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- <text id=93HT0322>
- <title>
- 1950s: Priceless Gift of Laughter:James Thurber
- </title>
- <history>Time-The Weekly Magazine-1950s Highlights</history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TIME Magazine
- July 9, 1951
- Priceless Gift of Laughter
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> "James Grover Thurber, Doctor of Humane Letters," intoned
- the president of Williams College, "cartoonist, playwright,
- foremost humorist of our day and nation, he has brought to a
- troubled America the priceless gift of laughter."
- </p>
- <p> The priceless gift for which Thurber was honored in
- Williamstown on Commencement Day, 1951, may soon be made
- available to half the world. United Productions of America,
- which last year made the Oscar-winning cartoon comedy short,
- Gerald McBoing-Boing, has announced a forthcoming eight-reel,
- 80-minute color film--partly animated, partly live, that will
- be derived solely from Thurber's writings and drawings. U.P.A.
- crosses its heart and hopes to die that the picture, tentatively
- titled Men, Women and Dogs, will be not only all Thurber but
- true Thurber. Shooting will start this year, release is
- scheduled for next year.
- </p>
- <p> Men, Woman and Dogs will open with Thurber himself giving
- an illustrated lecture in a theme that brought him fame both as
- a writer and an artist--the Domination of the American Male
- by the American Female. The fact that Thurber will talk
- throughout the entire first reel should leave him with a decided
- histrionic edge over Somerset Maugham, who merely introduced
- Quartet and Trio, the films made from his own stories.
- </p>
- <p> Is It Really Art? Although Maugham may have made a dressier
- screen appearance than Thurber presumably will (on Thurber's
- gaunt frame his expensive clothes give an unfurled effect),
- several ardent Thurberites have already pointed out that Maugham
- cannot draw. But, as the question has often been phrased in his
- home town, Columbus, Ohio: "Can Thurber, either?" For some time
- now, a psychiatrist has been writing Thurber, offering to cure
- him of his drawing.
- </p>
- <p> Whether Thurber's drawing requires psychiatry or not, a
- great many people, including New Yorker Editor Harold Ross,
- cannot get enough of it. A series of murals, executed by Thurber
- years ago in Manhattan for Tim Costello's Third Avenue saloon
- (known to it's clientele as "The Chop House of Broken Dreams"),
- is one of the extracurricular features of the establishment. The
- late Paul Nash, British painter and art critic, once declared
- Thurber "a master of impressionistic line," comparing him to the
- early Matisse.
- </p>
- <p> That enraged most of the professional artists Thurber knew,
- and sent him into delighted guffaws; not only has he never had
- a lesson, but he has never taken his drawing seriously. He loves
- to tell of the time Ross was asked why he ran such a fifth-rate
- artist in his magazine. "Thurber's a third-rate artist," Ross
- snapped loyally.
- </p>
- <p> Of Thurber's work, which comprises 17 volumes of prose and
- pictures, Nobel Prizeman T.S. Eliot said last year: "It is a
- form of humor which is also a way of saying something serious.
- There is a criticism of life at the bottom of it. It is serious
- and even somber. Unlike so much humor, it is not merely a
- criticism of manners--that is, of the superficial aspects of
- society at a given moment--but something more profound. His
- writings and also his illustrations are capable of surviving the
- immediate environment and time out of which they spring. To some
- extent, they will be a document of the age they belong to."
- </p>
- <p> Men, Woman and Dogs ought to be quite a document in its
- own right. After Thurber's opening lecture, the rest will
- consist of: 1) animated versions of the stories "You Could Look
- It Up" (how a big league ball club won a pennant by sending a
- midget in to bat), and "The Unicorn in the Garden" (how a woman
- tried to have her husband sent to the booby-hatch and was
- instead committed herself); 2) dramatizations, using flesh and
- blood actors, dealing with marriage perplexities; 3) another
- animated lecture, urging the superiority of dogs to humans and
- including that celebrated cartoon sequence "The Bloodhound and
- the Bug"; 4) a live demonstration of "The Whip-poor-will", one
- of Thurber's narrative ventures into neurasthenic horror; and
- 5) a three-reel version of his fantasy, "The White Deer."
- </p>
- <p> If it does nothing else to its audiences, Men, Women and
- Dogs should give them an abnormal 80 minutes. It will also be
- the first time in cinema history that the creative protagonist
- of a motion picture has been a blind man.
