Jerome Lawrence
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The following interview transcript with Jerome Lawrence has been carefully broken down into segments involving a variety of topics. Below each segment is a link to the corresponding video clip. Please attribute research sources to Mike Wood, Interviewer and the William Inge Center for the Arts.
Advice to aspiring writers: “Write every day.”
  Both Bob Lee and I teach – Bob’s at UCLA and I’m at USC.  We’ve taught all over the world.  But we tell them they’ve got to write every day.  You can take Sunday off, but you get in the writing habit and as for myself, I go to sleep unhappy if I haven’t written five pages a day.  It’s a happy habit.  It doesn’t mean you write five pages of a play every day.  It might just be five pages of a journal or five pages of a new story idea or a character sketch for a play you might not write for ten years, but you get started.

 

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Advice to aspiring writers: Enthusiasm is key
  We have many projects in the works at one time and we concentrate on one, meanwhile gathering material for another.  We have a long list of credits, but we always like to say the one we like best is the one we’re working on at the moment.  It’s always such a joy that you wake up in the morning and there’s work to do.  The whole point of writing is to have something in your gut or in your soul or in your mind that’s burning to be written.  A play is a passion.  You’ve got to want to grab somebody by the – everybody in the audience – by the shoulder and say, “Listen to me.  Here’s something I have in my heart, in my gut, in my head that I want to get across to you.”  And we often are accused of being overly enthusiastic.  I think enthusiasm is the answer to passionate writing.  Enthusiasm’s an old Greek word which means God-filled, and if you’ve got that hunk of “God” in you that is creative, why get it out with enthusiasm, with passion.

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Advice to aspiring writers: Encourage your peers
 

You must be involved in mankind.  And therefore, I also say, “You must encourage your peers.”  The other people in the class, I insist that all of their plays be put on by professional actors and by professional directors, which we do every year.  I say, “Want all your other people’s plays to be great – as good as yours or better, because then the audience is going to be involved all the time.” Every man’s flop diminishes me, again to paraphrase Donne.  Therefore, our only competition is shoddiness.  Our only competition in the theater is boredom, because if I’m bored with a play, if I’m revolted by a play on stage, with the Broadway prices, especially today, I’m going to walk out and not come back and pay that price again.  People who were bored before aren’t going to come see my play when it comes around, when possibly they might not be bored.

 

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Advice to aspiring writers: Cheer for the Good
  You must not demand the failure of your peers, because the more good things that are around in film, in television, in theater--which is our domain more than any other--why the better it is for all of us.  Every time I see a Rambo or a terrible, disgusting, revolting violent film or a cheap, vulgar play or a tawdry television thing, I will turn it off and so will the whole nation and the world turn it off.  So we must cheer for the good and the craftsman alike and the hopeful.


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Advice to aspiring writers: Regional theater is the place to be
  And the young playwright has much more chance today because also theater is where it belongs: all over the country.  That wasn’t in existence.  When we started the only regional theaters or out-of New York theaters--resident theaters--that ever did new plays – there were only three important theaters: Pasadena, The Cleveland Playhouse, and Margo Jones.  And Margo Jones was the only one who had a policy, an insane policy, a lot of people thought, of only doing new plays.  By doing that she discovered Tennessee Williams, she discovered William Inge, and thank God she discovered us.  Now, the only place new plays are done are the regional theaters or in England.  The shows are not done in New York first.

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From Ohio to New York
 

Bob Lee and I knew all about each other and had never met.  We were both from Ohio.  Bob was from Elyria, Ohio.  You know the original Elyria was a seacoast of…it’s Dubrovnik now, it’s a Twelfth Night.  But this is Elyria, Ohio on the seacoast of Lake Erie.   And I was from Cleveland, just 28 miles away.  We went to school 20 miles apart, Bob at Ohio Wesleyan and I at Ohio State.  But we never met.  Then when we got into radio Bob was working in New York and Hollywood and so was I.  Bob was at Young & Rubicam, I was at CBS; and we knew all about each other and about each other’s programs, but we’d never met.  Finally in January of 1942, right after Pearl Harbor, I had written up a whole plan for CBS in the event of war, and I was flown back.  And Bob was working on March of Time and other programs, mostly as a director.  And we met at a restaurant downstairs at CBS in New York, looked at each other, reached out and shook hands and Bob said, “Let’s have lunch together.”  And I said, “Oh, that’s an old Hollywood line.”  And he took out a pocket date book and he said, “No, let’s have lunch tomorrow.”  And that day, at lunch, we started writing radio plays together just naturally, and by a fluke we’d written and sold eight of them.  All eight got on the air in the same calendar week, and Variety had a big headline, “Lawrence and Lee take over Radio.”

