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Authors: Marc Weingarten

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The Gang That Wouldn't Write Straight: Wolfe, Thompson, Didion, Capote, and the New Journalism Revolution (48 page)

BOOK: The Gang That Wouldn't Write Straight: Wolfe, Thompson, Didion, Capote, and the New Journalism Revolution
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“Why is it the best day?”

“Because of the support and the love these people have shown me.”

And then Clay Felker, who had cowed politicians and made society matrons blush, openly wept.

AFTER THE BALL

A
fter Rupert Murdoch’s palace coup, Clay Felker brushed himself off and started over again.

Ironically, he ventured back to
Esquire
, the magazine that had unceremoniously shoved him aside fifteen years earlier. But so much had changed since then. Harold Hayes, who had turned
Esquire
into the greatest American general-interest magazine of the 1960s, had left in 1973 after a dispute with the chairman of the board, John Smart. The magazine’s management had decided, without Hayes’s consent, that
Esquire
would use market testing in attempt to shore up its sagging bottom line, and perhaps even replace George Lois’s covers with more obvious designs of their own choosing. Management wanted a harder sell, with multiple cover lines instead of those single, pithy cover lines that Lois and the editors had perfected over the years. In short, they were looking for a sexier, more appealing package that would sacrifice panache for ham-handed commercialism. Hayes wasn’t having it, and on April 5, he turned in his letter of resignation to the board. (Hayes died of a brain tumor in 1989.)

Without Hayes’s steady hand, the vitality seemed to drain out of
Esquire
. The magazine lost focus and market share, losing roughly $5 million from 1975 to 1977. In August 1977 Felker acquired the magazine with an investment from Vere Harmsworth, Viscount Rothemere, chairman of the British publishing giant Associated Newspapers, and recruited his old partner Milton Glaser to work by his side.

But Felker’s editorial instincts, once so sure and sharp during his
New
York
tenure, abandoned him. A fatal decision to increase the magazine’s frequency from monthly to biweekly left the magazine drowning in more red ink, and in May 1979 the majority interest of
Esquire
was sold to two thirty-something Tennesseans named Christopher Whittle and Phillip Moffitt.

From there, Felker had a cup of coffee or two at various publications (the
Daily News, Manhattan Inc., Adweek, U.S. News & World Report)
, tried his hand at an alternative newsweekly called the
East Side Express
that he sold in 1984, and even worked as a producer at Twentieth Century Fox for a brief time in the early 1980s. But the Felker era was, for all intents and purposes, a past-tense phenomenon.

The same year that Felker lost
New York
to Murdoch, Jann Wenner moved
Rolling Stone
from San Francisco to New York, thus irrevocably altering what Hunter Thompson called “a hub of great journalism. My attitude at the time was, if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. But Jann took his life so far in another direction that he destroyed the shining monument to himself that he had built.”

From 1967 to 1977,
Rolling Stone
featured movie stars on seventeen covers. From 1977 to 1979, it had twenty-two such cover stories. Thompson continued to contribute to the magazine, but none of his subsequent work, which varied wildly in quality, could match the greatness or the impact of the first two
Fear and Loathing
sagas (one exception being “The Banshee Screams for Buffalo Meat,” Thompson’s encomium for his friend Oscar Zeta Acosta, who vanished mysteriously in Mazatlán, Mexico, in June 1974).

Nineteen seventy-seven was also the year that George Lucas’s
Star Wars
was released, an event that landed the film’s cast on the cover of
Rolling Stone
in August. A covenant, it seemed, had been struck between Hollywood and Madison Avenue, and magazines would now become press organs for movie stars. Stories shrank, and so did ideas. Puff pieces were no longer discouraged by scrupulous editors; they were career builders for magazine writers now, and big draws for advertisers.

It just got ugly in the 1970s for New Journalism, a process that was hastened by the decline of general-interest magazines. So what happened? Television, mostly, which siphoned away readers and ad dollars, turned celebrity culture into a growth industry and ensured the end of big tent magazines such as
Life
, the
Saturday Evening Post
, and
Collier’s
—magazines that had published Mailer, Didion, Hersey, and many others.
Esquire, New York
, and
Rolling Stone
were no longer must-reads for an engaged readership that couldn’t wait for the next issue to arrive in their mailboxes, eager to find out what Wolfe, Talese, Thompson, and the rest had in store for them. As the seventies drew to a close, so too did the last golden era of American journalism.