- </p>
- <p> Slow Fade. Thurber is not totally blind. At the age of six,
- he lost his left eye when one of his brothers accidentally shot
- him with an arrow. For about the next 40 years, his right eye
- did double duty, then it failed him; ten years ago, Thurber
- underwent five extremely painful operations on it for cataract
- and trachoma. The eye has since had one-eighth vision, not
- enough for a 56-year-old writer to get himself around with
- safety. The shins of the long, gangling (6 ft. 1-1/2 in., 154
- lbs.) Thurber bear a mass of scars from collisions with coffee
- tables.
- </p>
- <p> Before his sight began to go, Thurber could punch a
- typewriter at a brisk pace. Never having learned the touch
- system however, he is now forced to scrawl with soft pencils on
- sheets of bright yellow paper, getting about 20 words to a
- sheet; words which he cannot see, although he peers at them
- through a thick goggle. After he has finished the first draft
- of a piece, it is read back to him, and he makes oral revisions
- sentence by sentence. Thurber always was a relentless revisor
- (he rewrote "The White Deer" 25 times) so that his composition
- has become slow and painful. Nevertheless, in the past ten years
- he has written and published more than he did in the previous
- ten.
- </p>
- <p> After a lapse of several years, during which he did not
- draw at all, Thurber is drawing again. He works with chalk on
- black paper, preferably just at sundown on clear days. About the
- porch of his Connecticut home, where he has his drawing board
- set up, drawings are stacked along with stove wood.
- </p>
- <p> On hot days when there is a lot of glare, Thurber sometimes
- sees a face that looks to him like Herbert Hoover's; at other
- times, there appears what might be the George Washington Bridge
- flapping about in the wind. Thurber is never bitter about his
- blindness, nor self-pitying, nor "saintly." Often he discusses
- it in a completely detached manner: now and then he uses it for
- little jokes. "I bet I can think up a cornier title for my
- memoirs that you can," he challenged a friend. "How about `Long
- Time No See?'"
- </p>
- <p> Home Life. James Grover Thurber was born in Columbus in
- 1894, second of the three children of Charles Leander and Mary
- Agnes Fisher Thurber (Mrs. Thurber didn't like the "Leander,"
- so her husband, a loyal Republican, changed it to "Lincoln.")
- Their other sons were William, a year older than Jim, and
- Robert, two years younger.
- </p>
- <p> Charley Thurber, the boys' father, was tall, thin, an
- inveterate wearer of derby hats and by profession an
- unsuccessful politician. Although he kept running for various
- offices until he was nearly 65, he never got elected to any.
- When there were six leading candidates for five offices, Charley
- Thurber would invariably finish sixth. Too honest to play ball
- with a political machine, and too amiable and gentle to be a
- winning maverick, he was a chronic also-ran.
- </p>
- <p> In return for his unflagging idealism and perseverance, he
- received appointments that were largely drudgery: secretary to
- two governors of Ohio (Asa Bushman and William McKinley), to a
- mayor of Columbus; member of a committee to investigate hazing
- at West Point; state organizer for Teddy Roosevelt's
- unsuccessful Bull Moose campaign for the presidency in 1912,
- etc. In a piece called "Gentleman from Indiana," Jim has written
- lovingly and beautifully of his father.
- </p>
- <p> In contrast to her mild, quiet husband, who never scolded
- the boys, Mamie Thurber was a hurled hand grenade. The class
- comic in school, a star at amateur theatricals, for a while she
- considered running away from home and going on the professional
- stage. Her stern Methodist father scotched that, clamping down
- on even the amateur theatricals, but it made no difference,
- Mamie kept right on performing.
- </p>
- <p> Once at a buffet luncheon she found a bowl of uncooked eggs
- waiting to be used for eggnogs. "You know, I've always wanted
- to throw a dozen eggs," she said to nobody in particular.
- Whereupon she selected a dozen and threw them at the nearest
- wall, not missing it once.
- </p>
- <p> Another time, she attended an overflow meeting conducted
- by a faith healer, who with his exhortations and layings-on-of-
- hands had set Columbus afire. Somehow she got hold of a
- stretcher, lay down on it and had a couple of friends carry her
- toward the platform. Halfway down the aisle, Mamie flipped to
- her feet, yelling, "I can walk! I can walk! It's the first time
- I've walked in 40 years!" Hundreds wept or screamed at the
- miracle.
- </p>
- <p> Mamie Thurber has gone on performing. Her husband died in
- 1939 at the age of 72, but she is still at it, an amazing old
- lady of 85, with piercing grey eyes under black brows, and none
- of her staggering faculties impaired. Wolcott Gibbs, of The New
- Yorker, has written of Thurber's "sure grasp of confusion."