We had an original radio drama on every major dramatic show in radio and there was no television then, so it was a big coup.  And right after that, as a result of that, as a result of our friendship and Bob’s friendship with Tom Lewis, and my CBS war plan, we were asked…by that time we were back in Hollywood…we were asked to go back by train to Washington to help form Armed Forces Radio Service. That was a great joy to do, to write and direct programs for the troops all over the world.

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WWII and Radio
  Our official title when we first formed Armed Forces Radio Service, we were two of the founding fathers.  We were both too young to be commissioned.  We were literally kids.  So they made us Expert Consultants to the Secretary of War.  Finally, everybody else was in uniform and we weren’t, so we went ahead and volunteered and took basic training and got into uniform.  I was lucky enough to get all over the map to North Africa and Italy, with a wire recorder.  There were no tape recorders then…doing stuff in the field which was great.  In fact I was sort of a war correspondent, and Bob was a hot pilot.  He was in the Air Corps for a while, too.  All experience helps when you write.

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Look Ma, I'm Dancin'
 

And we had one musical on Broadway with Nancy Walker, Look, Ma, I’m Dancin’!  We were very lucky in that instance, because we had George Abbott, the great George Abbott as director and Jerome Robbins who was the genius choreographer of the age, who had really dreamed up Look, Ma, I’m Dancin’!, or the basic idea, the conception and who had choreographed it.

And so we had a nice foothold.  It wasn’t a big hit.  It was always what we called a nervous hit, but it was a hit and it launched us on Broadway.

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Inherit the Wind: The Genesis
  All of the playwrights that the Inge Festival honored have had tremendous war experiences.  John Patrick in India out of which came Hasty Heart.  Robert Anderson in the Navy.  Sidney Kingsley was writing The Patriots while he was in Officer’s Training School, I believe, simultaneously.  It was a great source of material.  It was a war we were all fighting with passion, and consequently we all wrote with passion as a result.  The aftermath of the war is what inspired us to write many of our plays.  The whole reason for our writing Inherit the Wind was that we were appalled at the blacklisting.  We were appalled at thought control.  We were appalled at people being labeled “communists” or “pinkos” just because they believed in food for the hungry.  So that was our motivation, to go back into history to find a parallel situation where there was thought control and there had been terrible thought control in 1925 during the Scopes trial, which became just the genesis of Inherit the Wind.  It has an exodus all its own.  But our whole motivation was the blacklisting, McCarthyism, to write that play.  We used as a guideline two Santayana quotes, one is a very famous one, so famous it’s almost become a cliché: those who do not remember the past are condemned to repeat it or to relive it.

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Inherit the Wind: Rejection
  Nobody would do it.  As a matter of fact one…when our agent had given up, our New York Agent, we took it to a Hollywood agent and thought, “Well, maybe it’ll be a film.”  And this lady agent came to my beach house which I had then, and tossed the script into my fireplace and said, “Burn it.  It’s no good, nobody will ever do it.”  Well, when I directed the twentieth anniversary production of Inherit the Wind, which started about four years after that—and we were writing others plays in between too—but I was doing the twentieth anniversary production, there were computers then, and Dramatist Play Service and our agents in New York who had given up on it, put all the material in the computer and came up with the startling fact that this play that this film agent had told us to burn had never been off for a single night in all those twenty years.  It had been on somewhere in the world in 33 languages every single night of the week since.  So we always tell our students, “If you have a play and somebody tells you to burn it, and you’re passionate about it, don’t burn it.  Hang on to it.”

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Inherit the Wind: Fact vs. Fiction
  Part of the inspiration for doing Inherit the Wind was a parallel situation with a very great playwright, Maxwell Anderson.  I’d done my masters thesis comparing two of his plays, Gods of the Lightning which he wrote with Harold Hickerson, and then Winterset ten years later. They were both about Sacco and Vanzetti but the first one was a pretty dull play, because it was more or less a documentary.  Ten years later he took a poet’s license to write a play, not using the same names – he called them Bartolomeo Romagna, instead of Sacco.   Burgess Meredith starred in it on Broadway.  And we realized when we came across the Scopes trial material, that we were not going to be literal, that we were going to be poets and playwrights.  Therefore we combined three lawyers who had been at the trial: Dudley Field Malone, Arthur Garfield Hayes, and Darrow into one character.  We couldn’t therefore call him Darrow.  We called him Henry Drummond. Everything else about the play is fictional.  One critic said, “What’s so great about this play?  They just took the trial transcript.”  We didn’t.  There are two or three lines that we couldn’t leave out.  They were just too fatuous and funny.  For example, Bryan really did say, “I am more interested in the Rock of Ages than I am in the age of rocks.”  We had to use that.  But practically everything else in the play is original.  We don’t always tell people that.  William O. Douglas, the Supreme Court Justice, shook our hands after the performance of a play of Inherit the Wind in Washington and said, “I’m so glad you boys used Darrow’s famous speech, “Progress has never been a bargain.  You have to pay for it.”  And he said, “Oh, that was such a prophetic speech when Darrow talked about pollution, you know.  ‘Mister you may conquer the air, but the birds will lose their wonder and the clouds will smell of gasoline.’”  Well Darrow never made that speech, we wrote it.  But Darrow could have made it or should have made it or might have made it because it was a synthesis of everything he believed.  Same way with the “Golden dancer” speech.  We use that now as an indication to our students of how if you look behind the paint, if you dig out the lies, if you look below all the surface, the shiny surface, why it’s the subject matter of an infinite number of plays because you have to look beneath the surface of the lies and the deceits of your parents, of your family, of your friends, of your government, of your church, but particularly of yourself.  And if you can reveal what you’ve been kidding yourself about, that is of infinite value in writing plays.

