Michael McClure

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Michael McClure
File:GloriaGrahamMichael McMclure2004.jpg
Photograph by Gloria Graham during the video taping of "Add-Verse", 2004
Born (1932-10-20) October 20, 1932 (age 91)
Marysville, Kansas
Occupation Poet, songwriter, Critic, Playwright, and Professor
Nationality American

Michael McClure (born October 20, 1932) is an American poet, playwright, songwriter, and novelist. After moving to San Francisco as a young man, he found fame as one of the five poets (including Allen Ginsberg) who read at the famous San Francisco Six Gallery reading in 1955 rendered in barely fictionalized terms in Jack Kerouac's The Dharma Bums. He soon became a key member of the Beat Generation and is immortalized as "Pat McLear" in Kerouac's Big Sur.

Biography

Educated at the University of Wichita (later Wichita State University), the University of Arizona, and San Francisco State College,[1] McClure's first book of poetry, Passage, was published in 1956 by small press publisher Jonathan Williams.[2] His poetry is heavily infused with an awareness of nature, especially in the animal consciousness that often lies dormant in mankind. Not only an awareness of nature, but the poems are organized in an organic fashion, continuing with his appreciation of nature's purity. Stan Brakhage, friend of McClure, stated in Chicago Review that:

"McClure always, and more and more as he grows older, gives his reader access to the verbal impulses of his whole body's thought (as distinct from simply and only brain-think, as it is with most who write). He invents a form for the cellular messages of his, a form which will feel as if it were organic on the page; and he sticks with it across his life..."[3]

McClure has since published eight books of plays and four collections of essays, including essays on Bob Dylan and the environment. His fourteen books of poetry include Jaguar Skies, Dark Brown, Huge Dreams, Rebel Lions, Rain Mirror and Plum Stones. McClure famously read selections of his Ghost Tantra poetry series to the caged lions in the San Francisco Zoo. His work as a novelist includes the autobiographical The Mad Cub and The Adept.

On January 14, 1967, McClure read at the epochal Human Be-In event in Golden Gate Park in San Francisco and transcended his Beat label to become an important member of the 1960s Hippie counterculture. Barry Miles famously referred to McClure as "the Prince of the San Francisco Scene".[4]

McClure would later court controversy as a playwright with his play The Beard. The play tells of a fictional encounter in the blue velvet of eternity between Billy the Kid and Jean Harlow and is a theatrical exploration of his "Meat Politics" theory, in which all human beings are "bags of meat."

Other plays include Josephine The Mouse Singer and VKTMS. He had an eleven-year run as playwright-in-residence with San Francisco's Magic Theatre where his operetta "Minnie Mouse and the Tap-Dancing Buddha" had an extended run. He has made two television documentaries – The Maze and September Blackberries – and is featured in several films including The Last Waltz (dir. Martin Scorsese) where he reads from The Canterbury Tales; Beyond the Law (dir. Norman Mailer); and, most prominently, The Hired Hand (dir. Peter Fonda).

McClure was a close friend of The Doors lead singer Jim Morrison and is generally acknowledged as having been responsible for promoting Morrison as a poet. McClure performed spoken word poetry concerts with Doors keyboard player Ray Manzarek up until Ray's death and several CDs of their work have been released. McClure is the author of the Afterword in Jerry Hopkins's and Danny Sugerman's seminal Doors biography, No One Here Gets Out Alive. McClure has also released CDs of his work with minimalist composer Terry Riley. McClure’s songs include "Mercedes Benz," popularized by Janis Joplin, and new songs which were performed by Riders on the Storm, a band that consisted of original Doors members Ray Manzarek and Robbie Krieger.

McClure's journalism has been featured in Rolling Stone, Vanity Fair, The L.A. Times and The San Francisco Chronicle. He has received numerous awards, including a Guggenheim Fellowship, an Obie Award for Best Play, an NEA grant, the Alfred Jarry Award and a Rockefeller grant for playwriting. McClure is still active as a poet, essayist and playwright and lives with his second wife, Amy, in the San Francisco Bay Area. He has one daughter from his first marriage to Joanna McClure.

The Beard

The Beard is a notably controversial modern play, that explores the nature of seduction and attraction, as it portrays an explosive confrontation between two legendary figures, Jean Harlow, the platinum blonde movie star, and Billy the Kid, the baby-faced outlaw with a hair trigger. They are attracted to each other, but their egos get in the way. She mocks his masculinity, and he tells her she is envious of his beauty. This battle diminishes as they realize that since they are alone together they are free to shuck their burdening facades, and give in to what they’re truly feeling. The torrent of their unleashed passions leads to a final scene of great controversy, as the play comes to a climax with an act of explicit sexual intimacy between the cowboy and the starlet.[5][6]

McLure says that he was inspired to write the play by a vision that came to him of a poster advertising a boxing match between Jean Harlow and Billy the Kid. Before he began to write, he went to the printer that created boxing posters in San Francisco, and had the poster of his vision printed up. Then he says “I put the poster up on fences, windows, and in liquor stores where boxing posters would be, and put one up behind my head in the room I worked in at the time, which overlooked the bridge and the ocean. I could feel the presence of Billy the Kid and Jean Harlow broadcasting from the beautiful poster to the back of my head out towards the ocean. They began enacting the play and I began typing it up. They’d say a few pages, I just typed it. I thought it was a nature poem about mammal sexuality and mammal love. It could have been a tantric ritual.”

McLure happened to meet British playwright, Harold Pinter, who then gave words of support to the play, which helped it become noticed and gave courage to those who staged its first production in San Francisco in 1965.[7]

It debuted at the Actor’s Workshop Theatre in San Francisco on the December 18, 1965. A second performance followed at Bill Graham’s Fillmore Auditorium on the July 24, 1966. With the Fillmore’s high profile, the play attracted an audience of 700. After success at the Fillmore, the following month the play opened at The Committee, a theatre nightclub in the North Beach area of the city, where it was hoped it would enjoy a lengthy run.