- Nobody who ever heard Jim's mother tell a long, detailed,
- uproarious misadventure story would wonder where his sureness
- of grasp came from. There are oldtimers in Columbus who insist
- that Jim is but his mother's pale copy.
- </p>
- <p> Club Life. The five Thurbers constituted a family unit, but
- they were also a kind of club. Things were apt to be quite
- electric around the house; just how electric Jim has described
- in "My Life and Hard Times," a book which many Thurberites
- consider his most durable masterpiece. (Although they would
- probably give the accolade for funniest, saddest and best single
- Thurber story to "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty".) Sometimes
- it got a little overwhelming for Charley Thurber. In Jim's story
- "The Night the Bed Fell," occurs the sentence, "It happened
- then, that my father had decided to sleep in the attic...to
- be away where he could think."
- </p>
- <p> Thurber family sessions were marked by plenty of mimicry.
- William and Robert were good mimics (and still are), but Jim was
- even better. One day, during their young manhood, he phoned
- William and pretended to be a tailor, claiming in dialect to
- have made a suit for him which had not been called for, and
- demanding to be paid. Flabbergasted, William swore he had never
- ordered the suit and finally put his mother on the phone. After
- some angry argument, she challenged the "tailor" to describe
- William. "Ha!" said Jim, "It's a fine mudder dat don't even know
- her own son." Convinced that if Jim could write and make money,
- he could too, William once sent his famous brother a manuscript
- which began: "Columbus is a town with an alley between every
- street." Commented their mother, "William is twice as crazy as
- James, only he can't put it down."
- </p>
- <p> Outside the family, Jim was shy through grammar and high
- school and his first two years at Ohio State University, where
- he did little else than sit reading in the library with his hair
- in his eyes, looking like an emaciated sheep dog. After testing
- him, the psychology department reported that he had a remarkable
- memory. Unkempt, unloved and unknown, he was on his way to a
- Phi Beta Kappa key, perhaps to a life of scholarship.
- </p>
- <p> But one fateful day in a junior-year English class, the
- professor, William Lucius Graves read aloud a student theme
- entitled, "My Literary Enthusiasms," in which the dime novels
- of the day were wittily treated. Before he had a chance to
- announce the writer's name, the bell rang, and the students
- streamed out. Thurber found himself walking alongside Elliot
- Nugent, who was everything on the campus that Thurber was not--athlete, social success, best actor in the dramatic club,
- class president, idol of the coeds.
- </p>
- <p> "Gee, that was a swell piece, wasn't it?" Nugent remarked
- to the weedy stranger beside him. "I wonder who wrote it."
- Thurber swallowed, "I did," he said in a dim voice. Nugent
- stared at Thurber, then introduced himself. The two became best
- and lifelong friends. (In 1939 they wrote a hit play, "The Male
- Animal," in which Nugent starred. It's root idea, "What might
- have happened if we had stayed on at Ohio State?" Later it was
- a successful movie, directed by Nugent. Perhaps disgruntled by
- the play, Ohio State has never granted Distinguished Son Thurber
- an honorary degree. Even before Williams College honored him,
- however, small, urbane Kenyon College (Gambier, Ohio) had made
- him a Doctor of Letters.)
- </p>
- <p> Nugent made Thurber get his hair cut and buy a new blue
- suit, then got him into his own fraternity, Phi Kappa Psi.
- Thurber blossomed and expanded. He became an editor of the
- college daily and editor-in-chief of the humorous monthly, acted
- for the dramatic club, was elected to the senior honor society.
- </p>
- <p> He did not wait to graduate, for by then the U.S. was at
- war with Germany and he wanted to do something about it. Unable
- to enlist in the armed forces because of his eye, he entered the
- State Department and served a year and a half as code clerk at
- the American Embassy in Paris. With that memory of his, Jim was
- an outstanding code clerk. One of his colleagues in the code
- room was a young Yale poet named Stephen Vincent Benet.
- </p>
- <p> After returning from Paris in 1920, Thurber went to work
- as a reporter on the Columbus Dispatch, where he stayed three
- years, mostly covering the City Hall beat. To Thurber's city
- editor, the pattern of a perfect lead for all stories whatsoever
- was: "John Holtsapple, 63, prominent Columbus galosh
- manufacturer, died of complications last night at his home, 396
- Persimmon Blvd." Any attempts by the staff to get wit or
- originality into the paper usually landed on the spike. The city
- editor, who began by addressing Thurber as "Author" and "Phi
- Beta Kappa," came to respect him, but Thurber still sees this
- Legree in a recurring anxiety dream: "He runs up to my desk with
- a shoe in his hand and says, `We've got just ten minutes to get
- this shoe in the paper.' Boy do I move!"
