Sunday, March 13, 2022

Do Not Forsake Me, Oh, My Dushen'ka - weekly column, 13 March 2022

 

Lawrence Hall, HSG

Mhall46184@aol.com

 

Do Not Forsake Me, Oh, My Dushen’ka

 

Should Tex Ritter and John Wayne be cancelled as Russian sympathizers?

 

Imagine Tex Ritter, that good ol’ Panola County boy, singing a western song composed by a veteran of the Soviet Red Army whose early works include music for huge Communist spectacles. Who among us hasn’t joined in to sing along with that merry toe-tapper, “The Storming of the Winter Palace?”

 

Imagine John Wayne hiring the same Russian musician for a number of his movies as well as becoming his friend.

 

And it’s true, of course. Dmitri Tiompkin was born in the Russian Empire in what is now Ukraine, was educated in Saint Petersburg / Petrograd / Leningrad, did some time in the Red Army, and made his way to Hollywood via Berlin, Paris, and New York. Had he been able to find steady work in the USSR he would later have been murdered in Stalin’s purges of thousands of artists, poets, scholars, filmmakers, musicians, soldiers, childhood friends, old comrades, Ukrainians, and, finally, physicians.

 

Tiompkin, a classically trained musician, was a biggie in American films for almost fifty years, and won his first Oscar for High Noon, including its title song, “Do Not Forsake Me, Oh, My Darling.”

 

John Wayne famously disliked High Noon for its purported Communist associations, although the Soviets criticized the film for its “individualistic” protagonist. In this movie the solitary sheriff faces the baddies with no help from the citizens except his Quaker wife.

 

As a response to High Noon John Wayne and Howard Hawks made Rio Bravo which took the same situation – a solitary hero facing a bunch of bad dudes – and reverses the concept by having the sheriff refuse the help of the willing but untrained citizenry, who in the end show up anyway.

 

Both are brilliant American films, but one would be required in film class with the sheriff as a protagonist; the other is a Saturday afternoon yippee in which the sheriff is a hero. “Protagonist” is film school; “hero” is old school. High Noon is in minimalist black-and-white and Rio Bravo is in glorious Technicolor. High Noon is heavy with introspection and existential philosophy, but Rio Bravo is pretty high in thinky-ness too.

 

What High Noon really lacks, though, is Angie Dickinson throwing a flowerpot through a saloon window.

 

Both films were scored by Dimitri Tiompkin. Wayne and Hawks were hawks, all right, but they wanted their favorite Russian to make the music, and no one could depict the old west as well as Tiompkin, who wrote in his autobiography:

 

steppe is a steppe is a steppe.... The problems of the cowboy and the Cossack are very similar. They share a love of nature and a love of animals. Their courage and their philosophical attitudes are similar, and the steppes of Russia are much like the prairies of America.

 

The point in all this is that neither Russians nor anyone else should act like Communists or Putin-istas through acts of canceling, of censorship, and we’ve been getting some of that lately. Recently we have seen pictures of silly people pouring Russian vodka into sewers, which neglects the reality that the Russians were already paid for the vodka. But some folks never allow an opportunity for posturing to go by.

 

Many thousands of Russians are in prison right now for protesting Mr. Putin’s illegal and unrestrained invasion of Ukraine. They represent many more thousands of Russians who agree with them but are not yet ready to be beaten in the streets, humiliated, arrested, imprisoned, and tortured. They are not posturing. They are being censored and, in some cases, canceled – really canceled - for disapproving of the mass murder of their Ukrainian neighbors.

 

When anyone suggests canceling or censorship, let us remember that the First Amendment (Russia doesn’t have one of those) is all about not canceling or censoring.

 

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