ONWARD AND UPWARD WITH THE ARTS:
JUST SAYING
‘The anti-theatrical theatre of Annie Baker.
BY NATHAN HELLER,
Forty-second Street rehearsal stu~
dio. Card tables line one wall; the
playwright and the director are seated at
one of them, talking quietly. An actor
enters.
“THE AcToR:I saw*Who's Afraid of
Vinginia Woolf?” last night, everybody.
The director glances up and laugh.
‘Tue AcTOR: Iewas—
‘THE PLAYWRIGHT: Oh, yeah.
‘THE ACTOR: Itwas really good.
‘THe PLAYWRIGHT: Don't you think
‘Matt should play George?
‘Tue Director: Yeah, you were
"THe AcTOR: Yeah. Yeah. Oh,
God . .. It didn’t make me feel—it
didn’t make me feel wwonderf
relationships.
THE PLAYWRIGHT: It doesn't make
anyone feel wonderfil
THE ACTOR: No, thank you for say-
ing that. Twas litle
“He laughs self-conscious.
Bat it was really good.
THE DinecrOR: Its a great play.
THE ACTOR: Its a great play
THE DikécTor: Its like— Moment
to moment, you're so— Its so enjoyable
to watch people say language like that
Tie ATOR: Yeah, AndII thought it
was, like— I think it’s like all classics
where you realize, like, Oh, wow, this was
‘new when it was done. Like, the whole
about my
Baker combines the texture of ordinary life with surreal moments of transcendence
30 THE NEW YORKER, FEBRUARY 25, 2085
idea of, like: Everybody, sit down, we're
going to doagame! And it's like: A game?
Tchappens now all the time. I fee like its
such a cliché. Like, le’ play this game!
THE PLAYWRIGHT: Its like two in
the moming, and we haven't slept—
‘THE ACTOR: Yeah. But were going
to see this through,
‘THE PLAYWRIGHT: Yeah.
‘Tre AcTor: I was like, Why—
Tre Director: It’s a whole—it’s a
‘gente that he created.
TH Actor: Yeah, he created a
weird dramatic—
‘THE DiRECTOR:Its like the Marital-
Game Drunken Drama.
‘THE ACTOR: Yeah. Like, very good.
Ii’s good. And they are good. God.
‘THE PLAYWRIGHT: Isn't Amy Mor-
ton amazing?
ho goes to the theatre these days,
and why? For decades now, se
ous stage work has been regarded ten~
derly as the spotted owl of American
art—briliant and nimble, breathtaking in
flight, but unlikely to be found beyond a
few scarce habitats. Every time we watch
a trite blockbuster, fll asleep in front of
bad TV, or click through to a YouTube
video of yawning pandas, it’s said, our ca-
pacity for theatrical attention dies alittle
‘more. And yet, forall that, the theatre has
proved strangely resilient, selling (even
selling out) cascades of seats and claiming
more college degrees than film and ¢
cal psychology combined. Something is
going right. Perhaps the question isn’t
why some give up on the form but why
others keep falling in love. What can the
theatre do that books and sereens can't?
Annie Baker, a thirty-one-year-old
playwright, is one answer to this question;
she wants life onstage to be so vivid, nat-
tural, and emotionally precise that it bleeds
Into the audience's visceral experience of
time and space. Drawing on the imme:
acy of overheard conversation, she ha
oneered a style of theatre made to seem
as untheatrical as possible, while using
the tools of the stage to focus audience
attention. "Circle Mirtor Transformation,”
Baker's 2009 ensemble piece set at a
community-center drama class, won three
Obie awards, and was, in the 2010-11
season, the second most produced play in
America. (The first most produced w.
“The 39 Steps”) Her work has been per-
formed abroad in a dozen countries; last
PHOTOGRAPHBY ZACH GROSS‘year, four of her plays appeared as a book.
