178
And I suddenly had this feeling I was just as creepy as they were...
883
00:50:14,261 --> 00:50:16,222
and that my whole life had been a sham...
884
00:50:16,305 --> 00:50:19,141
and I didn’t have the guts to be Billie Holiday either.
885
00:50:19,225 --> 00:50:23,103
I mean, I really feel that I’m just washed up, wiped out.
886
00:50:23,187 --> 00:50:25,898
I feel I’ve just squandered my life.
887
00:50:29,360 --> 00:50:33,280
Andre, now, how can you say something like that?
888
00:50:33,364 --> 00:50:35,324
I mean -
889
00:50:42,957 --> 00:50:48,629
Well, you know, I may be in a very emotional state right now, Wally...
890
00:50:48,712 --> 00:50:51,799
but since I’ve come back home I’ve just been finding the world we’re living in...
891
00:50:51,882 --> 00:50:54,301
more and more upsetting.
892
00:50:54,385 --> 00:50:57,304
I mean, last week I went down to the Public Theater one afternoon.
893
00:50:57,388 --> 00:50:59,598
You know, when I walked in, I said hello to everybody...
894
00:50:59,723 --> 00:51:02,601
’cause I know them all, and they all know me,
they’re always very friendly.
895
00:51:02,685 --> 00:51:06,522
You know that seven or eight people told me how wonderful I looked?
896
00:51:06,605 --> 00:51:10,150
And then one person - one - a woman who runs the casting office, said...
897
00:51:10,234 --> 00:51:12,236
“Gee, you look horrible. Is something wrong?”
898
00:51:12,319 --> 00:51:15,322
Now, she - You know, we started talking. Of course, I started telling her things.
899
00:51:15,406 --> 00:51:19,410
And she suddenly burst into tears because an aunt of hers who’s 80...
900
00:51:19,493 --> 00:51:23,706
whom she’s very fond of, went into the hospital for a cataract, which was solved.
901
00:51:23,789 --> 00:51:27,334
I But the nurse was so sloppy, she didn't put the bed rails up...
902
00:51:27,418 --> 00:51:30,504
and so the aunt fell out of bed and is now a complete cripple.
903
00:51:30,588 --> 00:51:33,007
So you know, we were talking about hospitals.
904
00:51:33,090 --> 00:51:36,343
Now, you know, this woman, because of who she is -
905
00:51:36,427 --> 00:51:38,804
You know, ’cause this had happened to her very, very recently.
906
00:51:38,887 --> 00:51:42,349
- She could see me with complete clarity.
- Uh-huh.
907
00:51:42,433 --> 00:51:44,518
She didn’t know anything about what I’d been going through.
908
00:51:44,602 --> 00:51:47,187
But the other people, what they saw was this tan, or this shirt...
909
00:51:47,271 --> 00:51:49,231
or the fact that the shirt goes well with the tan.
910
00:51:49,315 --> 00:51:51,191
So they said, “Gee, you look wonderful.”
911
00:51:51,275 --> 00:51:54,611
Now, they’re living in an insane dreamworld.
912
00:51:54,695 --> 00:51:57,948
They’re not looking.
That seems very strange to me.
913
00:51:58,032 --> 00:52:01,285
Right, because they just didn’t see anything, somehow...
914
00:52:01,368 --> 00:52:04,747
except, uh, the few little things that they wanted to see.
915
00:52:07,791 --> 00:52:12,379
Yeah, you know, it’s like what happened just before my mother died.
916
00:52:12,463 --> 00:52:14,882
You know, we’d gone to the hospital
to see my mother...
917
00:52:14,965 --> 00:52:17,384
and I went in to see her...
918
00:52:17,468 --> 00:52:22,014
and I saw this woman who looked as bad as any survivor of Auschwitz or Dachau.
919
00:52:22,097 --> 00:52:25,809
And I was out in the hall sort of comforting my father...
920
00:52:25,893 --> 00:52:29,980
when a doctor who was a specialist in a problem she had with her arm...
921
00:52:30,064 --> 00:52:32,900
went into her room and came out just beaming.
922
00:52:32,983 --> 00:52:36,737
And he said, “Boy, don’t we have a lot of reason to feel great?
923
00:52:36,820 --> 00:52:40,407
Isn’t it wonderful how she’s coming along?”
924
00:52:40,491 --> 00:52:45,412
Now, all he saw was the arm. That’s all he saw.
925
00:52:45,496 --> 00:52:49,958
Now, here’s another person who’s existing in a dream.
926
00:52:50,042 --> 00:52:52,503
Who, on top of that, is a kind of butcher...
927
00:52:52,586 --> 00:52:54,838
who’s committing a kind of familial murder...
928
00:52:54,922 --> 00:52:58,133
because when he comes out of that room,
he psychically kills us...
929
00:52:58,217 --> 00:53:00,260
by taking us into a dream world...
930
00:53:00,344 --> 00:53:03,722
where we become confused and frightened...
931
00:53:03,847 --> 00:53:07,142
’cause the moment before, we saw somebody who already looked dead...
932
00:53:07,226 --> 00:53:11,772
and now here comes a specialist who tells us they’re in wonderful shape.
933
00:53:11,855 --> 00:53:14,566
I mean, they were literally driving my father crazy.
934
00:53:14,691 --> 00:53:17,778
I mean, you know, here’s an 82-year-old man
who’s very emotional...
935
00:53:17,861 --> 00:53:20,906
and you know, and if you go in one moment, and you see the person’s dying...
936
00:53:20,989 --> 00:53:23,992
and you don’t want them to die, and then a doctor comes out five minutes later...
937
00:53:24,076 --> 00:53:26,078
and tells you they’re in wonderful shape -
938
00:53:26,161 --> 00:53:28,789
I mean, you know, you can go crazy]
939
00:53:28,872 --> 00:53:32,626
- Yeah. I know what you mean.
- I mean, the doctor didn’t see my mother.
940
00:53:32,709 --> 00:53:35,254
The people at the Public Theater
didn't see me.
941
00:53:35,337 --> 00:53:38,340
I mean, we’re just walking around in some kind of fog.
942
00:53:38,424 --> 00:53:42,553
I think we’re all in a trance. We’re walking around like zombies.
943
00:53:42,636 --> 00:53:46,306
I don’t - I don’t think we’re even aware of ourselves or our own reaction to things.
944
00:53:46,390 --> 00:53:49,226
We - We’re just going around all day like unconscious machines...
945
00:53:49,309 --> 00:53:52,438
and meanwhile there’s all of this rage and worry and uneasiness...
946
00:53:52,521 --> 00:53:54,648
just building up and building up inside us.
947
00:53:54,732 --> 00:53:57,025
That’s right. It just builds up, uh...
948
00:53:57,109 --> 00:54:00,446
and then it just leaps out inappropriately.
949
00:54:01,905 --> 00:54:04,616
I mean, I remember when I was, uh, acting in this play...
950
00:54:04,700 --> 00:54:06,660
based on The Master and Margarita
by Bulgakov.
951
00:54:06,744 --> 00:54:09,163
And I was playing the part of the cat.
952
00:54:09,246 --> 00:54:11,665
But they had trouble, uh, making up my cat suit...
953
00:54:11,749 --> 00:54:15,419
so I didn’t get it delivered to me till the night of the first performance.
954
00:54:15,502 --> 00:54:19,131
Particularly the head - I mean,
I’d never even had a chance to try it on.
955
00:54:19,214 --> 00:54:22,759
And about four of my fellow actors actually came up to me...
956
00:54:22,843 --> 00:54:25,429
and they said these things which I just couldn’t help thinking...
957
00:54:25,512 --> 00:54:27,514
were attempts to destroy me.
958
00:54:27,598 --> 00:54:31,435
You know, one of them said, uh, “Oh, well, now that head...
959
00:54:31,518 --> 00:54:34,021
“will totally change your hearing in the performance.
960
00:54:34,104 --> 00:54:37,191
“You may hear everything completely differently...
961
00:54:37,274 --> 00:54:39,526
“and it may be very upsetting.
962
00:54:39,610 --> 00:54:42,821
“Now, I was once in a performance where I was wearing earmuffs...
963
00:54:42,905 --> 00:54:46,575
and I couldn’t hear anything anybody said.”
964
00:54:46,658 --> 00:54:50,370
And then another one said, “Oh, you know, whenever I wear even a hat on stage...
965
00:54:50,454 --> 00:54:52,456
tend to faint.”
966
00:54:52,539 --> 00:54:55,459
I mean, those remarks were just full of hostility...
967
00:54:55,584 --> 00:54:59,046
because, I mean, if I’d listened to those people, I would have gone out there on stage...
968
00:54:59,129 --> 00:55:01,924
and I wouldn’t have been able to hear anything,
and I would have fainted.
969
00:55:02,007 --> 00:55:03,967
But the hostility was completely inappropriate...
970
00:55:04,051 --> 00:55:06,053
because, in fact, those people liked me.
971
00:55:06,136 --> 00:55:09,556
I mean, that hostility was just some feeling that was, you know...
972
00:55:09,640 --> 00:55:12,518
left over from some previous experience.
973
00:55:12,601 --> 00:55:15,979
Because somehow in our social existence today...
974
00:55:16,063 --> 00:55:19,316
we’re only allowed to express our feelings, uh...
975
00:55:19,399 --> 00:55:21,568
weirdly and indirectly.
976
00:55:21,652 --> 00:55:24,071
If you express them directly, everybody goes crazy.
977
00:55:24,154 --> 00:55:27,366
Well, did you express your feelings about what those people said to you?
978
00:55:27,449 --> 00:55:31,495
No. [ Chuckles ] I mean, I didn’t even know what I felt till I thought about it later.
979
00:55:31,578 --> 00:55:34,957
And I mean, at the most, you know, in a situation like that, uh...
980
00:55:35,040 --> 00:55:37,292
even if I had known what I felt...
981
00:55:37,376 --> 00:55:40,087
I might say something, if I’m really annoyed...
982
00:55:40,170 --> 00:55:44,007
like, uh, “Oh, yeah. Well, that’s just fascinating...
983
00:55:44,091 --> 00:55:47,803
and, uh, I probably will faint tonight, just as you did.”
984
00:55:47,886 --> 00:55:50,764
I do just the same thing myself.
985
00:55:50,848 --> 00:55:54,184
We can’t be direct, so we end up saying the weirdest things.
986
00:55:54,268 --> 00:55:57,479
I mean, I remember a night. It was a couple of weeks after my mother died.
987
00:55:57,563 --> 00:55:59,481
And I was in pretty bad shape.
988
00:55:59,565 --> 00:56:01,733
And I had dinner with three relatively close friends...
989
00:56:01,817 --> 00:56:03,777
two of whom had known my mother quite well...
990
00:56:03,861 --> 00:56:06,446
and all three of whom had known me for years.
991
00:56:06,530 --> 00:56:09,324
You know that we went through that entire evening without my being able to...
992
00:56:09,408 --> 00:56:11,368
for a moment, get anywhere near what -
993
00:56:11,451 --> 00:56:13,662
Not that I wanted to sit and have this dreary evening...
994
00:56:13,745 --> 00:56:16,623
in which I was talking about all this pain that I was going through and everything.
995
00:56:16,707 --> 00:56:18,375
Really, not at all.
996
00:56:18,458 --> 00:56:20,627
But the fact that nobody could say...
997
00:56:20,711 --> 00:56:23,547
“Gee, what a shame about your mother” or “How are you feeling?”
998
00:56:23,672 --> 00:56:27,009
It was just as if nothing had happened. They were all making these jokes and laughing.
999
00:56:27,092 --> 00:56:29,094
I got quite crazy, as a matter of fact
1000
00:56:29,177 --> 00:56:31,722
One of these people mentioned a certain man whom I don’t like very much...
1001
00:56:31,805 --> 00:56:35,642
and I started screeching about how he had just been found in the Bronx River...
1002
00:56:35,767 --> 00:56:39,897
and his penis had dropped off from gonorrhea,
and all kinds of insane things.
1003
00:56:40,022 --> 00:56:44,693
And later, when I got home, I realized I’d just been desperate to break through this ice.
1004
00:56:44,776 --> 00:56:46,278
Yeah.
1005
00:56:46,361 --> 00:56:50,407
I mean, do you realize, Wally, if you brought that situation into a Tibetan home -
1006
00:56:50,490 --> 00:56:53,493
That’d be just so far out. I mean, they wouldn’t be able to understand it.
1007
00:56:53,577 --> 00:56:55,996
That would be simply -simply so weird, Wally.
1008
00:56:56,121 --> 00:57:00,000
If four Tibetans came together, and tragedy had just struck one of the ones...
1009
00:57:00,083 --> 00:57:04,713
and they spent the whole evening going -
[ Loud Laughing ]
1010
00:57:04,796 --> 00:57:07,049
I mean, you know,
Tibetans would have looked at that...
1011
00:57:07,132 --> 00:57:10,177
and would have thought that was the most unimaginable behavior.
1012
00:57:10,260 --> 00:57:12,638
- But for us, that’s common behavior.
- Mm-hmm.
1013
00:57:12,721 --> 00:57:16,475
I mean, really, the - the Africans would have probably put their spears into all four of us...
1014
00:57:16,558 --> 00:57:18,518
’cause it would have driven them crazy
1015
00:57:18,602 --> 00:57:21,104
They would have thought we were dangerous animals or something like that.
1016
00:57:21,229 --> 00:57:25,025
- Right.
- I mean, that’s absolutely abnormal behavior.
1017
00:57:25,108 --> 00:57:27,277
Is everything all right, gentlemen?
1018
00:57:27,361 --> 00:57:29,279
- Great.
- Yeah.
1019
00:57:33,450 --> 00:57:35,661
But those are typical evenings for us.
1020
00:57:35,744 --> 00:57:39,873
I mean, we go to dinners and parties
like that all the time.
1021
00:57:39,957 --> 00:57:43,043
These evenings are really like sort of sickly dreams...
1022
00:57:43,126 --> 00:57:45,545
because people are talking in symbols.
1023
00:57:45,671 --> 00:57:49,925
Everyone is sort of floating through this fog of symbols and unconscious feelings.
