Showing posts with label '70s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label '70s. Show all posts

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Four Dead in Ohio


Last week was the anniversary of the Kent State massacre.

The division of history into distinct decades is somewhat arbitrary—the ‘80s, for example, spilled over into the early ‘90s because the Reagan-Bush era ended in '92. The ‘60s as we think of them—turbulent, vivid, urgent and dangerous—didn’t really kick off until late ’63, after the Kennedy assassination and right around the time the Beatles arrived in the States.* And when did the ‘60s end? Four days in May, on a grassy campus in northeast Ohio, when activists at Kent State, angered by Nixon's escalation of the war into Cambodia on April 30, set off a weekend of protest that ended when the Ohio State Guard shot into a crowd of unarmed students, the culmination of what Todd Gitlin called “The Days of Death.” May 4 1970 was when the war came home.

I was only vaguely aware of the shootings until in college** I stumbled across James Michener’s book Kent State: What Happened and Why—probably the first volume on the topic, it was written and published in early 1971. 





Michener’s text is absolutely fascinating, and very, very contemporary, so much so that he assumes knowledge of then-current terms, like "straight" and "drop out" and "outside agitators," which have since become dated. One phrase, one reference in particular stood out--Michener and the students constantly talked about "the revolution."  Not a, but the.

I wasn’t sure what this meant but my mother set me straight—she explained to me that in those strange days, people believed that a by-God REVOLUTION was imminent, that all the rhetoric and violence was all leading toward a forcible overthrow of “the system.” I responded “Oh, like Helter Skelter” [Manson’s term for the race war he was trying to ignite with the murders he ordered—he picked up the phrase from the Beatles’ White Album, released the previous year.  Needless to say, the White Album does not endorse murder]. As a child of the post-‘60s, the mindset is a little difficult to grasp at first—the US really did undergo a revolution but it was more metaphorical than literal, an open challenge to the system of white patriarchal privilege rather than a literal coup d'etat.

Michener’s text is dated in another way—without exception, every female student is described in such glowing terms as “a leggy blonde co-ed” or “one of the prettiest of the activists."  It reads as though Austin Powers were the ghost writer!  Perhaps the most sadly hilarious example is during an interview with a black student, one Cindy Sudberry.



It was pathetic for a black like me to watch the nice white boys and girls growing up so fast. "Are the guns loaded?  Are they using real bullets?"...You didn't hear any blacks asking damn-fool questions like that...And I had to bite my tongue to keep from saying "I knew when I was born.  The guns are always loaded."
Cindy's rueful take on the shootings would have more impact if Michener hadn't introduced her with a long, lingering description of her "superb figure" in its "open midriff dress" and a detailed rundown of her cosmetic regime. ["A touch of rouge and eye makeup" and an "intelligent" use of lipstick, for the record.]  Down, boy.


As I read the book, I kept coming back to that famous picture, the one that won the Pulitzer, the one snapped right after the shooting had stopped and a 14 year old runaway was screaming over Jeffrey Glenn Miller, who’d been shot in the head. 




If you examine the photo, you can see the many of the students nearby don’t realize yet what has happened—several of them are clearly still on their way to class, unconcerned with what must have seemed like just another protest on a sunny spring day. Like Michener’s text, the picture is caught in time—everything has started to change, the deluge is just outside the frame of the shot, about to overwhelm everyone. The girl’s body language is so anguished, so fraught; she is an hieroglyph of shock and horror. When you look more closely you can see what must have been obvious to her—that she is standing over, and perhaps in, a river of Miller’s blood.***

I used to listen to the musical Godspell [which premiered off-Broadway a year after Kent State] as I was reading the book—the ballad “On the Willows,” with its mournful, delicate guitar riffs and that sliding cadence from major to minor on the last phrase, seemed especially appropriate.



But how can we sing
Sing the Lord’s song
In a foreign land?