Alot of rites, trying to pinpoint Bak-
ers appealing blend of naturalness and
precision, have called her a “realist” or a
“naturalist.” She thinks neither label
works. “ fel like we lack any terms for
playwriting that come after 1890,” she
says. “Realism, naturalism—are you talk-
ing about, like, Ibsen?” To watch Baker's
wworkistobe drawn intoaworld that feels
asunplotted as real life (characters chat at
cross-purposes; costumes and stage set~
tings are uncannily real) but that breaks
abruptly into surreal transcendence (a
hula hoop being spun for almost a min-
ute, in one case). Onstage, Baker exer~
cises meticulous control in order to make
action seem as unrefined as possible. Her
characters exchange the kind of knobby
dialogue you overhearin diners on Friday
‘momings: mothers fretting volubly about
their young-adult kids’ problems, twen-
tysomething friends chasing back bleary
silence with defensive nonchalance. (“Tm
really hung over so you guys will have to
excuse me if Tm like alittle low-energy.”)
Her goal is to explore what's left unsaid
along the edges of conversation: it’s the
principle of looking at familiar stars so
that the galaxies that can't be seen head
on appear out of the comer of your eye.
‘The work requires tight codrdination—
not just of scripted words and silences but
of movements, gestures, costumes, music,
and the whole immersive apparatus of
the modem stage. From “Circle Mirror
‘Transformation’
Scriuutz: Were you abused as a child?
Manrvel'm sorry?
ScHULTZ: Were you abused as a child?
‘Maxrv,.. No. Um, No. don't think so,
ScHuLIZ? Okay. "Cause
symptom among, abuse survivors.
Marty: Huh.
Pause.
ScHULtZ: Night terrors.
MaxtvsIuh. Yeah, Maybe. don't know
what ie was.
‘ScHULIZ: It was night terrors.
‘Makny: Yeah.
Sciutiz: Becky went on medications
for ... she went on some kind of epilepsy
medication. It helped her.
Mant: Huh,
Pause.
MARY: And it a real—
ScHULT2: [tsa real thing I's. real thing.
Look it up onli
‘When Baker adapted "Uncle Vanya’
fora SoFlo Rep production, last summer,
she worked to keep the language from
seeming high-flown. “I have a list of all
the things Chekhov does with dialogue
that seem initially counterintuitive to
“writers who have learned alt about plot
and action,” she explains. “People aren't
Tistening to each other. People will be
statement-and-response for twenty sec-
nds, and then someone else will be
like, ‘Ob, look what's in the newspaper!”
In the graduate-playwriting program at
N.Y.U,, where she began teaching last
fall, she points to Chekhov asa model of
social authenticity. “She uses the word
‘organic al the time,” Allie Solomon, one
of her graduate students, sas.
Baker's newest play, “The Flick,”
opens in early March, at Playwrights Ho-
tizons, the Off Broadway theatre where
“Circle Mirror Transformation” pre-
migred. Like all Baker's recent work,
“The Flic’ isthe result ofa close, fruitful
collaboration. Several years ago, Baker
met the director Sam Gold, and soon
came to feel that she had found her cre-
ative partner; since their first collabora-
tion, they've worked together on the
premiére of every Baker play. “Every
body’ like, ‘Oh! Itsan Annie Baker-Sam
Gold!” Louisa Krause, who appears as
Rose, the ply’ green-haired female lead,
says, “Automatically, ifs got the aura”
Since Baker started working with
Gold, her writing has grown leaner. She's
come to see her scripts as “blueprints,” in~
tended to be realized fully in rehearsal. “A.
Jot of writers make their plays director-
proof—extremely muscular, 0 that, no
matter what the production is it will be
the play—but Annie makes her plays re-
ally fagile,” Gold said recently. “But the
reason why they're not more muscular is
that, if they were, they wouldn't be on a
tightrope. They wouldn't be so fragile and
sospecificand so perfec. She has toleave
alot of room in them, because she wants
them to be razor-sharp. Its the defining
thing about the theatre—it’s not on the
page.”
Nhe Flick” is an elaborate tribute to
a fading art. As a teen-ager, Baker
‘was an avid cinephile: at thirteen, she
begged her mother to let her see “Pulp
Fiction”; when she was in high school,
the walls of her bedroom were covered
with posters of films by Truffaut. Over
time, though, she became disenchanted
with what she found in the movie the-
atres—it seemed pale and controlled be-
side the live immediacy of the stage.