1024
00:57:50,008 --> 00:57:52,386
No one says what they’re really thinking about.
1025
00:57:52,469 --> 00:57:57,474
Then people will start making these jokes that are really some sort of secret code.
1026
00:57:57,557 --> 00:57:59,977
Right. Well, what often happens in some of these evenings...
1027
00:58:00,060 --> 00:58:04,481
is that these really crazy little fantasies will just start being played with, you know...
1028
00:58:04,564 --> 00:58:07,693
and everyone will be talking at once
and sort of saying...
1029
00:58:07,776 --> 00:58:11,655
“Hey, wouldn’t it be great if Frank Sinatra and Mrs. Nixon and blah-blah-blah...
1030
00:58:11,738 --> 00:58:14,241
were in such and such a situation?”
1031
00:58:14,324 --> 00:58:17,703
You know, always with famous people, and always sort of grotesque.
1032
00:58:17,786 --> 00:58:20,414
Or people will be talking about some horrible thing...
1033
00:58:20,497 --> 00:58:25,001
like - like, uh, the death of that girl in the car with Ted Kennedy...
1034
00:58:25,085 --> 00:58:27,546
and they’ll just be roaring with laughter.
1035
00:58:27,629 --> 00:58:30,090
I mean, it’s really amazing. It’s just unbelievable.
1036
00:58:30,173 --> 00:58:35,262
That’s the only way anything is expressed, through these completely insane jokes.
1037
00:58:35,345 --> 00:58:38,598
I mean, I think that’s why I never understand
what’s going on at a party.
1038
00:58:38,682 --> 00:58:41,893
I’m always completely confused.
1039
00:58:41,977 --> 00:58:46,732
You know, uh, Debby once said, after one of these New York evenings...
1040
00:58:46,815 --> 00:58:49,109
she thought she’d traveled a greater distance...
1041
00:58:49,192 --> 00:58:52,696
just by journeying from her origins in the suburbs of Chicago...
1042
00:58:52,779 --> 00:58:54,740
to that New York evening...
1043
00:58:54,823 --> 00:58:57,868
than her grandmother had traveled in, uh, making her way...
1044
00:58:57,951 --> 00:59:00,620
from the steppes of Russia to the suburbs of Chicago.
1045
00:59:00,704 --> 00:59:03,040
- I think that’s right.
- [ Wally Chuckles ]
1046
00:59:04,166 --> 00:59:06,793
You know, it may - it may be, Wally, that one of the reasons...
1047
00:59:06,877 --> 00:59:08,795
that we don’t know what’s going on...
1048
00:59:08,879 --> 00:59:11,798
is that when we’re there at a party, we’re all too busy performing.
1049
00:59:11,882 --> 00:59:13,175
Uh-huh.
1050
00:59:13,258 --> 00:59:16,678
That was one of the reasons that, uh, Grotowski gave up the theater.
1051
00:59:16,762 --> 00:59:20,932
He just felt that people in their lives now were performing so well...
1052
00:59:21,016 --> 00:59:23,685
that performance in the theater was sort of superfluous...
1053
00:59:23,769 --> 00:59:25,687
and, in a way, obscene.
1054
00:59:25,771 --> 00:59:27,981
Huh.
1055
00:59:28,064 --> 00:59:30,817
Isn’t it amazing how often a doctor...
1056
00:59:30,901 --> 00:59:33,612
will live up to our expectation of how a doctor should look?
1057
00:59:33,695 --> 00:59:37,199
When you see a terrorist on television, he looks just like a terrorist.
1058
00:59:37,282 --> 00:59:39,785
I mean, we live in a world in which fathers...
1059
00:59:39,868 --> 00:59:42,078
or single people, or artists^.
1060
00:59:42,162 --> 00:59:44,372
are all trying to live up to someone’s fantasy...
1061
00:59:44,456 --> 00:59:48,460
of how a father, or a single person, or an artist should look and behave.
1062
00:59:48,543 --> 00:59:51,338
They all act as if they know exactly how they ought to conduct themselves...
1063
00:59:51,421 --> 00:59:53,340
at every single moment..
1064
00:59:53,423 --> 00:59:55,509
and they all seem totally self-confident.
1065
00:59:55,592 --> 00:59:58,094
Of course, privately people are very mixed up about themselves.
1066
00:59:58,178 --> 00:59:59,346
Yeah.
1067
00:59:59,429 --> 01:00:01,640
They don’t know what they should be doing with their lives.
1068
01:00:01,723 --> 01:00:03,850
- They’re reading all these self-help books.
- Oh, God!
1069
01:00:03,934 --> 01:00:06,478
I mean, those books are just so touching,
because they show...
1070
01:00:06,561 --> 01:00:09,481
how desperately curious we all are to know how all the others of us...
1071
01:00:09,564 --> 01:00:11,525
are really getting on in life...
1072
01:00:11,608 --> 01:00:14,361
even though, by performing these roles all the time...
1073
01:00:14,444 --> 01:00:17,447
we’re just hiding the reality of ourselves
from everybody else.
1074
01:00:17,531 --> 01:00:20,117
I mean, we live in such ludicrous ignorance of each other.
1075
01:00:20,200 --> 01:00:22,410
We usually don’t know the things we’d like to know...
1076
01:00:22,494 --> 01:00:24,496
even about our supposedly closest friends.
1077
01:00:24,579 --> 01:00:26,498
I mean - I mean, you know...
1078
01:00:26,581 --> 01:00:29,084
suppose you’re going through some kind of hell in your own life.
1079
01:00:29,167 --> 01:00:32,546
Well, you would love to know if your friends have experienced similar things.
1080
01:00:32,629 --> 01:00:34,631
But we just don’t dare to ask each other.
1081
01:00:34,714 --> 01:00:37,134
No. It would be like asking your friend to drop his role.
1082
01:00:37,217 --> 01:00:40,637
I mean, we just put no value at all on perceiving reality.
1083
01:00:40,720 --> 01:00:44,349
I mean, on the contrary, this incredible emphasis that we all place now...
1084
01:00:44,432 --> 01:00:46,393
on our so-called careers...
1085
01:00:46,476 --> 01:00:51,106
automatically makes perceiving reality
a very low priority...
1086
01:00:51,189 --> 01:00:55,861
because if your life is organized around trying to be successful in a career...
1087
01:00:55,944 --> 01:01:01,032
well, it just doesn’t matter what you perceive or what you experience.
1088
01:01:01,116 --> 01:01:04,411
You can really sort of shut your mind off for years ahead, in a way.
1089
01:01:04,494 --> 01:01:07,414
You can sort of turn on the automatic pilot.
1090
01:01:07,497 --> 01:01:10,876
You know, just the way your mother’s doctor
had on his automatic pilot...
1091
01:01:10,959 --> 01:01:13,170
when he went in and he looked at the arm...
1092
01:01:13,253 --> 01:01:15,714
and he totally failed to perceive anything else.
1093
01:01:15,797 --> 01:01:19,759
That’s right. Our - Our minds are just focused on these goals and plans...
1094
01:01:19,843 --> 01:01:21,803
which in themselves are not reality.
1095
01:01:21,887 --> 01:01:25,265
No. Goals and plans are not-
1096
01:01:25,348 --> 01:01:29,728
I mean, they’re - they’re fantasy. They’re part of a dream life.
1097
01:01:29,811 --> 01:01:33,356
I mean, you know, it always just does seem so ridiculous, somehow...
1098
01:01:33,440 --> 01:01:37,110
that everybody has to have his little - his little goal in life.
1099
01:01:37,193 --> 01:01:41,489
I mean, it’s so absurd, in a way, when you consider that it doesn’t matter which one it is.
1100
01:01:41,573 --> 01:01:44,034
Right. And because people’s concentration is on their goals...
1101
01:01:44,117 --> 01:01:47,120
in their life they just live each moment by habit.
1102
01:01:47,204 --> 01:01:50,373
Really, like the Norwegian telling the same stories over and over again.
1103
01:01:50,457 --> 01:01:53,001
- Mm-hmm.
- Life becomes habitual.
1104
01:01:53,084 --> 01:01:55,295
And it is today.
1105
01:01:55,378 --> 01:01:57,464
I mean, very few things happen now
like that moment...
1106
01:01:57,547 --> 01:02:00,300
when Marlon Brando sent the Indian woman
to accept the Oscar...
1107
01:02:00,383 --> 01:02:02,302
and everything went haywire.
1108
01:02:02,385 --> 01:02:04,846
Things just very rarely go haywire now.
1109
01:02:04,930 --> 01:02:07,974
And if you’re just operating by habit...
1110
01:02:08,058 --> 01:02:10,852
then you’re not really living.
1111
01:02:10,936 --> 01:02:13,605
I mean, you know, in Sanskrit, the root of the verb “to be”...
1112
01:02:13,688 --> 01:02:15,982
is the same as “to grow” or “to make grow.”
1113
01:02:16,066 --> 01:02:17,984
Huh.
1114
01:02:19,277 --> 01:02:21,321
[ Woman Laughing ]
1115
01:02:21,404 --> 01:02:23,323
- Do you know about Roc?
- Hmm?
1116
01:02:23,406 --> 01:02:25,492
[ Chuckling ] Oh, well.
1117
01:02:25,575 --> 01:02:27,577
Roc was a wonderful man.
1118
01:02:27,661 --> 01:02:29,955
He was one of the founders of Findhorn...
1119
01:02:30,038 --> 01:02:34,334
and he was one of Scotland’s - well, he was Scotland’s greatest mathematician...
1120
01:02:34,417 --> 01:02:36,920
and he was one of the century’s great mathematicians.
1121
01:02:37,003 --> 01:02:42,175
And he prided himself on the fact that he had no fantasy life, no dream life -
1122
01:02:42,258 --> 01:02:44,886
nothing to stand be -no imaginary life -
1123
01:02:44,970 --> 01:02:49,349
nothing to stand between him and the direct perception of mathematics.
1124
01:02:49,474 --> 01:02:53,478
And one day when he was in his mid-50s, he was walking in the gardens of Edinburgh...
1125
01:02:53,561 --> 01:02:56,398
and he saw a faun.
1126
01:02:56,481 --> 01:03:00,068
The faun was very surprised because fauns have always been able to see people...
1127
01:03:00,151 --> 01:03:02,821
but you know, very few people ever see them.
1128
01:03:02,904 --> 01:03:05,573
You know, uh, those little imaginary creatures.
1129
01:03:05,657 --> 01:03:07,575
- Not a deer.
- Oh.
1130
01:03:07,659 --> 01:03:10,912
- You call them fauns, don’t you?
- I thought a fawn was a baby deer.
1131
01:03:11,037 --> 01:03:14,249
Yeah, well, there’s a deer that’s called a fawn, but these are like those little imagi -
1132
01:03:14,332 --> 01:03:16,876
- Oh! The kind that Debussy -
- Yes. Right.
1133
01:03:16,960 --> 01:03:20,380
Well, so he got to know the faun, and he got to know other fauns...
1134
01:03:20,463 --> 01:03:22,757
and a series of conversations began...
1135
01:03:22,841 --> 01:03:25,677
and more and more fauns would come out every afternoon to meet him.
1136
01:03:25,760 --> 01:03:27,679
And he’d have talks with the fauns.
1137
01:03:27,804 --> 01:03:31,099
Then one day, after a while, when, you know, they’d really gotten to know him...
1138
01:03:31,182 --> 01:03:33,685
they asked him if he would like to meet Pan...
1139
01:03:33,768 --> 01:03:35,895
because Pan would like to meet him.
1140
01:03:35,979 --> 01:03:38,023
And of course,
Pan was afraid of terrifying him...
1141
01:03:38,106 --> 01:03:40,734
because he knew of the Christian misconception...
1142
01:03:40,817 --> 01:03:44,404
which portrayed Pan as an evil creature,
which he’s not.
1143
01:03:44,487 --> 01:03:47,449
But Roc said he would love to meet Pan,
and so they met...
1144
01:03:47,532 --> 01:03:50,243
and Pan indirectly sent him on his way on a journey...
1145
01:03:50,326 --> 01:03:54,664
in which he met the other people who began Findhorn.
1146
01:03:54,748 --> 01:03:57,876
But Roc used to practice certain exercises -
1147
01:03:57,959 --> 01:04:01,087
like, uh, for instance, if he were right-handed...
1148
01:04:01,171 --> 01:04:03,465
all today he would do everything with his left hand.
1149
01:04:03,548 --> 01:04:06,301
All day - eating, writing, everything - opening doors...
1150
01:04:06,384 --> 01:04:09,179
in order to break the habits of living.
1151
01:04:09,262 --> 01:04:11,848
Because the great danger, he felt, for him...
1152
01:04:11,931 --> 01:04:15,226
was to fall into a trance, out of habit.
1153
01:04:15,310 --> 01:04:19,856
He had a whole series of very simple exercises that he had invented...
1154
01:04:19,939 --> 01:04:24,110
just to keep seeing, feeling, remembering.
1155
01:04:24,194 --> 01:04:26,154
Because you have to learn now.
1156
01:04:26,237 --> 01:04:29,240
It didn’t used to be necessary, but today you have to learn something...
1157
01:04:29,324 --> 01:04:31,409
like, uh, are you really hungry...
1158
01:04:31,493 --> 01:04:34,579
or are you just stuffing your face -
[ Laughing ]
1159
01:04:34,662 --> 01:04:36,873
Because that’s what you do, out of habit?
1160
01:04:36,956 --> 01:04:39,584
I mean, you can afford to do it,
so you do it...
1161
01:04:39,667 --> 01:04:41,628
whether you’re hungry or not.
1162
01:04:41,711 --> 01:04:44,547
You know, if you go to the Buddhist Meditation Center...
1163
01:04:44,631 --> 01:04:47,092
they make you taste each bite of your food...
1164
01:04:47,175 --> 01:04:50,845
so it takes two hours -it’s horrible - to eat you Munch.
1165
01:04:50,929 --> 01:04:54,349
But you’re conscious of the taste of your food.
1166
01:04:54,432 --> 01:04:57,685
If you’re just eating out of habit, then you don’t taste the food...
