The Heart of an Anarchist:
Elia Kazan, the Artist as Outsider
by
Richard Wall
by Richard Wall
"I
don’t trust the state – whatever state. Do you? Really? I fear
authority. I don’t believe that those who exercise it will continue
to be friendly. I trust authority – to be unfriendly. I feel I
will be apprehended as much for my thoughts as for past deeds
and omissions."
~Elia
Kazan: A
Life (New York, Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., 1988)
No cultural
history of twentieth-century America would be complete without a
look at the life and work of Elia
Kazan (19092003). The reputation of this great film-maker,
theatre director and writer has divided opinion for over 50 years
– for political reasons.
A new biography
of Kazan has recently been given a mixed, but broadly favorable
review
in the New York Times (free log-in required). The
book is by Richard Schickel, Time film critic and a friend of
Kazan’s who in 1998 was apparently involved in the still controversial
decision to bestow on him Hollywood’s lifetime
achievement award for that year, and for whom writing it must
have been a labor of love.
When
it comes to biography, Elia Kazan himself is a hard act to follow.
His 1988 magnum opus, entitled just A
Life, is not only "arguably the best show-business
memoir ever written," but also and quite simply a compulsive
read. Despite its enormous length (825 pages in the 1997 paperback
edition from Da Capo Press), it is a book which I and many others
have found difficult to put down.
He was born
Elia Kazanjioglou in Constantinople, the capital of the Ottoman
empire (now Istanbul, Turkey), in September 1909. His father’s family
were Greeks from the plain of Anatolia, a people later to be permanently
exiled or assimilated, and many of them wiped out, as a result of
the war
of 192122 between Greece and Turkey.
Given
the belligerence and vindictiveness exhibited by such states, ever
prepared to sacrifice
human lives for the sake of their own aggrandizement and perceived
strategic interests or, worse still, "national dignity,"
is it any wonder Elia Kazan never trusted a state in his life?
Kazan was
lucky: his family brought him to America when he was around four,
before the fateful outbreak of World War One and all the human
disasters
that followed it in the land of his birth.
Many
years later he was to go back there, in the attempt to rediscover
his roots and understand the impulses which had lead his forbears
to obey the human instinct to act upon the "desperate thrust
for liberty" by emigrating to America. Out of this quest was
to come a novel, America America, and the now unjustly neglected
‘classic immigrant experience’ movie of the same name.
"I could
see what I had to do. I had to go back to Turkey – back to where
my family had come from… really look and listen and stay put whenever
I found something that aroused me. The more I thought about the
early history of my family, the more complex it seemed and the
less I found I actually knew about it. I was a kind of tourist
in my family’s history. I had not experienced the events or the
pressures I proposed to film or write about. I hadn’t been through
the crisis of persecution and want, never knew the desperate thrust
for liberty that I wished to dramatize. I was a middle-class American
boy, a stranger to my own history." (A Life, p. 581)
Kazan’s own
life and work can be seen as a thrust for liberty, carried out through
a combination of devotion, awareness, application, groveling, cleverness,
deception, artistry, technique, guile, toughness, compassion, betrayal
and loyalty. He lived the fullest of lives, having been married
three times, produced a large family of his own, and achieved both
fame and notoriety in the worlds of theatre, film and, late in life,
literature.
It’s all there
in the autobiography, and if you want a truly engrossing read, and
are interested in how the free human spirit survives in the struggle
against all that assails it, I recommend this huge book without
reservation.
Kazan and
the House Unamerican Activities Committee
The autobiography
also deals, of course, with the pivotal episode in Kazan’s life,
the fateful day of his second testimony to the House Unamerican
Activities Committee in April 1952, when (having earlier refused
to do so) he finally gave it the names of ex-comrades in the American
Communist Party, of which he had briefly been a member in the 1930s.
The fact that
he testified brought him instant hostility, which endures to this
day: there are those
who
can never forgive Kazan for what he did – ratting on former colleagues
and who feel that it contaminates
his whole work: "One needs to cut through the self-serving
arguments and excuses and say what is: Kazan behaved like a scoundrel,
becoming an informer in 1952 to save his career in Hollywood and
all that went with it." (David Walsh, Filmmaker
and Informer). In this camp we find, incidentally,
the writer of a truly disgraceful Fox News obituary
notice which panders shamelessly to the most mawkish type of
sentimentality about those whom the writer has selected as the approved
victims of Kazan’s naming of names.