Today, Baker doesn't watch much TV.
(She originally started taking some screen
assignments mostly for the Writers Guild
health insurance; her one idea for a cable
series, about life on a commune in Boli-
nas, California, became a pilot script that
never got made.) About five years ago,
Baker went to the IFC Center to watch
one of her favorite films, Bergman's
“Fanny and Alexander,” and noticed
something weird going on with the
screen. “I was like, There's something
‘wrong, there's something wrong! Im not
enjoying this; something's wrong! She
realized that the movie, originally shot on
35-mm, film, was being projected digi-
tally. “To me, it changed the whole phe-
nomenal experience,” she says. “The
Flick’ draws from the disorientation she
felt that day, butt plays formally wth the
idea of the theatre audience, too. Bakers
plays tend to be set in odd places: a com-
‘munity center in “Circle Mirror Trans-
formation,” the house a divorced mother
shares with her midlife lover in “Noc-
turama” (written in 2006), a trash area
behind a coffee shop in “The Aliens”
(2010). The Flick’ takes place in a small
movie theatre in Worcester County,
“Massachusetts, bt the vantage is the op-
posite of the moviegoer. Here, the audi-
ence sits where the movie sereen would
hang; rows of cinema seats climb the
stage, facing outward.
‘One Saturday moming, Baker, Gold,
theiractors, and the plays main crew met
for a rehearsal, on an upper floor of the
Playwrights Horizons building. “The
Flick’ has three main characters: Rose,
‘who's a projectionist; Sam, a thiry-five-
year-old usher (played by Matthew
Maher); and Avery (Aaron Clifton
Moten), a young, fastidious cinephile
who is Sam's new protégé with the mop
and the broom. Most scenes in the play
take place in the witching hour between
screenings, as Sam and Avery pass
through the empty theatre with their
dustpans, gabbing about movies and life.
‘The play, Baker and Gold quickly re-
alized, was a nightmare to stage. An usher
‘who hasbeen snaking down Row 7, stage
right, cannot suddenly cross the stage to
deliver a line. Blocking became an elabo-
rate chess game. Maer, Row 4, Seat 3,
seucep, bend down to pick up wrapper, say
the line, turn; Moten, pause in the aisle to
catch the line, answer, begin sweeping Row
5. Maber, adwance two paces; Moten, speak
without tuning. The play formalizes the
“THE NEW YORKER, FEBRUARY 25,20)invisible precision that’s become a hall-
mark of Baker and Gold’ style.
“Tm having a hard time, uh, ending
the pause,” Moten said during one of sev-
eral stops in the run-through. He and
“Maher were working on a moment, in the
second scene, when Sam, a Massachusetts
homeboy, joshes the aspirational Avery
about his “shit phobia’; there’s an awk-
ward silence as Sam’s mind runs dry of
further wittciss.
“Itssometimes a gray area between an
awkward moment between actors and an
awkward moment between characters,”
‘Maher agreed.
Gold nodded and told the actors not
to worry; this was the feeling they were
supposed to have. He is thirty-four, with
patient deadpan, a weeklong beard, and
tortoiseshell glasses. Much of his work, in
rehearsal isto act as an ambassador from
the gnarls of Baker's creative imagination,
translating her cryptic silences and fussy
requests into terms the actors can work
with. (A characteristic stage direction in
“The Flick’: “Maybe she incorporates &
couple moves from bhangra and/or hip
hop and/or West Atican dance classes in
her past.”)“You have to learn to embrace
thatbad feeling,” Gold said. “Te ahvays can
sustain longer than you think, because you
ride a second wave, often, in these mo-
ments—ifit’s just long enough, its a fine
‘moment, but if you ride that second wave
of awkwardness it gets good again.”
“Go for another lap,” Maher sid
“Yeah,” Gold said. “You want to go
for another lap of awlawardness.”
Baker, sitting beside Gold, furrowed
her brow. “Wait, did you say ‘lap’ or
“laugh?” she asked. She was wearing an
open plaid shir, sleeves rolled, over a ca~
sual dress, and fun, sensible shoes. (A
couple of years ago, she got into wearing
sandals over socks, but the phase passed.)