- </p>
- <p> In 1922, Thurber married Althea Adams, then a sophomore at
- Ohio State and one of the prettiest girls on the campus. He was
- chafing to write something better than city council doings, but
- had little confidence in his ability to make good outside
- Columbus. Urged on by Althea, he finally decided to assault New
- York by way of France, which he had loved in his code-clerk
- days. When they had saved up $125, they took off.
- </p>
- <p> After the novel Jim started in a Normandy farmhouse had
- petered out, the Thurbers went to Paris. He got a job on the
- Paris edition of the Chicago Tribune at $12 a week. The Paris
- Trib's cable tolls were in keeping with the princely salaries
- it paid its staff: a fat 50 words of variegated news arrived
- from America each night. Once Jim was handed a flimsy containing
- the line "Christy Mathewson died Saranac," and from memory and
- by Ouija board wrote a column obituary on the great New York
- Giants pitcher.
- </p>
- <p> Big Town. The summer of 1951 marks the 25th anniversary of
- Jim Thurber's arrival in New York City. Knowing only Columbus
- and Paris, he loathed New York at first, with its roar, its
- dirt, its jostle and the brash ways of its citizenry. But he got
- a job as reporter on the Evening Post, which reduced its price
- from five cents to three cents the day he went to work.
- </p>
- <p> That fall and winter, he bombarded The New Yorker, a
- struggling humorous weekly little more than a year old, with 20
- pieces, all of which were rejected. Althea argued that he was
- sweating too much over them and suggested that he bat one out
- in 45 minutes. On his next Sunday off, he did. It was about a
- man who got caught in a revolving door. The New Yorker bought
- it.
- </p>
- <p> During the four years he was a reporter, Thurber registered
- countless impressions that he could not have gotten into any
- newspaper. These were filed away in his memory, and he began
- working them into enchanting monologues for the amusement of his
- friends. In the '20s and '30s, to sit with drink in hand and
- listen to Jim Thurber off on a free-association talking marathon
- was an indescribable pleasure. When he used to mimic Harold
- Ross, he even looked like Ross, an incredible accomplishment.
- </p>
- <p> One night in 1927 at a small party in Greenwich Village,
- Thurber met E.B. White, who was already doing "Notes and
- Comments" on the front page of the New Yorker's "Talk of the
- Town" section. White was immediately taken with him; a little
- later, he recommended Thurber to Ross as a "Talk" reporter and
- writer.
- </p>
- <p> Big TIme. Not long after Ross hired him, Thurber was
- puzzled to find that he had a secretary, which he had never
- heard of a reporter having; he supposed that things were
- different on magazines. He was amazed when she handed him the
- office weekly payroll to sign, and the fine print of the "Goings
- On" department to check and okay. He asked her why, and her
- answer left him thunderstruck. "Because you're the managing
- editor," she said.
- </p>
- <p> In that era, New Yorker managing editors had a life
- expectancy hardly greater than that of May flies. In addition to
- hiring and firing managing editors, Ross was combating his
- restlessness by having the office walls torn down. The editorial
- floor was cluttered with scaffolding; workmen bashed out plaster
- and lath with sledge hammers; a chalky haze permeated the halls,
- assailing the lungs of staff and visiting contributors.
- </p>
- <p> Thurber wanted to write. He hated being managing editor,
- but Ross kept encouraging him. Once in an editorial conference,
- Ross snarled, "This week's issue has more mistakes in it than
- any we ever published. Who's responsible?" Hope rising in his
- breast, Thurber shot up his hand. "Good," Ross said. "Only
- honest managing editor I ever had."
- </p>
- <p> Thurber stood it for six months and, in spite of his misery
- as an executive, managed to write seven pieces that were
- accepted, but for which he did not get paid. At last Ross said,
- "I guess you're a writer. All right then, goddammit, write." So
- Thurber continued to write pieces and, in addition, he and White
- and one legman for 7-1/2 straight years got out "The Talk of the
- Town," which, nowadays, requires virtually a platoon. Between
- them, White and Thurber pretty much set the tone of the magazine
- that Ross had created.