1167
01:04:57,769 --> 01:05:00,647
and you’re not conscious of the reality of what’s happening to you.
1168
01:05:00,730 --> 01:05:02,816
You enter the d ream world again
1169
01:05:02,899 --> 01:05:06,361
Now, do you think maybe we live in this dream world...
1170
01:05:06,444 --> 01:05:09,823
because we do so many things every day
that affect us in ways...
1171
01:05:09,906 --> 01:05:13,326
that somehow we’re just not aware of?
1172
01:05:13,410 --> 01:05:17,747
I mean, you know, I was thinking, urn, last Christmas...
1173
01:05:17,831 --> 01:05:21,000
Debby and I were given an electric blanket.
1174
01:05:21,084 --> 01:05:25,839
I can tell you that it is just such a marvelous advance...
1175
01:05:25,922 --> 01:05:30,510
- over our old way of life, and it is just great.
- [ Andre Chuckling ]
1176
01:05:30,593 --> 01:05:34,013
But, uh, it is quite different from not having an electric blanket...
1177
01:05:34,097 --> 01:05:37,016
and I sometimes sort of wonder, well, what is it doing to me?
1178
01:05:37,100 --> 01:05:40,687
I mean, I sort of feel, uh,
I’m not sleeping quite in the same way.
1179
01:05:40,770 --> 01:05:42,689
[ Chuckles ]
No, you wouldn’t be.
1180
01:05:42,772 --> 01:05:45,692
I mean, uh, and my dreams are sort of different...
1181
01:05:45,775 --> 01:05:48,611
and I feel a little bit different when I get up in the morning.
1182
01:05:49,737 --> 01:05:53,199
I wouldn’t put an electric blanket on
for anything.
1183
01:05:53,283 --> 01:05:58,037
First, I’d be worried I might get electrocuted.
No, I don’t trust technology.
1184
01:05:58,121 --> 01:06:01,749
But I mean, the main thing, Wally, is that I think that that kind of comfort...
1185
01:06:01,833 --> 01:06:04,961
just separates you from reality in a very direct way.
1186
01:06:05,086 --> 01:06:07,797
- You mean –
- I mean, if you don’t have that electric blanket...
1187
01:06:07,881 --> 01:06:10,592
and your apartment is cold and you need to put on another blanket...
1188
01:06:10,675 --> 01:06:14,137
or go into the closet and pile up coats on top of the blankets you have...
1189
01:06:14,220 --> 01:06:16,389
well, then you know it’s cold.
1190
01:06:16,472 --> 01:06:18,725
And that sets up a link of things.
1191
01:06:18,808 --> 01:06:22,353
You have compassion for the per -Well, is the person next to you cold?
1192
01:06:22,437 --> 01:06:24,564
Are there other people in the world
who are cold?
1193
01:06:24,647 --> 01:06:27,108
What a cold night! I like the cold.
1194
01:06:27,192 --> 01:06:30,653
My God, I never realized.
I don’t want a blanket. It’s fun being cold.
1195
01:06:30,737 --> 01:06:34,073
I can snuggle up against you even more
because it’s cold.
1196
01:06:34,157 --> 01:06:36,743
All sorts of things occur to you
1197
01:06:36,826 --> 01:06:40,205
Turn on that electric blanket, and it’s like taking a tranquilizer...
1198
01:06:40,288 --> 01:06:42,749
or it’s like being lobotomized by watching television.
1199
01:06:42,832 --> 01:06:44,834
I think you enter the dream world again.
1200
01:06:46,502 --> 01:06:49,631
I mean, what does it do to us, Wally, living in an environment...
1201
01:06:49,714 --> 01:06:53,760
where something as massive as the seasons, or winter, or cold...
1202
01:06:53,843 --> 01:06:55,970
don’t in any way affect us?
1203
01:06:56,054 --> 01:06:58,056
I mean, we’re animals, after all.
1204
01:06:58,139 --> 01:07:00,058
I mean, what does that mean?
1205
01:07:00,141 --> 01:07:03,269
I think that means that instead of living under the sun...
1206
01:07:03,353 --> 01:07:06,022
and the moon and the sky and the stars...
1207
01:07:06,105 --> 01:07:08,942
we’re living in a fantasy world of our own making.
1208
01:07:09,025 --> 01:07:12,362
Yeah, but I mean, I would never give up my electric blanket, Andre.
1209
01:07:12,445 --> 01:07:15,240
I mean, because New York is cold in the winter.
1210
01:07:15,323 --> 01:07:18,534
I mean, our apartment is cold. It’s a difficult environment.
1211
01:07:18,618 --> 01:07:20,745
I mean, our lives are tough enough as it is.
1212
01:07:20,870 --> 01:07:24,374
I’m not looking for ways to get rid of the few things that provide relief and comfort.
1213
01:07:24,457 --> 01:07:27,293
I mean, on the contrary,
I’m looking for more comfort...
1214
01:07:27,377 --> 01:07:29,712
because, uh, the world is very abrasive.
1215
01:07:29,796 --> 01:07:32,215
I mean, uh,
I’m trying to protect myself...
1216
01:07:32,298 --> 01:07:35,927
because, really, there are these abrasive beatings to be avoided everywhere you look.
1217
01:07:36,010 --> 01:07:40,014
But, Wally, don’t you - don’t you see that comfort can be dangerous?
1218
01:07:40,098 --> 01:07:43,309
I mean, you like to be comfortable, and I like to be comfortable too...
1219
01:07:43,393 --> 01:07:46,896
but comfort can lull you into a dangerous tranquility.
1220
01:07:48,022 --> 01:07:50,984
I mean, my mother knew a woman, Lady Hatfield...
1221
01:07:51,067 --> 01:07:53,194
who was one of the richest women
in the world...
1222
01:07:53,278 --> 01:07:56,573
and she died of starvation because all she would eat was chicken.
1223
01:07:56,656 --> 01:07:59,492
I mean, she just liked chicken, Wally, and that was all she would eat.
1224
01:07:59,576 --> 01:08:02,620
And actually her body was starving, but she didn’t know it...
1225
01:08:02,745 --> 01:08:06,332
’cause she was quite happy eating her chicken, and so she finally died.
1226
01:08:06,416 --> 01:08:10,586
See, I honestly believe that we’re all like Lady Hatfield now.
1227
01:08:10,670 --> 01:08:14,632
We’re having a lovely, comfortable time with our electric blankets and our chicken...
1228
01:08:14,716 --> 01:08:18,595
and meanwhile we’re starving because we’re so cut off from contact with reality...
1229
01:08:18,678 --> 01:08:22,515
that we’re not getting any real sustenance, ’cause we don’t see the world.
1230
01:08:22,598 --> 01:08:24,517
We don’t see ourselves.
1231
01:08:24,600 --> 01:08:26,728
We don’t see how our actions affect other people.
1232
01:08:26,811 --> 01:08:29,939
Have you read Martin Buber’s book
On Hasidism?
1233
01:08:30,023 --> 01:08:32,233
- No.
- Well, here’s a view of life.
1234
01:08:32,317 --> 01:08:35,278
I mean, he talks about the belief of the Hasidic Jews...
1235
01:08:35,361 --> 01:08:37,280
that there are spirits chained in everything.
1236
01:08:37,363 --> 01:08:40,283
There are spirits chained in you. There are spirits chained in me.
1237
01:08:40,366 --> 01:08:42,744
Well, there are spirits chained
in this table.
1238
01:08:42,827 --> 01:08:47,749
And that prayer is the action of liberating these enchained embryo-like spirits...
1239
01:08:47,832 --> 01:08:49,876
and that every action of ours in life...
1240
01:08:49,959 --> 01:08:53,046
whether it’s, uh, doing business, or making love...
1241
01:08:53,129 --> 01:08:55,089
or having dinner together, or whatever -
1242
01:08:55,173 --> 01:08:57,800
that every action of ours should be a prayer...
1243
01:08:57,884 --> 01:08:59,719
a sacrament in the world.
1244
01:08:59,802 --> 01:09:02,388
Now, do you think we’re living like that?
1245
01:09:02,472 --> 01:09:04,515
Why do you think we’re not living like that?
1246
01:09:04,599 --> 01:09:07,602
I think it’s because if we allowed ourselves to see what we do every day...
1247
01:09:07,685 --> 01:09:09,687
we might just find it too nauseating.
1248
01:09:09,771 --> 01:09:11,731
I mean, the way we treat other people
1249
01:09:11,814 --> 01:09:15,401
You know, every day, several times a day, I walk into my apartment building.
1250
01:09:15,485 --> 01:09:18,988
The doorman calls me Mr. Gregory, and I call him Jimmy.
1251
01:09:19,072 --> 01:09:22,200
Already, what’s the difference between that...
1252
01:09:22,283 --> 01:09:25,078
and the Southern plantation owner
who’s got slaves?
1253
01:09:25,161 --> 01:09:28,206
You see, I think that an act of murder is committed in that moment...
1254
01:09:28,289 --> 01:09:30,249
when I walk into that building.
1255
01:09:30,333 --> 01:09:34,504
Because here’s a dignified, intelligent man -
a man of my own age -
1256
01:09:34,587 --> 01:09:38,216
and when I call him Jimmy, then he becomes a child, and I’m an adult...
1257
01:09:38,299 --> 01:09:40,593
because I can buy my way into the building.
1258
01:09:40,676 --> 01:09:43,304
Right. That’s right.
1259
01:09:43,388 --> 01:09:47,266
I mean, my God, when I was a Latin teacher...
1260
01:09:47,350 --> 01:09:49,477
I mean, people used to treat me -
1261
01:09:49,560 --> 01:09:52,355
I mean, uh, you know,
if I would go to a party...
1262
01:09:52,438 --> 01:09:55,316
of professional or literary people...
1263
01:09:55,400 --> 01:09:58,945
I mean, I was just treated, uh, in the nicest sense of the word...
1264
01:09:59,028 --> 01:10:00,655
uh, like a dog.
1265
01:10:00,738 --> 01:10:02,740
I mean, in other words, there was no question...
1266
01:10:02,865 --> 01:10:06,536
of my being able to participate on an equal basis in a conversation with people.
1267
01:10:06,619 --> 01:10:09,080
I mean, you know, I’d occasionally have conversations with people...
1268
01:10:09,163 --> 01:10:11,666
but then, uh, when they asked what I did...
1269
01:10:11,749 --> 01:10:14,252
which would always happen after about five minutes...
1270
01:10:14,335 --> 01:10:16,421
uh, you know, their faces -
1271
01:10:16,546 --> 01:10:20,299
Even if they were enjoying the conversation, or they were flirting with me, or whatever it was -
1272
01:10:20,383 --> 01:10:23,845
their faces would just have that expression just like the portcullis crashing down.
1273
01:10:23,928 --> 01:10:27,306
You know, those medieval gates. They would just walk away.
1274
01:10:27,390 --> 01:10:30,768
I mean, I literally lived like a dog.
1275
01:10:30,852 --> 01:10:34,397
And I mean, uh, when Debby was working as a secretary, you know...
1276
01:10:34,480 --> 01:10:38,067
if she would tell people what she did, they would just go insane.
1277
01:10:38,151 --> 01:10:40,486
I mean, it would be just as if she’d said, uh...
1278
01:10:40,570 --> 01:10:45,408
“Oh, well, I’ve been serving a life sentence recently, uh, for child murdering.”
1279
01:10:46,576 --> 01:10:50,580
I mean, my God, you know, when you talk about our attitudes toward other people...
1280
01:10:51,914 --> 01:10:53,916
I mean, I think of myself...
1281
01:10:54,000 --> 01:10:58,004
as just a very decent, good person, you know...
1282
01:10:58,087 --> 01:11:00,423
just because I think I’m reasonably friendly...
1283
01:11:00,506 --> 01:11:02,758
to most of the people I happen to meet every day.
1284
01:11:02,842 --> 01:11:05,511
I mean, I really think
of myself quite smugly.
1285
01:11:05,595 --> 01:11:08,723
I just think I’m a perfectly nice guy,
uh, you know...
1286
01:11:08,806 --> 01:11:11,893
so long as I think of the world as consisting of, you know...
1287
01:11:11,976 --> 01:11:14,771
just the small circle of the people that I know as friends...
1288
01:11:14,854 --> 01:11:17,857
or the few people that we know in this little world of our little hobbies -
1289
01:11:17,940 --> 01:11:19,859
the theater or whatever it is.
1290
01:11:19,942 --> 01:11:23,029
And I’m really quite self-satisfied. I’m just quite happy with myself.
1291
01:11:23,112 --> 01:11:25,239
I just have no complaint about myself.
1292
01:11:25,323 --> 01:11:27,325
I mean, you know, let’s face it.
1293
01:11:27,408 --> 01:11:31,204
I mean, there’s a whole enormous world out there that I just don’t ever think about.
1294
01:11:31,287 --> 01:11:35,541
I certainly don’t take responsibility for how I’ve lived in that world.
1295
01:11:35,625 --> 01:11:38,419
I mean, you know, if I were actually to sort of confront the fact...
1296
01:11:38,503 --> 01:11:40,671
that I’m sort of sharing this stage...
1297
01:11:40,755 --> 01:11:43,257
with-with-with this starving person in Africa somewhere...
1298
01:11:43,341 --> 01:11:45,885
well, I wouldn’t feel so great about myself.
1299
01:11:45,968 --> 01:11:50,681
So naturally I just - I just blot all those people right out of my perception.
1300
01:11:50,765 --> 01:11:53,893
So, of course -of course, I’m ignoring...
1301
01:11:53,976 --> 01:11:57,313
a whole section of the real world.
1302
01:11:57,396 --> 01:11:59,857
But frankly, you know...
1303
01:11:59,982 --> 01:12:04,320
when I write a play, in a way, one of the things I guess I think I’m trying to do...
1304
01:12:04,403 --> 01:12:07,615
is I’m trying to bring myself up against some little bits of reality...
1305
01:12:07,698 --> 01:12:10,785
and I’m trying to share that, uh, with an audience.
1306
01:12:12,245 --> 01:12:15,164
I mean - I mean,
of course we all know, uh...