But there was also a sense of psychic exhaustion, that the great stories had all been told and there was nothing left to write about. The last American troops pulled out of Saigon in 1975; mainstream culture had thoroughly colonized the counterculture, and women’s lib just wasn’t sexy enough for male journalists to cover with the same rigor and passion that they reserved for wars.

New Journalism as Wolfe envisioned it—as the great literary movement of the postwar era—died a long time ago, but its influence is everywhere. Once a rear-guard rebellion, its tenets are so accepted now that they’ve become virtually invisible. The art of narrative storytelling is alive and well; it’s just more diffuse now, spread out across books, magazines, newspapers, and the Web.

There are great immersive reporters such as Ted Conover, who posed as a corrections officer in Sing Sing prison and wrote an award-winning book about it called
Newjack
. Jon Krakauer accompanied a mountaineering expedition to Mount Everest on assignment from
Outside
magazine and produced a narrative nonfiction classic,
Into Thin Air
. Barbara Ehrenreich posed as a domestic laborer and told the hard-luck stories of her fellow workers in
Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America
.

Other best-selling books such as
The Orchid Thief, Random Family, Moneyball, American Ground
—riveting stories buttressed by meticulous reporting, full-bodied character development, and flat-out great writing-are the children of
Dispatches, The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test
, and
Armies of the Night
. The director of New York University’s magazine journalism program, Robert S. Boynton, interviewed the authors of these and other recent nonfiction classics for a 2005 book called
The New New Journalism
.

With the exception of Jimmy Breslin, who continued to write a weekly column until retiring from newspaper work in November 2004, New Journalism’s greatest practitioners moved on to other pursuits. Tom Wolfe virtually gave up journalism to devote himself to novels such as
The Bonfire of the Vanities
and
I Am Charlotte Simmons
. Michael Herr has published only three smallish titles in the years since
Dispatches
. Since publishing
Thy Neighbor’s Wife
, his 1980 book about sexual mores in
America, Gay Talese has written only one other book
(Unto the Sons
, a multigenerational saga of his own family) and has spent ten years working on the next one. A collection of his magazine pieces called
The Gay Talese Reader
was published in 2003. It is essential reading. John Sack continued to traverse the globe for stories about the Chinese Mafia, the Holocaust, and the My Lai massacre until his death from cancer in 2004. Joan Didion remains a giant of journalism and continues to produce stunning work.

Norman Mailer also retreated from print journalism but didn’t give up the practice entirely.
The Executioner’s Song
, his epic about Utah killer Gary Gilmore, was the end result of hundreds of hours of interviews conducted by the writer and his partner, Lawrence Schiller.
The Executioner’s Song
won Mailer his second Pulitzer prize in 1980.

As the years wore on, Hunter S. Thompson continued to fitfully produce good work, particularly during his brief run in the mid-1980s as a columnist for the
San Francisco Examiner
, when he inveighed against the evils of Reagan-era villains such as George H. W. Bush, Oliver Stone, Jim Bakker, Ed Meese, and the Gipper himself. By the late 1990s, Thompson’s output had slowed considerably. He was no longer writing consistently for any print publications; instead there was a sports column for
ESPN.com
that was really a wide-open forum for whatever was on Thompson’s mind come deadline’s eve. Despite some occasionally hilarious and insightful pieces, it seemed an odd place for Thompson to land. Some claim that he was too strung out on drugs to produce another significant book; others claimed he was just letting his legacy speak for itself and leaving the present to younger people.

Thompson loved to talk about his salad days, but there was a wistful, almost rueful catch in his voice when the past was discussed. Two years before fatally shooting himself on February 20, 2005, he summed it all up thusly:

The sixties were a distinct time, a trip. I looked around and I saw a lot of intimidating voices out there, but I never had to think about pleasing them. I had editors who let me write what I wanted to write, and I worked hard at it. It was no free ride, but it was a very exciting, intoxicating time for me. But it took me a while to realize that it’s not gonna come back. Not in my lifetime, not in anyone else’s.

NOTES

INTRODUCTION

 
“Look … we’re coming out once a week”: Tom Wolfe,
Hooking Up
(New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2000), 250.
 
“Zonggggggggggg!”: Lillian Ross, “Red Mittens!”
The New Yorker
, March 16, 1965.
 
“If we tell someone”:
Hooking Up
, 251.
 
He reeled off a letter: Ibid., 253.
 
“They have a compulsion in the
New Yorker
offices”: Ibid., 256.
 

The New Yorker
comes out once a week”: Ibid., 278.
 
Excerpts from Dwight Macdonald’s counterattack on“Tiny Mummies” are from“Parajournalism, or Tom Wolfe & His Magic Writing Machine,”
New York Review of Books
, August 26, 1965; and“Parajournalism II: Wolfe and
The New Yorker,” New York Review of Books
, February 3, 1966.