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Inherit the Wind: A Long Run
  Inherit the Wind, which nobody wanted to do on Broadway, it was years before we could get it on, until Margo Jones and the unlikely city of Dallas discovered it.  Then it exploded to life and there hasn’t been a night since then that it hasn’t been on somewhere in the world.  Last week if you were in the neighborhood you could have dropped in on a performance in Buenos Aries, in West Berlin or in Zimbabwe.  And it’s been translated into 33 languages.  That makes it all worthwhile.

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Auntie Mame: An Adaption
 

We had read the galleys of Auntie Mame because we had the same agent as Patrick Dennis, who had written the book.  Patrick Dennis himself tried to make a play out of it and it turned out to be a 320 page play that he wouldn’t cut or change and I’m told, though we never read it, not a very good play.  He was a very wonderful and funny man and when we took it over he had all kinds of blessing for us and he was wonderful.  And everybody said, “It’s impossible.”  And when we finally got Rosalind Russell to do it, she was told by a lot of people, “You mustn’t do it; it’ll be a disaster because it’s not a play.  It’s just a whole bunch of little sketches.  And it’s not a novel or anything with any storyline.”

So I think we managed to give it some structure.  We made the first act of a fast-living woman who is saved from just being trivial by the arrival of a little boy in her life, her nephew.  And then in the second act the reverse happens.  She saves him from having his life locked in a safe-deposit box.

So we gave it a real structure.  We decided the play had to say something too, as the book had in any case.  And it’s a diatribe against prejudice, against anti-Semitism, against living the constricted life…living the full life.  By the time it became a musical one of the biggest songs in it was “Open a New Window Every Day.”  In other words, live fully.  Don’t live just a one-track life.

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Auntie Mame: The Actresses
  Rosalind Russell was our first Auntie Mame on Broadway, at the Broadhurst, that wonderful theater.  And then she went to Hollywood to do the movie version of it, and Greer Garson took over for her, and then when Greer Garson left, Bea Lillie took over just for a short while before we all went to England, we went to Manchester and Oxford and then into the Adelphi Theatre on the Strand in London.  Meanwhile Constance Bennett was doing it, starting in Chicago.  Eve Arden was doing it on the West Coast, Sylvia Sidney was bussing - trucking it, Shirl Conway was at all the musical tents and then to Australia, and the line of ladies who played Mame would go on and on and on.  Thank God.

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Mame: A Musical
  Everybody would come out of the play and say, “Geez, that’s a great musical.”  And then somebody would say, “Wait a minute. There’s no music in it.”  But it really took the shape of a musical to start with.  So we had the sense to take an option on the musical rights ten years later, and I happened to be in Egypt on a round-the-world trip when Bob phoned me. I became very popular when they said, “There’s a call from Hollywood for Mr. Lawrence in the hotel in Cairo.”  Bob said, “Look, this is the day our option’s up.  Should we pick it up?”  He said, “I don’t think we should do it again.”  And I said, “We’re not going to do it again.  We’re going to do it better.  Wait till I get back to New York and we’ll try to get Jerry Herman to do it.”  So we all decided together that we were going to write it as a musical right from scratch, and de-cartoon it any way.  In other words, make the musical more real than the play had been.  So that when the eleven o’clock song came, “If you walked into my life today,” where she says, “What did I do wrong?” it had more depth of real feeling and emotion than the play had.  So we tell our students that.  If you’re going to make a musical, don’t cartoon it from the play.  Make it better than the play.  Have a reason for making it sing.   Steve Sondheim and Mary Rogers always say there are subject matters that are “why musicals.”  Why do it as a musical?  People have always asked us if we ought to make an opera or musical out of Inherit the Wind, and we say, “No way.”  And we even put it in our wills.  In no instance is there to be a musical or opera of Inherit the Wind because it doesn’t sing.  It’s an intellectual play.