1307
01:12:15,248 --> 01:12:17,750
the theater is, uh, in terrible shape today.
1308
01:12:17,875 --> 01:12:22,255
I mean, uh - I mean, at least a few years ago people who really cared about the theater...
1309
01:12:22,338 --> 01:12:24,674
used to say, “The theater is dead.”
1310
01:12:24,757 --> 01:12:27,677
And now everybody’s redefined the theater in such a trivial way...
1311
01:12:27,760 --> 01:12:29,720
that, I mean - I mean, God...
1312
01:12:29,804 --> 01:12:33,975
I know people who are involved with the theater who go to see things now that -
1313
01:12:34,058 --> 01:12:36,435
I mean, a few years ago these same people...
1314
01:12:36,519 --> 01:12:39,397
would have just been embarrassed to have even seen some of these plays.
1315
01:12:39,480 --> 01:12:42,024
I mean, they would have just shrunk, you know, just in horror...
1316
01:12:42,108 --> 01:12:44,318
at the superficiality of these things.
1317
01:12:44,402 --> 01:12:46,988
But now they say,
“Oh, that was pretty good.”
1318
01:12:47,071 --> 01:12:49,073
It’s just incredible
1319
01:12:49,156 --> 01:12:52,285
And I really just find that attitude
unbearable...
1320
01:12:52,368 --> 01:12:56,163
because I really do think the theater can do something very important.
1321
01:12:56,247 --> 01:13:01,127
I mean, I do think the theater can help bring people in contact with reality.
1322
01:13:01,210 --> 01:13:05,882
Now, now, you may not feel that at all. You may just find that totally absurd.
1323
01:13:07,258 --> 01:13:10,219
Yeah, but, Wally, don’t you see the dilemma?
1324
01:13:10,303 --> 01:13:14,307
You’re not taking into account the period we’re living in.
1325
01:13:14,390 --> 01:13:16,559
I mean, of course that’s what the theater should do.
1326
01:13:16,642 --> 01:13:18,603
I mean, I’ve always felt that.
1327
01:13:18,686 --> 01:13:22,064
You know, when I was a young director, and I directed the Bacchae at Yale...
1328
01:13:22,148 --> 01:13:25,443
my impulse, when Pentheus has been killed by his mother and the Furies...
1329
01:13:25,526 --> 01:13:28,154
and they pull the tree back, and they tie him to the tree...
1330
01:13:28,237 --> 01:13:31,490
and fling him into the air, and he flies through space and he’s killed...
1331
01:13:31,574 --> 01:13:34,535
and they rip him to shreds and I guess cut off his head -
1332
01:13:34,619 --> 01:13:38,289
my impulse was that the thing to do was to get a head from the New Haven morgue...
1333
01:13:38,372 --> 01:13:40,333
and pass it around the audience.
1334
01:13:40,416 --> 01:13:43,294
Now, I wanted Agawe to bring on a real head...
1335
01:13:43,377 --> 01:13:45,838
and that this head should be passed around the audience...
1336
01:13:45,921 --> 01:13:49,550
so that somehow people realized that this stuff was real, see?
1337
01:13:49,634 --> 01:13:52,136
That it was real stuff.
1338
01:13:52,261 --> 01:13:56,015
- Now, the actress playing Agawe absolutely refused to do it.
- [Giggling]
1339
01:13:56,098 --> 01:13:58,184
You know, Gordon Craig used to talk about...
1340
01:13:58,267 --> 01:14:02,480
why is there gold or silver in the churches or something - the great cathedrals -
1341
01:14:02,563 --> 01:14:06,108
when actors could be wearing gold and silver?
1342
01:14:06,192 --> 01:14:09,904
And I mean, people who saw Eleonora Duse in the last couple of years of her life, Wally -
1343
01:14:09,987 --> 01:14:13,366
people said that it was like seeing light on stage, or mist...
1344
01:14:13,449 --> 01:14:15,451
or the essence of something.
1345
01:14:15,534 --> 01:14:18,204
I mean, then when you think about Bertolt Brecht -
1346
01:14:18,287 --> 01:14:21,415
He somehow created a theater in which people could observe...
1347
01:14:21,499 --> 01:14:23,709
that was vastly entertaining and exciting...
1348
01:14:23,793 --> 01:14:26,879
but in which the excitement didn’t overwhelm you.
1349
01:14:26,963 --> 01:14:31,217
He somehow allowed you the distance between the play and yourself...
1350
01:14:31,300 --> 01:14:34,220
that, in fact, two human beings need in order to live together.
1351
01:14:34,303 --> 01:14:38,349
You know, the question is whether the theater now can do for an audience...
1352
01:14:38,432 --> 01:14:41,811
what Brecht tried to do or what Craig or Duse tried to do.
1353
01:14:41,894 --> 01:14:43,813
Can it do it now?
1354
01:14:43,896 --> 01:14:47,233
’Cause, you see, I think that people today are so deeply asleep...
1355
01:14:47,316 --> 01:14:49,985
that unless, you know, you’re putting on those sort of superficial plays...
1356
01:14:50,069 --> 01:14:52,321
that just help your audience to sleep more comfortably...
1357
01:14:52,405 --> 01:14:55,199
it’s very hard to know what to do in the theater.
1358
01:14:55,282 --> 01:14:57,201
[ People Chattering, Laughing ]
1359
01:14:57,284 --> 01:15:01,914
Because, you see, I think that if you put on serious, contemporary plays...
1360
01:15:01,998 --> 01:15:03,916
by writers like yourself...
1361
01:15:04,000 --> 01:15:06,669
you may only be helping to deaden the audience in a different way.
1362
01:15:06,752 --> 01:15:09,338
What do you mean?
1363
01:15:09,422 --> 01:15:11,465
Well, I mean, Wally...
1364
01:15:11,549 --> 01:15:14,927
how does it affect an audience to put on one of these plays...
1365
01:15:15,011 --> 01:15:17,972
in which you show that people are totally isolated now...
1366
01:15:18,055 --> 01:15:21,267
and they can’t reach each other, and their lives are desperate?
1367
01:15:21,350 --> 01:15:24,770
Or how does it affect them to see a play that shows that our world...
1368
01:15:24,854 --> 01:15:29,025
is full of nothing but shocking sexual events, and terror, and violence?
1369
01:15:29,108 --> 01:15:31,402
Does that help to wake up a sleeping audience?
1370
01:15:31,485 --> 01:15:34,613
See, I don’t think so, ’cause I think it’s very likely...
1371
01:15:34,697 --> 01:15:37,783
that the picture of the world that you’re showing them in a play like that...
1372
01:15:37,867 --> 01:15:40,911
is exactly the picture of the world they have already.
1373
01:15:40,995 --> 01:15:43,789
I mean, you know, they know their own lives and relationships...
1374
01:15:43,873 --> 01:15:45,875
are difficult and painful.
1375
01:15:45,958 --> 01:15:48,127
And if they watch the evening news
on television...
1376
01:15:48,210 --> 01:15:51,380
well, there what they see is a terrifying, chaotic universe...
1377
01:15:51,464 --> 01:15:55,509
full of rapes and murders and hands cut off by subway cars...
1378
01:15:55,593 --> 01:15:59,138
and children pushing their parents
out of windows.
1379
01:15:59,221 --> 01:16:02,516
So the play tells them that their impression of the world is correct...
1380
01:16:02,600 --> 01:16:04,602
and that there’s absolutely no way out.
1381
01:16:04,685 --> 01:16:06,604
There’s nothing they can do.
1382
01:16:06,687 --> 01:16:09,648
And they end up feeling passive and impotent.
1383
01:16:09,732 --> 01:16:12,193
I mean, look - look at something like that christening...
1384
01:16:12,276 --> 01:16:14,612
that my group arranged for me in the forest in Poland.
1385
01:16:14,695 --> 01:16:17,698
Well, there was an example of something that really had all the elements of theater.
1386
01:16:17,782 --> 01:16:20,993
It was worked on carefully.
It was thought about carefully.
1387
01:16:21,077 --> 01:16:23,454
It was done with exquisite taste and magic.
1388
01:16:23,537 --> 01:16:25,664
And they, in fact, created something..
1389
01:16:25,748 --> 01:16:29,502
which, in this case, was, in a way, just for an audience of one - just for me.
1390
01:16:29,585 --> 01:16:33,506
But they created something that had ritual, love, surprise...
1391
01:16:33,589 --> 01:16:35,549
denouement, beginning, a middle and end...
1392
01:16:35,633 --> 01:16:38,928
and was an incredibly beautiful piece of theater.
1393
01:16:39,011 --> 01:16:41,222
And the impact that it had on its audience - on me -
1394
01:16:41,305 --> 01:16:43,641
was somehow a totally positive one.
1395
01:16:43,724 --> 01:16:46,227
It didn’t deaden me. It brought me to life.
1396
01:16:49,104 --> 01:16:51,357
Yeah, but I mean, are you saying [ that it’s impossible -
1397
01:16:51,440 --> 01:16:55,611
I mean, uh - I mean -I mean, uh, isn’t it a little upsetting...
1398
01:16:55,694 --> 01:16:59,532
to come to the conclusion that there’s no way to wake people up anymore...
1399
01:16:59,615 --> 01:17:03,911
except to involve them in some kind of a strange, uh, christening in Poland...
1400
01:17:03,994 --> 01:17:06,580
or some kind of a strange experience on top of Mount Everest?
1401
01:17:06,664 --> 01:17:11,043
I mean, uh, because, uh, you know that the awful thing is...
1402
01:17:11,127 --> 01:17:13,379
if you really say that it’s-it’s necessary...
1403
01:17:13,462 --> 01:17:16,006
to, uh, take everybody to, uh, Everest.]J
1404
01:17:16,090 --> 01:17:20,052
it’s really tough, because everybody can’t be taken to Everest.
1405
01:17:20,177 --> 01:17:23,389
I mean, there must have been periods in history when it would have been possible...
1406
01:17:23,472 --> 01:17:26,433
to, uh, save the patient through less drastic measures.
1407
01:17:26,517 --> 01:17:29,145
I mean, there must have been periods when in order to give people...
1408
01:17:29,228 --> 01:17:31,230
a strong or meaningful experience...
1409
01:17:31,313 --> 01:17:34,275
you wouldn’t actually have to take them to Everest.
1410
01:17:34,358 --> 01:17:36,694
But you do now.
In some way or other, you do now.
1411
01:17:36,777 --> 01:17:39,572
You know, there was a time when you could have just, for instance, written...
1412
01:17:39,655 --> 01:17:43,075
I don’t know, uh, Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen.
1413
01:17:43,159 --> 01:17:46,829
And I’m sure the people who read it had a pretty strong experience. I’m sure they did.
1414
01:17:46,912 --> 01:17:49,582
I mean, all right, now you’re saying that people today wouldn’t get it.
1415
01:17:49,665 --> 01:17:53,335
Maybe that’s true. But I mean, isn’t there any kind of writing or any kind of a play -
1416
01:17:53,419 --> 01:17:55,921
I mean, isn’t it still legitimate
for writers...
1417
01:17:56,005 --> 01:17:59,258
to try to portray reality so that people can see it?
1418
01:17:59,341 --> 01:18:03,429
I mean, really, tell me, why do we require a trip to Mount Everest...
1419
01:18:03,512 --> 01:18:05,848
in order to be able to perceive one moment of reality?
1420
01:18:05,931 --> 01:18:08,767
I mean - I mean, is Mount Everest more real than New York?
1421
01:18:08,851 --> 01:18:10,895
I mean, isn’t New York real?
1422
01:18:10,978 --> 01:18:15,107
I mean, you see, I think if you could become fully aware...
1423
01:18:15,191 --> 01:18:18,652
of what existed in the cigar store next door to this restaurant...
1424
01:18:18,736 --> 01:18:20,738
I think it would just blow your brains out.
1425
01:18:20,821 --> 01:18:23,324
I mean - I mean, isn’t there just as much reality to be perceived...
1426
01:18:23,407 --> 01:18:25,409
in a cigar store as there is on Mount Everest?
1427
01:18:25,492 --> 01:18:27,119
I mean what do you think?
1428
01:18:27,202 --> 01:18:29,872
I think that not only is there nothing more real about Mount Everest...
1429
01:18:29,955 --> 01:18:31,999
|T think there’s nothing that different, in a certain way.
1430
01:18:32,082 --> 01:18:34,627
I mean, because reality is uniform, in a way...
1431
01:18:34,710 --> 01:18:36,670
so that if your-if your perceptions are -
1432
01:18:36,754 --> 01:18:39,590
I mean, if your own mechanism is operating correctly...
1433
01:18:39,673 --> 01:18:42,968
it would become irrelevant to go to Mount Everest, and sort of absurd...
1434
01:18:43,052 --> 01:18:45,888
because, I mean - it just —
I mean, of course, on some level, I mean...
1435
01:18:45,971 --> 01:18:49,600
obviously it’s very different from a cigar store on 7th Avenue.
1436
01:18:49,683 --> 01:18:52,895
- But I mean –
- Well, I agree with you, Wally.
1437
01:18:52,978 --> 01:18:55,648
But the problem is that people can’t see the cigar store now.
1438
01:18:55,731 --> 01:18:58,233
I mean, things don’t affect people
the way they used to.
1439
01:18:58,317 --> 01:19:00,736
I mean, it may very well be that 10 years from now...
1440
01:19:00,819 --> 01:19:03,572
people will pay $10,000 in cash to be castrated...
1441
01:19:03,656 --> 01:19:06,325
just in order to be affected by something.
1442
01:19:07,910 --> 01:19:10,996
Well, why - why do you think that is?
I mean why is that?
1443
01:19:11,080 --> 01:19:15,584
I mean, is it just because people are lazy today, or they’re bored?
1444
01:19:15,668 --> 01:19:18,796
I mean, are we just like bored, spoiled children...
1445
01:19:18,879 --> 01:19:21,382
who’ve just been lying in the bathtub all day...
1446
01:19:21,465 --> 01:19:23,801
just playing with their plastic duck...
