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One day when I had to stay home from the Warren G. Harding School
because of some Kid problem like a sty or a case of diarrhea and
everything was quiet in the house in the Northern Indiana steel-mill
town where we lived, half-way up in the next block on Cleveland
Street, I suddenly heard my mother laughing uproariously in the
kitchen. I struggled out of bed to see what was going on.
There she was, sitting at our white enamel kitchen table, wearing
her rump-sprung Chinese Red chenille housecoat, her hair festooned
with aluminum rheostats, laughing her head off.
"What's up, Mom?"
She waved weakly at me. She giggled again.
"What's happening, Mom?"
She wiped tears away from her eyes with a soggy dishtowel.
"Walter's kneecap is acting up again."
"Huh?" I asked in the best Rush Gook style.
"Go back to bed. Can't you see I'm listening to the
radio?" She was indeed. She had a white plastic
Sears Roebuck Silvertone radio with a cracked plastic cabinet, badly
repaired with adhesive tape, on top of our beloved Hotpoint
refrigerator. It was her constant companion. It hummed
and gave her shocks continually, but out of its imitation gold
speaker grill flowed her secret world of fantasy and entertainment.
She was one of millions of lucky and discerning housewives who had
the good fortune to actually hear 'Vic & Sade'. They
are, naturally, a decreasing band, the lucky ones, but they all, to
the last one, remember whole episodes and places, people, and the
Chicago and Alton freight yards. Paul Rhymer was unknown
to most of them, as he is to most of the civilized world today.
There is just no one to compare him with. As far as I know, no
one working in the mass media has ever created such a complete and
flawless world, peopled with characters so fully realized.
Most work done for the mass media is highly perishable by its very
nature. Unfortunately, also by the very nature of mass media,
the mediocre and the banal tends to outlive the truly creative and
original. The 'Lone Rangers' and 'Green Hornets' are forever dredged
up as examples of "The Golden Age of Radio," while
unfortunately the true gold is mentioned rarely, if it all.
My memory of the actual show as broadcast is episodic because 'Vic
& Sade' was a daytime show. Radio, in those days, as
television does to this very day, reserved its night-time prime
hours for the "important" shows. Daytime hours were
packed with things designed for "housewives", usually a
term tinged with slight derision in network offices.
Therefore, not only was the great work of Paul Rhymer burned up by
the nature of mass media itself, it was doubly cursed by being cast
among the quicksand shoals of the world of Soap Opera. It's as
though "Death of a Salesman" or "Our Town" had
debuted on a typical Wednesday afternoon between "As the World
Turns" and "Against the Storm", followed by "The
Hollywood Squares".
Being a kid at the time, daytime was spent going to school, or
outside just fooling around, but on the few times that I did hear
'Vic & Sade', Blue-Tooth Johnson, Rooster Davis,
Third-Lieutenant Stanley and Mr. Gumpox's horse Howard became firmly
embedded in my subconscious--forever. I remember nothing of
'The Lone Ranger' except "Hi Ho, Silver!", which is not
much of a line when you think of it. All I remember of Fred
Allen is his phony Chinese accent when he was playing a detective,
but Smelly Clark's Uncle Strap taking his lady friend to Peoria for
a fish dinner somehow got me where I lived. Maybe it was
because Paul Rhymer created TRUE humor. He did not deal in
jokes, but human beings observed by a sardonic, biting, yet loving
mind.
Rhymer has been compared to Harold Pinter by some, Mark Twain by
others. Personally I feel that Rhymer was a complete original.
Curiously enough, Rhymer READS better than any of the so-called
"serious" writers of his era. The 'Vic & Sade'
scripts are not only still fresh and funny, but are absolutely
recognizable as an authentic picture of American life which persists
in millions of homes today. Yamilton's Department Store,
Peoria, the peanut machine at the Depot, Consolidated Kitchenware,
Plant Fourteen, The Sacred Stars of the Milky Way were never touched
by Steinbeck or Odets. The Okies are a quaint period piece,
but Gloria Golden is still playing at the Bijou. Her name may
be Faye Dunaway or Raquel Welch. Rush's complaint "All
they ever have in movies is Love, Love, Love. Boy, they sure are
boring" could have been said yesterday afternoon.
Another thing that amazes me is rhymer's wild and subtle
imagination. Wild in the sense of being totally unpredictable,
and subtle in that he touched at all times on the faint vein of
madness that runs through all of us. He rarely went for the
obvious; hence he preceded the Theater of the Absurd by decades.
