Nathaniel Stampley as Coalhouse Walker Jr. in the Marriott Lincolnshire production of Ragtime. |
Tomorrow
evening my wife Kathy and I will be
on one of trips to the Marriott
Lincolnshire to see one of their uniformly
fine stagings of a musical. We indulge
ourselves in season passes and
have never regretted the expense. I
have been particularly looking forward to Ragtime, the lavish and sprawling
historical opus and won legendary
critical acclaim on Broadway in
1999 only to fail financially due to
the enormous cost of the production and huge cast. The play was
based on E. L. Doctorow’s 1975 novel which also birthed the 1981 film directed my Milos Forman and best remembered as the last screen performance by James Cagney.
That
Ragtime would appeal to the proprietor of this blog will come as no surprise
to regular readers. It corresponds
to the intersection of several interests covered here—American social history, popular culture and entertainment,
technological innovation and invention, and literature, all thanks
to Doctorow and his foundational novel.
In Ragtime and other novels Doctorow played
with mixing real historical persons
with his fictional characters set in
a background of real events and social conditions. Ok.
That’s a common feature of historical
fiction dating at least as far back as Alexander
Dumas pere and his French adventure romances. Current
American masters Larry McMurtry and Jerome Charyn innovatively mix fact, fiction, and fancy.
But
Doctorow went further. Rooted securely in time and place—early 20th
Century New York and environs—the
author shuffles social classes throwing his characters together in
ways that illuminated the rapidly
changing times. He also set the
scene by employing devices like newsreels and newspaper stories to document
actual event.
He
was not the first to do so. John Dos Passos deserves credit for inventing the technique in
his ground-breaking USA Trilogy
b and John Steinbeck used
the newsreel devise in The Grapes of Wrath. More recently and feminist icon Marge Piercy in Sex Wars: A Novel of the Gilded Age New York
was particularly adept at
the collision of class, ethnicity, religion, ideology and,
of course sex.
Ragtime featured three clusters of fictional characters.
First there was the purposefully
unnamed comfortably upper middle-class family from the leafy and prosperous
commuter suburb, New Rochelle, New York.
That’s the very same idyllic haven
that George M. Cohan wrote about in
his song 45 Minutes from Broadway. The family members were simply called Father, Mother, Mother’s Younger Brother,
Grandfather, and the Little Boy. They owed prosperity to a family business
that promoted the same super
patriotism and nationalism celebrated
by Cohan—the manufacture of flags and fireworks.
Then
there was Coalhouse Walker, Jr. a Harlem ragtime piano player; Sarah the servant girl he made pregnant; and the baby, Coalhouse Walker III, she tried abandon in the New Rochelle home’s garden. Mother unexpectedly showed
sympathy for the mother and babe,
bringing them both into her home where Coalhouse sought them out seeking a reconciliation with Sarah.
Finally,
there was the Latvian Jewish emigrant Tateh,
a street artist with ambition; the young wife he drove away
for desperately accepting money for sex
from her employer, and his
exceptionally lovely Little Girl.
Each
of their lives intersected and were changed forever by the experience. They also interact with real historical
characters—beautiful model and actress Evelyn Nesbit, her jealous husband Harry K. Thaw and her lover, the architect of Madison Square
Garden Stanford White; anarchist Emma Goldman; polar explorer Robert Perry and
his Black associate Matthew Henson; industrialist
Henry Ford and monopolist banker
J.P. Morgan, Harry Houdini, and Booker T. Washington. Other figures pop up, too—Sigmund Freud and
Carl Jung, novelist Theodore Dreiser, documentary
photographer Jacob Riis, the Mexican
revolutionary Emiliano Zapata and several New York City officials including Manhattan District Attorney Charles S. Whitman,
and Police Commissioner Rhinelander
Waldo.
Historical
events that provide backdrop for the novel include Perry’s Arctic expedition, Harry Thaw’s very public murder of Stanford White, the introduction of the Model T
Ford, the development of the early motion
picture industry, The Lawrence
Textile Strike of 1912, the Mexican
Revolution, the sinking Lusitania, and the onset of World War I.
If
it all seems a little dizzying, Doctorow
pulled it off with dazzling grace.
Author E. L. Doctorow. |
Edgar Lawrence Doctorow was born on January
6, 1931 in the Bronx. His parents, David Richard and Rose (Levine) Doctorow were second
generation Russian Jews and well
assimilated by the standards of
their community. They named their
son for Edgar Alan Poe. His father
ran a small music store that struggled in the hard times of the Great
Depression.
The
boy attended public schools and was encouraged by his family to seek the security of the education offered by prestigious
Bronx Science High School. He did
well in school but was more interested in literature
and writing than by advanced math and science. He contributed to
the school literary magazine The Dynamo and took classes in journalism.
Doctorow
went on to attend liberal Arts Kenyon College where he was mentored by poet and critic John Crowe
Ransom, the founder and editor of the prestigious Kenyon
Review. He majored in philosophy and took a special interest in theater acting in several student productions.
After
graduation in 1952 Doctorow went on to graduate
school at Columbia University back
in New York City. There he met and courted fellow student Helen Esther Setzer. But in 1953 his courtship was interrupted and his studies ended when he
was drafted into the Army.
Assigned to the Signal Corps,
he rose to the rank of corporal and
was posted to Germany.
