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- <text id=91TT2782>
- <title>
- Dec. 16, 1991: Hey, Let's Do A Few Lines!
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Dec. 16, 1991 The Smile of Freedom
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- LIVING, Page 76
- Hey, Let's Do A Few Lines!
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll are taking a backseat to poetry
- among the hip set
- </p>
- <p>By Janice C. Simpson--With reporting by Deborah Edler Brown/
- Los Angeles and Nina Burleigh/Chicago
- </p>
- <p> To have great poets, there must be great audiences, too.
- </p>
- <p>-- Walt Whitman
- </p>
- <p> No stranger to the bar scene of his own era, the Bard of
- Brooklyn would love the crowd at Chicago's Green Mill Lounge.
- Every Sunday night it's standing room only in this gritty
- neighborhood tavern. The audience is there for the weekly
- "slam," a literary version of The Gong Show at which amateur
- poets compete for small cash prizes and the much richer reward
- of having their work heard by an enthusiastic public. The poetic
- abilities of many contestants may be open to debate, but the
- audience is always in top form. On a typical evening a rambling
- poem about using nuclear weapons to blow up political banquets
- brings raucous cheers. A watery ode to existentialism ("Nothing
- that is worth having actually is...") draws equally
- good-natured jeers.
- </p>
- <p> Suddenly, poetry is popular again with the hip crowd in
- the U.S., for the first time since the Beat Generation of the
- '50s and early '60s. During the past five years, a new
- generation of defiantly populist poets has moved verse out of
- the hothouse environment of college and university writing
- programs and into bars, coffeehouses and even Laundromats and
- subway trains. "The only way for poetry to survive is to get out
- and get poetry into people's lives," declares Bob Holman, who
- organizes readings at the hip Nuyorican Poets Cafe on New York
- City's Lower East Side.
- </p>
- <p> The poetic populists claim that their efforts are
- providing fresh blood for an increasingly anemic area of
- American culture. The transfusion is substantial: the New York
- City Poetry Calendar currently lists an average of 15 gatherings
- each night. In Los Angeles the Poetry Hotline gives updates on
- readings; meanwhile, celebrities like Joe Spano, who played
- sensitive Sergeant Henry Goldblume on TV's Hill Street Blues,
- render their favorite poems in trendy spots like the Chateau
- Marmont. "Poetry deserves to be heard," he says.
- </p>
- <p> Readings have caught on with a young and racially diverse
- set that sees poetry clubs as an attractive way to meet people
- now that the disco scene is passe. "Before, the scene was
- centered around doing coke or pot in your house with your
- friends or going out to a bar and drinking," says Lycia Naff,
- a Los Angeles actress. "All those same people are now in the
- coffeehouses." Poetry gatherings are also a relatively cheap
- night out. Says Loyola University student Anne Grason, at the
- Green Mill: "Where else can you have this much fun for $4?"
- </p>
- <p> Some observers credit rap music for the renewed interest
- in the spoken word. "Ears are being tuned up to listen to words
- again," says Manhattan's Holman. Events like slams are aimed to
- appeal to a generation accustomed to the frenetic action of MTV.
- Contestants at Chicago's Green Mill are encouraged to perform
- their poems to live music, creating a new blend of poetry and
- song that has been nicknamed--what else--pong. In New York
- City the deejay at the Nuyorican Poets Cafe plays James Brown
- records and other dance music during breaks between slam
- competition rounds. "It's great to see writing so alive, and the
- dancing is great too," says Danine Richards, 25, a writer from
- Brooklyn.
- </p>
- <p> At the Electronic Cafe International in Santa Monica,
- California, the emphasis is on a mix of video and poetry called
- Telepoetics. At one recent event a poet in Santa Fe read a work
- about childbirth over telephone wires that fed into the cafe
- public address system. While her disembodied voice filled the
- room, images of her performance in New Mexico were projected
- onto three TV screens.
- </p>
- <p> Open-mike readings, at which anyone can get up and
- perform, are another popular audience booster in the clubs.
- Social issues, sexual and racial politics, and the general
- crassness of American culture are popular topics. "In the
- Persian Gulf bodies rained,/ Arab jets all worked in vain,/ The
- modern world is at the flood," declaims Joe Roarty at Chicago's
- Cafe Voltaire. Earnestness and energy also count for a lot.
- Donna Wozinsky, 36, a spunky special-education teacher from
- Queens, whose verse tends toward the excruciatingly personal
- ("I, the sperm bank of your soul...") attends at least three
- open-mike readings or slams a week. Says she: "I don't mind
- being judged because I know the audiences like me."
- </p>
- <p> There is, of course, the risk that the outburst of
- versifying will merely inundate the country with bad poetry that
- plays better onstage than on the page. But optimists argue that
- any interest will inevitably translate into greater respect for
- the truly gifted. "People prize the spoken word," says S.X.
- Rosenstock, vice president of Poetry Society of America, West.
- "Whether it's Beat poetry or Dante, they want to hear it.
- Speaking any poem is a statement of your freedom."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-