Credit: Jennifer May

Your Broadway play wins a Pulitzer Prize, a Tony, and a Drama Desk Award. You write and direct a film adaptation, which is nominated for five Academy Awards and as many Golden Globes. What do you do for an encore?

If youโ€™re โ€œDoubtโ€ author John Patrick Shanley, you do what youโ€™ve always done: Write something utterly different.

The playwright, screenwriter, and director is presenting a staged reading of his latest play, โ€œPirate,โ€ as part of New York Stage and Filmโ€™s 25th season at Vassar Collegeโ€™s Powerhouse Theater. Emerging from a six-hour rehearsal, he blinks in the sunlight and speaks in a gravelly rasp with the unmistakable cadence of his native Bronx. โ€œIt got nice out. Letโ€™s walk.โ€

Shanley strolls across campus at an easy lope. His manner is quietly confident, verging on cockiness; this is far from his first interview. He can be gracious, even courtly, but thereโ€™s also a sense of some inner lava on permanent simmer.

The youngest of five, he grew up in East Tremont, a working-class neighborhood full of Italian and Irish immigrants. His father was a meat-packer, his mother a telephone operator. The home was tumultuous, and Shanley was often in neighborhood fistfights. He started school at St. Anthonyโ€™s, a Catholic grammar school that served as his model for โ€œDoubt.โ€

When Shanley was 11, he started writing โ€œkinda sorta Edgar Allan Poe poetry, gangster 1920s machine-gun kind of stuff.โ€ By 13, heโ€™d written a four-line poem about the Holocaust that caught his teachersโ€™ attention. โ€œPeople took notice of me,โ€ he says. โ€œThey thought I had something.โ€

That wasnโ€™t the only reason people took notice: The rebellious teenager spent virtually every afternoon in detention at Cardinal Spellman High School. The poet and the pugilist came together when he worked on the stage crew of โ€œan amazing productionโ€ of โ€œCyrano de Bergerac.โ€ โ€œI loved the depiction of the poet as the toughest guy in the roomโ€“and a freak,โ€ Shanley says with a wild, braying laugh. โ€œAnd that a poet can be in the theater. And I liked colored lights.โ€

Midway through high school, Shanley was expelled. He spent the next two years at a Catholic-run private school in Harrisville, New Hampshire, which he describes as โ€œ500 acres on top of a mountain…snowy, windsweptโ€”thatโ€™s all it is, is winter.โ€ There were 55 students, all boys. โ€œIt was very intense, very different from the Bronx,โ€ Shanley says. Here, too, teachers encouraged his talent for writing.

He enrolled in New York University, but, characteristically restless, dropped out after a semester to join the Marines. After a two-year tour of duty, he returned to NYU and took โ€œevery writing class they had. The last one I took was a playwriting class. As soon as I started writing dialogue, I knew that was what I did.โ€ The final project was writing a one-act play. Shanley wrote a full-length instead; it was produced three weeks later.

Inflamed by his newfound passion, he churned out play after play, with Off-Broadway premieres nearly every year at such theaters as the Vineyard, Theater of the Open Eye, and Ensemble Studio Theater. โ€œI earned on the average $75 to $100 a year as a playwright for 10 years,โ€ he says without irony. He supported his playwriting habit with a series of blue-collar jobs: unloading trucks, painting houses, and working as a moving man, elevator operator, bartender, locksmith, and glazier. At 34, he went to work in the licensing department of Dramatists Play Service. โ€œIโ€™ve never had another job to this day,โ€ he pronounces with deep satisfaction.

Write or Starve
Shanleyโ€™s next production was โ€œDanny and the Deep Blue Sea,โ€ an explosive two-hander about a volatile guy from the Bronx and the equally bruised, angry woman he meets in a bar. A joint production of Circle Repertory Company and Circle in the Square, it starred John Turturro and June Stein. Shanley, who seems to remember the details of every paycheck, earned $5,000. That and a $17,000 NEA grant allowed him to patch together a living for over a year while he explored a new genre, having made a commitment to quit taking day jobs. โ€œIt was write or starve.

I thought, โ€˜I better learn to write screenplays if I want to make a living,โ€™โ€ he says.
He read lots of screenplays and wrote two on spec. โ€œAnd they made them,โ€ he marvels, still sounding awed. Five Corners was optioned by the first person who read it, director Tony Bill, with ex-Beatle George Harrison as his executive producer; it starred Jodie Foster and Tim Robbins. โ€œPeople kept telling me, โ€˜It doesnโ€™t happen this way,โ€™ but it did,โ€ Shanley says.

