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- <text id=92TT2165>
- <title>
- Sep. 28, 1992: Profile:Gore Vidal
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Sep. 28, 1992 The Economy
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PROFILE, Page 64
- A Gadfly in Glorious, Angry Exile
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Author, controversialist and now a rave-winning movie actor,
- Gore Vidal takes a bleak look at his country
- </p>
- <p>By Martha Duffy/Ravello
- </p>
- <p> The prayer breakfast during the Republican Convention is
- revving up its final hallelujahs as Mary Lou Retton burbles her
- introduction of President Bush. Thousands of miles away, in his
- aerie on the Mediterranean, an avid CNN watcher is taking in the
- action and talking back to his TV set. Of the ex-gymnast, he
- predicts, "She'll be running for office very soon." The
- President, as usual, quotes a letter, this one from a child
- named Joy Vaughn. "What if her name were Joy Previn?" asks the
- viewer sarcastically. One of the pols plugs voluntary prayer in
- schools. "Well," is the response, "there goes the First
- Amendment again."
- </p>
- <p> Despite his glee at the campaign antics, Gore Vidal is
- disgusted. He has loved politics passionately all his life. The
- grandchild of a U.S. Senator, he himself ran for that office
- unsuccessfully in 1982. In 1960 he wrote The Best Man, a witty,
- astute play about a presidential campaign. What he sees around
- him now is all change and decay. "We have one political party
- with two right wings," he says. "See why I go so deep into
- satire? You know, there are only two great issues--converting
- from war to peace and managing the economy. Instead we're
- talking about the fetus and the flag."
- </p>
- <p> Vidal--perversely brilliant novelist, acerbic gadfly and
- now movie actor--lives in self-imposed partial exile in a
- massive villa in the postcard-picturesque town of Ravello on
- Italy's Amalfi coast. All his surroundings are serene. Vidal,
- 67, is a tireless, disciplined author, and his house is in every
- detail of location and layout designed to enhance concentration.
- </p>
- <p> For the first time in nearly six months, he recently left
- Ravello. Paramount persuaded him to go to Hollywood for a press
- jamboree to promote Tim Robbins' shrewd, bumptious political
- film Bob Roberts. Vidal co-stars as an aging liberal Senator,
- and he does it with authority and panache. His reviews have been
- excellent, and the ham in him loves it. "I keep saying, `John
- Houseman is dead. Maybe I'll get those nice parts.'"
- </p>
- <p> On the literary front, Random House is publishing LIVE
- from Golgotha, an outrageous recasting of the Jesus story ("All
- these excuses and all this fund raising, and still he hasn't
- come back"). Harvard University Press has just brought out
- Screening History, a gentle, charming memoir of the movies Vidal
- saw as a child and how they influenced him. Two books and a
- movie in two weeks--not bad.
- </p>
- <p> Not surprising, however. Vidal has written 23 novels, six
- plays, eight volumes of essays and he isn't sure how many film
- and television scripts. At the moment he is reading the page
- proofs of his collected commentary--1,200 pages' worth--representing just two-thirds of his output since 1952. But to
- him all this is old hat. "I have a new career," he exults. "I'm
- now a journalist. And all because of the fax!" He keeps the
- machine nearer to him than his phone. "I'm full of opinions, but
- with the mails, the pieces were out of date when they arrived."
- </p>
- <p> Vidal has lived most of his adult life in the public eye.
- Even for people who have only heard of his mischievous best
- seller Myra Breckinridge, his image from countless TV talk shows
- is indelible--by turns suave, perverse, a man smarter than
- anyone else on the set. His waspish ripostes can be frightening
- to confront but endlessly quotable later--like his line about
- Ronald Reagan: "A triumph of the embalmer's art." Handsome,
- saturnine, Vidal projects the threat that he is capable of
- derailing anything.
- </p>
- <p> Christianity, for one thing. LIVE from Golgotha takes a
- shocking look at Jesus' claim as the Messiah and at those who,
- like St. Paul and St. Timothy, spread the word. Though the
- author has personally never progressed beyond a manual Smith
- Corona ("I have spent my life changing ribbons"), he has a
- sophisticated knowledge of computer gadgetry and a puddle
- jumper's expertise at time tripping.
