by Glenn Anders » Fri Aug 29, 2003 6:52 pm
Dear Jeff: The Conrad article is representative of an extraordinary reshaping of Welles' reputation, which has been going on since at least THE MAGNIFICENT AMBERSONS. To recite the events of Welles' life, as Conrad does, and cast them, one and all, in the ugliest light is below contempt, I think. And this is the man who is about to produce a book in which he relates Welles' roles and works to the man himself?
You are right. It doesn't seem promising.
On the other hand, Thomson's pitch for a film about the young manhood of Orson Welles looks very promising indeed. I know that many here hate Thomson, but my take on him is that he made Welles his hero in Cinema at an early age (around 1955). That hero-worship shaped his life as a film critic, and it must have been painful for him to see Welles' desperate, courageous decline.
His summing up of Welles and his career, I think, rises more from regret and pity (for himself and Welles) than from a snide anti-humanism like that displayed by Conrad.
The film Thomson half-seriously proposes might well cast Welles as a tragic genius rather than a pathetic, self-indulgent failure, which seems to be the general historical drift of biographical assessments of Welles these days.
B. Ruby Rich's thesis and discussion, of course, are simply absurd. Welles seems to have worked well with women, lots of lesbian women at that, and many of his works point up his hatred of, and disdain for, male chauvinism in all its forms. To suggest that women lack their former power in Hollywood, real or imagined, because of Welles is plain crazy!
Actually, Welles' defense of his life and Art is contained in those situations and lines (which Conrad distorts for own purposes) in TOUCH OF EVIL ("What does it matter what you say about a man?) and F FOR FAKE (What does it matter as long as we go on singing"); much more accurate an assessment to Welles as protagonist than Conrad's moralistic conclusions.
And alas, I'm afraid the Beatrice Welles' flap over the right to show CITIZEN KANE at the London retrospective is one more case of people losing money and being inconvenienced by an association with Orson Welles, though posthumous, and like a number of other such incidents when he was still alive, beyond his control.
Thank you for bringing this material to our attention, Jeff.
Glenn