Thanksgiving. The real inauguration of the holiday season in
the United States, and in homes, countries, points and vast places all around
the globe, seems to begin here. If all goes according to plan, each year we
enter into it primed to consider and acknowledge the aspects of our lives that
make it worth living, our blessings, if you will. And so it is this year, even
when things are not necessarily following the path to peace and happiness, in
cities like Paris or Beirut or Chicago, or in many homes where sickness or
poverty or other circumstances beyond individual control color our day-to-day
experience outside the lines of a Rockwell-esque representation of holiday
bliss.
And so it also has been for my family, a stressful month-long
prelude to Thanksgiving Day precipitated by the simple act of changing bedsheets.
One wrong move ended up meaning excruciating back pain, eventual back surgery
and nearly the entire month of November recuperating in a hospital near
downtown Los Angeles for our mother, all of which rippled out into an avalanche
of worry for everyone else, especially my wife, who accepted her responsibility
both as the primary facilitator for managing Mommy’s care within the system, and
also for her father, who found himself suddenly unmoored from routine and the
comfort of his wife’s company and set loose on a sea of anxiety over her
well-being.
It has been a difficult, stressful time for all of us, and both
my wife and I count ourselves lucky to be surrounded by those who seem to know
how to care for us too in their own way, and that at-home care usually involves
kitty cuddling and the liberal application of laughter inspired by our uniquely
nutty daughters. Over this past month my wife’s tensions have often been effectively
eased by the sound of their chatter and the invitation to join in a
conversation which usually centers around Game
of Thrones, Star Wars or some K-Pop phenomenon she only knows or cares
about because it sends one or both of the girls into a hot-cheeked fangirl flame-out.
(If there’s a copious supply of jelly beans nearby, so much the better.)
One evening last week I was slumped in a chair, bedraggled
by a day of less-than-satisfying news about our mother’s level of pain in
recovery and a long day of driving back and forth around Los Angeles through
harrowing traffic on one errand of mercy or another, when suddenly my phone
jingled, indicating the receipt of a text message. It was from my eldest
daughter, and when I opened it I was greeted by a .GIF of a large man hitching
up a longhorn steer in front of a saloon on the street of a pokey Western town.
One of the town’s citizenry berates the large man: “You can’t park that animal
here!” To which the large man responds by sauntering over and punching the
citizen’s horse square in the jaw, knocking man and beast into the dust.
It was a clip, of course, from Blazing Saddles, a perhaps unlikely candidate for status as a
Life-Changing or Otherwise Important Movie which has nonetheless been exactly
that for me ever since I saw it when it played my hometown in 1974. I have somehow
been able to transfer my love for Mel Brooks’ loony classic to my oldest youngster,
and she knew that seeing the clip was just what I needed in my worn-out moment,
just the thing to momentarily lift me out of the murkiness of worry and into a
perhaps lighter place. After she got the big laugh she was fishing for, the
clips began flying from her phone and pinging mine with speed and fury—“Hey,
where the white women at?!” “To tell a family secret, my grandmother was Dutch.”
“I didn’t get a harrumph outta that guy!” “Have you ever seen such cruelty?” Of course, it wasn’t long before the stress was
effectively chucked and I whipped out (cue horrified gasp from the citizens of
Rock Ridge) the Blu-ray, allowing Frankie Laine to commence serenading us
toward a familiar destination of comedy heaven which could never fully be
contained by the boundaries of the Warner Brothers backlot.
I’ve always enjoyed telling my daughter stories of seeing the movie for
the first time at age 14, in a packed house at my hometown movie palace, the
Alger, accompanied by my mother, my younger sister (13) and for some reason my youngest sister (3) as well. We were
seated together near the back of the auditorium, but it wasn’t long—sometime in
the middle of Cleavon Little’s suave rail-side rendering of “I Get a Kick Out
of You,” perhaps at the replacement of the word “kick” with the hilariously
emphatic “belt”—before I was
banished, because of my helpless and none-too-quiet laughter, to the back of
the house, far enough away from the women to theoretically ease their
embarrassment. Without missing a beat, I filled an empty seat just off the
entrance to the snack bar and proceeded to howl away.
Around the three-quarter mark, ate a movie's worth of relentless shrieking, I blasted a loud barking laugh in response to the gruff concession of frontier largesse directed by Olsen Johnson (David Huddelston) toward the multi-ethnic railroad workers whom Sheriff Bart has employed to help the citizens foil Hedley Lamarr's land-snatching ambitions-- "We'll take the niggers and the chinks, but we don't want the Irish!" My hometown, you see, was laregly settled by Irish immigrants, and the idea of the sort of self-made, white, Irish folks I knew being denied any such thing as land or even common courtesy was to my mind so randomly hilarious (I didn't know history at that point) that I couldn't help my convulsive response. It was then that I noticed the wife of the owner of the theater, Norene Alger, né Norene O'Keefe, standing in the doorway to the lobby just over my left shoulder. Oops! But before my humiliation could profoundly settle in, she put her hand on that shoulder, leaned down, smiled and said, "I could hear you from the box office. I just wanted to come in and see if you were all right." She just thought she'd check in before calling an ambulance. How's that for customer service?
