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