On the other
side are those
who believe he did the right
thing, and for principled reasons. "That he came to understand
the evils of the Communist Party and its ideology, and confirmed
the names of its American members, who were "loyal" to falsehoods
and murderers, makes him not a traitorous "informer," but an individual
dedicated to facts, truth. Elia Kazan should be applauded for such
moral heroism." (Joseph Kellard, The
Blacklisting of Elia Kazan)
In the middle
are those
who
do not admire what he did, but nonetheless acknowledge the quality
of his work, feel that he deserved his lifetime achievement award
and are prepared to forgive,
if not excuse. Among the most admirable of these – however much
he may be criticized for not understanding economics is the
playwright Arthur Miller, whose own refusal to name names in the
HUAC’s declining days is often contrasted favorably with Kazan’s
‘ratting.’
Miller and
Kazan were personal friends; Kazan directed the first performance
of Death
of A Salesman in 1949; and the HUAC episode damaged the
friendship almost beyond repair. But finally Miller, before he died
earlier this year, in an article
written in 2000 discussing the origins and motivations for his play
The
Crucible, showed great sympathy and understanding for Kazan,
and it is worth quoting him at length. Here he describes the predicament:
Kazan had
been a member of the Communist party only a matter of months,
and even that link had ended years before. And the party had never
been illegal, nor was membership in it. Yet this great director,
left undefended by 20th Century Fox executives, his long-time
employers, was told that if he refused to name people whom he
had known in the party actors, directors and writers
he would never be allowed to direct another picture in Hollywood,
meaning the end of his career.
…Exactly
as in Salem or Russia under the Czar and the Chairman,
and Inquisition Spain, Revolutionary France or any other place
of revolution or counter-revolution conspiracy was the
name for all opposition. And the reformation of the accused could
only be believed when he gave up the names of his co-conspirators.
Only this ritual of humiliation, the breaking of pride and independence,
could win the accused readmission into the community. The process
inevitably did produce in the accused a new set of political,
social and even moral convictions more acceptable to the state
whose fist had been shoved into his face, with his utter ruin
promised should he resist.
As he laid
out his dilemma and his decision to comply with the HUAC (which
he had already done) it was impossible not to feel his anguish,
old friends that we were. But the crunch came when I felt fear,
that great teacher, that cruel revealer. For it swept over me
that, had I been one of his comrades, he would have spent my name
as part of the guarantee of his reform. Even so, oddly enough,
I was not filling up with hatred or contempt for him; his suffering
was too palpable. The whole hateful procedure had brought him
to this, and I believe made the writing of The Crucible all but
inevitable. Even if one could grant Kazan sincerity in his new-found
anti-communism, the concept of an America where such self-discoveries
were pressed out of people was outrageous, and a contradiction
of any concept of personal liberty.
Miller
also mentions what a great shock it was for many people to learn
that someone of Kazan’s stature, and whom so many admired, had done
such an ignoble thing:
Kazan's testimony
created a far greater shock than anyone else's. …. It may be that
Kazan had been loved more than any other, that he had attracted
far greater affection from writers and actors with whom he had
worked, and so what was overtly a political act was sensed as
a betrayal of love.
That more than
anything is perhaps the reason why some continue to vilify him.
The benefit
of hindsight makes it pretty clear that it is wrong to attribute
to Kazan, as one carrying the alleged political weight of celebrity
both then and now, a personal responsibility for ruining careers
which in reality fell victim to blacklists, witch-hunts and loyalty
tests sanctioned by government, establishment and studio bosses.
Such tests, which invariably catch and condemn innocents and ‘fellow-travelers’
in their executors’ zeal to eliminate every possible subversive,
have never been good for the cause of liberty and freedom of thought.