1447
01:19:23,884 --> 01:19:27,262
and now they’re just thinking, “Well, what can I do?”
1448
01:19:28,764 --> 01:19:31,558
Okay. Yes. We’re bored.
1449
01:19:31,642 --> 01:19:33,644
We’re all bored now.
1450
01:19:33,727 --> 01:19:35,938
But has it ever occurred to you, Wally,
that the process...
1451
01:19:36,021 --> 01:19:38,524
that creates this boredom that we see in the world now...
1452
01:19:38,607 --> 01:19:43,028
may very well be a self-perpetuating, unconscious form of brainwashing...
1453
01:19:43,112 --> 01:19:46,365
created by a world totalitarian government
based on money...
1454
01:19:46,448 --> 01:19:49,076
and that all of this is much more dangerous
than one thinks...
1455
01:19:49,159 --> 01:19:52,037
and it’s not just a question of individual survival, Wally...
1456
01:19:52,121 --> 01:19:54,540
but that somebody who’s bored
is asleep...
1457
01:19:54,623 --> 01:19:57,751
and somebody who’s asleep will not say no?
1458
01:19:57,835 --> 01:20:00,671
See, I keep meeting these people -I mean, uh, just a few days ago...
1459
01:20:00,754 --> 01:20:02,715
I met this man whom I greatly admire.'
1460
01:20:02,798 --> 01:20:05,092
He’s a Swedish physicist. Gustav Bjornstrand.
1461
01:20:05,175 --> 01:20:07,720
And he told me that he no longer watches television...
1462
01:20:07,803 --> 01:20:10,723
he doesn’t read newspapers, and he doesn’t read magazines.
1463
01:20:10,806 --> 01:20:13,100
He’s completely cut them out of his life...
1464
01:20:13,183 --> 01:20:17,688
because he really does feel that we’re living in some kind of Orwellian nightmare now...
1465
01:20:17,771 --> 01:20:21,817
and that everything that you hear now contributes to turning you into a robot.
1466
01:20:22,901 --> 01:20:26,572
And when I was at Findhorn, I met this extraordinary English tree expert...
1467
01:20:26,655 --> 01:20:28,741
who had devoted his life to saving trees.
1468
01:20:28,824 --> 01:20:31,243
Just got back from Washington, lobbying to save the redwoods.
1469
01:20:31,326 --> 01:20:34,163
He’s 84 years old, and he always travels with a backpack...
1470
01:20:34,246 --> 01:20:36,248
’cause he never knows where he’s gonna be tomorrow.
1471
01:20:36,331 --> 01:20:39,335
And when I met him at Findhorn, he said to me, “Where are you from?”
1472
01:20:39,418 --> 01:20:42,421
I said, “New York.” He said, “Ah, New York. Yes, that’s a very interesting place.
1473
01:20:42,546 --> 01:20:46,467
Do you know a lot of New Yorkers who keep talking about the fact that they want to leave,
but never do?”
1474
01:20:46,550 --> 01:20:49,178
And I said, “Oh, yes.” And he said, “Why do you think they don’t leave?”
1475
01:20:49,303 --> 01:20:53,182
I gave him different banal theories.
He said, “Oh, I don’t think it’s that way at all.”
1476
01:20:53,265 --> 01:20:57,853
He said, “I think that New York is the new model for the new concentration camp...
1477
01:20:57,936 --> 01:21:00,397
“where the camp has been built by the inmates themselves...
1478
01:21:00,481 --> 01:21:04,068
“and the inmates are the guards, and they have this pride in this thing they’ve built.
1479
01:21:04,151 --> 01:21:06,070
“They’ve built their own prison.
1480
01:21:06,153 --> 01:21:08,155
“And so they exist in a state of schizophrenia...
1481
01:21:08,238 --> 01:21:10,157
“where they are both guards and prisoners.
1482
01:21:10,240 --> 01:21:13,619
“And as a result, they no longer have -having been lobotomized -
1483
01:21:13,702 --> 01:21:16,121
“the capacity to leave the prison they’ve made...
1484
01:21:16,205 --> 01:21:19,083
or to even see it as a prison.”
1485
01:21:19,166 --> 01:21:22,377
And then he went into his pocket, and he took out a seed for a tree...
1486
01:21:22,461 --> 01:21:24,421
and he said, “This is a pine tree.”
1487
01:21:24,505 --> 01:21:28,133
He put it in my hand and he said, “Escape before it’s too late.”
1488
01:21:29,385 --> 01:21:32,012
See, actually, for two or three years now...
1489
01:21:32,137 --> 01:21:36,433
Chiquita and I have had this very unpleasant feeling that we really should get out.
1490
01:21:36,517 --> 01:21:39,311
We really feel like Jews in Germany
in the late ’30s.
1491
01:21:39,394 --> 01:21:41,313
Get out of here.
1492
01:21:41,396 --> 01:21:43,482
Of course, the problem is where to go.
1493
01:21:43,565 --> 01:21:48,404
’Cause it seems quite obvious that the whole world is going in the same direction.
1494
01:21:50,406 --> 01:21:53,659
See, I think it’s quite possible that the 1960s...
1495
01:21:53,784 --> 01:21:58,497
represented the last burst of the human being
before he was extinguished...
1496
01:21:58,580 --> 01:22:01,291
and that this is the beginning of the rest of the future, now...
1497
01:22:01,375 --> 01:22:05,462
and that from now on there’ll simply be all these robots walking around...
1498
01:22:05,546 --> 01:22:07,840
feeling nothing, thinking nothing.
1499
01:22:07,923 --> 01:22:10,884
And there’ll be nobody left almost
to remind them...
1500
01:22:10,968 --> 01:22:14,263
that there once was a species called a human being...
1501
01:22:14,346 --> 01:22:16,348
with feelings and thoughts...
1502
01:22:16,432 --> 01:22:19,268
and that history and memory are right now being erased...
1503
01:22:19,351 --> 01:22:22,271
and soon nobody will really remember...
1504
01:22:22,354 --> 01:22:24,606
that life existed on the planet.
1505
01:22:26,233 --> 01:22:30,696
Now, of course, Bjornstrand feels that there’s really almost no hope...
1506
01:22:30,779 --> 01:22:34,158
and that we’re probably going back to a very savage...
1507
01:22:34,241 --> 01:22:37,286
lawless, terrifying period.
1508
01:22:37,369 --> 01:22:39,830
Findhorn people see it a little differently.
1509
01:22:39,913 --> 01:22:42,749
They’re feeling that there’ll be these pockets of light...
1510
01:22:42,833 --> 01:22:44,918
springing up in different parts of the world...
1511
01:22:45,002 --> 01:22:49,339
and that these will be, in a way, invisible planets on this planet...
1512
01:22:49,423 --> 01:22:51,925
and that as we, or the world, grow colder...
1513
01:22:52,009 --> 01:22:55,637
we can take invisible space journey^ L to these different planets...
1514
01:22:55,721 --> 01:22:59,183
refuel for what it is we need to do on the planet itself...
1515
01:22:59,266 --> 01:23:01,560
and come back.
1516
01:23:01,643 --> 01:23:04,563
And it’s their feeling that there have to be centers now...
1517
01:23:04,646 --> 01:23:08,942
where people can come and reconstruct a new future for the world.
1518
01:23:09,026 --> 01:23:11,028
And when I was talking to, uh, Gustav Bjornstrand...
1519
01:23:11,111 --> 01:23:14,364
he was saying that actually these centers are growing up everywhere now...
1520
01:23:14,448 --> 01:23:17,451
and that what they’re trying to do, which is what Findhorn was trying to do...
1521
01:23:17,534 --> 01:23:19,745
and, in a way, what I was trying to do -
1522
01:23:19,828 --> 01:23:22,206
I mean,
these things can’t be given names...
1523
01:23:22,289 --> 01:23:26,502
but in a way, these are all attempts at creating a new kind of school...
1524
01:23:26,585 --> 01:23:28,795
or a new kind of monastery.
1525
01:23:28,879 --> 01:23:31,381
And Bjornstrand talks about the concept of “reserves” -
1526
01:23:31,465 --> 01:23:34,259
islands of safety where history can be remembered...
1527
01:23:34,343 --> 01:23:36,929
and the human being can continue to function...
1528
01:23:37,012 --> 01:23:40,682
in order to maintain the species through a dark age.
1529
01:23:42,726 --> 01:23:45,103
In other words, we’re talking about an underground...
1530
01:23:45,187 --> 01:23:47,814
which did exist in a different way during the Dark Ages...
1531
01:23:47,898 --> 01:23:50,609
among the mystical orders of the church.
1532
01:23:50,692 --> 01:23:52,819
And the purpose of this underground...
1533
01:23:52,903 --> 01:23:58,116
is to find out how to preserve the light, life, the culture...
1534
01:23:58,200 --> 01:24:01,620
how to keep things living,
1535
01:24:01,703 --> 01:24:04,623
You see, I keep thinking that what we need...
1536
01:24:04,706 --> 01:24:07,542
is a new language -
1537
01:24:07,626 --> 01:24:09,795
a language of the heart...
1538
01:24:09,878 --> 01:24:13,799
a language, as in the Polish forest, where language wasn’t needed.
1539
01:24:13,882 --> 01:24:18,845
Some kind of language between people that is a new kind of poetry...
1540
01:24:18,929 --> 01:24:23,475
that’s the poetry of the dancing bee that tells us where the honey is.
1541
01:24:23,558 --> 01:24:26,645
And I think that in order to create that language...
1542
01:24:26,728 --> 01:24:30,274
you’re going to have to learn how you can go through a looking glass...
1543
01:24:30,357 --> 01:24:32,317
into another kind of perception...
1544
01:24:32,401 --> 01:24:37,322
where you have that sense of being united to all things...
1545
01:24:37,406 --> 01:24:40,659
and suddenly you understand everything
1546
01:24:45,038 --> 01:24:48,750
[ Siren Wailing In Distance ]
1547
01:24:49,751 --> 01:24:52,045
Are you ready for some dessert?
1548
01:24:52,129 --> 01:24:54,298
Uh, I think I’ll just have an espresso.
Thank you.
1549
01:24:54,381 --> 01:24:58,343
- Very good.
- I’ll - I’ll also have one. Thank you.
1550
01:24:58,427 --> 01:25:01,722
And - And, uh, could I also have, uh, an amaretto?
1551
01:25:01,805 --> 01:25:04,474
Certainly, sir.
1552
01:25:04,558 --> 01:25:06,685
Thank you.
1553
01:25:06,768 --> 01:25:11,023
You see, Wally, there’s this incredible building that they built at Findhorn.
1554
01:25:11,106 --> 01:25:13,734
And the man who designed it had never designed anything in his life.
1555
01:25:13,817 --> 01:25:15,777
He wrote children’s books.
1556
01:25:15,861 --> 01:25:19,031
And some people wanted it to be a sort of hall of meditation...
1557
01:25:19,114 --> 01:25:21,533
and others wanted it to be a kind of lecture hall.
1558
01:25:21,616 --> 01:25:25,704
But the psychic part of the community wanted it to serve another function as well...
1559
01:25:25,787 --> 01:25:29,416
because they wanted it to be a kind of spaceship which at night could rise up...
1560
01:25:29,499 --> 01:25:32,294
and let the U.F.O.’s know that this was a safe place to land...
1561
01:25:32,377 --> 01:25:34,379
and that they would find friends there.
1562
01:25:34,463 --> 01:25:38,216
So, the problem was -’cause it needed a massive kind of roof-
1563
01:25:38,300 --> 01:25:41,386
was how to have a roof that would stay on the building...
1564
01:25:41,470 --> 01:25:44,931
but at the same time be able to fly up at night and meet the flying saucers.
1565
01:25:45,015 --> 01:25:47,768
So, the architect meditated and meditated...
1566
01:25:47,851 --> 01:25:50,687
and he finally came up with the very simple solution...
1567
01:25:50,771 --> 01:25:53,065
of not actually joining the roof to the building...
1568
01:25:53,148 --> 01:25:55,150
which means that it should fall off...
1569
01:25:55,233 --> 01:25:58,403
because they have great gales up in northern Scotland.
1570
01:25:58,487 --> 01:26:01,990
So, to keep it from falling off, he got beach stones from the beach -
1571
01:26:02,074 --> 01:26:04,868
or we did,
’cause l-l worked on this building -
1572
01:26:04,951 --> 01:26:07,037
all up and down the roof, just like that.
1573
01:26:07,120 --> 01:26:11,416
And the idea was that the energy that would flow from stone to stone...
1574
01:26:11,500 --> 01:26:13,502
would be so strong, you see...
1575
01:26:13,585 --> 01:26:16,922
that it would keep the roof down under any conditions...
1576
01:26:17,005 --> 01:26:21,510
but at the same time, if the roof needed to go up, it would be light enough to go up.
1577
01:26:21,593 --> 01:26:25,263
Well - [ Chuckling ] it works, you see.
1578
01:26:25,347 --> 01:26:27,933
Now, architects don’t know why it works...
1579
01:26:28,016 --> 01:26:30,018
and it shouldn’t work, ’cause it should fall off.
1580
01:26:30,102 --> 01:26:32,020
But it works. It does work.
1581
01:26:32,104 --> 01:26:35,816
The gales blow, and the roof should fall off,
but it doesn’t fall off.
1582
01:26:35,899 --> 01:26:38,902
[ Man Coughing ]
1583
01:26:40,487 --> 01:26:42,406
Yep.
1584
01:26:42,489 --> 01:26:44,408
Well, uh...
1585
01:26:45,534 --> 01:26:48,245
do you want to know my actual response to all this?
1586
01:26:48,328 --> 01:26:50,664
- Do you want to hear my actual response?
- Yes!
1587
01:26:52,416 --> 01:26:54,710
See, my actual response -
I mean -
1588
01:26:54,793 --> 01:26:59,881
[ Laughing ] I mean - I mean,
I’m just trying to - to survive, you know?
1589
01:26:59,965 --> 01:27:03,135
I mean,
I’m just trying to earn a living...
1590
01:27:03,218 --> 01:27:05,846
just trying to pay my rent and my bills.
