A PLAY REVIEW: Conversations with a Tramp

 

     The production of the play Conversation with a Tramp has been wandering around the country for about 9 years.  It might, one of these days, come to your town, so I thought I'd share with you a few of the reflections and feelings it evoked in me when I saw it some four years ago at the University of Nevada' Student Union.    

     I went to see Conversation with a Tramp with considerable skepticism.  The play does not not focus on an imaginary character but on John Muir, a historical figure who was still living, crusading, and sauntering the American West at the beginning of this century.  To be sure, Muir's life provides a rich enough drama for a sensitive artist, but one learns from experience that, more often than not, such dramatizations fail; many works of art successfully display historical or artistic truths, but only a few manage to combine both.

     Moreover, this production, the audience was told, was going to be a one‑man show.  Lee Stetson collected the materials for this play, wrote it, and was going to perform it, alone, for some two hours.  The task seemed insurmountable.  To begin with, to succeed, Mr. Stetson had to be a first‑rate historian‑‑he had to be almost as familiar with Muir's life as he was with his own.  Then he would need to immerse himself in his hero's emotions and personality, to pick the really meaningful episodes of Muir's life, render them in a play form, and act them so well as to sustain, single‑handedly, his audience's attention with this life of an eloquent "tramp."

     I had, besides, some apprehensions about the play which stemmed from my own personal background.  I still believe‑‑even now‑‑that the Sierra Nevadas are among the most beautiful spots in North America, and that they provide some of the best places where solitude might be found by "nerve‑shaken" city people.  Moreover, Muir's life‑‑that strange combination of spirituality and practicality, of a solitude seeker and of a political crusader‑‑holds for me a bit of the fascination which the lofty peaks of Yosemite held for him.  Every human being who seeks to confer some meaning to his or her life would do well, I long thought, to study and emulate in a small measure the life of that irreverent vagabond.  I read therefore much that Muir wrote and which has been written about him and, like it or not, had some preconceptions about what should, and should not, be selected to highlight Muir's life. 

     So, you see, I would be a particular difficult customer for Mr. Stetson and his "one‑man tour de force."  I arrived five minutes before the hour, paid the required five dollars, positioned myself at a strategic place from which I could escape at a moment's notice, and steeled myself for the worst. 

     But this lifelong friend of mine‑‑skepticism‑‑failed me this time. Conversation with a Tramp turned out to be a sweet surprise; embodying that very combination of historical accuracy and first‑class art which is so difficult to achieve.  In fact, in my view this play deserves a far wider exposure than it seems to have received so far.


     The play takes place at Muir's study in Martinez, California.  We meet him five days before Christmas Eve of the year 1913.  He is 75 years old, with white flowing beard and sparse hair.  Still, the old fire, although somewhat subdued by his bodily decline, is burning bright.  He has been fighting for years now to save his beloved Hetch Hetchy Valley from being turned into a water reservoir for the city of San Francisco, and tonight the final, irreversible decision regarding the valley's fate will be made by President Woodrow Wilson.  Try to imagine yourself, an old man, fighting tirelessly for something which for you is not a mere valley but a spiritual shrine‑‑perhaps even God's conception of the beautiful‑‑at home with a few friends, waiting, at the twilight of your journey, for Wilson's decision.  A decision which will be made, moreover, by a man you consider a cold history professor, who (unlike Teddy Roosevelt, Muir's one‑time hiking companion) does not understand the spiritual meaning of this struggle, who never visited this shrine, and who, even if he did visit it, would have probably come up with some sacrilege like "you have seen one Redwood, you have seen them all," as one of his successors in office one day would.

     One might be indifferent to wildness and Muir's values; one might support nuclear explosions or the future passing away of the bald eagle; but one can't help, during the two hours of Lee Stetson's solo performance, seeing things through Muir's clear eyes. 

     In the first act we are taken back to Muir's childhood and his strictly religious upringing in Wisconsin, to his years of solitude in the Sierra Nevadas, to that stormy night which Muir spent, almost drunken with nature's magnificence, at the top of a gigantic Douglas fir, absorbing it all in a way that is so characteristic of children but which is uncommon among adults.  And through it all, during the play's first act, there is the underlying, repeating theme of waiting for the final answer about Hetch Hetchy Valley's fate. 

     Despite the odds, at the end of the first act the Old Man is hopeful‑‑Wilson will not veto the bill.  One gets the feeling that Muir can't, he simply can't, believe that the "temple‑destroyers," after all these years of toil and hope, will have the final word.

     But they do.  In the second act Mr. Stetson faces the formidable task of creating the required change of mood that this final, heart‑rending defeat must have caused, yet without engaging in uncharacteristic oversentimentality. 

Again, I don't think this subtle change could be conveyed more effectively than it has been conveyed in the performance I saw.  Mr. Stetson takes us back, for example, to Muir's temporary blindness and the profound transformation that those few months of darkness entailed.  If only given his eyesight again, this time he would surely know how to live and enjoy God's handiwork!  And again, whether we like it or not, Mr. Stetson compels us to ponder:  Must men be struck with temporary blindness to see the light?

     It cannot all be retold here, so I shall only describe one more touching episode from Stetson's play.  Towards the end of the second act, Muir goes on to reminiscence about his childhood escape from a contaminated well.  He has been digging for weeks deeper and deeper into the earth, away from the sunshine and nature's choir of wild things.  One morning, his father and brother drop him in a bucket down the well, which is by now 80‑feet deep.  Unknown to them, poisonous gas has seeped into its bottom.  Muir is immediately overwhelmed by the noxious fumes and is unable to summon enough strength to ask to be lifted up.  And, by this time, he is out of the bucket.  If I remember the story correctly, only the sight of an oak branch he sees above him as he collapses against the wall enables him to feebly call to them to lift him up, and only his father's desperate pleas can exert a strong enough influence on him in his semi‑conscious state to step into the bucket and be saved.

     Each of us must decide for himself whether he too, as Stetson unquestionably implies, dwells in a poisoned well, and if so, wonder:  What, in 1991, could guide us up‑‑as the oak branch and his father's voice guided Muir‑‑to the pure, unpoisoned, sunshine air?

     Conversation with a Tramp, we are told, is available for production in other locations.  To do so, you need to contact Lee Stetson at Box 811, Yosemite, California, 95389.

Back to Moti Nissani's Publications