1. RADICAL LIT: SOME ROOTS OF A REVOLUTION

 
“In New York in the early 1960s”: Tom Wolfe and E. W Johnson, eds.,
The New Journalism
(New York: Harper & Row, 1973), 47.
 
Roots of print journalism: Franklin Luther Mott,
American Journalism: A History, 1690-1960
(New York: Macmillan, 1962); George Boyce, James Curran, and Pauline Wingate,
Newspaper History from the Seventeenth Century to the Present Day
(London: Constable, 1978).
 
“There is likewise … great advantage”: Jonathan Swift,
A Modest Proposal
, 1729.
 
“We thought we almost saw the dingy little back office”: Charles Dickens,
Sketches by Boz
, excerpted from
The Oxford Illustrated Dickens
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1957).
 
Background of Joseph Pulitzer: James McGrath Morris,
The Rose Man of Sing Sing
(New York: Fordham University Press, 2003); Kenneth T. Jackson, ed.,
The Encyclopedia of New York City
(New Haven: Yale University Press, 1995), 964.
 
“I went down into the under-world of London”: Jack London,
The People of the Abyss
, Gutenberg Project e-book 1688 (1999; transcribed from the Thomas Nelson and Sons edition), available at
www.gutenberg.org/etext/1688
, 1.
 
Biographical background of George Orwell: Bernard Crick,
George Orwell: A Life
(Harmondsworth: Penguin Books, 1980).
Page 16
“There was … an atmosphere of muddle”: George Orwell,
Down and Out in Paris and London
(London: Secker & Warburg, 1986).
 
In the introduction to the French edition of the book: Crick,
George Orwell
, 187.
 
“The five-gallon can”: A. J. Liebling, “The Foamy Fields,”
The New Yorker Book of War Pieces
(New York: Schocken Books, 1988), 147.
 
“I guess I’d been thinking from the beginning”: Jonathan Dee, “Writers at Work: John Hersey,”
Paris Review
, Summer-Fall 1986.
 
“The journalist is always the mediator”: Sybil Steinberg, ed.,
Writing for Your Life: 92 Contemporary Authors Talk About the Art of Writing and the Job of Publishing
(Wainscott, N.Y.: Pushcart Press, 1992), 255.
 
when Kennedy ran for the House of Representatives: Ben Yagoda,
About Town:
The New Yorker
and the World It Made
(New York: Scribner, 2000), 184.
 
Background on the origins of the writing of
Hiroshima:
Ibid., 183-93.
 
“At exactly fifteen minutes past eight”: John Hersey, “A Reporter at Large: Hiroshima,”
The New Yorker
, November 1, 1946.
 
“Mrs. Nakamoto”: Ibid.
 
“I don’t believe”: Lillian Ross,
Reporting Back: Notes on Journalism
(Washington, D.C.: Counterpoint, 2002), 34.
 
“Bogart nodded”: Lillian Ross, “Come In, Lassie!”
The New Yorker
, February 21, 1948.
 
“‘Come In, Lassie!’ taught me how to watch and wait”: Lillian Ross, Ibid., 34.
 
“About our old piece—the hell with them!”: James R. Mellow,
Hemingway: A Life Without Consequences
(Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1992), 574.
 
“As I spent time with the characters”: Lillian Ross,
Here but Not Here
(Washington, D.C.: Counterpoint, 1998), 90.
 
“Huston as a person is almost too interesting”: Ibid., 90-91.
 
“I’m on the first floor”: Lillian Ross,
Picture: 50th Anniversary Edition
(New York: Da Capo Press, 2002), 23.
 
Ross’s anecdote about Nicholas Schenck:
Here but Not Here
, 101-2.
 
“It was as strange to me”: Jane Howard, “How the ‘Smart Rascal’ Brought It Off,”
Life
, January 7, 1966.
 
“People who don’t understand the literary process”: Ibid.
 
“It wasn’t a question of my
liking”:
Ibid.
 
Using John Hersey’s
Hiroshima
as a model: Yagoda,
About Town:
347.
 
“My theory”: Howard, “‘Smart Rascal.’”
 
“During this visit Dewey paused at an upstairs window”: Truman Capote,
In Cold Blood
(New York: Random House, 1965), 153.
 
The
New Yorker
fact checker found Capote to be the most accurate writer: Yagoda,
About Town
, 347.