- </p>
- <p> Thurber learned a great deal from White, and he is the
- first to acknowledge the debt. "I learned more about writing
- from White than from anybody," he has said. "He taught me to
- write a simple declarative sentence. I still send my things to
- him to read."
- </p>
- <p> World of His Own. Of his old colleague, White has written:
- "Most writers would be glad to settle for any one of ten of
- Thurber's accomplishments. He has written the funniest memoirs,
- fables, reports, satires, fantasies, complaints, fairy tales
- and sketches of the past 20 years, has gone into the drama and
- the cinema, and on top of that has littered the world with
- thousands of drawings. Most writers and artists can be compared
- fairly easily with contemporaries. Thurber inhabits a world of
- his own.
- </p>
- <p> "When I first knew him, his mind was unbelievably restless
- and made him uncomfortable at all hours. Now, almost 25 years
- later, I can't see that it has relaxed. He still pulls at his
- hair and trembles all over, as though he were about to sell his
- first piece. His thoughts have always been a tangle of baseball
- scores, Civil War tactical problems, Henry James, ancient myths and modern
- apprehensions. Through this jungle stalk the unpredictable
- ghosts of his relatives in Columbus, Ohio."
- </p>
- <p> In 1935 Jim and Althea were divorced. Their daughter,
- Rosemary, has just finished her sophomore year at the University
- of Pennsylvania. She has shown marked acting talent, perhaps
- inherited from her paternal grandmother. Thurber is an
- affectionate father; he and his daughter get along splendidly.
- Althea is now the wife of Dr. Allen Gilmore, head of the history
- department at Carnegie Tech.
- </p>
- <p> Jim always had a taste for handsome women, and the year of
- his divorce he married Helen Wismer, a clergyman's daughter,
- Mount Holyoke graduate and the former editor of a string of pulp
- magazines. She expertly manages his business affairs and his
- home, and has helped him enormously in conquering his blindness.
- The Thurbers spend part of every winter and spring in Hot
- Springs, Va. and Bermuda. Summer and fall they live in their
- beautiful twelve-room, 90-year-old house on 65 acres of land in
- West Cornwall, Conn.
- </p>
- <p> At present, Jim is putting the finishing touches on his
- latest book, The Thurber Album, which will be published next
- fall. In some of the chapters that have appeared in The New
- Yorker--particularly one called "Daguerreotype of a Lady"--Thurberites believe they have detected a new Thurber, still very
- funny, but somehow deeper and richer; the most exciting Thurber,
- they claim, since his sight failed.
- </p>
- <p> Sometimes I Love You. Ambivalent is probably the word for
- Thurber. Although he believes he is essentially optimistic about
- the human species, he tends to nurse doubt when he rolls the
- subject around in his mind: "The human species is both horrible
- and wonderful. Occasionally, I get very mad at human beings, but
- there's nothing you can do about it. I like people and hate them
- at the same time. I wouldn't draw them in cartoons, if I didn't
- think they were horrible; and I wouldn't write about them, if
- I didn't think they were wonderful."
- </p>
- <p> That, however, might be what his wife calls Jim's Friday
- Opinion. By the following Monday, he may have reversed himself,
- or be fretting over something entirely different. For humorists,
- there are not many fixed rules; about the only thing they are
- consistently against is pomposity.
- </p>
- <p> During wassail, Thurber's ambivalence can snap loose and
- he may be given to bursts of hooting and hollering. A New Yorker
- editor once returned to the office after a stormy evening at the
- Algonquin Hotel and thoughtfully announced, "Thurber is the
- greatest guy in the world up to 5 p.m." Those who love Thurber
- ascribe such outbursts to old-fashioned artistic temperament and
- simply shrug them off. They know that when real troubles arise,
- there is nobody more steadfast and generous. The jams he has
- helped and comforted friends through are without number.
- </p>
- <p> When The Thurber Album is completed, his next big effort
- will probably be another play. On Men, Women and Dogs, Thurber
- has a percentage-of-box-office deal with United Productions. If
- the picture is a success--and nearly everything Thurber
- touches creatively is successful--he will earn a great deal
- of money. For a man who has never once demeaned his talent for
- profit, nor ever aimed at mass appeal, he has already earned
- quite a lot.
- </p>
- <p> If more Thurber movies are made--and there is plenty of
- material to draw on--it is conceivable that the people and
- creatures of his imagination may one day be figures in
- international folklore. Already The Lancet, a learned British
- medical journal, has used the term "Walter Mitty syndrome" in
- referring to daydreaming on a grandiose scale.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-