She has thick bangs and wavy blond hair
that is usually damp from the shower
until early afternoon. Her manner is
friendly and reflexively casual.
Maher asked, “You thought I said
augh?”
“Yeah.”
“That's why you were like, Actors!
Whores!”
‘The moment diffused into chuckles.
But Baker's concern had been real.
‘Though her plays are funny, she gets
alarmed when her work brings in giant,
roaring laughs. In that case, she thinks,
S52 THE NEW YORKER, FEBRUARY 25, 2085
you're laughing mostly because the peo-
ple around you are laughing; you are los-
ing touch with your personal experience
cof what is happening onstage. The im-
mersiveness of the experience starts
breaking down as a result—and what's
the point of seeing a show like that?
en Baker was seventeen, she
WV sated sureeptiioulytape-re
cording people's conversations and tran-
scribing them, trying to understand how
people really spoke. “I was like, Holy
shit!” she says. Reading the conversations
on paper, she could see not just how peo~
ple spoke their minds but how they ailed
to—al the filles, the obliqueness, the false
starts. Today, she gives her N.Y.U. play-
‘writing students similar assignment, not
using a recorder but transcribing what
they hear directly by hand. “I can hear my
students’ voices through just the way they
listen,” she says. "T always tll them, Ifyou
lose track of your voice as a writer, go
back, eavesdrop, write down everything
‘you hear, and that’s it. That’s you listen=
ing to the world.”
‘In Baker's case, the result ends to be
both familiar and strange. Her plays
contain intensely realistic elements—
the studiously plausible scenery, the lack
of obviously purposive action—but they
don't always add up to a realistic effect.
“They/re very strange plays,” says Adam
Greenfield, the director of new-play de~
velopment at Playwrights Horizons,
who first brought Baker's work to the
company. “What she's doing is not just
trying to imitate life really well. People
Poke PP ery
don't stop and watch somebody spin a
hhula hoop in total silence for forty-five
seconds.” The consequence is a kind of
“zooming in,” he says, a reverent focus
on the small, telling details of everyday
life. “She's saying, "No, stop: look at this,
‘and look at this, and look at this, and lok
at this.” Gold describes her work as
being rooted in avant-garde formalism
but “with an incredibly human and
deeply psychological outlook.”
Before Baker writes play, she spends
about nine months reading, usually
without a particular method or design.
She reads history, fiction, and theory.
‘Many of her models, she insists, aren't
dramatic—they include, instead, visual
artists like Francis Bacon and Robert
Irwin. “Inwin would never call himself
theatre artist,” she says, “but I say that
‘what he was doing from the seventies
on, which was making people walkinto
a room and look at it differently, is a
kind of theatre.”
Baker fell in love with Nabokov when
she was in her twenties. She liked “Pale
Fire,” but she found herself haunted by
“Pain,” Nabokov’ satire about the hap-
less Russian émigré professor Timofey
Phin, lost in the wash ofa foreign culture.
Near the end of the book, after “house~
heating” dinner party he throws for him
self—on the verge, unbeknownst to him,
of getting fired—he begins doing the
dishes, taking special care with an aqua-
marine glass bowl, a gift from his ex-
‘wifes artist son, that is his talisman of se-
curity and suc
Iscsonant ln gas mie sound fll
of muted mellowness a5 seed down t0
Soak. He rinsed the amber goles and the si
Serva hapa owed en
groped un the bub
Jeane under the mel
dio bor foc oby poo of epoen ares
Snd retrieved ntfcrache, Fastious Prin
fied ty and was wiping i when the leggy
thing somehow dipped at of the owe
fel i Ticainan oma ok eam cut
witht intid-t, but this ony led to peo-
pelicigo the ensure conceding foum of the
tk mec an rng sk oboe
as followed upon the plunge.
nin hurled the towel into a corner and,
raring awey, ood fora crescent erring at
the blécknes Beyond the threshold of the
Tie looked very ol with
all open an afm of
tears dimming his blank, unblinking eyes.
