n4_92Y_websiten4_92YTribeca_website
92Y Blog
Wednesday, March 28, 2007
What you Missed: An Evening with Gene Wilder

An Evening with Gene WilderWren Abbott, an editorial intern at New York magazine and freelance writer, reviews the Gene Wilder talk for the 92Y Blog.

On Sunday night in the Kaufmann Concert Hall Ms. magazine founding editor Letty Cottin Pogrebin interviewed comic legend Gene Wilder, whose debut novel My French Whore came out earlier this month. Wilder has appeared in over 30 movies – he made his film debut in 1967 as an undertaker kidnapped by Bonnie and Clyde, played the eponymous chocolatier in Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, fell in love with a sheep in Woody Allen’s Everything you Always Wanted to Know About Sex (But Were Afraid to Ask), and in the role he says he’s most proud of, co-wrote and starred in Young Frankenstein.

Wilder’s new book, following the memoir he brought out last year, is a slight, curious tale about an American soldier in World War I who, captured by the Germans, survives by impersonating a famous American spy. It’s based on a screenplay that Wilder wrote 38 years ago when he was in Paris filming Start the Revolution Without Me. Although Wilder did serve in the military for a year (in the medical corps in Phoenixville, Pennsylvania), and his protagonist Paul Peachy is an amateur actor who, like Wilder, is from Milwaukee, My French Whore otherwise seems to have little basis in the author’s own experiences. As a result, the story has a fantastical quality, with Peachy spending most of the book luxuriating at the “magnificent castle” where the German army is accommodating him and falling in love with his French whore over roast duck and farmer’s cheese, occasionally taking time out to attend to matters of military intelligence.

In fact, what is most striking about Wilder when he’s not acting – in both his books and in his public persona – is his earnestness. He doesn’t use humor, as you might expect, to deflect sensitive subjects, but in his memoir and in his talk on Sunday, spoke frankly of the emotional landmarks in his life – his mother’s death from heart disease, his estrangement from adopted daughter Katie (Katharine Anastasia Wilder), losing his third wife Gilda Radner to cancer. According to Wilder, he isn’t a natural comic – “in life” he says “I was never funny” – but he has a gift for embodying an absurd character believably, to comic effect. What Wilder, a dutiful student of “method” pioneer Lee Strasberg, brought to comic roles was seriousness – thoughtful application of his actor’s training and instincts. What he strived for above all, he writes in his memoir, is believability.

When Wilder worked with Arthur Penn in Bonnie and Clyde, his big scene took place in the back seat of the outlaws’ car, where Gene Hackman, as Clyde’s brother Buck, tells a dumb joke that he finds uproariously funny, about a farmer spiking cow’s milk with brandy to administer it to his mother. Wilder’s idea was to not know the punchline until they were playing the scene for the first time, and when Hackman blurted out “Whatever you do – don’t sell that cow,” Wilder laughed until there were tears in his eyes. Penn was surprised and impressed – he’d never envisioned that scene as funny.

Wilder also had an important insight about the character Willy Wonka, and agreed to play the part only on the condition that he get to introduce the character in a certain way: appearing before the townspeople for the first time, Wonka hobbles out with a cane, pretends to stumble, and goes into an acrobatic forward somersault. On Sunday Wilder explained that the change was critical in setting up the character, because “from that point on, you don’t know whether I’m lying or telling the truth.”

Wilder made his name playing characters that hold something in reserve, like the mysterious Wonka, whose intentions are unclear up to the end of the movie, when he chooses Charlie as his successor at the factory. His memoir and his too-precious new novel suggest that Wilder’s imagination works best when hemmed in by a well-defined character. His acting is dependent on good writing – and in fact, that’s why he hasn’t acted in awhile – (he hasn’t appeared in a theatrical release since Another You in 1991). He said on Sunday that when he reads a good script “a bell goes off, and I know I have to do this.” The bell hasn’t gone off in awhile, but Wilder says he doesn’t miss acting. Once he started writing, he said, “it got into my vein, into an artery I think.”

  • More event reviews by Wren Abbott: Art of the Book and Best and Worst Films of 2006
  • More Lectures & Conversations



  • Comments Reader Comments

    Mr. Wilder’s book is not about “an American soldier in World War I who, captured by the Germans, survives by impersonating a famous American spy.” An American spy would have been shot, should be your first clue. He poses as a GERMAN spy.

    Mr. Wilder mentions this in the interview, it’s on the dust jacket, and easily found on the summaries on Amazon.com and the like—that is if you didn’t already know that spies, in war time, are shot by the other side (the Germans being the other side of this particular war).

    Here’s the summary from Publisher’s Weekly: “Paul, who speaks German, is brought in to interrogate notorious German spy Harry Stroller. Soon sent into the front line, Paul deserts and, in an extraordinary sequence, passes himself off as Harry Stroller.”

    See? The German. As an “editorial intern,” I guess these are the things you are learning.

    By Millard at June 30, 2009, 9:26am


    Post a Comment
    Due to comment spam, comments are moderated and will appear on the site after review by the editors.

    Name (required)
    Email (required; will not be published)
    Website

    Please enter the word you see in the image below:

    Email this item to a friend. Email this item to a friend.
    The email address(es) that you supply to use this service will only be used to send the requested item.


    Highlights from the
    92nd Street Y and 92YTribeca universe.
    About the 92nd Street Y
    About 92YTribeca
    Contact Us
    Support Us

    Sort By:
    92nd Street Y Topics:
    92nd Street Y News
    The Arts
    Humanities
    Jewish Life
    Family
    Fitness
    Interviews
    Podcasts
    Tell Me Why
    92YTribeca Topics:
    Music
    Film
    Theater
    Comedy
    Jewish Programs
    Talks
    Family Programs
    Cafe
    Tribeca Podcasts
    Search 92Y Blog

    Advanced Search
    Archives
    <   November 2009   >
    s m t w t f s
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7
    8 9 10 11 12 13 14
    15 16 17 18 19 20 21
    22 23 24 25 26 27 28
    29 30

    November 2009
    October 2009
    September 2009
    August 2009
    July 2009
    June 2009
    Recent Entries
    Next Week at 92YTribeca
    Places of Interest When You Visit 92Y
    We Didn’t Quite Hear You, Can You Repeat That Please?
    Appetite City: A Journey Through the History of New York’s Restaurants
    92Y Podcast: Ted Sorensen on John F. Kennedy
    Subscribe
    RSS Feed
    Mobile Version
    Email

    UJA Federation of New York

    Contact Us | Privacy Statement | Policies | Site Map | Help | Press Resources
    © 2008 92nd Street Young Men's and Young Women's Hebrew Association
    All Rights Reserved. Click here for directions
    Web Accessibility and the 92nd Street Y