In fact, it is my opinion that in some ways he is far closer to
Ionesco in spirit than he was to Thornton Wilder, who
sentimentalized American life in a way that Rhymer's sense of irony
refused to allow. For example, "The Washing Machine is On
the Blink" combines the American Do-It-Yourself syndrome,
Masochism, and the continual breakdown of modern technology in such
a totally nutty way as to be completely logical in the way a Marx
Brothers scene involving a grand piano, a stuffed duck, a bolt of
lightning and an out-of-work Fire Chief does. In some twelve
minutes of inspired dialog, Rhymer convinces us that two otherwise
sane human beings, down in the basement trying to fix the washing
machine, begin to enjoy electric shocks, experimenting with various
electric shock techniques, finally conspiring to lay one on an
unsuspecting mother, all the while cackling maniacally in ecstatic
pleasure. There are very few minds that could possibly
conceive of the electric shock as pleasure, but that's Rhymer for
you. I, personally, am curious just what your average nice,
hard-working housewife of the period thought when she heard that
one. I suspect more than a few crept down into the basement
covertly and tried sticking their fingers into hot AC outlets while
standing in puddles.
Another example of Rhymer at his surreal best is the little gem
called "Caramels on a Hot Day", in which we find Rush, as
he puts it, "stirring up a little excitement" by sitting
on the front porch, making round balls out of square
three-for-a-penny caramels. Think about that for a moment.
a hot day, caramels, and boredom. This is exactly what a kid
does do, squatting on a front porch in the heat of summer, but who
thinks to build a fifteen-minute drama to be broadcast to millions
out of that dynamic situation? Better yet, who but Paul Rhymer
could pull off such a feat, or would have the courage to do it even
if he could? Rhymer obviously was very sure about his work in
a medium where that kind of security and self-knowledge is almost
non-existent.
In a way it’s too bad that Paul Rhymer never
wrote for the more recognized media. Great reputations exist in the
theater or the novel on far less profound and effective work than
Rhymer’s. In fact, he probably wrote more funny lines in one month
of daily scripts than the combined output of five of the leading
playwrights of modern times. Not only that his characters were
truer, more consistent, and far better realized. Remember, reading
these scripts in published book form is barely skimming the thinnest
surface of the body of Vic & Sade. These works were written to be
performed, and yet in spite of that they come alive, snapping
and crackling, off the page. One reason, technically, is that Rhymer
created a vast cast of unseen and unheard people who were every bit
as alive and interesting as Vic, Sade, Rush, and Uncle Fletcher.
Fred and Ruthie Stembottom and their continual snaillike drives in
Fred’s old automobile to Chenoa, Illinois, and Ruthie’s “scared
rabbit” smile; Mr, Ruebush, Vic’s boss at the plant; Ike
Kneesuffer’s indoor horse-shoe set in his basement; Miz Husher’s
continual peevishness, and, of course, Vic’s beloved lodge brothers
in the Sacred Stars of the Milky Way – Robert and Slobert Hink, Y.
Y. Flirch and H. K. Fleeber, are all part of the well developed cast
of millions.
Not all of Vic & Sade’s episodes were pure fun and games. In fact,
they rarely were. Practically every episode had little shafts of
insight, and often sadness, that would come and go like the brief
hints of darker things we all have in our own lives, Sade’s
tenderness over poor old Uncle Fletcher’s wandering mind; Vic’s
understanding of Rush, and his obvious love for Sade, comes through
in a beautifully written and subtle episode called “Vic Confides in
Rush about Mothers.” It contains hints of the inevitability of
death, references to the “Empty Nest” syndrome (Rhymer was thirty
years ahead of psychiatrists on this one), overlaid with a
beautifully realized treatment of masculine relationships. In
addition, he managed to be funny. Rhymer must have been a hell of an
interesting man to know.
Perhaps one of the things that Rhymer did best was to illuminate and
dramatize lightly, effortlessly, and without at any point lecturing,
the vast gulf that exists between types of people. I have
never read a better short story touching on the smothering boredom,
yet natural concern we feel in the presence of close relatives than
in “Vic Reviews a Vacation Week with Bess and Walter in Carberry.”
Poor Walter and Bess, trying so hard to entertain Vic, and Vic
trying so hard to be entertained, while Sade all the while
blithely chatters on with her sister Bess, never realizing that
Vic’s only vacation for the year is going down the drain. This
episode, by the way, points out another quality in Rhymer’s work. He
never ridiculed or put down people merely because they are what they
are. However, he is razor-sharp when it comes to blasting the
fraudulent and the inane. “Vic Is Elected to the Congress of
Distinguished Americans” is a classic example of Rhymer putting
another one right in the bull’s-eye. This particular con has been
around for a long time, and there are countless walls in dens all
over the country upon which hang framed scrolls proclaiming
“officially” the profound and notable greatness of the yahoo who
pays the rent. In fact, it was only last week that I received,
personally, three notices in the mail informing me that I had been
selected “to be signally honored” by outfits with names very much
like The Congress of Distinguished Americans. I remind you that this
particular episode was aired ’way back in the Thirties.
