SALMAN RUSHDIE
John Stapleton.
The interview with Salman Rushdie took place in the same room
where he had written Midnight’s Children.
Despite having won the Booker Prize, these were the days before Satanic Verses scandalized the Islamic
world and a fatwah was issued against him – a time when Rushdie’s fame was more
or less contained within literary circles.
Serious breaches were breaking through the fabric of things.
I was using my newfound status as a freelance
journalist to pursue literary idols.
Any Australian literary or features editor would practically
slather down the phone If I asked them if they would like an interview with
Joseph Heller, Gore Vidal, Norman Mailer, Anthony Burgess, Dirk Bogarde or
Salman Rushdie. And London was the place to do it all, to meet the gods.
I had walked on Hampstead Heath with Al Alvarez, who I had gone
out of my way to befriend after interviewing him. He was the author of one of
the bibles of my youth, a meditation on suicide and Sylvia Plath called The Savage God.
The story about his then just published book on Las Vegas and the
lure of gambling, The Biggest Game In
Town, got a good run in The
Australian Financial Review. And
I was off and running, the world full of hope, opportunity, fond affections.
Of course parts of Hampstead Heath were
notorious as a gay beat, with God knows how many hundreds of men lurking in its
bushes and hideaways. These weren’t the parts of the Heath on which we walked.
Back in the 1970s in the crowd with which I
used to run, Sylvia Plath was one of our demi-gods, the author of The Savage God a legend.
To us, Plath’s early death at the hands of an
oven in W.B. Yeats former London apartment simply made her all-the-more
appealing.
We could quote lines from Plath's Daddy by rote; and we weren't
even at school:
You do not do, you do not do
Any more, black shoe
In which I have lived like a foot
For thirty years, poor and white,
Barely daring to breathe or Achoo.
You died before I had time--
Marble-heavy, a bag full of God,
Ghastly statue with one gray toe…”
“You do not do, you do not do, black shoe...you bastard I'm
through” was one of our favorite lines.
“Sylvia Platitude” was scrawled across the lounge room wall of
John Bygate’s terrace in Sydney's inner-city suburb of Paddington, the man who
I wrote a short story about, and co-won a competition back in 1972. The then princely
sum of $75. The discovery that you could make money out of something I liked
doing, writing, was a revelation.
The British treated Australians,
colonials as we were, with something between amusement and contempt.
But with the boldness of youth, it was
still relatively easy to inveigle my way into all sorts of situations.
Salman was a special case.
In those days, before time and age and
numerous life pressures crowded out the days and I would, like so many working
journalists, be forced to interview people without having read a word of their
work, heard their music or seen their paintings, back before the Executive
Summary was all one would have time to read of some major report or other, back
then, I always read as many of their books as possible before interviewing an
author.
I particularly loved Rushdie’s Midnight’s Children, as had millions of
other readers. I read it in Bombay, or Mumbai as it became known, where the
book was set. I even visited some of the locations in the book, including the
site of the Jaan temple, in that sprawling, jumbled area of Mumbai with its
feel of fading wealth which he describes so beautifully.
Midnight’s
Children resonated with
the chaos and multiple story lines of India.
The London house where Rushdie lived at the time was a large hushed home which
even then would have cost a substantial amount of money. Rushdie came from a
wealthy family. Struggling to survive was not part of his experience, but was
certainly part of mine.
I was living in squats at the time, and the
casualness of the money struck me. My own life had been riddled with bohemian
friends, and I was impressed by the substantiality of this world of casual influence
and success.
A maid had opened the door. It soon became
apparent that all four floors of the house were occupied by the Rushdie family;
an astonishing thing in the London I mostly knew. His wife appeared briefly
before disappearing into the bowels of the house. I was taken up to Rushdie's
study.
In those days, before my short hand and
personal hieroglyphics became good enough to keep up with most conversations, I
used a tape recorder, which I duly set up.
Rushdie told me about his first published book, a science fiction
novel called Grimus. And then the
author pointed out a framed black and white photograph of a house featured in Midnight’s Children, the rambling Indian
house where he had grown up.
Outside, before I knocked on the door, I had
been frantically reading the last pages of Shame,
the book I was ostensibly interviewing him about, a sprawling, black work set
in Pakistan. Few of the characters were admirable, the plot confusing and the
politics dark. Rushdie seemed impressed that I had actually read it.
The interview went well. He spoke disarmingly of the fame that had
been thrust upon him with the phenomenal success of Midnight’s Children. He showed me the desk where he had written it;
and asked: “If you had written a book like that, just sitting here, not really
talking to anybody, without any orthodox plot, with multiple voices inside it,
the voices of India, could you have possible imagined it would be a success?”
“No,” I replied.
And, of course, nor could he.
Afterwards, Rushdie saw me graciously to the door.
I walked back down the road into my own
contrasting life in that overwhelming city.
After that intimate hour with one of the
world's greatest writers, I always followed Rushdie’s career with interest, the
wall of secrecy and security that surrounded him after the death threats
stemming from Satanic Verses, the changed wives, his progress
into the literary stratosphere.
The public relations person from
Jonathan Cape said Rushdie had rang after our encounter and told her it was the
best interview he had ever done. I couldn’t have been more chuffed.
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