
Everywhere an Oink Oink: An Embittered, Dyspeptic and Accurate Report of Forty Years in Hollywood
By David Mamet
Simon & Schuster, 256 pp.
When youβve pummeled the world with as many plays, novels, films, books, cartoons, TV shows, essay collections and radioactive interview remarks as 75-year-old David Mamet, you end up becoming many David Mamets to the public.
And in an age of influencers, each influences the image of the others.
To the theater community, for instance, Mamet remains one of the preeminent American playwrights of the late 20th century, the streetwise master of Mamet Speakβthe foul-mouthed, gritty vernacular of success-challenged griftersβand the prize-winning author of modern classics such as Glengarry Glen Ross, American Buffalo and Speed-the-Plow.
Prize-winning, but not beloved. Mamet the culture warriorβthe tough-guy Chicagoan who praised Donald Trump βfor a great job as presidentβ and announced his shift from left to right in a famous 2008 Village Voice piece, βWhy I Am No Longer a βBrain-Dead Liberalβββhas turned many in the mainly left theater world against him. From anointment as the bard of the American Dreamβs dark side, Mamet now strikes some as a dark-side figure himself. Los Angeles Times theater critic Charles McNulty recently accused Mamet of βright-wing conspiracies and unhinged demagoguery,β calling him a βneocon crankβ whoβs βhardly been a criticsβ darling in his late career.β Thatβs a sad comedown for a playwright once acclaimed for capturing the unvarnished communication of characters spoiling for a fight.

David Mamet. Photo credit: David Shankbone (cc by-sa 3.0)
To another constituency, that of the center-right Jewish community, the author of The Wicked Son: Anti-Semitism, Self-Hatred and the Jews (2006) and other writings on his ethnic heritage comes across as a tribal warrior, defending Jewish tradition and Israel with fierce consistencyβif occasional hyperbole. In The Secret Knowledge: On the Dismantling of American Culture (2011), Mamet wrote that βIsraelis would like to live in peace within their borders; the Arabs would like to kill them all.β But to Jews on the left, his positioning on many issues within the tribal fold, as well as his attitudes on unrelated domestic issues (opposing COVID-19 protections, disputing climate change), make him problematic, to say the least.
And what of Hollywood, the subject of his newest βembittered, dyspepticβ report, for whom Mamet has been writing and directing films for more than 40 years? (Weβll get to the βaccurateβ part later on.) The positive take on Mamet is that he was a go-to pro for decades, the fastest typewriter in the West as script-doctor, reviser and writer. The Verdict (1982) and Wag the Dog (1997) earned him Oscar nominations for screenwriting, and critics highly praised some of his directed films, such as House of Games (1987). The downside? The industry word that Mamet canβt take criticism and clashes frequently with producers. As a result, a fair amount of his work has gone unproduced.
Has the ornery playwright who once called critics John Simon and Frank Rich βthe syphilis and gonorrhea of the American theaterβ mellowed?
Through all the multiple Mamets, one personality remains constant: a bold, aggressive, exceedingly confident, superbly well-read, arguably narcissistic provocateur who criticizes American culture in a contemptuous mode so savage it might be dubbed Higher Tourette Syndrome.
Now itβs Hollywoodβs turn to take it on the chin. Consider the title Everywhere an Oink Oink. Unlike Old MacDonald, our distinguished author thinks heβs been working in a sty for 40 years, and heβs ready to roast the inhabitants. Has the ornery playwright who once called prominent drama critics John Simon and Frank Rich βthe syphilis and gonorrhea of the American theaterβ mellowed?
A Mamet character might answer, βNo f—– way!β
βI am willing to think ill of anyone,β he begins this disjointed assemblage of anecdotes, screeds, scrambled memories and dead-on attacks, βso I suppose I have an open mind.β Everywhere an Oink Oink reads far less coherently than many of Mametβs earlier nonfiction books and essays. The prose and organization can be a mess. Non sequiturs dominate the book, as if Mamet tossed all his tales and observations on index cards up in the air, then wrote them up as he picked them off the floor.
