| Author's Notes - Glamour
Glamour is defined in the American Heritage Deluxe Dictionary
as:
1. An air of compelling charm, romance, and excitement, especially
when delusively alluring.
2. Archaic. A magic spell; enchantment.
Alice Bailey, the psychic, wrote a book on the nature of
"Glamour." For her it is an illusion fed by desire,
a being that has no substance in itself, a false 1ight, an
illusion of substance.
The year is 1939. Summer. Czechoslovakia has fa1len to the
Nazis. In a few more months Poland will fall and Europe will
be at war, a war that has never seen its match in the history
of humankind. Fifty-five million people will perish. The face
of the world will never be the same. It was an age of cults,
of glamour. Mussolini, “il Duce” (the leader)
had glamour, Generalissimo Franco, "El Caudillo"
(The Overlord) had glamour, Hitler, “Der Fuhrer”
had it. Mussolini wanted to restore Italy to the glamour days
of Rome. Hitler's glamorous blond beauties would rule the
world for a thousand years as the third German Empire. The
goosestep, the rallies, the black fashionable uniforms with
the skull and crossbones had ghoulish glamour. In the summer
of 1939 Laura Riding and Robert Graves traveled to New Hope,
Pennsylvania from Spain on Riding's prompting, after Graves'
friend, the editor of Time Magazine, Tom Matthews, secured
a good review of Riding's poetry. The reviewer, Schuyler Jackson
and his wife, Kit invited Graves and Riding into their home.
Graves and Riding had left their home in Spain after Franco
took over the country. They had five minutes to pack and only
one suitcase between them. Robert Graves was a poet, novelist,
biographer, mythographer. classical scholar and translator.
He is best known for "I, Claudius," a two-volume
fictional autobiography of the Roman emperor of the first
century that was serialized for television broadcasting by
the BBC. Laura Riding enjoyed no such fame. She resentfully
lived in his shadow. But Graves worshipped her, thought her
a superior writer to himself. He was in essence hypnotized
by her "glamour." Riding had the ability to develop
a cult-like devotion among her friends; She had several circles
of followers. Having decided that the handsome Schuyler Jackson
must be hers, Laura behaved with calculated ferocity. Schuyler
Jackson's wife Kit, the good-natured mother of their four
young children, was a serious obstacle; but within six weeks,
through sheer force of will, Riding reduced her to a demented
and violent creature prepared to 'confess' to witchcraft before
being removed to an insane asylum. Clearly this is stuff for
the silver screen.. Even in a post~Fatal Attraction Hollywood
context and the story is absolutely true. I was drawn to the
story because of its dramatic allure (glamour) and because
of the parallels of Laura's invasion of Kit's house and the
invasion of Europe .I had no idea that the parallels would
be so clear and abundant. Acting on W.C.. Fields' advice about
animals and children I had to configure' the Jackson's as
childless. And although the hideous dismantling of Kit's psyche
took the work of eight people, I had to simplify the cast
to four. Gradual1y, through the alchemy of necessity I found
that I was writing a play I had never expected, a taut, nasty
little drama of quite large dimension. I moved the Pennsylvania
farm to the New England Coast. I simplified Schuyler's mind
and de-emphasized Laura's demonic intentions. She was still
demonic but not self-consciously so, But most important, Kit
was not driven insane. She was forced to clarity, She is the
only sane one in the place, a place surrounded by the yawning
chasm of darkness and danger.
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