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PLAYWRIGHTS ON
WRITING
The
outsider within us
One
wouldn't expect an elderly gay transvestite to be so beloved, but rooting for
the underdog is a reminder that through insecurity comes strength.
By
Doug Wright
Special to The Times
June 12, 2005
Charlotte von Mahlsdorf scoops the last of her strawberry yogurt from its
plastic cup. With a satisfying smack, she downs the last dollop. It's Feb. 2,
1993, and tonight I've been interviewing her for more than four hours. One day,
I hope to forge a play from the disparate puzzle pieces of her life.
"It's late," she says in her signature lilt. She peers at me cautiously and
asks, "You are going to take a taxi back to West Berlin, yes?"
Indeed I am. Charlotte lives in an eastern suburb, about 40 minutes by commuter
train from the city's hub. It's a forbidding neighborhood: drab buildings with
barren window boxes, and a surplus of disaffected youth, many of them skinheads.
Naturally, I'm not fond of taking the subway to and from her home at odd hours.
"Do you mind if I share the ride?" she asks me. I'm surprised; it's almost 11
p.m. She explains, "I've been invited to a party in town."
Our driver is in his 50s, squat with closely cropped hair, a crumpled cap and a
grizzled chin. His forearms are like giant drumsticks. I'm nervous. Will
Charlotte invite his enmity? After all, he doesn't look especially open-minded,
and Charlotte just happens to be a man: an elderly gay transvestite who survived
both the Nazis and the Communists as an open cross-dresser. To make matters
worse, she's instantly recognizable; a bestselling autobiography and a
documentary film have made her a cult celebrity in Berlin.
Brazenly, Charlotte sits up front, next to our new friend. I crawl into the
back. The cabbie shoots an ominous look at me in his rearview mirror, then
shifts the car into reverse with an insolent jolt.
I sit stoically during the ride, but Charlotte is merrily prattling on about a
host of subjects: the weather, the demise of the East German automobile called
the Trabant, drag balls under Kaiser Wilhelm, and Thomas Edison's invention of
the phonograph. Her merry cadences are the only sound, other than the roar of
the motor.
I'm focused on the driver. What's running through his head? Nasty epithets? Is
he smirking at this elderly gent in a lady's coat, trundling into town with her
queer American friend? Will our ride culminate in an ugly incident?
Finally we arrive at Charlotte's destination: a swank apartment building near
the Kurfürstendamm. She smooths her skirt as she slides out of the passenger
seat. Beaming at me, she exclaims, "Danke schön!" Then she heads daintily
up the steps, her hips swaying ever so slightly.
Once again the cabbie catches my face in the mirror. "Charlotte von Mahlsdorf,"
he says with a mixture of awe and unmistakable civic pride. "A true Berlin
original, ja?"
In the years to come, I see it happen again and again: Charlotte, charming
potential adversaries into submission. On a book tour in the East, a
conservative tire magnate giggles like a schoolboy and kisses her hand. A
middle-class mother with a baby on her hip asks Charlotte for her autograph. On
a typical Sunday morning when Charlotte offers guided tours of her home, a
rustic museum of late 19th century antiques, the crowd that mills outside
waiting to gain admission is diverse: hipsters in leather, gay couples, straight
backpackers and stout old German ladies with dour husbands in tow. Once this
motley crew ambles inside — as Charlotte effuses about credenzas and ink pots —
they all regard her with the same beatific smiles.
Why is such a willful eccentric so appealing to so many? For me, it's a crucial
question. After all, I hope to mold her life into drama. And I'm not keen on
merely preaching to the choir. I'd like the play to reach a broad audience.
Naturally, I hope that my fellow gay men and women will find the piece
meaningful, as a compelling chapter in our largely forgotten history. But I've
always believed that if a subject is truly worthy, it will speak to everyone.
Can my stage version of Charlotte boast the same charisma as the genuine
article? Will the play attract an audience? Or will my leading "lady" be written
off as a freak?
I'm consoled by one thought: Like the greatest and most enduring characters,
Charlotte is larger than life. She reaches beyond the particulars of her time,
place and idiosyncratic nature to embody lasting truths.
Her very life is a trope for history. A compulsive collector, Charlotte
preserved the culture that she knew not by writing about it but by saving its
remnants, precious objects that tenaciously survived the 20th century's two most
lethal regimes.