Here’s Miller again:
It is very
significant that in the uproar set off by [the 1999] award to
Kazan of an Oscar for life achievement, one heard no mention of
the name of any member of the HUAC. One doubted whether the thought
occurred to many people that the studio heads had ignominiously
collapsed before the HUAC's insistence that they institute a blacklist
of artists, something they had once insisted was dishonourable
and a violation of democratic norms. Half a century had passed
since his testimony, but Kazan bore very nearly the whole onus
of the era, as though he had manufactured its horrors when
he was surely its victim.
The Miller-Kazan
relationship was the subject of a PBS
documentary broadcast in September 2003 (four days before Kazan
died), entitled "Miller,
Kazan and the Blacklist: None Without Sin," which attracted
a lot of comment
at the time.
The Heart
of an Anarchist
The continuing
Kazan/HUAC debate leaves practically no-one indifferent to the life
and work of this undoubted man who, in some respects his
fears, his lust for life and the constant need for reassurance
retained throughout his 94 years all the alert and primitive instincts
of child and animal.
Like any hunted
animal, he tried never to let himself be pinned down: the creative
impulse, born of many ambiguities, caused him always to look for
the escape route from any enclosed space, almost as soon as he had
walked in the door:
"When
I was young, a shorthorn buck, my favorite quick line was "I’ve
got to go." I’d arrive at a party, immediately feel ill
at ease, then, with an "I’ve got to go," disappear.
Often I’d not even give that nonexplanation, and I’d never hint
at where I had to go or why so suddenly. I’d just vanish. Some
years later, when I’d become a middle-aged goat, and if I saw
there was no one in the traffic for me, I’d leave abruptly.
I’m afraid I still do that. People ask me why I drop out that
way and where I go so suddenly. "We missed you," they
say. "We had a lot of fun after you left," they say.
But that doesn’t prevent me, the next time I’m in tight company,
from disappearing just as abruptly. It seems that when I’m in
the society of my fellow man, I feel trapped, soon need to get
away and do." (A Life, p. 335).
There was no
reasonableness about him, and reasonableness is precisely the criterion
which does not work when judging him. He was always aware of the
terrible ambivalence which underlay his decision to testify: in
an interview in 1971 he said of it, "I don't think there's anything
in my life toward which I have more ambivalence, because, obviously,
there's something disgusting about giving other people's names."
Yet seventeen years later, in "A Life," he
writes: "Reader, I don’t seek your favor. I’ve been telling
you only some of the things I was asking myself on the way "down."
But if you expect an apology now because I [named] names to the
House Committee, you’ve misjudged my character. The "horrible,
immoral thing" I would do, I did out of my true self."
In my view,
the key to understanding Kazan the artist is to know that he had
a need for permanent uncertainty and unpredictability, what he called
"an anarchist’s heart." Describing
the period immediately following the production of five successful
films, culminating in the 1957 movie A
Face in the Crowd, Kazan wrote:
"I became
convinced that an artist needs an anarchist’s heart and has to
be pulled more than one way at a time. I had to be open to the
unexpected….I set out to destroy what I found stifling and replace
the predictable with the unpredictable. I courted what would be
disruptive. I was more determined than ever to concentrate on
my own projects and prepare my own scripts." (A Life,
p. 571).
I believe Elia
Kazan was one of twentieth-century America’s greats, a talented
artist who worked magic with actors, introduced many future stars,
and left an enduring movie
legacy which is a visually fine and poetic body of work. Of
course it is uneven in quality: it both benefits and suffers from
the ambivalence and the inner personality conflicts which afflicted
him. That in turn is what produces the fierce diversity of opinion,
and very likely too the fact that people are still writing books
and articles about him today.
Elia Kazan’s
Movies – a Personal Anthology
"I
ain’t a-crawlin’ for no damn government!" – Miss Ella
in Wild River
The
very early black and white film A
Tree Grows In Brooklyn (1945), starring Dorothy McGuire,
was Kazan’s first major film. It was based on the classic novel
by Betty Smith and has a special place in many moviegoers’ affections,
in part surely because of the iconic status of the novel. It is
beyond being dated: it has all the melancholy nostalgic charm of
a social era which has completely and utterly disappeared, so that
it is now almost a documentary. Kazan himself described it as "mushy,"
a "photographed stage play set in a designer’s cleaned-up tenement."