- </p>
- <p> Golgotha and Myra have several things in common: fantastic
- sexual gambits and a kind of Lewis Carroll flouting of the laws
- of time. Plotted like a mystery for late-page plot twists, it
- casts Paul as a tap-dancing gay, Jesus as a brilliant
- businessman. Drawing on the work of historian Joel Carmichael,
- Vidal argues that when Jesus threw the money changers out of the
- temple, he was destroying a sophisticated Roman financial
- structure that controlled banking in the Middle East--and
- thereby sealing his own fate.
- </p>
- <p> The narrator is Timothy, who is caught on a time trip not
- of his choosing. All he wants to do is set down his own account
- of the glory days, but he is thwarted by sci-fi circuitry that
- allows other people to penetrate his narrative. In particular,
- two chaps named Cutler intrude ruthlessly. Gradually it becomes
- clear that Cutler One wants to discard Jesus and await a
- Messiah who does not end up on a cross. Cutler Two opts for
- Jesus as the focus of a new religion. In this muddle, centuries
- turn inside out and the cast at Golgotha can be changed and
- added to; there is even room for Mary Baker Eddy and Dr. Helen
- Schucman. It is also possible for Jesus to command a good table
- at Spago. Or, given Vidal's insatiable need to shock, to find
- himself pinioned by user-friendly nails at the Crucifixion.
- </p>
- <p> Already, an Irish bishop, a Conservative British M.P. and
- the Vatican press have denounced Vidal for blasphemy, though
- none of them had access to the book when they went public. But
- LIVE from Golgotha will nettle many more. The author shrugs it
- all off: "Christianity is such a silly religion." As for the
- book's teasingly naughty humor, he washes his hands of other
- people's want of wit: "Sometimes the wrong word makes exactly
- the right joke."
- </p>
- <p> Vidal has always been impossible to pigeonhole. He is ever
- the restless bull in the china shop of conventional wisdom. He
- is also a serious student of history. Jason Epstein, his old
- friend and longtime publisher, correctly calls Vidal "the last
- in a line of men of letters--among whom Edmund Wilson is a
- classic example. Scholars like him are rare in any age,
- polymaths with a huge range of interests." Vidal can lampoon the
- New Testament because he knows the Bible and Roman history.
- </p>
- <p> But Wilson's career was a clear trajectory compared with
- Vidal's. Competing in his psyche are two more obsessions: show
- biz and sexual identity. He is the grandchild of Oklahoma
- Senator Thomas P. Gore (making him a distant--"in every way"--cousin of Al Gore's), and, since his mother was feckless and
- his father often away starting up airlines, he spent his first
- 10 years happily with his grandfather, in privileged Washington
- circles.
- </p>
- <p> The elder Gore was blind, so his grandchild began reading
- to him as soon as he could make sense of the letters himself.
- It was the perfect start for an autodidact. Later, his mother
- married financier Hugh D. Auchincloss, who was to leave her to
- marry Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis' mother, thus establishing
- Vidal's long connection with the Kennedys. But at the time, it
- set young Gore adrift ("If my mother heard about a school at a
- party, she just sent me there").
- </p>
- <p> He never bothered with college. From the age of 14 he had
- been trying to write a novel, and at 19 he completed Williwaw,
- for which he drew on his Army service in the Aleutians in 1943.
- Vidal was a precocious success, but when he published The City
- and the Pillar (1948), which had an openly homosexual theme, he
- found himself blackballed by the mainstream press. He has never
- forgotten the ostracism and remains suspicious to the point of
- paranoia about the literary Establishment. Still, it never
- occurred to him that he could not prosper. He was a natural at
- script writing and started a second career in Hollywood. (His
- first credit, The Catered Affair in 1956, starring Bette Davis,
- was shown recently on Italian TV, and he reveled in his personal
- time trip.)
- </p>
- <p> At no time has he lacked ideas or opportunities. His
- agenda at the moment is typical. This winter Martin Scorsese's
- new film on the Byzantine Empress Theodora, for which Vidal has
- written the screenplay, goes into production. Then he and
- Howard Austin, his companion of many years, hop off to Bangkok
- for their annual cool-out at the Oriental Hotel. While Vidal
- was promoting Bob Roberts, he and Warren Beatty found time to
- discuss another political movie. Sting may dramatize his 1978
- novel Kalki. Looking back, Vidal regrets that he didn't take
- movies more seriously. "After The Best Man I think I could have
- become a director--not so much of theatrical movies but of TV
- films, where you have much more control. And the novel just may
- be dead."
- </p>
- <p> But in the next breath he adds, "What I really have to do
- is bite the bullet on the final novel of my American story,
- called The Golden Age. I'll have a fictional plot and myself as
- a fictional character as well. I won't ever write a memoir. If
- I tried, it would be like a bad MGM movie--or worse, a good
- one." The Golden Age in question is an ironic description of the
- Kennedy years.
- </p>
- <p> Recently he unearthed 13 pages of notes he took after a
- visit to Hyannis Port. However, anyone expecting a burnished
- glow of memory will be disappointed. "In the beginning I was as
- impressed as anyone," he says. "But it was nonsense really. The
- invasion of Cuba was the first moment I realized that Kennedy
- was not going to be much of a President. And Vietnam is really
- on his head. The truth is that he was something of a war lover,
- very romantic."
- </p>
- <p> But J.F.K. was fun. Vidal, who had grown up among
- Washington elders, found an ebullient President, who was only
- seven years older than he, very refreshing. Kennedy relished the
- kind of slanging session at which Vidal is a master. He
- remembers Kennedy "as one of the greatest gossips I've ever
- known. He knew everything, and still he questioned you
- constantly. He was wildly interested in all the movie stars I
- knew. `Tell me about Hope Lange,' he'd say."
- </p>
- <p> Those freewheeling good times are distant now. His health
- is good, his career robust, but Vidal seems like a lion in
- winter. He feels that the populist causes he fought for all his
- life died with Lyndon Johnson. He is confident that Bush will
- lose the election, largely because of his stand on abortion,
- but he despairs of Bill Clinton's shaking up the economy
- sufficiently or reversing the incursions on civil liberties and
- women's rights made in the name of family sanctity by what he
- calls the Party of God, consisting mostly of Republicans, but
- Democrats as well.
- </p>
- <p> "Bush is a perfectly rational man on abortion," he notes,
- "but he thinks he can't afford to be. His only hope is for a
- very small turnout and enough godly folk to push him over. But
- the Democrats have two conservative Southern boys running, and
- they'll take back the South." Vidal is depressed, but his
- irrepressible humor--never dormant long--bubbles to the
- surface. "Ultimately it's a matter of style. What it comes down
- to is this: Do you spell Jennifer with a J or a G? That's a
- class division. As a populist, I'm all for G."
- </p>
- <p> Vidal is also confronting the fact that old friends are
- dying of AIDS. He does not advertise his homosexuality, but a
- reader of his fiction, notably Myra, Kalki, Duluth and of course
- Golgotha, knows that he hates the chains of sexual identity.
- Throughout his literary career he has played endlessly with the
- notions of bisexuality or transsexuality. If readers find the
- new novel repellent, it may be that it is no longer easy to
- laugh at scenes in which Nero rapes Timothy ("Tighten those
- beautiful little buns") or to laugh off lewd goings-on along the
- missionary trail.
- </p>
- <p> Vidal will not give ground, as always determined to follow
- his instincts. There is a scene in Golgotha in which Timothy
- and Mark, walking in Rome, hear a noisome humming that they
- cannot place. "I hear it too," says the author. "It's not
- supernatural or anything silly like that. It's just a sense that
- things are going on around you." Armed with TV, the fax and
- endless phone calls from an international army of well-placed
- pals, this remorseless observer is picking up every buzz.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-