… and
still a bit of the boring stuff
Already
the next eulogy on great acting – I can’t help it! Unlike last year, I don’t
even have to look for them. They just kind of fall to me. This time it would be
my personal suggestion for “best actress”, though it doesn’t matter because she
has it already. (Sally Hawkins will be a more interesting choice, I am sure, and
to “weigh” great acting is impossible anyway.) But there is still a tiny bit of
the boring stuff left.
As I
have written already, interpretation, in my experience, is about controlling
meaning. It is the act of determining the meaning of a text, and we start
getting involved with it as soon as we say anything else about the text than
what actually happened TO US when we were reading it. We begin to determine
meaning usually when there is something we don’t understand about the text and
begin to think about it. We usually understand the text with OUR OWN meaning
so, unless our reading is disturbed because there is something we consciously don’t
understand, or realize that other people understand it differently, or unless
we like interpretation as an activity connected with text, we have no need of
it. (It is only the tip of an iceberg anyway, as the lot is certainly done
subconsciously, synchronising the content we are picking up with the meaning
that is already there, but we don’t need to - or even can - be bothered with
that.) In my case, interpretation usually starts when I am not content with my
reading, when I have this feeling that there is MORE to the text which I cannot
see. (As is usually the case in “Shakespeare”. I find content I like, and which
makes sense, but I always have this feeling that there is a lot more which I
don’t read. And, as I have written in my last post, concerning the “nature” of
a fictional text, there ALWAYS is more.)
And
there is always a lot which, for diverse reasons, we cannot know about a text,
and which might be important to understand it. Quite often we are, with our
restricted point of view, unable to ask the right question(s) which might lead
us to the “centre” of a text. If there is a “centre” of a text - as I would
describe it: a vortex where the meaning of a text is created, and from where it
spreads to all the “random” detail that comes into the text - is a question
that depends on our philosophical point of view. It presupposes that there IS a
text, kind of like a physical being that “does” something, so it is basically a
naïve and “naturalistic” way of looking at it. But, as I am well aware that I cannot
“access” the text directly in any way, I am probably not THAT serious about it
- philosophically, I mean. It is rather what I already called a “working
metaphor” before: a useful way of looking at something BECAUSE it works. For
me, this vortex movement – or rather the potential of a text to create this
movement IN ME - is what constitutes a fictional text and makes it different
from other kinds of text which don’t need my personal involvement to exist.
Nothing that is going on in non-fictional text
- basically! - requires a PERSON to come into being. It can be “covered”
by semantic common sense, specialized knowledge about the subject of the text,
and general theories about what our world is like.
Controlling
meaning by interpretation is always kind of taking the text away from me –
which I don’t like, for reasons I have written about already – and putting it
in some kind of established historical and philosophical context, referring it
back to its “source”, the author, or, worst of all, submitting it to literary
theories (which, in my opinion, are crap because they usually “take out” the
human content and make a hash of the text – something that no sensible person
would want to read). So, starting to think about the text I am reading, I find
contradictions and bits I don’t understand, or find that other people understand
it differently, and then I NEED interpretation. But is there a SENSIBLE way of
establishing meaning?
Reading
my posts about the “Tempest” – where the only thing I really knew about the
text was that I didn’t understand it at all – I noticed that I already use a
method to control meaning if I have to do it. Though probably not often enough
to make the most of the text I am reading. I am not that fond of it because it
is kind of “destructive”, but I was surprised to find that I STILL consider it
the only REASONABLE method of determining meaning. I already wrote all of this
somewhere, but only now it makes COMPLETE sense because only now do I have the
complete context.