1591
01:27:05,929 --> 01:27:08,306
I mean, uh -
1592
01:27:08,390 --> 01:27:11,768
Ah, I live my life.
1593
01:27:11,852 --> 01:27:14,938
I enjoy staying home with Debby.
1594
01:27:15,021 --> 01:27:17,858
I’m reading Charlton Heston’s autobiography.
1595
01:27:17,941 --> 01:27:19,609
And that’s that.
1596
01:27:19,693 --> 01:27:22,612
I mean, you know -
I mean, occasionally, maybe...
1597
01:27:22,696 --> 01:27:27,159
Debby and I will step outside, we’ll go to a party or something.
1598
01:27:27,242 --> 01:27:30,662
And if I can occasionally get my little talent together and write a little play...
1599
01:27:30,746 --> 01:27:32,998
well, then that’s just -that’s just wonderful.
1600
01:27:33,081 --> 01:27:36,042
And I mean, I enjoy reading about other little plays people have written...
1601
01:27:36,126 --> 01:27:39,504
and reading the reviews of those plays and what people said about them...
1602
01:27:39,588 --> 01:27:42,799
and what people said about what people said.
1603
01:27:42,924 --> 01:27:47,345
And I mean, I have - I have a list of errands and responsibilities that I keep in a notebook.
1604
01:27:47,429 --> 01:27:49,931
I enjoy going through the notebook...
1605
01:27:50,015 --> 01:27:52,434
carrying out the responsibilities, doing the errands...
1606
01:27:52,517 --> 01:27:55,687
and crossing them off the list.
1607
01:27:55,771 --> 01:28:00,233
And, I mean, I just - I just don’t know how anybody could enjoy anything more...
1608
01:28:00,317 --> 01:28:04,696
than I enjoy, uh, reading Charlton Heston’s autobiography...
1609
01:28:04,779 --> 01:28:07,616
or, uh, you know, uh, getting up in the morning...
1610
01:28:07,699 --> 01:28:11,203
and having the cup of cold coffee that’s been waiting for me all night...
1611
01:28:11,286 --> 01:28:13,789
still there for me to drink in the morning...
1612
01:28:13,872 --> 01:28:17,292
and no cockroach or fly has-has died in it overnight.
1613
01:28:17,375 --> 01:28:20,045
I mean, I’m just so thrilled when I get up...
1614
01:28:20,128 --> 01:28:23,632
and I see that coffee there, just the way I wanted it.
1615
01:28:23,715 --> 01:28:26,009
I mean, I just can’t imagine...
1616
01:28:26,092 --> 01:28:28,678
how anybody could enjoy something else
any more than that.
1617
01:28:28,762 --> 01:28:32,599
I mean - I mean, obviously, if the cockroach - if there is a dead cockroach in it...
1618
01:28:32,682 --> 01:28:35,477
well, then I just have a feeling of disappointment, and I’m sad.
1619
01:28:35,560 --> 01:28:38,730
But I mean, I - I just -I just don’t think...
1620
01:28:38,813 --> 01:28:41,066
I feel the need for anything more
than all this.
1621
01:28:41,149 --> 01:28:43,777
Whereas, you know,
you seem to be saying...
1622
01:28:43,860 --> 01:28:46,780
that, uh...
1623
01:28:46,863 --> 01:28:50,242
it’s inconceivable that anybody could be having a meaningful life today...
1624
01:28:50,325 --> 01:28:52,494
and, you know, everyone is totally destroyed...
1625
01:28:52,577 --> 01:28:55,163
and we all need to live in these outposts.
1626
01:28:55,247 --> 01:28:57,916
But I mean, you know,
I just can’t believe - even for you -
1627
01:28:57,999 --> 01:29:01,336
I mean, don’t you find - Isn’t it pleasant just to get up in the morning...
1628
01:29:01,419 --> 01:29:04,881
and there’s Chiquita, there are the children...
1629
01:29:04,965 --> 01:29:07,425
and The Times is delivered, you can read it.
1630
01:29:07,509 --> 01:29:10,387
I mean, maybe you’ll direct a play, maybe you won’t direct a play.
1631
01:29:10,470 --> 01:29:13,098
But forget about the play that you may or may not direct.
1632
01:29:13,181 --> 01:29:17,769
Why is it necessary to - Why not lean back and just enjoy these details?
1633
01:29:17,853 --> 01:29:22,440
I mean, and there’d be a delicious cup of coffee and a piece of coffeecake.
1634
01:29:22,524 --> 01:29:25,193
I mean, why is it necessary to have more than this...
1635
01:29:25,277 --> 01:29:27,612
or to even think about having more than this?
1636
01:29:27,696 --> 01:29:31,032
I mean, I don’t really know what you’re talking about.
1637
01:29:32,325 --> 01:29:34,953
I mean - I mean,
I know what you’re talking about...
1638
01:29:35,036 --> 01:29:37,873
but I don’t really know what you’re talking about.
1639
01:29:37,956 --> 01:29:41,167
And I mean, you know, even if I were to totally agree with you, you know...
1640
01:29:41,251 --> 01:29:44,462
and even if I were to accept the idea that there’s just no way for anybody...
1641
01:29:44,546 --> 01:29:46,631
to have personal happiness now...
1642
01:29:46,715 --> 01:29:49,092
well, you know,
I still couldn’t accept the idea...
1643
01:29:49,175 --> 01:29:51,803
that the way to make life wonderful would be to just totally...
1644
01:29:51,887 --> 01:29:54,222
you know, reject Western civilization...
1645
01:29:54,306 --> 01:29:57,642
and fall back into some kind of belief in some kind of weird something -
1646
01:29:57,726 --> 01:30:00,145
I mean, I don’t even know how to begin talking about this...
1647
01:30:00,228 --> 01:30:03,607
but you know, in the Middle Ages..
1648
01:30:03,690 --> 01:30:07,277
before the arrival of scientific thinking as we know it today...
1649
01:30:07,360 --> 01:30:09,654
well, people could believe anything.
1650
01:30:09,738 --> 01:30:12,365
Anything could be true -the statue of the Virgin Mary...
1651
01:30:12,449 --> 01:30:14,534
could speak or bleed or whatever it was.
1652
01:30:14,618 --> 01:30:16,620
But the wonderful thing
that happened...
1653
01:30:16,703 --> 01:30:19,664
was that then in the development of science in the Western world...
1654
01:30:19,748 --> 01:30:24,502
certain things did come slowly to be known and understood.
1655
01:30:24,586 --> 01:30:27,172
I mean, you know...
1656
01:30:27,255 --> 01:30:30,717
obviously, all ideas in science are constantly being revised.
1657
01:30:30,800 --> 01:30:32,719
I mean, that’s the whole point
1658
01:30:32,802 --> 01:30:37,807
But we do at least know that the universe has some shape and order...
1659
01:30:37,891 --> 01:30:42,395
and that, uh, you know, trees do not turn into people or goddesses...
1660
01:30:42,479 --> 01:30:44,814
and there are very good reasons
why they don’t...
1661
01:30:44,898 --> 01:30:47,192
and you can’t just believe
absolutely anything.
1662
01:30:47,275 --> 01:30:49,194
Whereas, the things that you’re talking about -
1663
01:30:49,277 --> 01:30:52,822
I mean - I mean, you found
the handprint in the book...
1664
01:30:52,906 --> 01:30:56,868
and there were - there were three Andres and one Antoine de Saint-Exupery.
1665
01:30:56,951 --> 01:30:59,746
And to me that is a coincidence.
1666
01:30:59,829 --> 01:31:02,791
But - And-And then, you know, the people who put that book together...
1667
01:31:02,874 --> 01:31:05,085
well, they had their own reasons for putting it together.
1668
01:31:05,168 --> 01:31:08,380
But to you it was significant, as if that book had been written 40 years ago...
1669
01:31:08,463 --> 01:31:12,467
so that you would see it, as if it was planned for you, in a way.
1670
01:31:12,550 --> 01:31:14,636
I mean, really – I mean -
1671
01:31:14,719 --> 01:31:19,265
I mean, all right, let’s say, if I get a fortune cookie in a Chinese restaurant...
1672
01:31:19,349 --> 01:31:21,393
I mean, of course, even I have a tendency -
1673
01:31:21,476 --> 01:31:24,270
I mean, you know - I mean, of course, I would hardly throw it out
1674
01:31:24,354 --> 01:31:27,357
I mean, I read it.
I read it, and - and, uh -
1675
01:31:27,440 --> 01:31:30,694
I just instinctively sort of -You know, if it says something like, uh...
1676
01:31:30,777 --> 01:31:34,406
“A conversation with a dark-haired man will be very important for you”...
1677
01:31:34,489 --> 01:31:37,534
well, I just instinctively think, you know, “Who do I know who has dark hair?
1678
01:31:37,617 --> 01:31:40,412
Did we have a conversation? What did we talk about?”
1679
01:31:40,495 --> 01:31:44,791
In other words, uh, there’s something in me that makes me read it...
1680
01:31:44,874 --> 01:31:48,545
and I instinctively interpret it as if it were an omen of the future.
1681
01:31:48,628 --> 01:31:52,173
But in my conscious opinion, which is so fundamental to my whole view of life -
1682
01:31:52,257 --> 01:31:55,427
I mean, I would just have to change totally
to not have this opinion.
1683
01:31:55,510 --> 01:31:57,470
In my conscious opinion, this is simply something...
1684
01:31:57,595 --> 01:32:01,766
that was written in the cookie factory several years ago and in no way refers to me.
1685
01:32:01,850 --> 01:32:04,602
I mean, you know, the - the fact that I got it -
1686
01:32:04,686 --> 01:32:07,439
I mean, the man who wrote it did not know anything about me.
1687
01:32:07,522 --> 01:32:09,566
I mean, he could not have known anything about me.
1688
01:32:09,649 --> 01:32:12,277
There’s no way that this cookie could actually have to do with me.
1689
01:32:12,360 --> 01:32:14,946
And the fact that I’ve gotten it is just basically a joke.
1690
01:32:15,030 --> 01:32:17,824
And I mean, if I were gonna go on a trip on an airplane...
1691
01:32:17,907 --> 01:32:19,951
and I got a fortune cookie that said “Don’t go”...
1692
01:32:20,034 --> 01:32:23,788
I mean, of course, I admit I might feel a bit nervous for about one second.
1693
01:32:23,872 --> 01:32:26,374
But in fact, I would go because,
I mean...
1694
01:32:26,458 --> 01:32:28,918
that trip is gonna be successful or unsuccessful...
1695
01:32:29,002 --> 01:32:31,629
based on the state of the airplane and the state of the pilot.
1696
01:32:31,713 --> 01:32:34,466
And the cookie is in no position to know about that.
1697
01:32:34,549 --> 01:32:36,468
And I mean, you know, it’s the same...
1698
01:32:36,551 --> 01:32:39,304
with any kind of, uh, prophecy, or a sign, or an omen.
1699
01:32:39,387 --> 01:32:43,808
Because if you believe in omens, then that means that the universe -
1700
01:32:43,892 --> 01:32:46,311
I mean, I don’t even know how to begin to describe this.
1701
01:32:46,394 --> 01:32:49,856
That means that the future is somehow sending messages...
1702
01:32:49,939 --> 01:32:52,025
backwards to the present.
1703
01:32:52,108 --> 01:32:55,445
Which-Which means that the future must exist in some sense already...
1704
01:32:55,528 --> 01:32:58,448
in order to be able to send these messages.
1705
01:32:58,573 --> 01:33:02,744
And it also means that things in the universe are there for a purpose - to give us messages.
1706
01:33:02,827 --> 01:33:05,246
Whereas I think that things in the universe are just there.
1707
01:33:05,330 --> 01:33:07,207
I mean, they don’t mean anything.
1708
01:33:07,332 --> 01:33:11,836
I mean, you know, if the turtle’s egg falls out of the tree and splashes on the paving stones...
1709
01:33:11,920 --> 01:33:15,006
it’s just because that turtle was clumsy -
by accident.
1710
01:33:15,090 --> 01:33:19,177
And-And to decide whether to send my ships off to war on the basis of that...
1711
01:33:19,260 --> 01:33:21,346
seems abig mistake to me.
1712
01:33:21,429 --> 01:33:25,058
Well, what information would you send your ships to war on?
1713
01:33:25,141 --> 01:33:26,851
Because if it’s all meaningless...
1714
01:33:26,935 --> 01:33:28,978
what’s the difference whether you accept the fortune cookie...
1715
01:33:29,062 --> 01:33:31,105
or the statistics of the Ford Foundation?
1716
01:33:31,189 --> 01:33:33,191
It doesn’t seem to matter.
1717
01:33:33,274 --> 01:33:37,403
Well, the meaningless fact of the fortune cookie or the turtle’s egg...
1718
01:33:37,487 --> 01:33:41,282
can’t possibly have any relevance to the subject you’re analyzing.
1719
01:33:41,366 --> 01:33:44,619
Whereas a group of meaningless facts that are collected and interpreted...
1720
01:33:44,702 --> 01:33:48,122
in a scientific way may quite possibly be relevant.
1721
01:33:48,206 --> 01:33:50,875
Because the wonderful thing about scientific theories about things...
1722
01:33:50,959 --> 01:33:54,629
is that they’re based on experiments that can be repeated.
1723
01:33:55,672 --> 01:33:57,632
Hmm.
1724
01:34:12,522 --> 01:34:14,649
Well, it’s true, Wally.
1725
01:34:14,732 --> 01:34:17,443
I mean, you know,
following omens and so on...
1726
01:34:17,527 --> 01:34:20,280
is probably just a way of letting ourselves off the hook...
1727
01:34:20,363 --> 01:34:24,701
so that we don’t have to take individual responsibility for our own actions.
1728
01:34:24,784 --> 01:34:27,078
But I mean, giving yourself over to the unconscious...
1729
01:34:27,162 --> 01:34:32,500
can leave you vulnerable to all sorts of very frightening manipulation.
1730
01:34:32,584 --> 01:34:35,920
And in all the work that I was involved in, there was always that danger.
1731
01:34:36,004 --> 01:34:39,591
And there was always that question of tampering with people’s lives...