Now aware of the play’s controversial elements, the San Francisco Police Department secretly tape-recorded the first two performances and secretly filmed the third performance. Having failed in their attempts to successfully censor Allen Ginsberg’s Howl, the performances of Lenny Bruce and the San Francisco Mime Troupe, the police department was intent to succeed this time.

At the end of that third performance on August 8, 1966—only the fifth time the play had been performed in public—the San Francisco Police Department raided the venue and arrested actors Billie Dixon (Jean) and Richard Bright (Billy). Under Penal Code Section 647(a) the pair were initially charged with “obscenity”, then “conspiracy to commit a felony” and ultimately with “lewd or dissolute conduct in a public place.”

The American Civil Liberties Union took the case and represented the actors. Twelve days after the arrests, the play was performed at The Florence Schwimley Little Theatre, in Berkeley. The audience included more than a hundred ACLU-invited expert witnesses, including political activists, academics, writers and even members of the clergy. Seven members of the Berkeley Police Department and the District Attorney’s office were also present. Five days later, the city of Berkeley brought its own charges of “lewd or dissolute conduct” against the play. It became a theatrical cause célèbre, until finally, after months of legal deliberation, Judge Joseph Karesh of the San Francisco Superior Court ruled that while the play did contain material of a troublesome nature, it was not appropriate to prosecute such work under the law. All the charges were dropped and the subsequent appeal lost.

Unable to perform in the San Francisco area, the play moved to Los Angeles, where the play's attempt at a run was disrupted by the arrest of both Dixon and Bright at curtain down of fourteen consecutive performances. McClure recalls, “The actor and the actress actually got two standing ovations, one at the end of the play and the second when the police hauled them out of the door and into the waiting wagon and took them off to book them.”[citation needed]

The Beard eventually transferred to New York where in the 1967–1968 Obie Theatre Awards, it won Best Director and Best Actress. It has since played successfully all over the world and is a favorite with American university drama groups. It is interesting to note that the play has enjoyed particular success in London, having been produced there twice. In 1968, actor Rip Torn directed a notable production at The Royal Court Theatre and it has most recently been revived at a smaller venue, the Old Red Lion Theatre in 2006 under the direction of Nic Saunders with new music by Terry Riley. The play is currently out of print in both the US and UK. Saunders would collaborate with McClure a second time in 2008 on the award-winning short film Curses and Sermons which would mark the first time McClure had authorised a filmed adaptation of one of his poems.

California College of Arts and Crafts

Michael McClure was a popular, celebrated professor of English at the California College of Arts and Crafts (now renamed California College of the Arts), in Oakland, California for many years.

Bibliography

  • Passage (1956)
  • For Artaud (1959)
  • Hymns to St. Geryon and Other Poems (1959)
  • The New Book/A Book of Torture (1961)
  • Dark Brown (1961)
  • Meat Science Essays (1963)
  • The Blossom; or Billy the Kid (1964)
  • The Beard (1965)
  • Poisoned Wheat (1965)
  • Unto Caesar (1965)
  • Love Lion Book (1966)
  • Freewheelin Frank (with Frank Reynolds) (1967)
  • The Sermons of Jean Harlow and the Curses of Billy the Kid (1968)
  • Hail Thee Who Play (1968)
  • Muscled Apple Swift (1968)
  • Little Odes and The Raptors (1969)
  • The Surge (1969)
  • Star (1970)
  • The Mad Cub (1970)
  • The Adept (1971)
  • Gargoyle Cartoons (1971)
  • The Mammals – includes The Feast, The Blossom; or, Billy the Kid, and Pillow (1972)
  • The Book of Joanna (1973)
  • Solstice Blossom (1973)
  • The Grabbing of the Fairy (1973)
  • Rare Angel (1974)
  • A Fist-Full (1956–57) (1974)
  • Gorf (1974)
  • September Blackberries (1974)
  • Jaguar Skies (1975)
  • The Last American Valentine: Illustrated poems to seduce and destroyWrite Bloody Publishing anthology (2008)
  • Mysteriosos and Other Poems (2010)
  • Ghost Tantras (2013) ISBN 9780872866270
  • Mephistos and Other Poems (Forthcoming from City Lights 2016) ISBN 9780872867284

Selected filmography

  • Two (1965) – as himself
  • Be In (1967) – as himself
  • Beyond The Law (1968) – as actor
  • The Hired Hand (1971) – as actor
  • The Last Waltz (1978) – as himself
  • The Source (1999) – as himself
  • Love Her Madly (2002) – as himself
  • The Third Mind (2006) – as himself
  • Curses and Sermons (2008) – based on his work

References

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  2. Charters, Ann. "Michael McClure." The Portable Beat Reader, 1992. Print.
  3. Brakhage, Stan. "Chicago Review Article." Chicago Review. 47/48. 1/4 (Winter 2001/Spring 2002): 38-41. Print.
  4. Miles, Barry. In The Sixties. Jonathan Cape Books, 2002, p. 262.
  5. McClure, Michael. The Beard. Grove Press. 1967. ISBN 978-0394174389
  6. Simonson, Robert. Ehren, Christine. “Sacharow Resurrects McClure's The Beard at La MaMa, Sept. 23”. 23 September 1999. Playbill. [1]
  7. Edwardes, Jane. “Time Out talks to beat poet Michael McClure ahead of the London revival of his play The Beard, which US authorities tried to ban for obscene content when it was first staged in 1965”. Time Out, London. 18 July 2006. [2]

External links