‘Then, witha moan of anguished anticipation,
he wenrbacko hesakand, bracing himell,
clipped his hand deep into the foam fapget
of iss sung him. Cen he removed a be
en goblet. The beautiful bow was intact
Often, when Baker sits down to write,
she says, this scene is at the forefront of
her mind.
aker says she has only two memories of
her parents being in a room together,
and has trouble, today, trying to envision
what kind of relationship theirs might have
been, When she was bor, in Apri, 1981,
the family lived in Cambridge, Massachu-
setts but she grew up mostly in the college
town of Amherst, where her father hadbeen an administrator for the Five Colleges
consortium and her mother worked toward
a doctorate in counselling psychology.
(Linda Bakeris now a psychotherapist and
professor at Keene State College, in New
Hampshire.) Baker’ fither, Conn Nugent,
‘was a gregarious Irish Catholic with a
briskly pragmatic air; her mother came
from a lefty New York Jewish family
(*Baker” was originally Beckerman) and
hasa more circumspect nature. Theyd met
at a commune, in the nineteen-seventies,
and shared an orientation toward progres-
sive activism. If Baker had been a boy, she
says, her parents would have called her
‘Timothy Nugent.
When Baker was six, half a year after
the family moved to Amherst, her par-
ents sat her and her older brother down
to make an announcement. The young
Annie headed them off. “Tl bet you're
getting divorced!” she blurted out.
“She paid a lot of attention to what
was going on around her, and to how
people were interacting with herand with
one another—she was very tuned in to all
of that” her mother says. Custody was
split; Bakers father moved out and, a year
later, took a job in New York, where he
eventually raised a second family. Baker
continued to live in Massachusetts, with
her mother, every year, they would raise
caterpillars into butterflies.
“Te was intense to go back and forth,
especially because my parents have very
different personalities that required very
differen things from me and my brother,”
Baker says. “T would train myself to be a
‘very sassy, super-assertive person around
my dad. Then Id get back to my moth
ex's house, and she'd be like, “Why did you
just speak to me that way?”
“She thrives on confrontation,” says
Baker's older brother, Benjamin Nugent,
who isalso awrite. (Hislatest books the
novel “Good Kids”) ‘I think our family
was hard for her sometimes, because it
‘wasn{all that confrontational my mother
and I were quietly depressed in the years
after the divorce, and I think her impulse
‘was to try to hammer at our shells, to get
usto be depressed more openly still see
that shell-hammerer in Annie's work.”
‘When Baker went away to college, at
Tisch, N.Y.U’'s arts school, she enrolled
as adramatic-writing student. Today, she
can't recall why. “I was interested in writ~
ings” she says. “And I was “interested in
film an rerested’ in theatre. But I
“Tsvant to start seeing richer people.”
‘wasttlike, Tim going to bea playwright!”
She worked a string of odd jobs after
graduation. She was an assistant resi-
dence-hall director for student ballerinas
at the School of American Ballet. (It gave
her free apartment at Lincoln Center.)
She was a contestant wrangler for “The
Bachelor. (“Awful”) She took uncredited
writing assignments for the extra cash.
Her big break was with the quiz show
“Who Wants to Be Millionaire?” which
hired herto write “throws,” pre-commer-
cial sendofis: “Don't touch that dial—
‘welll be back with John in the hot seat.”
Later, she became one of the show's re~
searchers. But her sense of vocation re~
mained vague. Ata doctor’ appointment
‘when she was twenty-four, her physician,
filing out her charts, asked what her job
was, “Twas like, We-e-el, you know I
‘write plays, but you can't bea playwright,
so [have a day job, and maybe Tl end up
teaching or something," she recalls “And
hhewas like, ‘One of my patients isa play-
‘wright! A very well-known playwright.”
And Iwas lke, ‘Yeah, but you can't make
a living asa playwright. You can't, lke, be
4 playwright!” Her doctor looked at her
oddly. Tewas the first time that she real-
ized this was an option,
By then, she was spending evenings
deep in her imagined world. “Body
Awareness,” one ofthe pieces that Baker
‘was working on during this time, cen-
tered on a middle-aged academic lesbian
couple, Joyce and Phyllis; Joyce's twenty-
one-year-old, etymology-obsessed son,
Javed and a visiting photographer at the
nearby college, Frank. As the four of
them struggle with the issues of power
and identity—Phylis thinks Frank’ pho-
tography of women is exploitative, Joyce
thinks Phyllis is envious and controlling,
and both think Jared might have Asper~
gers syndrome—their intellectual and
aesthetic certainties peel apat. Isa play
about the emotional stakes of intellectual
dogmatism, strung against a jaunty por-
trait ofcollege-town culture, and, appear
ing ata moment when theatrical taste an
toward small and tight domestic dramas,
itbrought Baker to national attention.
