Humor flies from unlikely sources
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JOSEPH N. BELL
The Newport Beach Library Foundation’s Distinguished Speakers series
offered up a bonus last Friday.
David Brooks is an oxymoron -- a New York Times columnist who
represents the conservative position in a weekly debate on the PBS
Lehrer News Hour. Since I have commented in this space on two earlier
speakers who might loosely be identified as liberal, I figured I
should cover this one, too, in the interests of balance.
Brooks was introduced to a standing-room audience as “the
conservative the liberals love.” That hit me as quite accurate during
the body of his talk when he was discussing the new American
demographics but a little over the top when he turned to answering
mostly political questions from the audience. I loved him
selectively.
But one thing is certain. Brooks was, by a country mile, the
funniest speaker I’ve heard on this series. He was on hand to push
his new book, just published, called “On Paradise Drive: How We Live
Now (And Always Have) in the Future Tense.” If that title sounds
convoluted, read the book and you’ll understand. His thesis is the
new nature and structure of the demographics in this country, and
that is mostly what he talked about. For 45 minutes he gave us a
trenchant, wonderfully funny and painfully accurate look at
ourselves.
All of us who heard him will think twice -- and then probably go
anyway -- before heading to Costco to buy “30 pounds of Tater Tots in
order to save money.” In hard-core suburbia, Brooks said, “the
smaller the woman, the larger the car she is driving. And golf is a
spiritual experience in which living at a well-organized par is the
goal.” He described Newport Beach as a community of “organic grocery
stores, natural hair coloring, Trader Joes and bathroom towels that
match.”
He sees the whole nation as gravitating to locales -- good, bad or
indifferent -- where we can be comfortable with our neighbors and our
surroundings. This has resulted in fast-growing communities full of
soul-mates but without a core, “with no center, no main street. Mesa,
Ariz., for example, now has more people than St. Louis or
Cincinnati.” The impact on politics, he said, is profound. “The
number of American counties where one political party dominates
strongly has doubled in a generation, resulting in a sharp drop in
swing voters. At the same time, the United States has steadily become
more polarized. Politics have become the Yankees against the Red Sox.
Bitter polarization. Crush the other side.”
He said it is time to remember that this is still one country,
whose citizens share a powerful common quality of high energy.
“Nationality matters. Being American shapes our personality. What
still unites us is the American dream that allows us to say, ‘Yes, I
control my life.’ We’ve always had the future mentality, idealists
working on matter.”
I suspect such optimism would play a lot better in Mesa than in
East Los Angeles or the south side of Chicago. But it was delivered
with such high style and humor that cavils seem downright
wrong-headed.
*
Last night, the work of my stepson, Erik Patterson, was on display
on both coasts. While his new play, “Red Light, Green Light” was
selling out at the Theatre of Note in Los Angeles, Erik was in New
York to take part in a staged reading before an audience of his
peers. And I’m feeling too much pride to let it pass without
recognition here.
Erik is seven years out of Newport Harbor High School and three
years out of Occidental College. He switched from acting to
playwriting in his senior year at Oxy, and he has worked assiduously
at his craft in a brutally competitive field whenever and however he
could squeeze time from a series of marginal jobs that paid his rent
and bought gas for his ancient car. The New York trip is a powerful
sign that his work is attracting high-level attention.
His reading took place at the Lark Play Development Center, which
sponsors an annual festival of “new plays and new voices.” Hundreds
of plays are submitted for this competition, 40 are winnowed out by
staff, and a panel of noted professionals select six for a staged
reading. The winning playwrights are flown to New York and work for
several days with professional directors and New York actors who will
bring their plays to life. The exposure to the movers and shakers of
New York theater is priceless. Meanwhile, the same play --
well-reviewed by local critics -- is halfway through its run in Los
Angeles, Thursdays through Sundays.
His mother and I got a close look at Erik’s commitment to his
craft last week when he came home to do his laundry and got a call
that his leading man in Los Angeles was suddenly and seriously ill
and couldn’t go on the following night. Erik shut himself in a room
and memorized the lines in a single day, then did three flawless
performances until the stand-in was ready to take over.
His mother is representing the family in New York this week, and
I’m following events -- by choice -- vicariously by phone and e-mail.
I’ve seen the play here, of course, and I marvel at the uncanny ear
for dialogue and depth and substance that Erik has somehow acquired
in just 26 years. And I wonder at what the years ahead are going to
produce.
Erik’s vision is much darker than that of David Brooks, but they
share one powerful leavening agent: humor, mined from the frequent
absurdities of human behavior. No matter which pole it comes from,
humor can offer a safe and useful bridge to connect segments of a
polarized society.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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