JOSEPH N. BELL -- The Bell Curve
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You live with them for almost 20 years. And you fuss at them for the
chaotic condition of their room, for not checking the oil in the decrepit
old car you bought them to drive to school, for not writing thank-you
notes for gifts received. For dying their hair pink. Or blue. Or
lavender.
But you also have dinner with them every night, and you talk. They
carefully guard things they don’t want to tell you, but they talk about
other things. Substantial things on their mind. And they play head games
with you. And they laugh a lot. With you.
And then they go off to college and begin a life completely outside
your vision and the connection becomes fuzzier and less frequent, along
with the trips home. Not the love. Just the connection. And subtle and
inevitable and highly desirable changes take place in a relationship that
can well deal with those changes.
And then they get out of college and go to work, and you see them less
and less because their schedule won’t allow it. But you see them enough
to know that they are using the tools with which they have been blessed
in strong and productive ways, and you find that exciting. And then one
day you drive into Los Angeles and see the tangible results gleaned from
those tools, and you are stunned. And finally, driving home, you are
warmed by the hope that you might, somehow, have had some small part in
helping what you just saw happen.
Last week was Erik’s week.
For the past year and a half, my stepson, Erik Patterson, has been
working a full-time day job as a production assistant for survival pay,
most recently at Universal Studios. He then gulps down an unhealthy and
unsatisfactory dinner and dons his other hat -- as playwright and actor.
For the last six months, this has meant arriving at the Actor’s Gang
theater in Hollywood at 6 in the evening to spend the next five hours
participating in acting seminars and taking an increasingly important
part in productions underway. Somehow, he also found time to fine tune
plays he has written and even to start new ones.
Last week, we saw some of the fruits of all that work.
On Saturday night, at the Actor’s Gang theater, we attended the
opening of “Mephisto” -- a passionate and anguished look at Germany in
the years of Hitler’s rise to power through the eyes of an outlying
theater troupe. Erik, asked to assist director Tim Robbins with routine
tasks, made himself so invaluable during early rehearsals that he ended
up with a credit on the program as dramaturge in addition to his walk-on
part.
After the performance, Robbins, hanging out in the lobby, said some
glowing things to us about Erik. Later, a half-dozen of the actors sought
his mother and I out to add to the accolades, delivered with clear
affection. Then, five days later, we had a repeat performance -- but this
time Erik’s work was the centerpiece.
In a tiny venue called Theater of Note on Cahuenga Boulevard in
Hollywood, Erik made his debut in commercial theater with a one-act play
he had written that served as an anchor for a program of three one-acts.
Although we had seen readings of Erik’s play before, this was the first
full production, and it was done superbly. He also got his first review.
LA Weekly wrote of his play: “Erik Patterson’s ‘Tonseisha’ is the
highlight of the triple bill. . . . Patterson’s writing is original,
poetic and funny.”
In the last year, Erik has introduced us to a new world, with rather
clearly defined geographic borders in a down-at-the-heels portion of
Hollywood off and around Santa Monica Boulevard. Here new plays are
incubated in several dozen tiny storefront theaters, where parking is an
adventure and seating might be for 50 or even fewer. Here, people
committed to the theater hold forth on love and hope -- and clearly not
on money. Here can be found the crucible of young playwrights and actors
hoping to develop their craft and be seen, along with successful older
artists reaching back to their roots or once-hopeful actors still
embracing a love that has passed them by as a means of earning a living.
This is a lively and vital group of people who hold up a mirror to our
society and ourselves and support themselves any way they can to buy time
to create their own form of art. Erik is presently facing that problem
anew. The TV show on which he has been working at Universal has been
canceled, and he will soon be out of a job. And so his creative work will
be in jeopardy until he finds a new base of support. It’s a problem
familiar to most of the young people who share his passions, and if this
seems frivolous at a time of national testing, I would suggest that never
do we need the perspective of our artists more than at such a time.
Virtually every civilized society in the world except ours understands
this and supports its artists in tangible ways. Here, where $200 billion
is poured into the abyss of a missile protection program that isn’t
needed, doesn’t work and probably never will, and where huge tax breaks
are given the people who least need them, legislators fight annually to
preserve a tiny pittance in support of the arts.
That probably isn’t going to change. Erik will find a new job, go back
to his writing, and hope. Hope that one day a producer will come to one
of those tiny theaters to see a play he has written and pick it up for a
bigger production or subsidize a new work by him. If quality is the
catalyst in such a scenario, it will happen. Maybe even before he finds
that new job.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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