Mametβs enemy number one? Producers. Theyβre βcriminal doltsβ and βvillainsβ who, βlike their kind in Washington, produce nothing.β Actors donβt get off any better. βIf the shots are correctly described and engineered into a captivating progression,β Mamet writes, βit makes no difference what the actor says. (Watch a film with sound off, and youβll see.)β
Whom else does Mamet strafe? βActing schools load the actor with analyses that clarify nothing,β he explains. βThey serve only to kill spontaneity.β Critics? Theyβre βenraged by productivity,β their βvery vehemenceβ an βindictment of their talentless, loveless, drab, and pointless lives.β (Ouch.)
As he rains invective on the Hollywood zeitgeist, his culture-warrior complaints merge with his professional ones. βThe destruction of the Biz by Diversity Commissars is not the cause, but a result, of corporate degeneracy,β he rails, lashing out at βDiversity Pornβ and βDiversity Capos.β In his era, βThe Theater was a meritocracy.β Now, βThe white hegemony in a century of pictures has been replaced by a black hegemony.β (This claim statistically makes no sense, but maybe Mamet isnβt thinking statistically.) βThe call for equity is a demand for reward without achievement,β he declares, βand the Studios that heed it are, consequently, turning out garbage.β Really? Black Panther?
Being Mametβa funny guy who knows everything about the bizβhe does score some points. He condemns the endless opening roll call of investor logos that moviegoers now endure and the tiresome producer credits at the end. He shares great lines from others, such as Joe Mankiewiczβs quip that, in Hollywood, an associate producer is anyone whoβd βassociate with a producer.β
You can also tune out the dyspepsia and focus on the gossip. The man has known everybody. Sean Connery told him, βI never made a penny off of Bond.β Tina Sinatra told him he reminded her of her father. Kubrick told him Kirk Douglas was a βpain in the assβ on Spartacus. The wall of Walt Disneyβs inner office, a friend confided, depicted Disney characters involved in an orgy. Thereβs lots more of that, and itβs fun. Alternatively, you can revel in Mametβs endless love for puns, some dopey (βAnn-Margret is the only girl in Hollywood who still has her hyphenβ), some on the money (βHollywood is where Nope Springs Eternalβ).
Readers who treasure Mametβs four-square defense of Jews will find passages to like: βContemporary swine have trotted out the old anti-Semitic canards that the Jews control this or that. If only. Further, the indictment doesnβt specify in what ways Jews exercise this supposed control, and how it injures the ranters who, universally, seem to have done right well in Show Biz whoever controls itβ¦perhaps thanks are more appropriate than invective.β
That said, Mamet exhibits an odd sense of humor about Jewish history. One of the many strange cartoons that festoon the text shows a theater signboard for Shoah. Written below the movie title: βNo one will be seated during the last four million Jews.β
The key problem with many of Mametβs observationsβto come to that βAccuracyβ in the subtitleβis that theyβre just dumb and false. Example: βInequity, Gender Politics, Feminism, and like doctrines are like modern art: a first glance is sufficient. Thereβs no information to be gained from an in-depth study.β F. Scott Fitzgerald βwasnβt fit to puke into the same toilet as Hemingway.β Stanislavskiβs classic works, An Actor Prepares and Building a Character, βwere a bunch of drivel.β
Mametβs not dumb, so why does he write such things? The kindest way to respond to Everywhere an Oink Oink may be to see it as an elegy from a crotchety major talent embittered by his endgame. Should we forgive Mamet the vitriol because he feels excommunicated from parts of the theater and movie world and this inspires his Lear-like laments?
βI began my career in Hollywood at the top,β Mamet writes, but now he describes himself as βthe last cogent survivor of Old Hollywood,β suffering from βsenescence,β βsidelined because of my politics (respect for the Constitution, etc.),β the βHermit of Santa Monica, shunning a world that has moved on, and to which his name is as the mention of Herodotus to illiterate youth.β
Socrates, Kant and many another philosopher thought βknowing thyselfβ the most important of ethical accomplishments. βWas I arrogant in my fifty years in Show Biz?β Mamet asks. βYou bet. But only toward my inferiors. A wiser man might have Gone Further if he had learned not humility but diplomacy. I am not a wiser man.β
Agreed.
Carlin Romano, Momentβs Critic-at-Large, teaches media theory and philosophy at the University of Pennsylvania.Β
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