He was gratified at its success: "I was a success, it seemed,
a great success," and yet, always the doubter looking over
his shoulder for trouble, in the very next sentence he wrote: "Or
was I a failure, a great failure? Or was it both?"
In
1951 Kazan directed Vivien Leigh and a smoldering Marlon Brando
in A
Streetcar Named Desire, the screen version (also in black
and white) of his earlier highly successful theatrical production
of Tennessee Williams’ play. It was partially cut at the time of
its release, at the instigation of the Legion of Decency which,
in the name of "the preeminence of the moral order over artistic
considerations" wanted the film to show that the married couple,
Stella and Stanley, could never be happy together again after the
way he had behaved. "Which," writes Kazan, "was contrary
to Tennessee’s intention and his goal of ‘fidelity.’" Today
we can see the full director’s version on DVD:
over 50 years after it was made, it is still as dramatic a cinema
experience as you are ever likely to get. Highly recommended.
On
the Waterfront (1954), remains the best known and most publicly
acknowledged of Kazan’s movies (it won eight Oscars), but artistically
it is not his best. Made in the aftermath of his HUAC testimony,
the film at the very least can be read as an unconcealed plea for
the right of the main character Terry, played by Marlon Brando,
to choose to rat on the vicious and corrupt leadership of his longshoremen’s
union. In the film, "his decision to testify is portrayed as
an act of courageous whistle-blowing, not betrayal or cowardice."
(Jacob Weisberg, Blacklist
and Backstory). Lindsay Anderson, the British critic and
film director, once famously described it as "a Fascist film."
Here’s Kazan himself speculating on the reasons for the film’s box
office success:
"My
guess is that it’s the theme, that of a man who has sinned and
is redeemed. But how can that be? After all, Terry’s act of self-redemption
breaks the great childhood taboo: Don’t snitch on your friends.
Don’t call for the cop! Our hero is a "rat," or for
intellectuals, an informer. But that didn’t seem to bother anyone
in the audience, not given our villains, those whom Terry was
fingering. Which is proof that Budd Schulberg [the screenwriter]
touched a deep human craving there: redemption for the sinner,
rescue from damnation. Redemption, isn’t that the promise of the
Catholic church? That a man can turn his fate around and by an
act of good heart be saved at last? There are gut reasons like
that for the success of the great hits. They touch a fundamental
hunger in people. Yes, that a man can, no matter what he’s done,
be redeemed…" (A Life, p. 528)
The
success of On the Waterfront was followed in 1955 by the
classic Cain and Abel story, East
of Eden, based on the latter part of John Steinbeck’s novel
of the same name and introducing the actor James Dean in the first
of the three big films he made during his short
life. Dean overacts in the film, and by Kazan’s account behaved
like a prima donna on the set, but the result, a cinematic portrayal
of the story of Cal’s enterprising but ill-fated attempts to gain
his father’s affections, is unforgettable and still very moving.
Kazan regretted
the creation of the Dean legend, the essence of which was "that
all parents were insensitive idiots, who didn’t understand or appreciate
their kids and weren’t able to help them." Yet the old
dualism was again in play: it was Kazan himself who had cast Raymond
Massey, "the old-timer who’d played Lincoln enough times
to establish a franchise" as the hardened father character,
and had encouraged right to the end the spontaneous animosity which
erupted between Massey and Dean:
"I didn’t
conceal from Jimmy and Ray what they thought of each other: the
screen was alive with precisely what I wanted; they detested each
other. Casting should tell the story of a film without words;
this casting did. It was a problem that went on to the end, and
I made use of it to the end." (A Life, p. 535-6)"
Wild
River (1960), a film beautifully photographed
in fully saturated colors, starring Montgomery Clift and Lee Remick,
is set in the 1930s in the Tennessee Valley. It describes the lead-up
to the successful attempt by the then recently established Tennessee
Valley Authority to buy up the last piece of privately-owned land
it needs in order to close the great dam which will tame the wild
river once and for all, thereby preventing the disastrous flooding
which has taken place in earlier years at great cost in human life
and damage to property.
