Contemporary politics,local and international current affairs, science, music and extracts from the Queensland Newspaper "THE WORKER" documenting the proud history of the Labour Movement.
MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Tuesday, 20 March 2018
Fran Lebowitz: 'You do not know anyone as stupid as Donald Trump'
Fran Lebowitz: ‘The only people who live in Australia are those who came to Australia and couldn’t face the trip back.’
Photograph: Cybele Malinowski/Sydney Opera House
Be grateful you didn’t sit next to Fran Lebowitz on the plane from New York
to Melbourne. The trip was the longest flight she had taken, and
therefore the longest time she managed to go without a cigarette. When I
ask if it is her first time in Australia, she says: “That makes it
sound as if there’s going to be a second time.” She surprised herself by
not being taken off the flight in handcuffs for assaulting fellow
(first-class) passengers or smoking in the toilets.
“I was like a child on the plane, asking the flight attendant, ‘Are
we there?’ And she said, ‘Are you nuts? We’ve only been flying for four
hours.’ The only people who live in Australia are those who came to
Australia and couldn’t face the trip back – I’m actually one of those
people.”
Lebowitz has been invited to Australia several times but, as a
longtime smoker, 30 hours on a flight without a cigarette was out of the
question. But she was persuaded to perform shows (which quickly sold
out) at the recent All About Women festival at the Sydney Opera House,
and a Wheeler Centre talk in Melbourne. She got though the flight
without being arrested by chewing lots of gum and being able to smoke
during a brief stop in LA.
Before our meeting, I spot her standing on the footpath – smoking,
naturally – in her sartorial uniform of Levi 501s, a white shirt and
custom-made dark blazer. She glances up the street, towards Melbourne’s
Fawkner Park, as if she’s not quite sure where she is or how she got
here. (She later asks me what day it is.)
Once we sit down to talk it’s immediately apparent that talking is
what Lebowitz does best. That’s a big call, given the New Yorker is an
author, social commentator, public speaker and even actor, appearing in
shows such as Law and Order. She’s such a good talker that when I go to a
nearby restaurant to do some work on my laptop after our interview is
over, she sees me, sits next to me and talks for another hour. (“Let me
know if I’m disturbing you,” she offers politely).
But first, during her interview with Guardian Australia, Lebowitz
wants to make it clear that she takes no responsibility for the state of
American politics. She had just arrived in Melbourne and was having
breakfast in her hotel when a man next to her saw she was reading the
paper. “And this guy started talking to me, I was reading something
about Trump, and he said, ‘You elected him!’ And I said ‘I did not!’”
Lebowitz becomes indignant. “I mean, I did not. It’s not my fault. I
know you [Australians] are very upset about it. But we are more upset.
Even my friends – I have a lot of friends in New York who are not
American – were blaming me. I spent a year of my life before the
election, going around the country, talking about this stuff. It’s not
my fault. I am blameless. I am not a perfect person. I am not blameless
in life but I do not know one single person who voted for him.”
Fran Lebowitz at Diane von Furstenberg’s International
Women’s Day celebration in March. Photograph: Angela
Pham/BFA/REX/Shutterstock
Echoing the reported opinion of former US secretary of state Rex Tillerson,
Lebowitz thinks the biggest danger of Trump is that he is a moron.
“Everyone says he is crazy – which maybe he is – but the scarier thing
about him is that he is stupid. You do not know anyone as stupid as
Donald Trump. You just don’t.”
Lebowitz is still shocked that Trump won. Part of the shock is that
she was living so fully in a liberal New York bubble. “I had zero belief
he would win. I have never been so wrong in my life. And being right is
something I cherish. It’s really important to me to be right.”
It’s one of three nights burned entirely into 67-year-old Lebowitz’s
memory – on a par with the Kennedy assassination and 9/11. “I remember
every single second of the whole day – voting, everything – the whole
day.”
"My level of rage, always high, is now in fever pitch all the time."
She voted and went to lunch, and on the way home she felt like New
York was getting ready to welcome its first female president. She walked
past a party being set up, hosted by Harvey Weinstein. They said, “See
you tonight, Ms Lebowitz!” But she didn’t attend that party, opting
instead for the party of the then Vanity Fair editor, Graydon Carter.