The
first thing I do, obviously, when I am trying to determine meaning, is to look
for “hard facts” and try to separate them from the “rubbish” – basically every
statement about the text that is not VERIFIED. Which means: not related to
SOMETHING IN THE TEXT in a way I can explain. This verification is just basic
common sense about text which, I think, everybody uses at some point if they
want, or are asked for, clarification. And it is the first step to determine
meaning because, without it, there are no FALSIFYABLE FACTS. This is, in fact, VERY
basic, and very dull, and almost any other literary theory I could think of is
more sexy, even something like structuralism. (I even remember a time when I
found structuralism very sexy …) The interesting thing for me is that I
actually USE this method when I need to “check” on the text I am reading. Naturally,
without thinking. And I would never have known this, had it not been for my
blog, because I would never have laid down and found proof of it. The most
exciting thing for me - and my reason for taking up the issue again - was to
realize that I ACTUALLY TRIED to falsify my statements about the meaning of the
text. Taking up “The Tempest” again, I established WHY I had been wrong to
trust Simon Russell Beale’s “interpretation” completely, and it was great when
I found out because it led to a much more comprehensive understanding of the
play. And when I noticed this, I remembered that I did the same much earlier dealing
with “Hamlet”. When I began to suspect that Shakespeare might have implied that
Ophelia actually WAS pregnant BUT DIDN’T FIND DEFINITE PROOF for it I tried to
FALSIFY my suspicion and, to my own disappointment, was successful. In this
case, I had to rule out an interesting possibility. But, on the whole, my
discovery about Shakespeare PURPOSEFULLY creating ambiguity and doubt on this
subject - as well as on almost any important issue in “Hamlet”! - led to a much
more profound understanding of the text than anything I had envisaged in the
beginning. And this is the manner I understand and in which I use
interpretation. Probably not as often and as thoroughly as I should, but
nonetheless!
So, this
really didn’t get too long, but there is still something boring – for everybody
except myself – which I have to commemorate here. It was because I took up my
“fan fiction” about Tolkien’s “Wandering Dwarves” again, and was, on the whole,
extremely pleased with it. And it struck me that I understand now IN WHAT WAY
EXACTLY this has been the beginning of the long journey which led me to this
place (– THIS place where I am JUST NOW, or will be in a minute when I’ll start
“reading” Woody Allen.) When I read my story again it suddenly felt like a hell
of a journey!
But why
shouldn’t I be pleased when there is a real reason for it? When I realized that
I only came here, in the end, because I had written a really good text myself.
I already suspected that I often have an “advantage” as a reader on other
people who are “just” readers, but now I know exactly what it is. And I know
exactly what I gained by writing the text I ALWAYS WANTED TO WRITE – without
knowing it, of course! The question WHY I suddenly could read Shakespeare –
meaning: could get so much out of reading his plays, or sonnets, as I never
could have imagined might “be” in a text – just got answered. As well as the
question why I suddenly could appreciate great acting in a way I couldn’t
before – even tell exactly when it is great acting, and when it is not, and
why. Or why I suddenly knew so exactly what I want to watch and read. - I began
to notice already while I was writing my story – like I never did before! -
that writing a text is also a way of reading it, but of course it is different.
It is different because it is also a way of TAKING POSSESSION, of becoming
conscious about WHAT IT IS I possess and what I DO to be able to possess it.
(I think
this is why it can be compared with acting, only in THIS ONE RESPECT, because
acting is also taking possession, usually of a very small and subjective part
of the text but in an extremely intense way I can only understand “remotely” by
analogy. And only after I had done “it” myself, and knew what being able to do EXACTLY
what I wanted to do feels like. I still don’t understand the least bit about
what actors DO when they are acting! Like writing fiction, you don’t understand
the first thing about it until you are able to do it yourself.)
So, writing
a really good text myself, a text that EXCEEDED my own standards, was the
reason I am now able to find and APPRECIATE really good text in the way I do. It
sounds extremely preposterous, but it is true: only because I did it myself I
was finally able to single out the kind of texts that fulfill the standards I
established myself. And, strangely, this is what I knew when I was a child of
seven. THIS was kind of the only “plan” I ever had: that I had to write this
great text, and then I would become who I WANTED to be. I probably thought of
becoming a great writer, back then, and didn’t have the faintest idea of what I
obviously wanted to be: A GREAT READER.
What I
APPRECIATE about text, when I am thinking about it, is almost exactly what I
appreciate about people: Intelligence, humour, honesty, truthfulness about
their “human content”, “depth” (which translates into complexity when it comes
to text), beauty (as in “aesthetical”, so, basically: beauty WITH content),
diligence, perfectionism and determination (a text can “know” as well as a
person exactly what they want and “work out” how to achieve it), and, last but
not least, courtesy (which doesn’t seem to apply to text, but it does because
it is very important for me that a narrator treats his/her characters with
respect). (My favourite “king-becoming graces” from “Macbeth”: “devotion,
patience, courage, fortitude” probably really don’t apply to text …) Of course
it was not at all a coincidence that I fell in love simultaneously with the
“best fit” – and I knew that there was nothing wrong with it, because THIS TIME
I knew from the start that it was finally ABOUT ME that I fell in love and not
at all about possession. It was entirely about being able to appreciate, not about
being appreciated.
“Possessing”
a text is also only a metaphor of the intensity of the relationship I developed
with text I was writing and began to transfer to the texts I was reading. And
this is all that counts: knowing what I want, and what I need, and how to get
it. I know now that I WILL ALWAYS BE ABLE TO FIND IT because what I have gained
writing my text is one of the very few things that nobody can take away from me.
And I know now that there will always be enough great text for me to “possess”
in the future. In any case, there will always be “Shakespeare” – the
approximately one third of his plays I haven’t read, and the rest I will always
go on reading. I never even had an idea what the meaning of happiness was,
until then - approximately five years ago. The existential crisis about four
years ago was about what I might do to keep it going. I was right, I had to
figure that out, but I did, more successfully than I could have imagined. It is
READING AS IF I POSSESSED a text. And “staying in love”, of course. And both things turned out to be easier than I thought because I was right about the method
AND the object. It is all about DOING IT, in the end. And I have known this a
long time, probably always, as I was so pleased when I realized, about my
nephews and nieces, that children don’t really want to possess things. Not like
many adults do, which I think is such a bleak mode of existence. They want to
be able to DO things. But happiness is probably all about being able to make
the most of what we already know, deep inside. And now that’s done, and I can
finally go on appreciating – in this case Woody Allen’s latest film “Wonder
Wheel” and its “heroine” Ginny, played by Kate Winslet.
Not a
very surprising choice for “best actress”, I know! When it is not Cate
Blanchett, it is Kate Winslet. In fact, what happened when I saw “Wonder Wheel”
was kind of the same thing that happened when I saw “Blue Jasmine”, and it is
not really a coincidence that it was Woody Allen both times. I really should
start liking him better, and I invariably don’t. But I invariably see his films
though I invariably don’t feel like seeing them. And there invariably is this
kind of bad conscience about skipping one which I don’t have about other
directors. As my blog shows, I am usually not very interested in directors, nor
author’s films. I couldn’t even recommend “Wonder Wheel” as if it was this
great film because it isn’t. It is just same old Woody Allen, same as last
year, same as every year. Which STILL doesn’t mean that it isn’t great.
I was
very pleased with taking up what I already did once – “reading” Woody Allen – and discovering anew that I had been right about his films. I really was bored with last year’s
(what was it???) but nonetheless very pleased with seeing Ken Stott (my second
favourite dwarf of all times!) happily acting the hell out of this rather insignificant
character. And I think THIS is even the first reason why Woody Allen is so good.
Good for actors because he really likes actors. And actors probably like him as
a director because he appreciates them, and of course they like this, and are
happy, and when they are happy WE are going to see surprisingly beautiful
acting. I suppose, like myself, actors are happiest when they get an
opportunity to surprise themselves …
In fact,
Woody Allen’s films are kind of like theatre – where actors get leave to step
into their characters and go full length at acting the hell out of them without
being interrupted all the time because camera, sound, make-up, and whatever, is
more important for the making of the film than acting. I have no idea how Woody
Allen works and may be totally wrong, but what I see feels like this. It FEELS
LIKE THEATRE, and there is certainly nothing wrong with combining the intensity
of theatre acting with beautiful, “complete” settings, like Coney Island in the
Fifties, which can only be provided for the screen.
But this
rare quality – combining both aspects to this degree – is not even the best
about his films. At least not for me. It strikes me that I use “films” automatically,
instead of “movies”, because “films” is so very European whereas “movies” is
American which, in this context, is meaningful. Usually it would be splitting
hairs, but Woody Allen’s films are “movies”, with a quality of (Hollywood) nostalgia
I don’t like that much. This is probably the reason I never really feel like
seeing them, though I know now from experience that something WILL happen when
I do. And I am never afraid of what this might be – though I should be! I think
the nostalgic “wrapping” has this effect of keeping the stories and people at a
distance so that I begin to analyse before they strike home. But Coney Island
in the Fifties is a pretence. Due to the exceptional intensity of the acting,
the protagonists immediately began to feel as close and contemporary as if they
were standing on a stage, thirty feet removed from my seat.