1732
01:34:39,674 --> 01:34:43,303
because if I lead one of these workshops, then I do become partly a doctor...
1733
01:34:43,386 --> 01:34:45,513
and partly a therapist, and partly a priest.
1734
01:34:45,597 --> 01:34:50,018
And I’m not a doctor, or a therapist, or a priest.
1735
01:34:50,101 --> 01:34:52,687
And already some of these new monasteries...
1736
01:34:52,770 --> 01:34:55,356
or communities or whatever we’ve been talking about...
1737
01:34:55,440 --> 01:34:57,483
are becoming institutionalized...
1738
01:34:57,567 --> 01:35:00,778
and I guess even in a way, at times,
sort of fascistic.
1739
01:35:00,862 --> 01:35:04,949
You know, there’s a sort of self-satisfied elitist paranoia that grows up -
1740
01:35:05,033 --> 01:35:08,077
a feeling of “them” and “us” -that is very unsettling.
1741
01:35:08,161 --> 01:35:12,373
But I mean, uh, the thing is, Wally, I think it’s the exaggerated worship of science...
1742
01:35:12,457 --> 01:35:14,459
that has led us into this situation.
1743
01:35:14,542 --> 01:35:17,128
I mean, science has been held up to us
as a magical force...
1744
01:35:17,211 --> 01:35:19,213
that would somehow solve everything.
1745
01:35:19,297 --> 01:35:21,507
Well, quite the contrary. It’s done quite the contrary.
1746
01:35:21,591 --> 01:35:23,593
It’s destroyed everything.
1747
01:35:23,676 --> 01:35:25,637
So that is what has really led,
I think...
1748
01:35:25,720 --> 01:35:29,724
to this very strong, deep reaction against science that we’re seeing now...
1749
01:35:29,807 --> 01:35:32,518
just as the Nazi demons that were released in the ’30s in Germany...
1750
01:35:32,602 --> 01:35:36,439
were probably a reaction against a certain oppressive kind of knowledge...
1751
01:35:36,522 --> 01:35:38,983
and culture and rational thinking.
1752
01:35:39,067 --> 01:35:42,612
So I agree that we’re talking about something potentially very dangerous.
1753
01:35:42,695 --> 01:35:45,949
But modern science has not been particularly less dangerous.
1754
01:35:46,032 --> 01:35:47,992
Right. Well, I agree with you.
1755
01:35:48,076 --> 01:35:50,078
I completely agree.
1756
01:35:51,913 --> 01:35:54,374
No, you know] the truth is...
1757
01:35:54,457 --> 01:35:58,628
I think I do know what really disturbs me about the work you’ve described...
1758
01:35:58,711 --> 01:36:01,673
and I don’t even know if I can express it
1759
01:36:01,798 --> 01:36:05,677
But somehow it seems that the whole point of the work that you did in those workshops...
1760
01:36:05,760 --> 01:36:09,681
when you get right down to it and you ask what was it really about -
1761
01:36:09,764 --> 01:36:11,724
The whole point, really, I think.
1762
01:36:11,808 --> 01:36:14,978
was to enable the people in the workshops,
including yourself...
1763
01:36:15,061 --> 01:36:19,440
to somehow sort of strip away every scrap of purposefulness...
1764
01:36:19,524 --> 01:36:22,068
from certain selected moments.
1765
01:36:22,151 --> 01:36:25,405
And the point of it was so that you would then all be able to experience...
1766
01:36:25,488 --> 01:36:28,658
somehow just pure being.
1767
01:36:28,783 --> 01:36:32,704
In other words, you were trying to discover what it would be like to live for certain moments...
1768
01:36:32,787 --> 01:36:35,873
without having any particular thing that you were supposed to be doing.
1769
01:36:35,957 --> 01:36:38,334
And I think I just simply object to that.
1770
01:36:38,418 --> 01:36:41,546
I mean, I just don’t think I accept the idea that there should be moments...
1771
01:36:41,629 --> 01:36:43,798
in which you’re not trying to do anything.
1772
01:36:43,881 --> 01:36:47,885
[ Chuckling ] I think, uh, it’s our nature, uh, to do things.
1773
01:36:47,969 --> 01:36:49,887
I think we should do things.
1774
01:36:49,971 --> 01:36:52,098
I think that, uh, purposefulness...
1775
01:36:52,181 --> 01:36:56,561
is part of our ineradicable basic human structure.
1776
01:36:56,644 --> 01:36:59,439
And to say that we ought to be able to live without it...
1777
01:36:59,522 --> 01:37:03,526
is like saying that, uh, a tree ought to be able to live without branches or roots.
1778
01:37:03,609 --> 01:37:06,320
But - But actually, without branches or roots, it wouldn’t be a tree.
1779
01:37:06,404 --> 01:37:09,240
I mean, it would just be a log. Do you see what I’m saying?
1780
01:37:09,324 --> 01:37:10,992
Uh-huh. Uh-huh.
1781
01:37:11,075 --> 01:37:14,454
I mean, in other words, if I’m sitting at home
and I have nothing to do...
1782
01:37:14,537 --> 01:37:16,456
well, I naturally reach for a book.
1783
01:37:16,539 --> 01:37:20,251
I mean, what would be so great about just sitting there and, uh, doing nothing?
1784
01:37:20,335 --> 01:37:22,253
It just seems absurd.
1785
01:37:22,337 --> 01:37:23,963
And if Debby is there?
1786
01:37:25,173 --> 01:37:27,091
Well, that's just the same thing.
1787
01:37:27,175 --> 01:37:30,094
I mean, is there really such a thing as, uh...
1788
01:37:30,178 --> 01:37:34,098
two people doing nothing but just being together?
1789
01:37:34,182 --> 01:37:36,184
I mean, would they simply then...
1790
01:37:36,267 --> 01:37:39,354
be, uh, “relating,” to use the word we’re always using?
1791
01:37:39,437 --> 01:37:41,356
I mean, what would that mean?
1792
01:37:41,439 --> 01:37:43,441
I mean, either we’re gonna have a conversation...
1793
01:37:43,524 --> 01:37:45,651
or we’re going to, uh, carry out the garbage...
1794
01:37:45,735 --> 01:37:49,322
or we’re going to do something, separately or together.
1795
01:37:49,405 --> 01:37:51,324
I mean, do you see what I’m saying?
1796
01:37:51,407 --> 01:37:55,286
I mean, what does it mean to just, uh, simply, uh, sit there?
1797
01:37:55,369 --> 01:37:57,663
That makes you nervous.
1798
01:37:57,789 --> 01:38:02,210
Well, well, why shouldn’t it make me nervous?
It just seems ridiculous to me.
1799
01:38:02,293 --> 01:38:04,295
That's interesting. Wally.
1800
01:38:05,421 --> 01:38:09,217
You know, when I went to Ladakh in western Tibet and stayed on a farm for a month...
1801
01:38:09,342 --> 01:38:13,221
well, there, you know, when people come over in the evening for tea, nobody says anything.
1802
01:38:13,304 --> 01:38:15,431
Unless there’s something to say, but there almost never is.
1803
01:38:15,515 --> 01:38:19,060
So they just sit there and drink their tea, and it doesn’t seem to bother them.
1804
01:38:20,394 --> 01:38:24,816
I mean, you see, the trouble, Wally, with always being active and doing things...
1805
01:38:24,899 --> 01:38:28,027
is that I think it’s quite possible to do all sorts of things...
1806
01:38:28,111 --> 01:38:31,531
and at the same time be completely dead inside.
1807
01:38:31,614 --> 01:38:34,033
I mean, you’re doing all these things, but are you doing them...
1808
01:38:34,117 --> 01:38:36,244
because you really feel an impulse to do them...
1809
01:38:36,327 --> 01:38:39,080
or are you doing them mechanically, as we were saying before?
1810
01:38:39,163 --> 01:38:41,791
Because I really do believe that if you’re just living mechanically...
1811
01:38:41,874 --> 01:38:44,127
then you have to change your life.
1812
01:38:44,210 --> 01:38:47,213
I mean, you know, when you’re young, you go out on dates all the time.
1813
01:38:47,296 --> 01:38:50,216
You go dancing or something. You’re floating free.
1814
01:38:50,299 --> 01:38:53,469
And then one day suddenly you find yourself in a relationship...
1815
01:38:53,553 --> 01:38:55,680
and suddenly everything freezes.
1816
01:38:55,763 --> 01:38:58,558
And this can be true in your work as well.
1817
01:38:58,641 --> 01:39:01,477
And I mean, of course, if you’re really alive inside...
1818
01:39:01,561 --> 01:39:03,521
then of course there’s no problem.
1819
01:39:03,604 --> 01:39:05,857
I mean, if you’re living with somebody
in one little room...
1820
01:39:05,940 --> 01:39:08,776
and there’s a life going on between you and the person you’re living with...
1821
01:39:08,860 --> 01:39:13,364
well, then a whole adventure can be going on right in that room.
1822
01:39:13,448 --> 01:39:17,034
But there’s always the danger that things can go dead.
1823
01:39:17,118 --> 01:39:20,705
Then I really do think you have to kind of become a hobo or something, you know...
1824
01:39:20,788 --> 01:39:22,957
like Kerouac, and go out on the road.
1825
01:39:23,040 --> 01:39:25,209
I really believe that.
1826
01:39:25,293 --> 01:39:29,172
You know, it’s not that wonderful to spend your life on the road.
1827
01:39:29,255 --> 01:39:33,801
My own overwhelming preference is to stay in that room if you can.
1828
01:39:33,885 --> 01:39:37,096
But you know, if you live with somebody for a long time, people are constantly saying...
1829
01:39:37,180 --> 01:39:40,850
“Well, of course it’s not as great as it used to be, but that’s only natural.
1830
01:39:40,933 --> 01:39:44,395
The first blush of a romance goes, and that’s the way it has to be.”
1831
01:39:44,478 --> 01:39:47,648
Now, I totally disagree with that.
1832
01:39:47,773 --> 01:39:52,445
But I do think that you have to constantly ask yourself the question, with total frankness:
1833
01:39:52,528 --> 01:39:54,655
Is your marriage still a marriage?
1834
01:39:54,739 --> 01:39:56,908
Is the sacramental element there?
1835
01:39:56,991 --> 01:39:59,619
Just as you have to ask about the sacramental element in your work -
1836
01:39:59,702 --> 01:40:02,079
Is it still there?
1837
01:40:02,163 --> 01:40:04,832
I mean, it’s a very frightening thing, Wally, to have to suddenly realize...
1838
01:40:04,916 --> 01:40:09,170
that, my God, I thought I was living my life, but in fact I haven’t been a human being.
1839
01:40:09,253 --> 01:40:11,172
I’ve been a performer.
1840
01:40:11,255 --> 01:40:14,425
I haven’t been living. I’ve been acting. I’ve - I’ve acted the role of the father.
1841
01:40:14,508 --> 01:40:18,095
I’ve acted the role of the husband. I’ve acted the role of the friend.
1842
01:40:18,179 --> 01:40:21,599
I’ve acted the role of the writer, or director, or what have you.
1843
01:40:21,682 --> 01:40:25,561
I’ve lived in the same room with this person, but I haven’t really seen them.
1844
01:40:25,645 --> 01:40:29,690
I haven’t really heard them.
I haven’t really been with them.
1845
01:40:29,774 --> 01:40:32,443
Yeah, I know some people are just sometimes...
1846
01:40:32,527 --> 01:40:35,154
uh, existing just side by side.
1847
01:40:35,238 --> 01:40:40,159
I mean, uh, the other person’s, uh, face could just turn into a great wolf’s face...
1848
01:40:40,243 --> 01:40:43,079
and, uh, it just wouldn’t be noticed.
1849
01:40:43,162 --> 01:40:46,499
And it wouldn’t be noticed, no. It wouldn’t be noticed.
1850
01:40:47,792 --> 01:40:49,961
I mean, when I was in Israel a little while ago -
1851
01:40:50,044 --> 01:40:52,672
I mean, I have this picture of Chiquita that was taken when she -
1852
01:40:52,755 --> 01:40:56,384
I always carry it with me. It was taken when she was about 26 or something.
1853
01:40:56,467 --> 01:40:59,303
And it’s in summer, and she’s stretched out on a terrace...
1854
01:40:59,387 --> 01:41:02,306
in this sort of old-fashioned long skirt that’s kind of pulled up.
1855
01:41:02,390 --> 01:41:04,892
And she’s slim and sensual and beautiful.
1856
01:41:05,017 --> 01:41:09,355
And I’ve always looked at that picture and just thought about just how sexy she looks.
1857
01:41:09,438 --> 01:41:11,816
And then last year in Israel, I looked at the picture...
1858
01:41:11,899 --> 01:41:16,195
and I realized that that face in the picture was the saddest face in the world.
1859
01:41:16,279 --> 01:41:19,365
That girl at that time was just lost...
1860
01:41:19,448 --> 01:41:21,409
so sad and so alone.
1861
01:41:21,534 --> 01:41:25,079
I’ve been carrying this picture for years and not ever really seeing what it is, you know.
1862
01:41:25,162 --> 01:41:28,332
I just never really looked at the picture.
1863
01:41:30,334 --> 01:41:34,672
And then, at a certain point, I realized I’d just gone for a good 18 years unable to feel...
1864
01:41:34,755 --> 01:41:36,966
except in the most extreme situations.
1865
01:41:37,049 --> 01:41:40,052
I mean, to some extent, I still had the ability to live in my work.
1866
01:41:40,136 --> 01:41:42,054
That was why I was such a work junkie.
1867
01:41:42,138 --> 01:41:46,350
That was why I felt that every play that I did was a matter of my life or my death.
1868
01:41:46,434 --> 01:41:48,644
But in my real life, I was dead.
1869
01:41:48,728 --> 01:41:51,314
I was a robot.
1870
01:41:51,397 --> 01:41:54,358
I mean, I didn’t even allow myself to get angry or annoyed.
1871
01:41:54,442 --> 01:41:57,194
I mean, you know, today Chiquita, Nicolas, Marina -
1872
01:41:57,320 --> 01:42:01,198
All day long, as people do, they do things that annoy me and they say things that annoy me.