“Everyone was in a great mood and there were these huge American flags draped everywhere. Everyone was drinking champagne.”
From
time to time over the night, Lebowitz popped into the kitchen to look
at the election map on TV and, with each visit, became increasingly
nervous. The map was turning red.
A friend, the contributing editor at Vogue, André Leon Talley, who
had been on a strict weight-loss regime all year, entered the room. “I
had been with this guy in restaurants all year and he was like, ‘Fish,
just a little salad, no dressing!’ There were all these chocolates and
cookies and stuff [on the table] and he started eating them without even
looking.
“Then I’m smoking as usual but at a certain point I realised I’m
smoking two cigarettes and Andre had eaten all the cookies. Graydon had
in his hands two martinis and a waiter said ‘You want another?’ and he
said ‘Yes!’ He couldn’t even hold them. At a certain point [another]
friend of mine said, ‘I’m going home, I can’t take this – I’m not tough
enough. I’m going home to take drugs.’ This is a man my age, a very
distinguished man.”
Lebowitz went home to Soho through neighbourhoods usually
busy with nightlife. “But there was no one in the streets – it was
nothing. It was like grief inside those houses. It was horrible. I felt
that strongly affected emotionally for at least a month. My level of
rage, always high, is now in fever pitch all the time.”
Lebowitz believes naked racism is behind Trump’s election. “He
allowed people to express their racism and bigotry in a way that they
haven’t been able to in quite a while and they really love him for that.
It’s a shocking thing to realise people love their hatred more than
they care about their own actual lives. The hatred – what is that about?
It’s a fear of your own weakness.”
The other hot button issue right now is guns. Lebowitz nearly chokes on her mineral water when I ask her if she has one.
Fran Lebowitz: ‘I had zero belief Trump would win. I have
never been so wrong in my life.’ Photograph: Stewart
Cook/REX/Shutterstock
“Of course I don’t have a gun!” She is scathing of gun owners. “Who
are these people that love guns? These people who love Trump and they
love guns, these are the most frightened people I have ever seen in my
life. Who’s after you? They live in the middle of nowhere. I live in New
York city and I don’t have a gun. No one I know has a gun.
“In the early 70s, when I was more vulnerable in every way, it was
really dangerous. I could have gotten a gun but I never got one. I was
an 18-year-old penniless girl in the middle of a dangerous city and I
was never as afraid as these men in Texas, living in a state of terror.”
Her voice drips with disdain.
What does she think of the teenaged activists taking on Congress over gun control?
“I do feel that this very young generation – people who are teenagers
today and in their 20s – are so much better than the generation right
above, people who are in their 40s. When I was in my 40s and these
people were coming up, making music and taking drugs, I thought, ‘These
people are horrible.’ But when these new young people started coming up,
I was pleasantly surprised. I mean – they read books. When I am on the
subway and I see a person reading a book, they will be 24, and the
person on the Kindle is 44.”
Young people love her. Young men come up to her in Macy’s and tell her she has to change her views about men in shorts; others have created songs and memes about her.
While Lebowitz loves to talk, she sees herself as a private person.
“Publicly, I don’t really talk about myself in a very personal way
and I wish other people wouldn’t either. I mean, partially this is
because people my age were raised that way. We were raised not to talk
about ourselves. But I don’t really think about myself anymore. It’s one
of the upsides about getting old. I’ve lost interest.”
Today’s young people “have always lived in an environment where people asked them what they thought”, she says.
“When I was a child no one ever asked you a question – and I mean no
one. Children were told what to do. From morning to night, instructions …
No one ever asked about yourself, that is for sure. Unless you had a
fever, and even then they took your temperature and told you how you
felt. ‘I don’t feel well.’ ‘Yes, you do.’”
Apart from taking part in the Trump resistance, Lebowitz says she has
considered running for mayor of New York – except she doesn’t want to
do any early starts. “I would consider being the night mayor and
starting at 4pm,” she says.
“You’re a nightmare already,” I joke.
“Yeah, I don’t need to be elected to be a nightmare.”
She looks out to the quiet, leafy Melbourne street, contemplating the
flight home to that city she embodies in so many ways. “You know what,”
she says. “I can’t do that trip again. It’s nice here. I’ll get someone
to send my stuff.”
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