Neil Pepe, the artistic director of the
Atlantic Theatre Company, who grew up
in southern Vermont, was taken with her
portrait of crunchy New England home
life when he read the play, in 2007."When
youre looking around tying to find inter
esting plays, the frst thing you listen foris
the truth of the author's voice,” he says.
Baker was by then living in Brooklyn, and
‘when Pepe called to say tha the phy was
{going into production she fell down in the
middle of Clinton Avenue.
ne chilly afternoon in January,
Baker went for a walk in Green-
Wood Cemetery, a five-hundred-acre
expanse south of Park Slope. She wanted
some fresh air, and she took a southwest
route over some hill, toward the ponds.
After afew minutes, Baker wandered off
THE NEW YORKER, FEBRUARY 25,2005the path to take a close look at a particu~
lar headstone:
LIFFCHILD
Father
Frank A.
1863.
She rummaged in her purse. Names
like Liftchild are the sorts of thing that
Baker takes down in her notebook. (The
notebook is a Moleskine, which embar-
rasses her; she's afraid, she says, of being
mistaken for the kind of Brooklyn writer
who takes notes in Moleskines.) She
writes relatively litle down—she goes
through about one notebooka year—and
sometimes can't read her handwriting.
Butthe record of thought proves useful as
she tries to distill several months of read~
ing into afew hours of unforced action.
"The more intensely Baker has fo-
cussed on stripping conventional dra-
matic style out of her plays, the further
she has wandered from her earlier work;
today, she tries to distance herself from
“Body Awareness”’s straightforward
style. “ ‘Body Awareness’ was written
with very little thought about physical
space and time and duration and design
and all ofthe things that I think are inte~
gral to writing for the theatre—the first
things I think about now when I sit down
to write,” she said, working her way
around a curve in the cemetery path.
‘When the play was produced, he favor
ite parts had little to do with the dialogue.
Instead, she loved the drama's loose
endo—details she'd put in on awhimy lke
aasmall wind instrument that Frank inex-
plicably carries in his pocket.
‘Trying to find a technique to help her
draw out these moments, Baker went to
graduate school in 2007, when she was
twenty-six. She wanted to teach, and,
even more, she wanted to work with Mac
Wellman, a playwright, novelist, poet,
and professor at Brooklyn College. A
generation of young theatre writers
passed through Wellman’s ands; his stu-
dents included Young Jean Lee and
‘Sarah Ruhl. Although he considers Baker
among the three or four best dialogue
‘writers he's encountered, he also believes
that playwrights fuelled by nothing but
their talents tend to burn out. Hemadea
point of providing her with varied intel-
lectualsilage—"Finnegans Wake,” Witt-
genstcin, narrative theory, all seen through
the dramatist’s eye—so that she'd have
some means of reinventing herself if ¢x-
hhaustion or shtick set in.
‘Today, most of Baker's playsbegin not
‘with dialogue but with a conceptual con-
straint, In Wellman's class, she'd read
‘Mary Douglas book about circular plot
structure, “Thinking in Circles,” and
‘wanted to write a circular play, with the
focal point in the middle (a plan she even-
tually abandoned). She had also been
T don't know - is this
truly the right career
path for me?
7 a
ZERO DARK THIRTY SOMETHING
poring over transcripts of Fritz Perls’s
Gestat-therapy sessions, at the Bsalen
Institute, in the sixties. “Circle Mirror
‘Transformation,’ the play that arose from.
this study, follows a six-week small-town
acting class whose members progress
through a series of drama exercises—re~
citing one another's biographies in the
first person, improvising sentences one
‘word at a time—and, in the process, re
veal so much that thei relationships start
to strain and change.