1873
01:42:01,282 --> 01:42:04,035
And today I get annoyed.
And they say, “Why are you annoyed?”
1874
01:42:04,118 --> 01:42:06,287
And I say, “Because you’re annoying,”
you know.
1875
01:42:07,955 --> 01:42:10,207
And when I allowed myself to consider the possibility...
1876
01:42:10,291 --> 01:42:12,877
of not spending the rest of my life with Chiquita...
1877
01:42:12,960 --> 01:42:16,672
I realized that what I wanted most in life was to always be with her.
1878
01:42:18,090 --> 01:42:21,427
But at that time, I hadn’t learned what it would be like to let yourself react...
1879
01:42:21,510 --> 01:42:23,429
to another human being.
1880
01:42:23,512 --> 01:42:25,556
And if you can’t react to another person...
1881
01:42:25,640 --> 01:42:28,809
then there’s no possibility of action or interaction.
1882
01:42:28,893 --> 01:42:33,939
And if there isn’t, I don’t really know what the word “love” means...
1883
01:42:34,023 --> 01:42:38,819
except duty, obligation, sentimentality, fear.
1884
01:42:41,280 --> 01:42:43,824
I mean -
[ Chuckling ]
1885
01:42:44,825 --> 01:42:46,869
I don’t know about you, Wally, but I -
1886
01:42:46,952 --> 01:42:50,998
I just had to put myself into a kind of training program to learn how to be a human being.
1887
01:42:51,082 --> 01:42:53,250
I mean, how did I feel about anything?
I didn’t know.
1888
01:42:53,376 --> 01:42:57,713
What kind of things did I like? What kind of people did I really want to be with? You know?
1889
01:42:57,797 --> 01:43:00,216
And the only way
that I could think of to find out...
1890
01:43:00,299 --> 01:43:04,261
was to just cut out all the noise and stop performing all the time...
1891
01:43:04,345 --> 01:43:07,682
and just listen to what was inside me.
1892
01:43:07,765 --> 01:43:10,768
See, I think a time comes when you need to do that.
1893
01:43:10,851 --> 01:43:13,938
Now, maybe in order to do it, you have to go to the Sahara...
1894
01:43:14,021 --> 01:43:16,023
and maybe you can do it at home.
1895
01:43:16,107 --> 01:43:18,484
But you need to cut out the noise.
1896
01:43:20,695 --> 01:43:22,613
[ Car Horn Honks On Street ]
1897
01:43:22,697 --> 01:43:24,657
Yeah. Of course, personally,
I-I just, uh -
1898
01:43:24,740 --> 01:43:28,452
I usually don’t, uh - [ Chuckles ] like those quiet moments, you know.
1899
01:43:28,536 --> 01:43:30,162
I really don’t.
1900
01:43:30,246 --> 01:43:34,959
I mean, uh, I don’t know if it’s that, uh, Freudian thing or what-
1901
01:43:35,042 --> 01:43:37,753
But, uh, you know, the fear of unconscious impulses...
1902
01:43:37,837 --> 01:43:41,006
or my own aggression or whatever, but, uh...
1903
01:43:41,090 --> 01:43:44,802
if things get too quiet, and I find myself
just, uh, sitting there...
1904
01:43:44,885 --> 01:43:46,846
you know,
as we were saying before...
1905
01:43:46,929 --> 01:43:51,559
I mean, whether I’m by myself, or-or I’m-I’m with someone else...
1906
01:43:51,642 --> 01:43:54,729
I just, uh -I just have this feeling of...
1907
01:43:54,812 --> 01:43:58,858
uh, my God,
I’m going to be revealed.
1908
01:43:58,941 --> 01:44:03,112
In other words, I’m adequate to do any sort of a task, urn...
1909
01:44:03,195 --> 01:44:07,158
but I’m not adequate, uh, just to - to be a human being.
1910
01:44:07,241 --> 01:44:09,160
I mean, in other words, I’m not, uh -
1911
01:44:09,243 --> 01:44:12,538
If I’m just, uh, trapped there and I’m not allowed to do things...
1912
01:44:12,621 --> 01:44:16,041
but all I can do is just, um, be there...
1913
01:44:16,125 --> 01:44:18,377
well, I'll just fail
1914
01:44:18,461 --> 01:44:20,463
I mean, in other words, uh...
1915
01:44:20,546 --> 01:44:22,965
I can pass any other sort of a test...
1916
01:44:23,048 --> 01:44:26,844
and, you know, I can even get an “A” if I put in the required effort...
1917
01:44:26,927 --> 01:44:29,054
but I just don’t, uh -
1918
01:44:29,138 --> 01:44:31,849
I just don’t have a clue how to pass this test.
1919
01:44:31,932 --> 01:44:35,352
I mean - I mean, of course,
I realize this isn’t a test...
1920
01:44:35,436 --> 01:44:38,189
but, um, I see as a test...
1921
01:44:38,272 --> 01:44:40,316
and I feel I’m going to fail it.
1922
01:44:40,399 --> 01:44:42,359
I mean, it’s — It’s very scary.
1923
01:44:42,443 --> 01:44:46,697
I just feel, uh, just totally at sea.
I mean -
1924
01:44:46,780 --> 01:44:49,241
Well, you know,
I could imagine a life, Wally...
1925
01:44:49,325 --> 01:44:54,121
in which each day would become an incredible, monumental, creative task...
1926
01:44:54,205 --> 01:44:56,373
and we’re not necessarily up to it.
1927
01:44:56,457 --> 01:44:59,919
I mean, if you felt like walking out on the person you live with, you’d walk out.
1928
01:45:00,002 --> 01:45:02,004
Then if you felt like it, you’d come back.
1929
01:45:02,087 --> 01:45:05,758
But meanwhile, the other person would have reacted to your walking out.
1930
01:45:05,841 --> 01:45:09,094
It would be a life of such feeling.
1931
01:45:09,178 --> 01:45:11,514
I mean, what was amazing in the workshops I led...
1932
01:45:11,597 --> 01:45:15,226
was how quickly people seemed to fall into enthusiasm...
1933
01:45:15,309 --> 01:45:19,647
celebration, joy, wonder, abandon, wildness, tenderness.
1934
01:45:19,730 --> 01:45:21,899
Could we stand to live like that?
1935
01:45:21,982 --> 01:45:24,985
Yeah, I think it’s that moment of contact
with another person.
1936
01:45:25,069 --> 01:45:26,987
I mean, that’s what scares us.
1937
01:45:27,071 --> 01:45:30,491
I mean, that moment of being face to face with another person.
1938
01:45:30,574 --> 01:45:32,493
I mean, now - [Laughs]
1939
01:45:32,576 --> 01:45:36,831
You wouldn’t think it would be so frightening. It’s strange that we find it so frightening.
1940
01:45:36,914 --> 01:45:38,833
Well, it isn’t that strange.
1941
01:45:38,916 --> 01:45:42,086
I mean, first of all, there are some pretty good reasons for being frightened.
1942
01:45:42,169 --> 01:45:46,507
I mean, you know, the human being is a complex and dangerous creature.
1943
01:45:46,590 --> 01:45:49,260
I mean, really, if you start living each moment?
1944
01:45:49,343 --> 01:45:51,262
Christ, that s quite a challenge.
1945
01:45:51,345 --> 01:45:54,974
I mean, if you really reach out and you’re really in touch with the other person...
1946
01:45:55,057 --> 01:45:58,519
well, that really is something to strive for, I think, I really do.
1947
01:45:58,602 --> 01:46:01,230
Yeah, it’s just so pathetic if one doesn’t do that.
1948
01:46:01,355 --> 01:46:05,776
Of course there’s a problem, because the closer you come, I think, to another human being...
1949
01:46:05,859 --> 01:46:08,946
the more completely mysterious -and unreachable -
1950
01:46:09,029 --> 01:46:10,948
that person becomes.
1951
01:46:11,031 --> 01:46:14,660
I mean, you know, you have to reach out, you have to go back and forth with them...
1952
01:46:14,743 --> 01:46:18,747
and you have to relate, and yet you’re relating to a ghost or something.
1953
01:46:18,831 --> 01:46:20,791
I don’t know, because we’re ghosts.
1954
01:46:20,874 --> 01:46:24,670
We’re phantoms. Who are we?
1955
01:46:24,753 --> 01:46:27,631
And that’s to face, to confront the fact that you’re completely alone.
1956
01:46:27,715 --> 01:46:30,467
And to accept that you’re alone is to accept death.
1957
01:46:30,551 --> 01:46:33,804
You mean, because somehow when you are alone, you’re alone with death.
1958
01:46:33,887 --> 01:46:38,100
I mean, nothing’s obstructing your view of it,
or something like that.
1959
01:46:38,183 --> 01:46:39,977
Right.
1960
01:46:40,060 --> 01:46:42,980
You know, if I understood it correctly, I think, uh, Heidegger said...
1961
01:46:43,063 --> 01:46:47,318
that, uh, if you were to experience your own being to the full...
1962
01:46:47,401 --> 01:46:52,364
you’d be experiencing the decay of that being toward death...
1963
01:46:52,448 --> 01:46:54,825
as a part of your experience.
1964
01:46:54,908 --> 01:46:58,078
You know, in the sexual act there’s that moment of complete forgetting...
1965
01:46:58,162 --> 01:46:59,830
which is so incredible.
1966
01:46:59,914 --> 01:47:02,124
Then in the next moment, you start to think about things:
1967
01:47:02,207 --> 01:47:04,460
work on the play, what you’ve got to do tomorrow.
1968
01:47:04,543 --> 01:47:08,005
I don’t know if this is true of you, but I think it must be quite common.
1969
01:47:08,088 --> 01:47:10,591
The world comes in quite fast
1970
01:47:10,674 --> 01:47:14,178
Now, that again may be because we’re afraid to stay in that place of forgetting...
1971
01:47:14,261 --> 01:47:16,347
because that, again, is close to death.
1972
01:47:16,430 --> 01:47:18,807
Like people who are afraid to go to sleep.
1973
01:47:18,891 --> 01:47:22,770
In other words, you interrelate, and you don’t know what the next moment will bring.
1974
01:47:22,853 --> 01:47:24,855
And to not know what the next moment will bring...
1975
01:47:24,938 --> 01:47:27,024
brings you closer to a perception of death.
1976
01:47:27,107 --> 01:47:30,778
You see, that’s why / think that people have affairs.
1977
01:47:30,861 --> 01:47:33,280
I mean, you know, in the theater,
if you get good reviews...
1978
01:47:33,364 --> 01:47:35,783
you feel for a moment that you’ve got your hands on something.
1979
01:47:35,866 --> 01:47:38,077
You know what I mean?
I mean, it’s a good feeling.
1980
01:47:38,160 --> 01:47:40,496
But then that feeling goes quite quickly.
1981
01:47:40,579 --> 01:47:43,874
And once again you don’t know quite what you should do next.
1982
01:47:43,957 --> 01:47:45,626
What'll happen?
1983
01:47:45,709 --> 01:47:48,253
Well, have an affair, and up to a certain point...
1984
01:47:48,337 --> 01:47:51,048
you can really feel that you’re on firm ground, you know.
1985
01:47:51,131 --> 01:47:54,718
There’s a sexual conquest to be made. There are different questions._
1986
01:47:54,802 --> 01:47:56,720
Does she enjoy the ears being nibbled?
1987
01:47:56,845 --> 01:48:00,349
How intensely can you talk about Schopenhauer at some elegant French restaurant?
1988
01:48:00,432 --> 01:48:02,810
Whatever nonsense it is.
1989
01:48:02,893 --> 01:48:06,897
It’s all, I think, to give you the semblance
that there’s firm earth.
1990
01:48:06,981 --> 01:48:10,943
Well, have a real relationship with a person that goes on for years -
1991
01:48:11,026 --> 01:48:13,696
That’s completely unpredictable.
1992
01:48:13,779 --> 01:48:17,032
Then you’ve cut off all your ties to the land, and you’re sailing into the unknown...
1993
01:48:17,116 --> 01:48:19,576
into uncharted seas.
1994
01:48:19,660 --> 01:48:24,373
I mean, you know, people hold on to these images of father, mother, husband, wife...
1995
01:48:24,456 --> 01:48:26,375
again for the same reason -
1996
01:48:26,458 --> 01:48:29,962
’cause they seem to provide some firm ground.
1997
01:48:30,045 --> 01:48:32,381
But there’s no wife there.
1998
01:48:32,464 --> 01:48:34,508
What does that mean?
A wife.
1999
01:48:34,591 --> 01:48:37,302
A husband. A son.
2000
01:48:37,386 --> 01:48:39,388
A baby holds your hands...
2001
01:48:39,471 --> 01:48:43,100
and then suddenly there’s this huge man lifting you off the ground...
2002
01:48:43,183 --> 01:48:45,102
and then he’s gone.
2003
01:48:45,185 --> 01:48:47,146
Where’s that son?
2004
01:49:06,290 --> 01:49:10,335
[ Wally Narrating ] All the other customers seemed to have left hours ago.
2005
01:49:10,419 --> 01:49:14,631
We got the bill, and Andre paid for our dinner
2006
01:49:14,715 --> 01:49:16,216
Really?
2007
01:49:18,552 --> 01:49:21,680
[ Conversing, Indistinct ]
2008
01:49:42,493 --> 01:49:44,745
[ Wally Narrating ]
I treated myself to a taxi.
2009
01:49:46,205 --> 01:49:48,707
I rode home through the city streets,
2010
01:49:49,917 --> 01:49:52,586
There wasn’t a street, there wasn’t a building...
2011
01:49:52,669 --> 01:49:55,964
that wasn’t connected to some memory in my mind.
2012
01:49:57,382 --> 01:50:00,511
There, I was buying a suit with my father
2013
01:50:03,138 --> 01:50:06,642
There, I was having an ice cream soda after school.
2014
01:50:10,729 --> 01:50:14,149
When I finally came in, Deb by was home from work...
2015
01:50:14,233 --> 01:50:17,736
and I told her everything about my dinner with Andre.
191131
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