2. THE GREAT AMERICAN MAGAZINE

 
“the publishing equivalent of a lemonade stand”: Robert J. Bliwise, “The Master of New York,”
Duke Magazine
, September-October 1996.
 
One day Carl came home: Ibid.
 
Background on Arnold Gingrich, the founding of
Esquire
, and the internecine battle between Hayes, Ginzburg, and Felker is taken from Arnold Gingrich,
Nothing but People: The Early Days at
Esquire (New York:
Crown, 1971) and Carol Polsgrove,
It Wasn’t Pretty, Folks, But Didn’t We Have Fun?
Esquire
in the Sixties
(New York: W. W. Norton, 1995), as well as interviews with Clay Felker and Ralph Ginzburg.
 
“I floundered around for four or five years”: From a speech given to Wake Forest students by Harold Hayes, Wake Forest University Archives, Winston-Salem, N.C. (henceforth WFA).
 
“His persistent refusal to accept an ordinary approach”: Harold Hayes, “Making a Modern Magazine,” WFA.
 
“Arnold’s removal from the heat of everyday activity”;“They wore the same kind of clothes”: Harold Hayes, “Building a Magazine’s Personality,” from an unpublished memoir, WFA.
 
“our drinking editor”: Gingrich,
Nothing but People
, 207.
 
“a test of lung power”: Ibid., 205.
 
“I spent the whole afternoon reading these things”: Bliwise, “The Master of New York.”
 
“Early in his act”: Thomas B. Morgan, “What Makes Sammy Jr. Run?”
Esquire
, October 1959.
 
“Well, Dave, baby”: Ibid.
 
“It takes a terribly long time”: Ibid.
 
“I had a hard time writing about Brigitte”: Thomas B. Morgan,
Self-Creations: 13 Impersonalities
(New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1965), 98.
 
“Brigitte swung around the car again and again”: Thomas B. Morgan, “Brigitte Bardot: Problem Child,”
Look
, August 16, 1960.
 
“TIME:
Afternoon”:
Thomas B. Morgan, “David Susskind: Television’s Newest Spectacular,”
Esquire
, August 1960.
 
“I really think the watershed book was
Advertisements”:
Hilary Mills,
Mailer: A Biography
(New York: Empire Books, 1982), 194.
 
“He had the deep orange-brown suntan”;“Eisenhower’s eight years”: Norman Mailer, “Superman Comes to the Supermart,”
Esquire
, November 1960.
 
“enormously personalized journalism”: Mills,
Mailer
, 195.
 
“a more active control of all our materials”: Hayes memo to Gingrich, WFA.
 
Details of the Felker-Sahl confrontation can be found in Polsgrove,
It Wasn’t Pretty
.
 
“the rakish fashion of the Continental boulevardier”: Gay Talese,
Unto the Sons
(New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1992), 6.
 
three hundred columns: Barbara Lounsberry, “Portrait of a (Non-Fiction) Artist,” available
www.gaytalese.com
.
 
“I learned [from my mother]”: Gay Talese, “Origins of a Nonfiction Writer,” in Gay Talese and Barbara Lounsberry,
Writing Creative Nonfiction: The Literature of Reality
(New York: HarperCollins, 1996), 2.
 
“Sports is about people who lose”: Lounsberry, “Portrait of a (Nonfiction) Writer.”
 
As the men talked: Gay Talese, “Portrait of a Young Prize Fighter,”
New York Times
, October 12, 1958.
 
“I am currently trying to gather”: Talese letter to Harold Hayes, February 24, 1960, WFA.
 
“New York is a city of things unnoticed”: Gay Talese, “New York,”
Esquire
, July 1960.
Page 63
a piece that
Village Voice
writer: Hentoff letter to Hayes, September 18, 1961, from WFA.
 
“it seemed he might be involved”: Talese, “The Soft Psyche of Joshua Logan,”
Esquire
, April 1963.
 
when Talese read back the story to Logan: Polsgrove,
It Wasn’t Pretty
, 60-61.
 
“I had become almost an interior figure”: Talese and Lounsberry,
Writing Creative Nonfiction
, 106.
 
“It is not a bad feeling with you’re knocked out”: Gay Talese, “The Loser,”
Esquire
, March 1964.
 

And so then you know”:
Ibid.

3. KING JAMES AND THE MAN IN THE ICE CREAM SUIT

 
The
Herald Tribune’s
lineage: Richard Kluger,
The Paper: The Life and Death of the
New York Herald Tribune (New York, Alfred A. Knopf, 1986).
 
The history of the
New York Herald Tribune
is recounted in extraordinary detail by Richard Kluger in his book
The Paper: The Life and Death of the
New York Herald Tribune. All of the historical background is taken from this book.
 
