A BITS reader recently sent me a copy of this 30-minute video made for Montana PBS about the life of western writer Dorothy M. Johnson
(1905-1984). It is an informative, entertaining, and expertly told account of a
determined and inventive writer who made a difference in the way western
stories are conceived and told.
Her influence remains a strong presence in the unfolding
genre of frontier fiction today. Hers was an intelligence that inquired of both
myth and history and returned from that inquiry with discoveries that many
other western writers, steeped in convention, could not see, or did not care
to—a condition, alas, that sometimes continues in places today.
There are a number of talking heads in the video, and the
memories of those who were friends, students, and acquaintances reveal much of
her temperament, her humor, and her grit. With Margot Kidder as the voice of
Johnson and Stan Lynde as narrator, the warmth and affection for the western
story that Johnson brought to its writing come persuasively through.
The efforts of others to put into words the genuine
contribution she made to western storytelling fall a bit short of really
measuring her stature. Academics interviewed fall into what feel like tentative generalities about how she anticipated the “revisionism” of the 1960s and 70s.
Even the late Elmer Kelton seems to regard her only as an accomplished woman
writer. And while he may rank her with Mari Sandoz and Willa Cather, why does
she not bear comparison with others who happen to be male?
Altogether, director Bill Bilverstone and writer Sue Hart
have paid honest tribute to their subject. They include many photos of Johnson
over her lifetime, and their narrative reminds us of the lean times she lived
through and survived as a struggling writer, working for many years in New
York, far from her home ground in Whitefish, Montana—before The Saturday
Evening Post and then Hollywood found her.
Dorothy M. Johnson |
Wrapping up. At
the time of the film’s release, writer-producer Sue Hart noted that people know the films based on Johnson’s stories but do not know of
Johnson herself; “I wanted to
make sure that people never forget her.” This video bio makes a
notable effort to rectify that.
Gravel in Her Gut and Spit in Her Eye is currently available on DVD from Montana PBS. For
more Overlooked movies and TV, click on over to Todd Mason’s blog, Sweet Freedom.
Further reading:
Coming up: Dane
Coolidge, The Soldier’s Way (1917)
Great to see this. Johnson packed a lot into a little. Sounds like the film does the same.
ReplyDeleteyeah, sometimes. perhaps too often. we forget the writer and remember the stories.
ReplyDeleteFor years the project was stymied by a lack of visuals. Then librarians at the University of Montana, which had received DMJ's papers, uncovered an uncatalogued carton of photos, and the project revived. Sue returned the favor by identifying hundreds of people in the photos for the librarians. The other possibility was to employ more clips, but the cost to run a few moments of The Man Who Killed Liberty Valance was breathtaking for a low-budget project. There are few TV documentaries that focus on an author of genre western fiction. I think there is one of Elmer Kelton, but I know of no others.
ReplyDelete"Comparison with others who happen to be male". Yes, indeed. Does she not rank with 2 or 3 of her short stories in the all time best short stories list top 5 of the WWA, thereby making her the greatest short story writer of all, male or female?
ReplyDeleteRon, I know I checked your blog, but managed to miss this. Adding it in, and also next week...and I'm a booster of Johnson and (even professionally) PBS...
ReplyDeleteRon, this is an incentive for me to read some of Dorothy M. Johnson's western fiction.
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ReplyDeleteThe film seems to no longer be available at Montana PBS. I would love to get ahold of it.
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