As I pored over the grainy pictures in the book, I kept imagining that song playing over the sounds of the shooting, the cries, the agonized breathing as Alison Krause and William Schroeder and Sandy Scheuer fought to stay alive [Jeffrey Miller of course died immediately].  



For our captors there required
Of us, songs
And our tormentors, mirth...


Little enough grace to ease their passing.  In the aftermath of the shootings traditionalist Americans who were frustrated by the student movements of the ‘60s rose up in condemnation against the four dead students. Rarely has the generational divide been so starkly revealed. Many older Americans said things like "those kids got what was coming to them" and "students get away with too much today [sound familiar?] and they should be shot" and most shockingly "Any student who was on campus that day should have been shot down."  One mother heartbreakingly told her daughter, an honors student and an RA who had barely missed being shot, that if a bullet had found her "you would have deserved it."




William Schroeder was an ROTC cadet, a "straight."  Sandy Scheuer was on her way to class.   They were not protesting--but even if they had been, like Allison Krause and Jeff Miller, these are First Amendment rights.  They are constitutionally protected.  If this country can tolerate neo-Nazis marching in Skokie, Illinois, we can tolerate a few long-haired students flipping off armed Guardsmen.


Even in the face of parental alienation and the hatred of conservatives and even death, the students wouldn't back down--there were campus strikes all over the nation in protest to the shootings [760 according to Michener].  I rather love this NYU student's bravado:




But in the end, perhaps the students did win--as I've argued before, nothing galvanizes a movement like excessive force and it seems that eventually parental love won out over politics.  The war that Nixon escalated, the war for which he won re-election by promising a "secret plan" to end, the unpopular, endless quagmire for which students were dying in droves, both in Vietnam and now on their own campuses, finally, finally, crept to a halt five years later--poetically on April 30, 1975.


*I read a fascinating theory speculating that the reception to the Beatles was so ecstatic in part because of the Kennedy assassination—that after six weeks of sustained national mourning, the nation seized the opportunity to forget their grief for a while.

**I discovered this book carelessly tucked away in one of the student lounges at my alma mater, Sweet Briar. For some reason this lounge was full of hidden historical treasures—I also came across a copy of James Silver’s Mississippi: The Closed Society here. Fantastic! Like Kent State: What Happened and Why, Silver’s book is another examination of a campus uprising (the violent resistance to the integration of Ole Miss in 1962), and was written during the last fall of the Kennedy administration—but it was published in early 1964 and so it was dated as soon as it came out. Things had a way of changing very quickly in the ‘60s—the center wasn’t holding. Turning and turning in the widening gyre/The falcon cannot hear the falconer/Things fall apart...



***If you want to see Miller's body at another angle to appreciate exactly how horrific his shooting was, you can search for the pictures on Google images.  Warning:  They are very graphic, why is why I didn't host them.  Head wounds bleed quite heavily--according to Michener "No one, not even veterans from Vietnam, could believe that so much blood had come from one human being."

Monday, November 7, 2011

Give Yourself Over to Absolute Pleasure

Apologies for the too-long absence, I have been hard at work tapping up a storm as Columbia in a production of The Rocky Horror Show.  This is of course the stage version of the '70s movie classic--as a teenager I saw the movie many times at the Key Theater in Georgetown and listened to the soundtrack religiously. I even drew in my diary an approximation of the famously lippy RHPS logo:
Freud would have a field day.  Although he might have a hard time determining whether Frank N. Furter was fixated on the oral or the anal stage.
The meaning behind the tagline never dawned until I was cast in September and then the answer popped into my head.  The movie came out in 1975, and what other "culturally, historically or aesthetically significant" film came out that year?  Everyone's favorite updated Moby Dick epic, Jaws.  More on this below.

