Other Voices
If Truman Capote hadnt been cremated, hed be turning in his
grave.
by Leonard Gill
Truman Capote: In Which Various Friends, Enemies, Acquaintances,
and Detractors Recall His Turbulent Career
By George Plimpton
Nan A. Talese/Doubleday, 490 pp., $35
ou can dip into George Plimptons latest oral biography, Truman
Capote, anywhere you like and have some dispiriting fun doing
it. But by all means start with the eloquent tribute James Dickey
delivered on Capotes behalf (and on behalf of Capotes early
output), which closes the book on a high and deeply felt note.
Read it and keep it in mind. For the better part of the preceding
400-plus pages, youll be working, mostly down, from there.
OR you can work, mostly up, from the random shots, some deserving
and some deservingly cheap, delivered by Capotes enemies and
detractors, as so deliciously promised in Plimptons subtitle.
For that most endearing and enduring of enemies, you can start
with Mr. Gore Vidal.
I write about the fifth century B.C. and comparative religion
and Confucius and the Buddha and Zoroaster and Socrates, and,
of course, American history. Subjects of no interest to my contemporaries,
Vidal is quoted as saying (in all seriousness). I dont want
to know about marriage. Suburban adultery. And who gets custody
of the children. Im not even interested in the awakening of the
young homosexual in the South and whether or not to wear crêpe
de chine before sundown. ... Important though these things are
to the sensitive author, they do not tug at my heartstrings.
Nor, for that matter, did Truman Capote. When, in (for once) all-out
innocence, a young Capote mistakenly confided to Vidal, Thank
heavens, Gore, were not intellectuals, Vidal shot back, Speak
for your fucking self!
Vidal, despite his customary misanthropy, was, as usual, onto
something early and something with real relevance to the late
career and careerism of Truman Capote. And in keeping to the
style of the book under review, I depend for that something on
another eyewitness, this time the writer and onetime friend of
Capotes, Marguerite Young. On Capotes unfinished, unfinishable
Proustian epic on jet-set society, Answered Prayers the book
that was to raise further and crown the reputation of the author
of Other Voices, Other Rooms, The Tree of Night, The Grass Harp,
Breakfast at Tiffanys, and In Cold Blood I quote:
I dont think [Capote] could have been an epic writer because
that requires a formidable strength. It requires an education.
... Like many American writers, he existed in tidy vignettes of
limited dimensions. No one could be better at that. But just stringing
them together doesnt make an epic. ... [He] didnt read enough
books. He didnt know anything. He was ignorant. ... When I went
to Europe with Carson McCullers, she was reading Proust for the
first time and reading it through blue sunglasses. Thats how
educated those people were.
George Plimpton has had the required education, but this and past
projects have displayed his own tendency toward tidy vignettes
of limited dimensions and a sizable horror of topics taken on
full-scale. For lack of the formidable strength required? Or
is it that Plimpton, deep down, does care about the question of
crêpe de chine before sundown?
The jacket of Truman Capote proudly reminds us that Plimpton originated
participatory journalism (remember Paper Lion?), but his ideal
mode is really nonparticipatory authorship. His (or was it Jean
Steins?) Edie: An American Biography, on Andy Warhols doomed
muse Edie Sedgwick, was all strung-together quotes, the bare-bones
of the biographers art bound and forced to perform as biography
itself. (When you consider Plimptons long editorship of The Paris
Review, consider as well that that magazines most-read feature
has always been its interviews.)
Plimpton, however he sees himself as author, doesnt even lay
sole claim to that title with Truman Capote. He recognizes Susan
Morgan and Anne Fulenwider, in an opening note to readers, as
virtual co-authors, and properly steers us to Gerald Clarks official
biography, Capote, if its a writer who actually writes on his
subject you seek. If your idea of primary source material is cocktail-party
chatter, however, here you have it. Capote the social climber
and backstabber at least fits the method, and everyone who is
or was anyone has been invited from old-timers in Monroeville,
Alabama, to John Kenneth Galbraith to the producer of The Sonny
and Cher Comedy Hour. No Babe Paley, firsthand, though (dead).
No Pat Buckley (but we do get William F.). And, for some reason,
no Dick Cavett, who, when last seen, was doing print ads for a
company that manufactures an antidepressant.
Cavett could exasperate Capote almost as expertly as Vidal and
he outdid himself by cornering Capote on his flimsy definition
of the nonfiction novel. That exasperation turned to squirming
so violent a TV audience watched as a writer, nearing the end
of his tether and talent, appeared to be in the act of wetting
his pants. This, in a book such as Plimptons, however, doesnt
count as a grave oversight. A point that does matter that its
the tidy vignettes of Truman Capote we reread and not Gore Vidal
on Confucius is almost as overlooked. n
This Week's Issue | Home