“The Aliens,” which premidred less
than a year after “Circle Mirror Transfor-
mation,” may stand as the purest distilla~
tion of her ambitions to date. It has only
three characters: Jasper and KJ, two thir-
tyvomething slacker frends ina small Ver-
‘mont town, and Evan, a wide-eyed seven-
ten-year-old employee atthe café where
they hang out. The dialogue is spare and
aimless; almost haf of the ply is silence.
“The Aliens” grew out of some readings of
Wittgenstein that Baker did with Well-
man. “The line between a really rigorous
tractatus and a freshman in college going,
“What if your red isn't my red?—it re-
minded me of all these townies with
shrooms Thad known,” she says. In one of
the play's sharpest passages, Jasper, an as~
pring novelist who has just learned that his
‘ex girlfriend has found anew guy, recounts
‘@ conversation he had with KJ’s mother:
Jasons I was talking to her about how I
‘was always lke getting kicked out of places
anilikesleepingon floors or whatever and she
‘was like: this, ub, this in-between stat, this
boeing unstable or whatever if you accept it—
J Oh man, Was she talking aout her
Gender sath?
‘SPER: No, No, She wa like: the state of
just having lost something is like the most
‘enlightened state in the world.
<] is silent.
JasrER: And I thought of that lastnight,
andall ofa sudan [fl like incredible. [was
Simultaneously like being, stabbed in the
heart over and over again with tis like devil
kenfe but [also felt euphoric, And then Isat
down and I wrote ike twenty pages.
Back in Green-Wood Cemetery that
afternoon, the light was getting low and
nussety. Itwould not be long before the
gates closed for the night. Baker's conver-
sation had started to come in phrases; she
was trudging uphill ata steady pace and
panting slightly between thoughts.
“Wait, sorry, do you think that belongs
over there?” she asked. Nearby, a garland
lay in an empty patch of grass. It was
white with purple ribbons threaded
through. It looked as if it might haveblown from a nearby grave. Baker wan-
dered over and stopped.
“Do we leave it” she asked. “Do we
move it? That's not a grave.” She walked
on a bit, and then stopped and turned
around. “Oh, God, this kind of thing wll
Kill me. Iwill actually go fucking ery,”
she said. She picked up the garland and
placed it delicately near the gravestone for
which she thought it was intended.
Ak are pulled these days between
two warring camps. On one side ie
‘what might be called the Experientialists:
those who believe that the point of artis to
have the audience undergo a particular ex-
perience in time—and that the audience's
responsibilty’s to submit as fully as possi-
ble. (Think of Antonioni, who kept his
cameras open to the unexpected.) On the
other are the Arrangers: people who think
that the role of arts to order, bumish, per-
form, and engage desire. (Think of Hitch-
cock.) Experientialism honors the artst’s
sensibility: “A la Recherche du Temy
Perdu” may be dilated and slow, but i
only by giving in to the author's method
thatwe can experience its genius. Arrang-
ing, by contrast, defers to the audience:
what makes “The Great Gatsby” better
than any ofa hundred novels wth compa~
rable cultural freight is that is economi~
cally written and smartly plotted, seducing
us without special conditions. Diehard
Experientialists accuse Arrangers of pan-
dering with “easy art” and cliché, Arrang-
ers mock Experientilists for self-indul-
gence, tedious abstruseness, and bad faith
(The lousy Experientialist claims that his
disjointed, boring novel is suppored to be
that way.) The ablest artists are those who
inhabit a middle landscape, mastering the
art of special attention while meeting the
challenges of effortless appeal.
Bakeris one of those artists. Although
she has a distaste for anything too pol-
ished or arranged, her work has an inti-
‘mate, vernacular allure. She feels perpet-
ually beleaguered by interpreters who
think she's trying to write small-town
drama. She sees the emotional stakes of
the world that she describes as higher and
more ominous. Shortly after Wellman
saw *Circle Mirror Transformation” and
“The Aliens,” Baker asked him for his
thoughts. “I said, T see a side to you that
the New York crities’—who are smart
about her—'don't see, and that’s a hard
side, a nasty side,” he says.