The land in
question is an island owned by an old lady, Miss Ella Garth, who
is holding out with her family and faithful (but soon to be enticed
away) farm laborers against what she sees as the dastardly intrusion
of the federal government. Clift, as the TVA agent, makes repeated
and initially unsuccessful attempts to talk to her on her island,
with a view to discussing its compulsory purchase. On his first
visit, when he announces "I’m from the TVA," she simply
gets up and walks away. Next time around, frustrated, he says to
her "You’ve got to talk to me." She snaps back at him,
"Why should I talk to you? You’re from the federal government,
aren’t you?" Later on, in a declaration of stubborn independence
at his insistence that the river needs to be tamed for the common
good, she says to him, "I like things running wild. I’m agin’
dams of any kind…and I ain’t a-crawlin’ for no damn government!"
Montgomery
Clift as Chuck, and particularly Lee Remick as the stronger female
character Carol, play the love scenes in an understated way which
today would be regarded as ‘tame,’ yet her passion for him is conveyed
with a surprising intensity.
Kazan wrote:
"I’d
conceived this film years before as a homage to the spirit of
FDR; my hero was to be a resolute New Dealer engaged in the difficult
task of convincing "reactionary" country people that
it was necessary, in the name of the public good, for them to
move off their land and allow themselves to be relocated. Now
I found my sympathies were with the obdurate old lady who lived
on the island that was to be inundated and who refused to be patriotic,
or whatever it took to allow herself to be moved. I was all for
her. Something more than the shreds of my liberal ideology was
at work now, something truer perhaps, and certainly stronger.
While my man from Washington has the ‘social’ right on his side,
the picture I made was in sympathy with the old woman obstructing
progress.
Perhaps I
was beginning to feel humanly, not think ideologically. The people
in my life for whom I’d felt the deepest devotions were three
old-fashioned women: my grandmother, my mother and my schoolteacher
… I no longer had a taste for liberal intellectuals. I always
knew what they were going to say about any subject. I simply didn’t
like the reformers I’d been with since 1933, whether they were
Communists or progressives or whoever else was out to change the
world. I’d only believed I should like them. I’d followed the
crowd, which during those years was going that way.
The film
that resulted from all this is one of my favorites, possibly because
of its social ambivalence. Jean Renoir’s famous phrase, "Everyone
has his reasons" was true here. Both sides were "right."
Wild River is also a favorite of certain French film critics [….]
Skouras (the studio director) had an opposite view and treated
the film deplorably, jerking it out of theatres before it had
any chance to take hold and booking it thinly across the country.
It was not exhibited in Europe until I staged a stormy scene in
[the studio director’s] office and shamed him. I hope the negative
is safe in one of Fox’s vaults, although I’ve heard a rumor that
it was destroyed to make space for more successful films. This
would not surprise me. Money makes the rules of the market, and
by this rule, the film was a disaster." (A Life, p. 596f.)
One
of my personal favorites is Splendor
in the Grass (1961), the bittersweet and visually beautiful
1961 movie which introduced the young Warren Beatty and also starred
the divine Natalie Wood. It was the first film by Elia Kazan I ever
saw. Pat Hingle plays the Beatty character’s father larger (and
above all louder) than life: this makes his suicide in the wake
of the Wall Street crash all the more shocking. The whole film taught
me that seemingly remote historical events, as well as fundamental
life choices, could have tragic personal consequences.
Here is what
Kazan himself had to say about Splendor in the Grass:
"[The]
story is about a simple struggle of right, wrong, and social disgrace,
of what is practical in life and what is best for property and
family. It is not my favorite of films, but the last reel is my
favorite last reel, at once the saddest and the happiest. Natalie,
just released from an institution and declared sound again, visits
her old love – Warren – in the hope that their relationship might
be revived. She discovers that he is married, leading a life that’s
far reduced from the station his father had envisioned for him,
with a rather plain wife who is beginning to raise a family.
What I like
about this ending is its bittersweet ambivalence, full of what
Bill [Inge, the screenwriter] had learned from his own life: that
you have to accept limited happiness, because all happiness is
limited, and that to expect perfection is the most neurotic thing
of all; you must live with the sadness as well as the joy."
