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Authors: Woody Allen

BOOK: Mere Anarchy
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Is there a relationship between a healthy regimen and creative genius? We need only look at the composer Richard Wagner and see what he puts away. French fries, grilled cheese, nachos—Christ, there’s no limit to the man’s appetite, and yet his music is sublime. Cosima, his wife, goes pretty good, too, but at least she runs every day. In a scene cut from the Ring cycle, Siegfried decides to dine out with the Rhine maidens and in heroic fashion consumes an ox, two dozen fowl, several wheels of cheese, and fifteen kegs of beer. Then the check comes and he’s short. The point here is that in life one is entitled to a side dish of either coleslaw or potato salad, and the choice must be made in terror, with the knowledge that not only is our time on earth limited but most kitchens close at ten.

The existential catastrophe for Schopenhauer was not so much eating as munching. Schopenhauer railed against the aimless nibbling of peanuts and potato chips while one engaged in other activities. Once munching has begun, Schopenhauer held, the human will cannot resist further munching, and the result is a universe with crumbs over everything. No less misguided was Kant, who proposed that we order lunch in such a manner that if everybody ordered the same thing, the world would function in a moral way. The problem Kant didn’t foresee is that if everyone orders the same dish, there will be squabbling in the kitchen over who gets the last
branzino.
“Order like you are ordering for every human being on earth,” Kant advises; but what if the man next to you doesn’t eat guacamole? In the end, of course, there are no moral foods—unless we count soft-boiled eggs.

• • •

T
O SUM UP:
apart from my own Beyond Good and Evil Flapjacks and Will to Power Salad Dressing, of the truly great recipes that have changed Western ideas Hegel’s Chicken Pot Pie was the first to employ leftovers with meaningful political implications. Spinoza’s Stir-Fried Shrimp and Vegetables can be enjoyed by atheists and agnostics alike, while a little-known recipe of Hobbes’s for Barbecued Baby Back Ribs remains an intellectual conundrum. The great thing about the Nietzsche Diet is that once the pounds are shed they stay off—which is not the case with Kant’s “Tractatus on Starches.”

BREAKFAST

Orange juice

2 strips bacon

Profiteroles

Baked clams

Toast

Herbal tea

The juice of the orange is the very being of the orange made manifest, and by this I mean its true nature, and that which gives it its “orangeness” and keeps it from tasting like, say, a
poached
salmon or grits. To the devout, the notion of anything but cereal for breakfast produces anxiety and dread, but with the death of God anything is permitted, and profiteroles and clams may be eaten at will, and even buffalo wings.

LUNCH

1 bowl spaghetti, with tomato and basil

White bread

Mashed potatoes

Sacher torte

The powerful will always lunch on rich foods, well seasoned with heavy sauces, while the weak peck away at wheat germ and tofu, convinced that their suffering will earn them a reward in an afterlife where grilled lamb chops are all the rage. But if the afterlife is, as I assert, an eternal recurrence of this life, then the meek must dine in perpetuity on low carbs and broiled chicken with the skin removed.

DINNER

Steak or sausages

Hash-brown potatoes

Lobster thermidor

Ice cream with whipped cream or layer cake

This is a meal for the Superman. Let those who are riddled with angst over high triglycerides and trans fats eat to please their pastor or nutritionist, but the Superman knows that marbleized meat and creamy cheeses with rich desserts and,
oh,
yes, lots of fried stuff is what Dionysus would eat—if it weren’t for his reflux problem.

APHORISMS

Epistemology renders dieting moot. If nothing exists except in my mind, not only can I order anything, the service will be impeccable.

Man is the only creature who ever stiffs a waiter.

S
URPRISE
R
OCKS
D
ISNEY
T
RIAL

THE WALT DISNEY
company shareholder suit over the severance package paid to departing president Michael Ovitz was jolted today by the testimony of an unexpected witness, who was questioned by counsel for the entertainment giant.

COUNSEL
Will the witness please state his name.

WITNESS
Mickey Mouse.

C

Please tell the court your occupation.

W

Animated rodent.

C

Were you friendly with Michael Eisner?

W

I wouldn’t say friendly—we had dinner together a number of times. Once he and his wife had Minnie and me to their house.

C

Did you ever discuss business with him?

W

I was present at a breakfast between Mr. Eisner, Roy Disney, Pluto, and Goofy.

C

Where was this breakfast?

W

At the Beverly Hills Hotel.

C

Were there any other witnesses?

W

Steven Spielberg stopped at our table to say hello … oh, and Daffy Duck.

C

You’re acquainted with Daffy Duck?

W

Daffy Duck and I had met at a dinner at Sue Mengers’s home some months back and had become friendly.

C

I take it Mr. Eisner did not approve of this relationship with Daffy Duck?

W

We quarreled over it several times.

C

What finally happened?

W

I eventually stopped seeing Daffy when he became a Scientologist.