In fact, Baker's plays tend to centeron
akind of mentorship. In “The Aliens,”
Jasper and KJ act as adult models for
Evan; in “Body Awareness,” Frank takes
Jared under his wing; in “The Flicks” Sam
is supposed to be showing Avery the
ropes. The mentorship, however, is al-
‘ways dubious: the teachers are never peo~
ple one might entirely admire.
“T think asa kid Twas a litle bit of an
Alex. Keaton,” Baker says, referring to
the priggish, conservative character on
the eighties sitcom “Family Ties.” “My
parents have each been married multiple
times, and I didn’t have a nuclear family,
and there were a lot of people coming in
and out of my life growing up. I found
that very destabilizing and, asa child, very
infuriating,”
‘When her mother arrived home at
night, she and Annie would sit at the
kitchen table and talk about what people
in their social circles were doing, and what
that behavior might mean. Sometimes
disputes arose, usually because of Annie's
stern moralism. That attitude lingered
until she was twenty-three. “I got really
depressed, and was immobilized by regret
and self-hatred,” she says. “Td never felt
like that before.” The realization that she,
too, would make mistakes and hurt peo-
ple “annihilated” her, she says. It’s this cri-
sis in her understanding that helped impel
herto make the emotional teachers in her
play—the beacons of moral honor—peo~
ple who are themselves filing in full-
fledged adulthood. “The story of their
lives might not immediately appear to be
‘exemplary or what the younger character
would want,” she explains. “But there's a
kind of transcendence and nobility they
embody through having not ived the lives
they wanted to.” Something must break
forthe glass bowl to stay whole.
‘he basement of a Washington
Square bar. Several tables have been
pulled together to make one long one;
about a dozen students have crowded
around it. They have finished the last
class meeting of the term. The teacher
sits in the middle, with a Scotch-on-the~
rocks: her drink. The room is filled with
cross-conversation; Lady Gaga's “Tele-
phone” ison the jukebox.
A STUDENT: I don't know—I think
the most dangerous thing is that I would
stop and think problems and stuf. think
screenplays—you just want to talk story.
‘And a play isn't so much about story, it’s
about the poem, and—
THE TEACHER: You know what I re-
cently started doing—and I want to high-
light this—I now negotiate in my con-
tract for screenplays that I won't write
outlines.
‘Two STUDENTS (together): Ooh!
‘THE TEACHER: I feel like if we all
started doing that that would just—
A STUDENT: Woo-hoo!
They dink glasses.
THE TEACHER: I feel like it’s the
most dangerous— I actually feel like
Hollywood hurts itself when everybody
outlines screenplays. And then it trickles
down to grad writing programs. Like, Im
willing to sit around for hours to talk
about what the screenplays going to be,
and talk about ideas, and doodie
grams on dry-erase boards, but I just
wor't.... Because, by the time I finish
the outline, it’s dead.
fewweeks ago, Baker began teach-
ing her second semester of graduate
playwriting. She gives her students a se-
ries of formal assignments trying toteach
them how to develop their voices within
constraints. She has had them write an
“Acistotelian” play, with a classical dra-
‘matic arc. She guides them as they try to
develop a full-length script.
A particularly fruitful exercise, Baker
thas found, is one she calls the “scrambled”
play. It’s meant to be an antidote to pre~
dictable narrative. Students writea play of
at least four scenes. When they are done,
they submit it to the class, and someone
else in the class scrambles the order. Ifa
student turned ina play with scenes in the
sequence 1-2-3-4, they might end up ar-
ranged as 2-1-4-3. The writing that the
assignment generates tends to be excep-
tionally strong. Is that because students
are finally free from the stranglehold of
ddeamatic convention? Or because, antici-
pating the scramble, they double down on
craft in every scene? Baker isn't sure. But
the exercise may prepare students for the
hardest part of being a playwright, which
is handing your story over to other people
and seeing it change—relinguishing con-
trol and watching what happens onstage.
“What everyone ahvays exclaims about, at
the end, is how the order in which it was
randomly serambled seems like it was per~
fect,” Baker says “None of us ever want to
hear it again in any other way.” #
“THE NEW YORKER, FEBRUARY 25,2003 35