“I get there and I can’t find her”: Jimmy Breslin,
The World of Jimmy Breslin
(New York: Viking, 1967), 19-20. Introduction to“The Reds.”
 
“keep all storms in my life offshore”: Jimmy Breslin,
I Want to Thank My Brain for Remembering Me
(Boston: Little, Brown, 1996), 24.
 
“Without Throneberry”: Jimmy Breslin, “The Mets,”
The World of Jimmy Breslin
, 17-18.
 
“I never thought about how to do a column”: Jimmy Breslin,
The World’ of Jimmy Breslin
, introduction, xv.
 
“It’s news reporting”: Jack Newfield, “An Interview with Jimmy Breslin,”
Tikkun
, February 23, 2005.
 
“were a little poorer than some”: Jimmy Breslin,
The World of Jimmy Breslin
, 31.
 
“Marvin the Torch never could keep his hands”: Ibid., “Marvin The Torch,”34.
 
“Yes, sir?”: Ibid., “Jerry the Booster,”42.
 
“into a shape like a bowling ball”: Tom Wolfe and E. W Johnson, eds.,
The New Journalism
(New York: Harper & Row, 1973); Tom Wolfe, “The New Journalism,”13.
 
The
New York Times’s
metropolitan editor A. M. Rosenthal:
Jimmy Breslin: The Art of Climbing Tenement Stairs
, radio documentary produced by Jon Kalish for KCRW
 
One day in March 1964: David W Dunlap, “If These Walls Could Publish …,”
New York Times
, August 25, 2004.
 
The call bothered Malcolm Perry: Jimmy Breslin, “A Death in Emergency Room One,”
The World of Jimmy Breslin
, 169.
 
“A guy’s weight”:“Keep Me Going,”
Newsweek
, May 6, 1963. Unsigned.
 
When Pollard got to the row of yellow: Jimmy Breslin, “It’s an Honor,”
The World of Jimmy Breslin
, 177-80.
 
“different spectators have suggested”: Toby Thompson, “The Evolution of Dandy Tom,”
Vanity Fair
, October 1987.
Page 84
“Jack London of all people was my model”: Elaine Dundy, “Tom Wolfe … But Exactly, Yes!”
Vogue
, April 15, 1966.
 
“This must be the place!”: Wolfe and Johnson, eds.,
The New Journalism;
Tom Wolfe, “The New Journalism,”4.
 
“electrical conduits,” “industrial sludge,” “big pie factory”: Ibid.
 
“I still get a terrific kick”: Joe David Bellamy, “Sitting Up with Tom Wolfe,”
Writer’s Digest
, November 9, 1974.
 
“Tom Sawyer”: Dundy, “Tom Wolfe … But Exactly, Yes!”
 
“mean, low-down cold streak”: Tom Wolfe, “Miserable Weather to Continue; Ships, Aircraft, Shores Battered,”
New York Herald Tribune
, December 8, 1962.
 
“with eyes that looked like poached eggs”: Tom Wolfe, “He Elevates Fraternities,”
New York Herald Tribune
, December 2, 1962.
 
“A willowy co-ed”: Tom Wolfe, “600 at NYU Stage Lusty Rent Strike,”
New York Herald Tribune
, April 13, 1962.
 
“usual non-fiction narrator”: Wolfe and Johnson, eds., Tom Wolfe, “The New Journalism,”
The New Journalism
, 17.
 
“Is that Joan Morse”: Wolfe, “The Saturday Route,”
The Kandy-Kolored Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby
(New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1965), 223.
 
“When I reached New York in the sixties”: Wolfe and Johnson, eds., Tom Wolfe, “The New Journalism,”
The New Journalism
, 30.
 
“When great fame”: Tom Wolfe,
The Pump House Gang
(New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1968; Bantam edition, 1978), 8.
 
“Here you are, boy, put your name right there”: Tom Wolfe, “The Marvelous Mouth,”
Esquire
, October 1963.
 
“It’s the automobile that’s the most important story”: Emile Capouya, “True Facts and Artifacts,”
Saturday Review
, July 31, 1965.
 
“I don’t mind observing”;“Plato’s
Republic
for teenagers”;“They’re like Easter Islanders”;“shaped not like rectangles”: Thomas K. Wolfe, “There Goes (VAROOM! VAROOM!) that Kandy-Kolored (THPHHHHHH!) Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby (RAHGHHHH!) Around the Bend (BRUMMMMMMMMMMM …),”
Esquire
, November 1963.
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