C

I direct you back to the breakfast. Do you recall what was discussed?

W

Mr. Eisner said that he planned to hire Michael Ovitz, the head of CAA.

C

How did you feel about that?

W

I was surprised, but Pluto took the news harder. He seemed despondent.

C

Why despondent?

W

He was worried because Mr. Ovitz had a much closer relationship with Goofy, and Pluto felt his screen time might be reduced.

C

So you were aware of a “special relationship” between Mr. Ovitz and Goofy?

W

I knew that when Mr. Ovitz was an agent he had courted Goofy, and if I’m not mistaken, the two shared a house together in Aspen.

C

Did there come a time when they became closer?

W

Mr. Ovitz stood by Goofy when he was busted in Malibu.

C

Is it true Goofy had a drug problem?

W

He was addicted to Percodan.

C

How long had that been going on?

W

Goofy went on painkillers after a flop he took in a cartoon. He parachuted off the Empire State Building with an umbrella and hurt his back.

C

And?

W

Mr. Ovitz was responsible for getting Goofy into the Betty Ford Center.

C

Did you ever tell Mr. Eisner of your apprehensions over his plan to hire Mr. Ovitz?

W

Minnie and I discussed it. We knew they’d clash.

C

Did you bring it up with anyone besides your wife?

W

Dumbo, Bambi—I really can’t remember. Oh, yes—Jiminy Cricket, one time at Barbra Streisand’s house. She threw a party for Jiminy when he bought his place in Trancas.

C

And was anything concluded?

W

Dumbo felt that Donald Duck should talk to Mr. Eisner about our concerns because Mr. Eisner always seemed to listen to Donald. As he put it, Donald was “one of the deepest ducks he’d ever met.” The two spent a lot of time together in Donald’s pond.

C

And was the relationship reciprocal?

W

Oh, yes. Donald lived at Mr. Eisner’s home for six months when he and Daisy Duck were separated. Donald had been having an affair with Petunia Pig, Porky’s girlfriend. It was a no-no at Disney to socialize with creatures from a competing studio, but in Donald’s case Mr. Eisner chose to look the other way, which upset the shareholders.

C

This was the affair you referred to in your deposition?

W

Yes. My memory’s hazy on this, but I think Donald was introduced to Petunia Pig at the home of Jeffrey Katzenberg.

C

You were present?

W

Yes. Myself, Tom Cruise, Tom Hanks, Jack Nicholson. I believe Sean Penn, Wile E. Coyote, the Road Runner—

C

Tom and Jerry?

W

No, they were at EST that weekend.

C

It was six months later when Mr. Katzenberg and Mr. Eisner became involved in a lawsuit. Do you recall those details?

W

It had to do with Mr. Eisner promising stock options to Bugs Bunny if he would come to work at Disney.

C

And did Bugs?

W

No. Bugs was his own man. At that time he wanted to take a year off to write a novel.

C

Getting back to the party—do you recall what happened next?

W

Yes. Donald Duck got drunk and made a pass at Nicole Kidman. It was extremely embarrassing because at the time she and Tom Cruise were still married. Donald was rather hostile to Tom, I recall, and felt Tom was being offered all the roles he wanted. I recall Mr. Eisner at that party taking Donald outside to calm him down.

C

Do you recall what happened next?

W

On the lawn of Mr. Katzenberg’s house Donald met Petunia Pig. He found her very beautiful and very exciting and I know they liked a lot of the same music groups. And Donald always had a problem with anger management. He had been on Prozac for years because he’d become convinced his career had tanked and soon he would wind up on a Cantonese menu. Despite Mr. Eisner’s advice, Donald began seeing Porky’s girlfriend on the sly.

C

To the best of your knowledge, how long did the affair continue?

W

For about a year. Petunia told Donald she couldn’t keep seeing him because she’d fallen deeply in love with Warren Beatty and he with her. If you recall, Warren took her to the Cannes Film Festival.

C

Did there come a time when Daisy Duck threw Donald out?

W

Yes, and Mr. Eisner took him in and let him live at his house till Donald and Daisy finally agreed that they’d live together again but have an open relationship sexually.

C

So, to the best of your recollection, did anyone at all ever tell Mr. Eisner it might not be a good idea to hire Mr. Ovitz?

W

The night of the Academy Awards I brought it up to Pinocchio, but he didn’t want to get involved.

C

And so you’re saying neither Pinocchio nor anyone else warned Mr. Eisner that he and Mr. Ovitz might be an incompatible match.

W

To the best of my knowledge, that’s correct.

C

And when the job didn’t work out the subject came up of Mr. Ovitz’s severance package—the $140 million payment? Did Mr. Ovitz ever feel it was excessive?

W

I just know that Jiminy Cricket was often perched on Mr. Ovitz’s shoulder and advised him to always let his conscience be his guide.

C

And?

W

The rest is history.

C

Your witness.

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