RHPS somehow manages to simultaneously spoof horror and sci-fi flicks and capture the unabashed hedonism of the '70s, the era of suburban key parties and the gay liberation movement.  Its first song, "Science Fiction Double-Feature," is a roll call of genre classics:

Michael Rennie was ill
The Day the Earth Stood Still
But he told us where we stand
And Flash Gordon was there
In silver underwear
Claude Rains was The Invisible Man
Then something went wrong
For Fay Wray and King Kong
They got caught in a celluloid jam
Then at a deadly pace
It Came From Outer Space
And this is how the message ran...


Fascinatingly, all of the movies listed here are American, and the creator of Rocky Horror, Richard O'Brien, is English.  (Although it should be noted that the Hammer movies, to which RHS also pays homage, were English.) What is it about these British composers who are so well-versed in American pop culture capital?--the song "Tiny Dancer" is so convincingly early '70s Californian in spirit ("blue jean baby, LA lady," "the headlights on the highway," "Jesus freaks, out in the street"), it might have been written by any wistful go-west-young-man free spirit but was instead composed by Bernie Taupin, also English. The American invasion?


And for all of Rocky Horror's celebratory pan-sexualism, it ends on a haunting note--Brad and Janet stumble through the mist in the aftermath, wondering what the hell just happened to them.*

And all I know
Is deep inside I'm
Bleeding...

Perhaps this is the true genius of RHS--embodying the ethos of the '70s, it then anticipates the aftermath, the Big Chill of the '80s.  Gotta pay the piper sometime, sadly...

This poster--and endless riffs thereon--was EVERYWHERE after the movie came out.**
Back to the other set of lips: the movie Jaws is actually quite different from its source book--most people think the movie improves on it, but I have a great fondness for the Benchley novel which is both witty and dark and (like RHPS) very much a product of the '70s (and unlike the Spielberg adaptation which is surprisingly undated, hirsute heroes aside).  The novel is less of a Man vs. Beast thriller and more of an extended metaphor--the shark is not just Brodie's obsession but also a symbol of the forces that threaten to tear apart the town and Brodie's marriage, not the least of which is the sexual revolution which, by 1974 (the year the novel was published) had filtered down to the middle class.  Most memorably, Brodie's wife Ellen has a very brief affair with the ichthyologist Hooper, whose older brother she had dated as a teenager.  Throughout the novel Ellen is a consistently sympathetic character and yet coolly plans and executes extramarital seduction.  What can I say?  It was the '70s--everyone had a lot more sex then.




Middle class '70s people preparing to have era-appropriate extra-marital sex. You just know Brad and Janet will be hosting the next one.

If you've read the novelization to the Jaws sequel, the first chapter reveals the shark that has come along to terrorize Amity THIS time is pregnant.  Even the shark had sex in Jaws!


*"Super Heroes," and Janet and Brad's bewilderment after their night of debauchery at the castle, always make me think of the last section of Steppenwolf when Harry is wandering through the club.


**Interesting perspective in the poster--in the book the shark is estimated at about 25 feet long but in this picture he sure looks a lot bigger than that!  When Hooper first sees the shark he is euphoric, rhapsodizing "Damn near megalodon!"  C. megalodon was a kind of proto-shark but much bigger and toothier, anywhere from 50 to 100 feet which is frankly terrifying.  
Jaws, the Prequel:
"You're gonna need a bigger--" CHOMP.
The End.

Saturday, February 12, 2011

San Francisco, November, 1978

Sean Penn plays Harvey Milk.



This is one of those fascinating, only-in-the-'70s, historical narratives to which I am always drawn. I first became interested in Harvey Milk's story back in Virginia when I was called in to audition at the Source Theatre for a musical about Milk's life and death.  In preparation for the audition I did a lot of research about the man, and then later saw a documentary about Milk. The story is compelling: Harvey Milk, the first openly gay elected official in the country, elected to the San Francisco Board of Supervisors in 1977, just as the gay liberation movement is unfurling across the country. And even then he probably would not have been elected if San Francisco hadn't reorganized their election process.  Previously all supervisors had been elected on city-wide ballots but the procedures were changed so that supervisors were now chosen by their district instead of running at-large.  So basically, the gay district elected him--he called himself "The Mayor of Castro Street."