Around the three-quarter mark, ate a movie's worth of relentless shrieking, I blasted a loud barking laugh in response to the gruff concession of frontier largesse directed by Olsen Johnson (David Huddelston) toward the multi-ethnic railroad workers whom Sheriff Bart has employed to help the citizens foil Hedley Lamarr's land-snatching ambitions-- "We'll take the niggers and the chinks, but we don't want the Irish!" My hometown, you see, was laregly settled by Irish immigrants, and the idea of the sort of self-made, white, Irish folks I knew being denied any such thing as land or even common courtesy was to my mind so randomly hilarious (I didn't know history at that point) that I couldn't help my convulsive response. It was then that I noticed the wife of the owner of the theater, Norene Alger, né Norene O'Keefe, standing in the doorway to the lobby just over my left shoulder. Oops! But before my humiliation could profoundly settle in, she put her hand on that shoulder, leaned down, smiled and said, "I could hear you from the box office. I just wanted to come in and see if you were all right." She just thought she'd check in before calling an ambulance. How's that for customer service?
Blazing Saddles
may have seemed like a throwaway at the time, and in some ways I suppose it
still is; therein lies a considerable part of its charm. But its staying power,
particularly for a comedy that doesn’t seem so much rooted in style as in the
rage and uncertainty of the moment in which it first became a sensation, is
worth examining, and the behind-the-scenes glimpses inside the gorgeous Mel Brooks Collection Blu-ray box set
from which we pulled Blazing Saddles
the other night (which I wrote about for Ray Young’s late, lamented Flickhead blog six years ago) offer some
interesting observations. For Brooks’ career, Blazing Saddles marked a seismic
shift after the Oscar-winning triumph of The
Producers and the relatively tepid reception of The Twelve Chairs; it changed Brooks’ entire approach to filmmaking
(for better and worse), and it ended up being a landmark in movie comedy as
well.
The 55-minute interview attached to the commentary track for that Blazing Saddles Blu-ray is an invaluable
peek into the process of creating this foul-mouthed, subversive satire. In it
Brooks details with fond remembrance, and not just a smidgen of frustration,
the difficulties and joys of bringing the movie together. And in the set’s accompanying
120-page book, It’s Good to Be a King,
Brooks recalls the process of fleshing out Andrew Bergman’s script, initially
entitled Black Bart: “I wrote
berserk, heartfelt stuff about white corruption and racism and Bible-thumping
bigotry,” said the director, beginning the movie’s transformation from a wacky
lark into, as producer Michael Hertzberg says on one of the Blu-ray’s
documentaries, a movie that felt as though it had to be made. “Writing the
movie got everything out of me,” remembers Brooks, “all of my furor, my frenzy,
my insanity, my love of life and hatred of death.”
Seen in 2015, Blazing
Saddles is, against all odds, as funny as ever-- and this from someone who
laughed so hard upon seeing it in 1974, you remember, that several of my
classmates at school told me the next day, “I heard you at the movies last
night!” To my mind that frenzy Brooks speaks of is channeled here into
something truly representative not only of its creators’ states of mind, but
the state of mind of the country at the time the movie was being made. It may
be in many ways a pastiche, lacking the cohesive sense of style and tribute
that marks Young Frankenstein, but no
other Mel Brooks movie hits the kind of gasp-inducing highs that Blazing Saddles does, or sustains that
delirium as well.
Maybe part of why the movie plays so brilliantly in 2015 is
that it taps into our memories of a time that was perhaps less enlightened but
also far less suppressed in terms of a culture’s permission to air its filthy
laundry in the form of a vicious romp like this. (Even if someone had the nerve
to try out a gag like Slim Pickens’ “#6 Dance” solution, in these lunatic days
of trigger warnings and otherwise overly coddled sensibilities they’d likely
get hauled up before a committee.) Going into the second American decade of the
millennium, we have a Black president and nobody says the “N” word anymore. But
anybody with sense and/or access to the daily reports filed from the streets of
Ferguson and Chicago and Los Angeles and New York and all points around and
between ought to be able to see that the old devils ain’t gone, they’re just hidden
more deceptively. And as the 2016 presidential campaign begins ramping up it is
clear enough that those devils are feeling distressingly empowered to start
emerging from the shadows from where several decades of progressive social
thinking had hoped to banish them. In Blazing
Saddles Brooks fiddles with the enemy, recognizes him in us, and has a hell
of a laugh in the attempted exorcism. In the long run that exorcism may not
have worked, but it’s good to know that this movie, far exceeding is value as
well-preserved time capsule, is still in there throwing punches around.
And thinking about this crazy picture certainly has seemed
to have distracted me from other worries of the day too, hasn’t it? Mission
accomplished, my sweet, thoughtful, .GIF-sending girl. I guess it wouldn’t be
inappropriate at all to express thanksgiving to Mel Brooks, Cleavon Little,
Madeline Kahn, Harvey Korman, Slim Pickens, Richard Pryor and everyone who had
a hand in making Blazing Saddles what
it is. But I’m also grateful to my daughter for bringing it back to my attention,
encouraging me with its humor and her appreciation of that humor, and for
getting the movie back inside my head long enough to take me, for a few hours
anyway, away from the worries swirling around in there with it. And oh, yeah, when
I’m finished writing this we’re off to my wife’s parents’ house, where she will
cook the day’s turkey and we’ll all raise a toast to happiness and health and
all the rest of the things we seem to so easily take for granted. Our Mommy
came back from the hospital yesterday, and we can’t wait to see her once again in
the home where she belongs. She’s not a Mel Brooks fan, but that’s okay. Before
and after dinner, while being waited on hand and foot, she can eat potato chips
and watch anything she wants.
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