While
in the service Doctorow married his sweetheart
and started a family that eventually included three children. With a family to support he had to forgo
continuing his education after his discharge
and defer his dream of becoming a writer. Instead he turned to a career as an editor.
It proved to be a long, but valuable apprenticeship.
Money from the successful film adaptation of Welcome to Hard Times made it possible to Doctorow to devote himself to his writing. |
An
early gig was as a script reader for a motion picture company. It was the mid-‘50’s and westerns were
the rage. He read so many that he started to write
a parody of the conventions of the genre but
as he worked it became a morality tale and
a meditation on violence and revenge. Welcome
to Hard Times was published to critical
acclaim, but modest sales in
1961. A New York Times review compared
the book to Joseph Conrad’s classic Heart
of Darkness:
Perhaps the
primary theme of the novel is that evil can only be resisted psychically: when
the rational controls that order man's existence slacken, destruction comes.
Conrad said it best in Heart of Darkness, but Mr. Doctorow
has said it impressively.
In
1967 MGM brought the novel to the screen in an acclaimed film starring Henry
Fonda, Janis Rule, Aldo Ray, Kennan Wynn, and Eliza Cook, Jr. Income from
the movie allowed Doctorow to leave behind his years in publishing and concentrate on his
writing.
But
in the mean time he had an illustrious—and
informative—career as an editor. First,
he spent seven years as a book editor at the quality literary paperback house New American Library (NAL) where
he worked with such diverse authors as. Ian
Fleming and Ayn Rand. The in 1964 he moved on to Dial Press as editor-in-chief publishing work by James Baldwin, Norman Mailer,
Ernest J. Gaines, and William Kennedy.
His
long experience as an editor served him well.
His own book editor Jason Epstein
later observed:
When you’d read
Edgar's manuscripts, it was done. That’s just the kind of writer he was; he got
everything right the first time. I can’t think of any editorial problem we had.
Even remotely. Nothing.
Finally,
in 1969 with his movie money in his
pocket and an invitation to
become a visiting writer at the University of California, Irvine, Doctorow
moved to the Golden State and
dedicating himself to his writing. The first fruit of this period was The
Book of Daniel, a roman a clef of the trial and execution of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg for nuclear espionage and treason in light of the turbulent campus radicalism of their
children. The book was proclaimed a contemporary masterpiece when it was
published in 1971 and vaulted Doctorow to the first ranks of American
novelists.
The
book also was adapted as a film Daniel,
directed by Sidney Lumet and
released in 1983. It starred Timothy Hutton, Hollywood’s go-to young
idealist at the time, Mandy Patinkin,
Lindsay Crouse, Amanda Plummer, Ellen
Barkin, and Ed Asner.
The trial and execution of Ethel and Julius Rosenberg and it haunting effect on their children inspired The Book of Daniel. |
When
his stay at the UC Irvine over, Doctorow and his family returned to the
comfortable home they had in New Rochelle, where he began work on the novel
partially inspired by his adopted
hometown. Like The Book of Daniel the new work was deeply influenced by the social
turmoil of the times. But instead of
directly embodying the ‘70’s they were reflected in the events and characters
of the novel. Readers were not beat over
the head with parallels, but
they clear. Evelyn Nesbit’s story echoed
the newer sexual revolution. Mother’s awakening
evoked the emerging feminism,
Emma Goldman reflected the New Left, Coalhouse
Walker and his angry gang stood for
the militancy of the Black Power Movement and Black Panthers, and Mama’s Little
Brother was a doppelganger for the
kind of guilt ridden wealthy youth that
became Weatherman bombers.
Ragtime became Doctorow’s most honored and celebrated novel, but he continued to produce remarkable fiction
while also pursuing an academic career that
included turns at Sarah Lawrence College,
the Yale School of Drama, the University of Utah, Princeton University, and New York University. Among his 12 novels are:
World’s Fair, 1985 set against
the 1939 New York World’s Fair and
world teetering of the edge of World War
II. Winner of the 1986 National Book Award.
Billy Bathgate, 1989 about an
Irish Bronx kid’s rise in the Dutch
Schultz mob. Winner of the National Book Critics Circle award for
fiction, PEN/Faulkner Award for
Fiction, the William Dean Howells Medal,
and was the runner up for the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book
Award. Adapted by British playwright Tom Stoppard for a 1991 film starring Loren Dean as the title character, Dustin Hoffman as gangster Dutch
Schultz. The film co-stared Nicole
Kidman, Steven Hill, Steve Buscemi, and Bruce Willis.
The March, 2005 based on Sherman’s March to the Seat and the closing days of the Civil War.
A Gone With the Wind antidote.
It was a recipient of the PEN/Faulkner Award, the National Book
Critics Circle Award, and the Michael Shaara Award for Excellence in Civil
War Fiction. It was adapted for the stage in 2012 by Chicago’s famed Steppenwolf Theater Company.
Doctorow
continued to be showered with honors
among them the National Humanities Medal
from the National Endowment for the Humanities, F. Scott Fitzgerald Award for Achievement in American Literature, Medal
for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters from the National Book
Foundation, American Academy of Arts and Letters Gold Medal for Fiction, and
the Library of Congress Prize for
American Fiction.
Doctorow’s
long and productive life came to an
end when he died of lung cancer in
New York City July 21, 2015 at the age 84.
His wife, children, and countless
devoted readers survived him.
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