But progress like this rarely goes unchallenged and across the country there were a lot of public figures who, from either principle or a political strategy, opposed gays being allowed any kind of public role.  This was the era of Anita Bryant's successful campaign to overturn an ordinance in Florida that prohibited anti-gay discrimination (which earned her a pie in the face).





This was also the era of the Briggs Initiave, a bill pushed by California gubernatorial hopeful John Briggs who saw in Bryant's victory an exploitable power base (namely, evangelical Christians) and drafted a bill prohibiting homosexuals from teaching positions throughtout the state--a bill which failed with the help of then-Governor Ronald Reagan (which--whoah--there's an interesting topic for a future post).   But as Briggs assured journalist Randy Shilts, he didn't really hate gays deep down--"it's politics.  Just politics."


Back in San Francisco, Dan White had also been elected to the Board--a former cop and much more conservative, meat-and-potatoes, "traditional values" kind of guy. George Moscone was the mayor, and he and Milk were much closer politically. White and Milk used to tangle on issues--in fact, after Milk reconsidered his support on an issue and ended up voting against White on a particular bill, White opposed Milk on every single vote.  Eventually White finally got fed up and quit, claiming the position of Supervisor didn't pay enough to support his family. His support base convinced him to ask to be reappointed; he tried and originally Moscone was going to, but Milk and two other progressive supervisors convince Moscone otherwise.  A couple of days later White shows up at City Hall with a gun, climbs through the window to avoid the metal detectors, goes upstairs and murders Moscone, reloads, goes downstairs and murders Milk. He shot them both in the head; according to the medical examiner, they both probably would've survived the body wounds had they been treated promptly.  But the head wounds were instantly fatal..


The murders gave a huge impetus to Dianne Feinstein's political career--as President of the Board of supervisors, she now became Acting Mayor and announced to the press what had happened.





White got a slap on the wrist--a 7-year sentence (which ended up being 5 years) for murdering two people. His lawyer claimed White was less culpable due to "diminished capacity," arguing that his increased consumption of junk food was key to his state of depression.  (The media turned this into the Twinkie defense--most people misunderstood the argument, thinking that the junk food binge caused him to snap and murder.  What the lawyer was arguing was that the junk food binge was an indicator of diminished capacity, because White was normally a fitness freak.)  Unbelievably, in light of the indisputed evidence that White had planned out the murders quite thoroughly, the jury bought this theory and found him guilty only of voluntary manslaughter.  The gay community was outraged and responded with what became known as the White Night Riots.


*and in fact later confessed not only to premeditation, but had also intended to kill the two other progressives who'd lobbied with Milk against his reinstatement.


What makes the whole story even sadder and more fatalistic, was that news of the Jonestown tragedy had just broken.  The People's Temple was very much connected to San Francisco--the city had been their base before relocating to Guyana and in fact Jones had close ties to both Milk and Moscone. Just the week before Moscone had attended a memorial service for Leo Ryan, the US Congressman who was murdered by Jones's guard right before the order for the mass suicide was given. In an even weirder coincidence, the practice runs that Jones would order for the massacre to test his adherents' loyalty, where his guards would command the cult members to drink liquids they were told were poison--were known as White Nights.


I have a theory (unprovable admittedly) that, as Ecclesiastes tells us, there are times for things.  That sometimes events all come together not from coincidence but because they're all acting on each other in unperceived ways, influencing each other somehow--that there's a mystical element to the events that affect us most strongly.  When I try to imagine San Francisco at that time, that one singular month, November of 1978, I imagine a cloud, dark and thick, hanging over the city, obscuring the light.  What can possibly make sense of such a black hole of sadness and death, why two such terrible tragedies happened so close together?  Maybe it was just time.


(This material originally appeared, in edited form, in my personal blog.)