(A Life, p. 605)
America
America (1963), shot in black and white and
having an unknown Greek actor in the lead role, is a film in a category
of its own. The film was nominated for several Oscars, including
best director. Kazan wrote in 1988 that "it is now my favorite
of the films I’ve made, but early in 1963, when I was editing it…
I had doubts about its worth." This great immigrant movie,
the location shooting of which was monitored every day by a Turkish
censor (to ensure that ‘national dignity’ was upheld) and at times,
disruptingly, by the secret police, did indeed represent Kazan’s
finest achievement as his own master:
"...during
my experience of making America America, particularly in those
months when I was overseas directing it and making all decisions
every day, I’d felt totally myself in a way I never had before.
In the making of that film, all activity had started from a directive
I gave, and each day’s program was based on my wishes. That was
what I wanted to be, the unchallenged source. I recognized that
from now on I’d only be able to work that way." (A Life,
p. 660)
It is perhaps
significant that Kazan’s major success after making this film was
a written work: The
Arrangement, which was made into a movie in 1969.
In 1972 he self-financed another controversial film, The
Visitors, with a screenplay written by his son Chris Kazan
on a Vietnam war theme. It has achieved a certain cult status as
well as notoriety, Kazan once again being attacked for not following
the rules in making it and for choosing a subject-matter – a GI
informing on atrocities carried out by his colleagues – which recalled
the controversies of 1952. But by this time the major movie successes
were behind him.
There is also
a bittersweet irony in the fact that in 2001 America America
was deemed "culturally significant" by the Library of Congress,
and selected for preservation in the National
Film Registry. Too bad that Warner Brothers have not yet seen
fit to issue it on DVD in the US or the UK: at the time of writing
it appears only to be available in these markets as a prohibitively
expensive second-hand
VHS tape.
Kazan’s last
film, made in 1976, was The
Last Tycoon (available on DVD),
which starred Robert de Niro in a movie version of the Scott Fitzgerald
novel, scripted by Harold Pinter. Critics judge it a disappointment.
Once again he introduced a new acting talent (Theresa Russell),
and it is still a movie worth seeing, but there were enduring disagreements
about the quality of the script and the suitability of Robert de
Niro and Ingrid Boulting in the lead roles.
Overshadowing
all the bad press, however, was the film’s personal significance.
Kazan was aware that he was making his last film:
[The screenwriters]
had provided me with nothing to shoot for an ending. This is the
worst possible situation, because it means that something is wrong
earlier in the story. I had to make something up.. and I did.
I also had a hunch that it would be the last shot I’d make in
my life, and perhaps for that reason the ending I devised said
more about me and my feelings than it did about the film’s hero.
I asked Bobby
[Robert de Niro] to walk slowly down a deserted studio street.
He came to a stop at the side of a sound stage whose great rolling
door was wide open… He hesitated for a moment, then he walked
slowly off into the dark of the unused stage. The gloom enveloped
him and he disappeared. It was the end, the fade-out of the film
I was making and the end for me and my time as a director. … It
was all over, and I knew it. (A Life, p. 781).
Elia Kazan
was an outsider to the last.
References
Books
Articles
- Sandy Carter,
Kazan
and the Oscars and Us, ZMag, March 25, 1999
- Roger Ebert,
Oscar-winning
director Elia Kazan dies, Chicago Sun-Times,
September 23, 2003
- Joseph
Kellard, The
Blacklisting of Elia Kazan, Capitalism Magazine, March
7, 1999
- William
Mandel, None
Without Sin – Not Even PBS, September 19, 2003
- Arthur
Miller, "Are
You or Were You Ever…", The Guardian, September
17, 2000
- Michael
Mills, Elia
Kazan, Moderntimes.com, 2005
- Robert
C. Tracinski, Elia
Kazan Should Be Honored Because of His Testimony, Capitalism
Magazine, September 29, 2003
- Michael
Ventura, Some
Sins Don’t Die, Austin Chronicle, October 17, 2003
- David Walsh,
Filmmaker
and Informer, World Socialist Website, February 2005
December
2, 2005
Richard
Wall (send him mail) has a Master's
degree in International Relations from the London School of Economics
& Political Science, and lives in Estoril, Portugal, where he currently
works as a freelance writer and translator.
Copyright ©
2005 LewRockwell.com
Richard
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