Wednesday, July 12, 2006

Why U & Me & Tennessee...?

U & Me & Tennessee
- an American romance...
The Story of how we made the movie


When it first occurred to me to make a movie about the romance between Konrad Hopkins and Tennessee Williams, I realized that two films I’d seen quite some time ago had left powerful impressions on me, and would shape the way I approached this project.

One was Mr. Hoover and I, by Emile de Antonio, and the other was My Dinner With André, directed by Louis Malle.

My Dinner With André is of course just that – a reunion of two old friends – the writer/actor Wallace Shawn and the theatre director André Gregory. Almost the entire movie takes place at a table in a restaurant, as the two friends catch up on the last few years since they’ve seen one another. Based on their actual reunion, they played themselves in a scripted, tightly directed movie in the conventional sense of the word.

Louis Malle was also one of the world’s greatest documentary film makers, and that skill and sensibility suffuses My Dinner With André.

Mr. Hoover and I was something else – entirely new for me and very liberating. Having been under FBI surveillance for decades for his Left-leaning politics and uncompromising documentary films, Emile de Antonio tells the story of his quest to wrest his file from the clutches of the FBI by employing the then-new Freedom of Information Act. In the process he provides an illuminating account of the relationship between J. Edgar Hoover and Clyde Tolson, and of the blatant illegality that was/is endemic in much of the bureau, all the while making it abundantly clear that there is actually no freedom and NO information!

But the way “D” does this is deceptively gentle and really daring. He just calmly talks to the camera – and then he shows a conversation between him and his wife as she cuts his hair – THEN he puts in a conversation he filmed between himself and John Cage as Cage makes bread (as I recall…) and talks about random operations in the making of his music and art.

De Antonio’s film seems to embody John Cage’s approach – deliberately random - but while it is apparently languid and rambling, it is actually a body-blow precisely and consciously aimed at the entire American culture of movie-making and media manipulation.

We can say of Mr. Hoover and I, as Woody Guthrie said of his guitar, “This machine kills fascists” – and we could add – “with truth, humor and love.”

No car chases. No lightning-fast edits. No guns. No blood.

No sex. ( ummm............unlike U & Me & Tennessee....)

Often no apparent story…
And yet…..

I watched it when it was broadcast on Channel 4 here in the U.K. and I was charmed, intrigued, awakened.

So many of the really important things that happen to us in life occur in just this way – two people sitting at a table, talking.

I realized I’d have to make my movie this way - not only because of the constraints of time and budget, but because this approach is part and parcel of what U & Me & Tennessee is really about – humanity, friendship across generations, love – talking and listening.

And I realized I’d have to take part myself, just like “D” and Wallace Shawn and André Gregory did – because I was part of this story – Konrad had not revealed the full extent of his involvement with Tennessee to anyone before – hadn’t himself re-examined what occurred between them for more than fifty years. But he was willing to do so if I was willing to ask the questions and really listen to the story.

We’d both also been kind of culturally constrained, guarded, living as foreigners in the West of Scotland for many years, thousands of miles from the nation that made us, decades from the times of our youth. Because of all this we shared an instinctive bond.

I wasn’t at all sure what he’d say once the cameras started rolling, because I didn’t know the story before he told it to me.

What you see in U & Me & Tennessee is what Konrad Hopkins re-lived on those two days as we talked. Hilarious, full-hearted, sobering and – ultimately - encouraging and inspiring.

Copyright Paul Birchard 2006 All Rights Reserved.

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2 Comments:

Blogger Me said...

Sounds interesting!

1:55 AM  
Blogger Peter Jacobs said...

Sounds very interesting!

Thanks for your comments on my blog, Paul.
I am a bit of a Tennessee Williams fan and hope to see a production of Vieux Carre they're doing at the Library Theatre in Manchester this season.
I`ve previously seen Cat On A Hot Tin Roof (the play & obviously the film) and a production of The Glass Menagerie, also at the Library.

The thing that is starting to strike me as I continue with my Gay for Today project, is how little I know about many people - quite often the fact that they existed at all! - and how little is available in this country, films, books etc. And I consider myself reasonably well read and educated! Maybe that`s why I stick at it.

Because of the nature of gay culture, many of the people I feature are linked, so I`m sure Williams will be popping up again sometime on Gay for Today.

11:50 PM  

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