Meanwhile, he finished a second screenplay, The Bride and the Beast, instructing his agent to send it to director Lawrence Kasdan, who liked Shanleyโ€™s plays. She also sent it to Norman Jewison. โ€œBoth of them wanted it,โ€ Shanley recalls. โ€œNorman responded first, and a week later, Larry Kasdan called him and asked him to step aside so he could direct it. So I knew then that there was no way Norman was going to let that screenplay go.โ€ Jewison shot the film and released it under a new title: Moonstruck.

Shortly after it opened, Shanley opened his mailbox at the tenement where he was living and took out a royalty check. It was for $85,000. โ€œI just knew that my life had changed,โ€ he says. โ€œI was 36 years old, Iโ€™d been living below the poverty line for my entire life. Suddenly I could buy anything they had in the store.โ€

The wild ride continued with six Academy Award nominations, including wins for Cher, Olympia Dukakis, and Shanley, whose acceptance speech included the much-quoted line, โ€œI want to thank everybody who ever punched or kissed me in my life, and everybody I ever punched or kissed.โ€ (There may be long lines in both columns: The former Bronx brawler, twice married and divorced, has dated a string of celebrities including actress Kim Cattrall and model Paula Devicq.)

Shanleyโ€™s Hollywood track record veered from commercial fiascos The January Man and Joe Versus the Volcano to the much-lauded Doubt. Heโ€™s never been tempted to move to Los Angeles. โ€œI could have just kept on earning a lot of money,โ€ he says, but โ€œI was very concerned with being able to write in a way that was real for the rest of my life. This is what I do.โ€

As a playwright, Shanley refuses to play it safe. Along with his Pulitzer/Tony/Drama Desk triple crown, heโ€™s garnered some brutal reviews. In his โ€œButcher of Broadwayโ€ critic incarnation, New York Times columnist Frank Rich sharpened his cleaver on Shanley so often it started to seem like a personal grudge. Shanley always came back punching, and once sent an unsolicited letter to a younger playwright whose debut had been panned by Rich, assuring her it was a backhanded compliment, โ€œlike being blacklisted by Nixon.โ€

Deeply Different
โ€œPirateโ€ is the 13th script heโ€™s tried out at the Powerhouse, his artistic home since New York Stage & Filmโ€™s inaugural season, which included his โ€œSavage in Limbo.โ€ Itโ€™s a challenging work, a complex political allegory sharing a bed with a surreal comedy, full of music-hall accents and a central image of blinding which may allude to Shanleyโ€™s ongoing fight with glaucoma. The playwrightโ€™s bold choices and unmistakable dialogue thrill some audience members and seem to infuriate others. Midway through the reading, a man in the first row walks out, crossing the black-box stage so close to the actors that Fisher Stevens stops in mid-sentence and waits for him to reach the exit. When Stevens shrugs and continues the scene, the audience claps.

โ€œThis play is deeply, wildly different from my last, which was deeply, wildly different than the one before that,โ€ Shanley says. โ€œYou donโ€™t dream the same thing every night. Why would you write the same thing every day?โ€

Besides, he adds, โ€œIโ€™m not the same. I am what I was, plus what I am. You have to find a way to get to the next step on the road.โ€

Shanleyโ€™s writing process usually starts with โ€œa title, an image, or a room that I think has power. With โ€˜Doubt,โ€™ all I had was the title. I didnโ€™t know the subject matter, didnโ€™t know it was about nuns.โ€ What interested him was the state of uncertainty, something he feels is alarmingly absent from modern debate. The idea developed through images of black and white: the nunsโ€™ habits, the first black child in an all-white school. Color is extremely important to Shanley; he often describes a set in meticulous detail before he begins writing lines. โ€œI really design it,โ€ he says. โ€œI try to keep people out of the room for as long as possible, then they walk in and the play starts.โ€

He was equally specific about decorating his Manhattan apartment, choosing colors so vivid they rated a spread in the New York Times โ€œHomeโ€ section, and his cottage upstate. After staying with friends and at local B&Bs for many years, Shanley purchased a tract of land on a fishing creek in Ulster County. He didnโ€™t build on that site, but planted some tulips he hoped would come up every spring; the local wildlife thought otherwise. Twelve years ago, he bought a cabin on a mountaintop near the Rondout Reservoir. His teenage sons Nick and Frank, adopted during his marriage to actress Jayne Haynes, grew up with the country house. โ€œThey love it,โ€ says Shanley, who also enjoys using it as a writing retreat. โ€œIโ€™d go up there for seven days alone. It was utter isolationโ€”very, very remote. The house isnโ€™t on a dirt road, itโ€™s off a dirt road.โ€

โ€œI like the Hudson Valley. I always think of Washington Irving, and the Hudson River School of painting, that sort of stately magnetism the place has.โ€ John Patrick Shanley gazes at his interviewer, amused and a little impatient. โ€œYou done with me yet? Thereโ€™s a barbecue.โ€

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *