In One Person - Page 97

"You don't like girls?" the lieutenant had asked me.

"Yes, I do--I do like girls," I told him.

"Then what are your 'homosexual tendencies,' exactly?" the army psychiatrist asked.

"I like guys, too," I told him.

"You do?" he asked. "Do you like guys better than you like girls?" the psychiatrist continued loudly.

"Oh, it's just so hard to choose," I said, a little breathlessly. "I really, really like them both!"

"Uh-huh," the lieutenant said. "And do you see this tendency continuing?"

"Well, I certainly hope so!" I said--as enthusiastically as I could manage. (Alice loved this story; at least she said she did. She thought it would make a funny scene in a movie.)

"The funny word should have warned you, Bill," Larry would tell me much later, when I was back in New York. "Or the movie word, maybe."

What might have warned me about Alice was that she took notes when we were talking. "Who takes notes on conversations?" Larry had asked me; not waiting for an answer, he'd also asked, "And which of you likes it that she

doesn't shave her armpits?"

About two weeks after I'd checked the box for "homosexual tendencies," or whatever the stupid form said, I received my classification notice--or maybe it was my reclassification notice. I think it was a 4-F; I was found "not qualified"; there was something about the "established physical, mental, or moral standards."

"But exactly what did the notification say--what was your actual classification?" Alice had asked me. "You can't just think it was a Four-F."

"I don't remember--I don't care," I told her.

"But that's just so vague!" Alice said.

Of course the vague word should have warned me, too.

There'd been a follow-up letter, perhaps from the Selective Service, but maybe not, telling me to see a shrink--not just any shrink, but a particular one.

I'd sent the letter to Grandpa Harry; he and Nils knew a lawyer, for their logging and lumber business. The lawyer said that I couldn't be forced to see a shrink; I didn't, and I never heard from the draft again. The problem was that I'd written about this--albeit in passing--in my first novel. I didn't realize it was my novel Alice was interested in; I thought she was interested in every little thing about me.

"Most places we leave in childhood grow less, not more, fancy," I wrote in that novel. (Alice had told me how much she loved that line.) The first-person narrator is an out-of-the-closet gay man who's in love with the protagonist, who refuses to check the "homosexual tendencies" box; the protagonist, who is an in-the-closet gay man, will die in Vietnam. You might say it is a story about how not coming out can kill you.

One day, I could tell that Alice was really agitated. She seemed to be working on so many projects at the same time--I never knew which screenplay she was writing, at any given moment. I just assumed that one of these scripts-in-progress was causing her agitation, but she confessed to me that one of the studio execs she knew had been "bugging" her about me and my first novel.

He was a guy she regularly made a point of putting down. "Mr. Sharpie," she sometimes called him--or "Mr. Pastel," more recently. I had the impression of an immaculate dresser, but a guy who wore golfing clothes--light-colored clothes, anyway. (You know: lime-green pants, pink polo shirts--pastel colors.)

Alice told me that Mr. Pastel had asked her if I would try to "interfere" with a film based on my novel--if there ever were a movie made. Mr. Sharpie must have known she lived with me; he'd asked her if I would be "compliant" to changes in my story.

"Just the usual novel-to-screenplay sort of changes, I guess," Alice said vaguely. "The guy just has a lot of questions."

"Like what?" I asked her.

"Where does the service-to-my-country part come into the story?" the studio exec in the light-colored clothing had asked Alice. I was a little confused by the question; I thought I'd written an anti-Vietnam novel.

But in the exec's opinion, the reason the closeted gay protagonist doesn't check the "homosexual tendencies" box is that he feels an obligation to serve his country--not that he's so afraid to come out, he would rather risk dying in an unjust war!

In this studio exec's opinion, "our voice-over character" (he meant my first-person narrator) admits to homosexual tendencies because he's a coward; the exec even said, "We should get the idea that he's faking it." The faking-it idea was Mr. Sharpie's substitute for my idea, in the novel--namely, that my first-person narrator is being brave to come out!

"Who is this guy?" I asked Alice. No one had made me an offer for the film rights to my novel; I still owned those rights. "It sounds like someone is writing a script," I said.

Alice's back was to me. "There's no script," she mumbled. "This guy just has a lot of questions about what you're like to deal with," Alice said.

"I don't know the guy," I told her. "What's he like to 'deal with,' Alice?"

Tags: John Irving Fiction
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