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Mame: Angela Lansbury
  Everybody said, “Of course you’re going to use Rosalind Russell in Mame.”  But we said, “No.  We can’t do it again.”  So she claims she was asked, but she never was, and she got kind of mad at us and started to say nasty things about us.  But we auditioned everybody and saw everybody and everybody said, “No, Angela is a second banana.  She’s not a leading lady.  Don’t use her.”  But Bob Lee and Jerry Herman and I believed in Angela very, very strongly.  We’d seen her in a flop that Steven Sondheim wrote called Anyone Can Whistle.  She was wonderful.  And she was.  She was sensational.  It made her a star, just as Inherit the Wind made Tony Randall a star.

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The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail
  The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail is my particular favorite.  Bob and I wrote it sitting with yellow pads right on the shores of Walden Pond.  And we read it again because we were reaching to the past for a parallel.  Something from the past would help illuminate the present for us.  And it was right at the height of the Vietnam War.  And there was Thoreau, protesting another illegal, immoral, undeclared war: the war against Mexico.  And so we went back and realized that his protests, his literal invention discovery of civil disobedience was so important to everything that followed.  Gandhi carried around a copy of Civil Disobedience in his pocket, in South Africa before the whole subcontinent of India was freed.  Martin Luther King swore by Civil Disobedience, non-violent dissent… your right to dissent without using bullets or rocks or burning down buildings.  That was the passion.  That was the motive for us to make us write it, and it turned into the most widely produced play of our time without every being on Broadway, because it went all over the country and all over the world.  It was presented even in the Soviet Union.  It’s just recently been translated into Mandarin.

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Margo Jones and the Dallas Theater
  In honor of the fact that Margo Jones started Tennessee Williams and William Inge and us and many other playwrights, we started an annual award, and it’s been given every year for almost thirty years now to a producer, not a playwright, who does the most to help new plays and new playwrights.  Many, many people have gotten this award and Bill Inge and Tennessee, until their deaths, were on the judging committee every year.

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Writing Solo
  We’ve written a lot of things separately.  We don’t write prose together.  Bob and I have each had a number of books separately.  Bob wrote the first book on television.  He was the Nostradamus of television.  With a forward by Dr. Lee DeForrest, who’s the father of broadcasting.  And I wrote a biography of Paul Muni called Actor.

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Collaboration
  In dialogue we love to play out all the scenes together, and it’s great, and it never gets lonely.  And actors tell us that they feel it’s playable dialogue because it’s already been played, let’s say.  We always talk it out, and then we do it to a tape recorder after we draft, and sometimes we throw it out and write it again.  Until we hear one that really sounds alive and full of love and passion and theatricality, we don’t use it.  And we have a rule-of-thumb.  We call it the UN veto.  And when we told the Russians and the Chinese about this– we’ve been all over the world with our plays and cultural exchange things – they said, “Oh that’s better than the UN.”  It’s kind of like two houses of Congress.  It’s a system of checks and balances between us.  We always say that writing, you have to wear two hats.  You write something and then you put it down and you put on another hat and look at it as a critic.  You have to be your own critic.  Well, we figure we’re each other’s critics right as we go along.  And we argue a lot, we yell a lot, we scream a lot, but our UN rule is very simple.  We say, “You can always say no to anything: a comma, an idea, a whole basis or premise for a play, a speech, a character, anything – you can say no to it.  But it has to be a positive no.”  By that I mean, if I say no to something Bob comes up with, I then have the obligation to come up with something better that he’ll say yes to.  So you cannot just be negative, and I think that keeps the creative juices going.  And I tell my students, “When you write yourself, you’ve got to do that.  If you reject an idea, just know that some better one’s going to come along.”   And if you’re a craftsman-like playwright who works at something, you know that every time there’s a problem you’re going to come up with something better that’s gonna solve it.  And it works even better when there are two people.  We have a book we’re writing about collaboration which we call “the anatomy of collaboration” and the title is Which One Can’t Spel?  The reason for that is that everybody thinks if you’re a team, one of you has to be a total idiot who can’t even spell his own name.  He can’t even speak a coherent sentence.  That’s not true.  You should only have a partner who you respect as much as you respect yourself.  Otherwise, forget it.

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A Dose of Laughter
  Norman Cousins calls a daily dose of laughter “internal jogging” and that’s why we try to make all our funny plays serious and all our serious plays funny, because the audience demands that wonderful grace of laughter – the therapy of laughter.  The Santayana quote that we use all the time is, “the young man who cannot weep is a savage, and the old man who will not laugh is a fool.”  The first half of that quote implies that you must always find the breaking point, the vulnerability point of every human being, man or woman, the point where you weep.  But mostly, all of us are foolish to go through all of life and not have the saving grace of laughter put down all the problems of our worlds, whether it is plague or illness, or the threat of annihilation of the planet.

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