For
Ginny’s story the analogy of theatre is even more fitting than usual. Not even
because she loves the glamour of theatres and movies and dabbled in acting –
until she ended up pregnant. As usual with Woody Allen there is this merciless
and profound perspective on the lies that shape the lives - NOT mainly of his
protagonists, but “our” own. In this case it struck home when Ginny makes this
remark about being a waitress. She insists that, when she is waiting on tables,
it is not HER who is doing this: “I am ACTING when I am waiting on tables.” And
I think what Kate Winslet does to “prove” this is so convincing, and so totally
surprising at the same time, that the sentence didn’t even strike me as lunacy
in the first place.
I had to
THINK about this sentence, but only a fraction of a moment, to assess that she
is right. I know I couldn’t even work as a waitress because my acting skills
are so insignificant. I am probably acting in front of my computer as well, but
my computer is of course totally indifferent towards my acting, and my colleagues
are used to my mediocre representation of myself. (Even if I improved a great
deal, they probably wouldn’t notice.) But in a greasy spoon of the kind where
Ginny works you get all sorts of people, and they don’t let you get away with
anything.
In this
case I lack the means to describe what Kate Winslet is doing, and why it is so
great. It might well become my favourite acting experience in 2018, but it is,
of course, too early to say. As I just decided on 2017’s, and probably decided
on 2016’s as soon as I saw it, I can describe the DIFFERENCE, though. As to the
KIND of acting, Richard Armitage’s Red Dragon and Sean Bean’s Tracey were very
much the same thing. I both loved them for their sublime beauty which comes out
of complexity. When I can see and enjoy all these different “layers” of acting
- of voice, face, body, movement, accent, and so on - come together in this
way. In both cases, “changing” into this exceptional and singular character was
one of these big feats of acting where every detail is important and has to be
absolutely perfect, where nothing can be left to chance. Kate Winslet’s Ginny
is “the other kind” of great acting I know. Which appears absolutely simple and
straightforward on the outside, and infinitely “deep” on the inside. It is
mostly face acting, and I usually don’t appreciate it in the same way unless it
is so great. In this case, it was probably even more significant than anything
of the kind I have ever seen because Ginny is ABOUT acting. Her whole life is
acting. I might say she is acting FOR HER LIFE because her survival strategy is
to be for everybody else what they expect her to be, and, by this, to get out of
them what she needs. And this ability is about the only thing she HAS, apart
from good looks. There are easily three completely different people “in” her, with
under-categories! In the end, I think, even a fourth person when she is drunk
and starts acting “for” herself, so as not to have to admit that her life has
just gone to pieces. And the absolutely explicit and convincing way Kate
Winslet does this actually made me change my mind - or at least finally have a
big think - about these issues of lying and acting. Not about the ART of acting
- which is mostly not lying but revealing - but about the significance acting
and lying has in real life. (It was already “brewing”, I realize, as I was
thinking of “reading” Claire Underwood’s interview for some time …)
The
greatest moment of the film is probably when Ginny is standing in front of that
public phone, the receiver in her hand, and suddenly stops acting, suddenly
stops doing anything at all, just finally “acting” on the truth of the
situation … though acting, in this case, just means to cease doing anything.
Everything kind of falls from her: who she thinks she is, who she wants to be,
what she thinks she should do, or what is right, or what we do when we are not
thinking, automatically, as she is waiting on tables. Everything stops; the
world, and Ginny, come to a standstill. And, if this is what happens when we
stop acting, and lying, and doing whatever we do WHEN IT IS NOT US – why would
we ever want it??? My thought, when I left the cinema, was why “we” have such
an issue still with something we are doing so well: lying and acting. It is
what we live on, day after day, when we are NOT US but are acting what other
people want, need, expect us to be. Expertly, beautifully even, with utter
perfectionism …
I don’t
know MY answer to this question, but asking such a question IN THIS WAY – so as
to make us look at it in a different light - is pure Woody Allen. And his METHOD of asking
is to use ingenious actors for the job. I actually cannot think of anybody else
than Kate Winslet for this character. I don’t know that either, but I take it
that Woody Allen writes most of his films for certain actors. (That would be
even more like theatre, in the “old days”.) Same as in “Blue Jasmine”: Who else
but Cate Blanchett should have played her? And this is great – that only this
one specific great actor could have “put” the question in the right way. It is
completely acknowledging the singularity of their “acting personality”, and there
is probably no greater compliment to an actor you can think of. Skip the
Oscars! But THIS is definitely Oscar material – if not this, what should be?
Though, this time, nobody who matters
will see it because it is just same old Woody Allen all over again. Pity!!!