When the Nazis were looting Jewish homes during World War II, Charlotte followed
with a junk cart, rescuing lamps, bronze busts and recordings of banned
composers such as Mendelssohn and Offenbach. During the Cold War — when the
Russians threatened to destroy a Weimar-era cabaret in Berlin's red light
district — Charlotte rescued each table, each cane-back chair, each faded menu
and each bottle of liquor, hiding them all in her basement. In room after room
of her homegrown museum, she kept a fractured, tumultuous country intact. (In
1992, the German Cultural Ministry awarded her a prestigious medal for her
preservation efforts.)
This hobby makes her more than heroic; it makes her simpatico. Everyone has an
aunt or grandmother who lovingly hoards — souvenir thimbles, perhaps, or Hummel
figurines, or faded copies of Life magazine. Charlotte simply took this penchant
to extremes; she preserved an entire slice of bourgeois German culture.
Charlotte has another, less visible collection: the anecdotes she loves to share
about her life. In telling them over the years to tourists and journalists,
she's polished them to a high sheen, just like her cherry wood breakfront. When
she recounts her time as a nervous teen in the Hitler Youth, or her imprisonment
in a detention center, the tales have a rehearsed, carefully cadenced sound,
rendering them precise and strangely implausible at the same time. These
narratives are every bit as precious to me as her antiques. They raise
fascinating, eternal question about the nature of history itself: When is it
pure, and when is it tainted by the private, sometimes covert agenda of the
historian?
"But what about her transvestism?" I ask myself. "The pleated skirts, the prim
stockings, the sleeves that taper to the cuff only to reveal large, thick,
rough-hewn hands? To some, won't this always render her exotic or, worse still,
peculiar?"
Once they've been demystified, however, even Charlotte's sartorial quirks are no
longer alienating. They become a point of commonality. We all dress to convey
our innermost selves: a bright scarf for the bon vivant, sober pinstripes for
the serious professional. Our clothes announce our perceptions about ourselves:
baggy sweaters that say, "I'm worried about my weight!" or spandex tank tops
that boast, "I actually use my gym membership."
In her simple black dresses and restrained jewelry, Charlotte was merely
expressing her truest qualities: a femininity in spite of her biological sex, an
emulation of her beloved mother, a marked nostalgia for an earlier time, a
reverence for simplicity. True, we don't all count cross-dressers among our
acquaintances. But who among us doesn't know a dandy, a clotheshorse or a
fashionista? In Charlotte's seeming eccentricity, we see our own habits, writ
large.
I reassure myself with another heartening fact: Stories about outsiders are
so popular that they've become clichés. In our hearts, we are all solo
travelers, fighting against a sea of homogeneity — the runt striving to make the
football team, or the homely girl who morphs into the beauty queen. What better
tale than the awkward, effeminate young German boy, draped in his mother's
shawl, outsmarting storm troopers? These anecdotes nourish our perpetual love
affair with the underdog. Charlotte's story reminds us that even our darkest
insecurities can become a source of strength.
There are countless other characters — both in life and in drama — who have
become icons for phenomena greater than themselves. Donald Trump has become
synonymous with cutthroat capitalism. The name Hugh Hefner connotes a
freewheeling hedonism. Blanche DuBois is synonymous with delusional
self-invention, and Hamlet is indecision personified. These figures endure in
our consciousness because they embody key aspects of our experience in the
world.
Is my beloved Charlotte worthy of this pantheon? Is she a living, breathing
illustration of history's necessity in our lives? In person, she was. I can only
hope that my play makes its case for her as artfully as she did for herself.
*
'I Am My Own Wife'
Where: Geffen Playhouse at the Wadsworth Theatre, 11301 Wilshire Blvd.,
Brentwood
When: 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays through Thursdays, 8 p.m. Fridays, 4 and 8:30
p.m. Saturdays, 2 and 7 p.m. Sundays
Ends: July 10
Price: $34 to $85
Contact: (310) 208-6500, Ext. 144
Also
Where: La Jolla Playhouse, Mandell Weiss Theatre, 2910 La Jolla Village
Drive, La Jolla
When: Aug. 9 to Sept. 11
Contact: (858) 550-1010
*
Doug Wright won the Pulitzer Prize and the Tony Award for "I Am My Own Wife."
His other plays include "Quills" and the upcoming musical "Grey Gardens."
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