GREATER CLEMENTS - Lincoln Center Theater

Page 8

8

First Responders by Josh Garrett-Davis

AN OLDER WOMAN from my home state of South Dakota told a story that stuck in my memory. She had always regarded her hometown as placid, upstanding, and perhaps she used the word “normal.” Later in life, she volunteered to be a 911 operator, since her town was too small to provide professional emergency services beyond a county sheriff. The calls shocked her. They pulled open the curtains on methamphetamine use, domestic violence, alcoholism, and other dramas. She learned about an expanse of hurt that had probably been there as long as the town had stood—maybe as old as the cottonwood and ash trees in sturdy “shelter belts” or windbreaks nearby. Politeness had shielded the hurt from view. She didn’t say whether the curtains, the discretion of first responders like herself, were good things. My own parents were both first responders of sorts: my mom a counselor and my dad a legalaid lawyer and public defender. They knew things about neighbors, community members, even my friends’ families, that they never leaked to me. They were also objects of some gossip and discretion, especially after their divorce in the mid-1980s and my mom’s subsequent relationship with a woman—leading, through a cascade of decisions, to her moving to Portland, Oregon, and me staying in South Dakota with a single dad most of the year from ages ten to eighteen. I silenced my urban summers (gay-pride parades, New Age church camp), but in retrospect it is clear that many first responders knew—some local pastors, teachers, lawyers. After graduating from high school, I quickly fled this place where I felt like a lonely outsider,

LINCOLN CENTER THEATER REVIEW

the only one with a secret. From afar, I have spent many years researching the histories and cultures of the Plains and the broader American West. I have felt drawn to dramas of the past—first to historical 911 calls, conflicts, and controversies, but increasingly to subtler incongruities, unexpected creations, and resilient survivals. A central story for American history is what some scholars call “settler colonialism,” what they used to call “the frontier”—the attempt by newcomers to erase and replace indigenous others. This has been a messy process, with an astounding array of both indigenous and settler peoples, and many unclear lines between or across those two simple labels. The stories are rich and seemingly bottomless. Now I work at a western-history museum that seeks to explore these dynamics, often in tension with popular fictions about the West. We often screen Westerns and try to place them in context with short introductory remarks. Not long ago we showed Oklahoma!, the 1955 film adaptation of the musical. It was stranger than I remembered from the classic Broadway songs and courtin’ story. One confusing element was a stilted, almost tortured regional dialect. It turned out that this writing had survived the translation from the 1930 play Green Grow the Lilacs, by Lynn Riggs, on which Oklahoma! was based. In his foreword to the play, Riggs wrote of striving to capture a “nostalgic glow” around his home state, which he had left as a young man. In his characters’ meticulous dialect, in Riggs’s reaching for something past, something stirs. When the original play’s matriarch, Aunt Eller, resists the arrest of her nephew by deputy federal marshals, she declares that the United States is “jist a furrin country to me,” with no rightful jurisdiction in Indian Territory. One of the deputies defends himself (“We hain’t furriners”) by asserting, “Why, I’m jist plumb full of Indian blood myself.” Lynn Riggs, a citizen of the Cherokee Nation living (as an adult writer) in exile in that “furrin country,” hinted here at the issues of tribal sovereignty and federal authority, blood and belonging, that can shape personal dramas in the middle of this continent. He also subtly excavated the effects of historical violence. Laurey, the lead character, at one point recounts, “In the Verdigree bottom the other day, a man found thirty-three arrowheads— thirty-three—whur they’d been a Indian battle.” The home Riggs yearned for became home after the Cherokee were forcibly removed less than a century earlier, and a vague violence haunted the landscape. Some prosperous Cherokee brought slaves with them on the Trail of Tears—individuals who were themselves descendants of indigenous


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