Some of Rhymer’s funniest stuff dealt with that all-pervasive
goofiness of the moth Century – the movies. Vie, particularly, was
great on the subject. In fact, in “Stembottom’s Invitation to Drive
Thirty-five Miles to a Double Feature” we find Vic emitting “low,
painful groans” for three full pages of dialog when faced with the
nightmare of attending a double feature of two pictures he had
already seen, and hated the first time around, and which he
describes as “rotten, rotten, rotten.” Nobody in today’s situation
comedies is ever remotely as honest about a fellow medium. Does
Archie Bunker ever blast the movies, or even mention them at all?
Does Mary Tyler Moore? Never. That’s the thing about the characters
in Vic & Sade. They lived in the real world, where people really do
say such things as movies are rotten, or Yamilton’s Department Store
is throwing another one of “them phony Sales.”
Judging from his scripts, if Rhymer were alive today he would
probably snort in derision at the pompous tone of this foreword, but
I also suspect he would secretly have enjoyed it. Rhymer was an
artist, and no artist who ever lived ever turned down a tribute to
his work. I think I should point out a few techniques that Rhymer
used that everybody tries but few master. Most contemporary writers
for mass media simply feed a series of one-liners to their
characters, go for the cheap laugh, and hope that no one is the
wiser. Rhymer, in contrast, wrote dialog; succinct, spare,
yet with an absolutely true ear for the rhythms and inRections of
American speech. This is much easier to talk about, or discuss in
class, than to accomplish. Obviously, Rhymer was a very gifted
listener. A few brief examples:
SADE: Sounds like somebody’s trying to knock our
front door in.
RUSH: That stug cookin’
on the gas
stove okay, Mom?
SADE: Why?
RUSH: Makin’ a gurgling
sound like it needed water.
Now that’s nice. People talk like that. This, if you wish
to read the rest of the dialog, which gets better as it goes
along, can be found in “Manual for Wives of Sky Brothers in the
Sacred Stars of the Milky Way.” There is also some very nifty
Latin, a language not often heard on mass media. No pun
intended.
Finally, I should point out that the announcer was also an
integral part of the daily drama. My mother, for one, loved him.
I think his name was Bob Brown. His subtle, confidential style
set the tone for the daily session of eavesdropping in the small
house halfway up in the next block. My mother to this day tells
about the time, not more than five minutes into the episode, the
cast, including the announcer, got to laughing so hard over some
nuttiness that Rhymer had come up with that the entire show was
a shambles. They just laughed and chuckled until finally they
gave up trying to be Vic and Sade and Rush and Uncle Fletcher
and went off the air, hooting and hollering and leaving millions
of listeners in kitchens everywhere doing the same thing. When I
was just beginning in the business, I had the rare honor to meet
the fine actress who played “Sade.”' She looked just like Sade
should look. She looked, well, like Sade. The series was
long off the air, but was rapidly growing as a legend. I asked
her what was the hardest thing about playing Sade on a daily
basis, year in and year out. Naturally, I figured she’d say
something like “endless rehearsals,” how tough the grind was,
and so on.
“Well, son, I’ll tell you,” she said, sounding exactly like Sade
about to straighten out Rush on some fine point of life. “The
hardest thing was to keep a straight face. Sometimes those
scripts were so funny that we had to fight all the way through
the show just breaking up, And the more we rehearsed, the
funnier it got. Why, I remember one day having to turn my face
to the wall while Uncle Fletcher was telling me about a trip he
took to Cairo, Illinois, in the company of one of his friends.
The engineer was on the floor, the announcer had to leave the
room, and I can tell you it wasn’t easy.”
What better compliment can an actor pay a writer?
I have one practical suggestion for those of you who have had
the great sense to pick up this volume of scripts. Read them
aloud. Get three or four good friends together and decide who’s
going to play Vic, who will be Sade, and finally Rush and poor
old Uncle Fletcher. You can call in your next door neighbor to
do the announcing. Ten to one you’ll be doing VIC Br SADE
episodes until five in the morning. Have fun. That’s what Paul
Rhymer and Vic & Sade are all about.
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