New York’s attempt to think about
stupid stuff for a weekend came to an abrupt halt early on Super Bowl Sunday
when word was leaked that Philip Seymour Hoffman was found dead of a heroin
overdose.
Hoffman was a highly celebrated
actor and I had the good fortune to see him on stage several times. His most well-known
role was his Oscar-winning performance as Truman Capote in Capote. My personal favorite Hoffman film performances were his
turns as the millionaire Lebowski’s assistant in the Coen brothers’ The Big Lebowski and as the furiously masturbating crank phone caller in Todd Solondz’s Happiness.
Heroin is one of the
absolutely dumbest drugs you can take. It is horrifically addictive and even
people who have been rid of it for years find themselves drawn back to it, as
was apparently the case with Hoffman. I can think of several good people I knew,
people I thought were too smart for it, people who were streetwise and
experienced and with a lot of talent to offer and good years ahead of them, who
have overdosed on smack. It’s one of the most
senseless and undignified deaths imaginable. It’s an admission to the world
that you were weak, that you let a small envelope of powder determine your fate.
It is immensely frustrating to see
people with great talent and success piss away their lives with drugs or
alcohol. But they have done so endlessly. The litany of great artistic drunks
and drug addicts outnumbers the roster of brilliant teetotalers immeasurably.
One can argue that for big movie
stars like Hoffman, arrogance and success drive them to drugs. I disagree.
Hoffman likely began his life with drugs when he was little known. Most of the
artists who die from drugs and alcohol are not famous people but nameless
nobodies without much to their name.
Artists are drawn to substance
abuse because they are constantly seeking transcendence. That’s why they are
artists; they want to exist outside the humdrum of everyday life. Every
creative person, myself included, has a star-gazed idea of themselves that
rarely matches reality. Creative people almost always want to be something other
than what they are. And for an artist, the worst thing in the world is to look
in the mirror and realize that you’re a normal person like everyone else. Drink
and drugs can keep that fun-house mirror in front of your face a lot longer
than your brain can by itself. That’s the deadly trap of getting drunk or high.
It’s a lot easier to sit in a pretty café and drink yourself into oblivion like
Hemingway than it is to sit over a keyboard and write a novel like Hemingway.
As one of the world’s legion of
frustrated writers, I have spent most of my adult life on the drunk list but
became a teetotaler in recent years. I can say with confidence that you can
excel at being creative while not indulging in substance abuse. I like to think
that if I can quit drinking, anyone can quit anything (and without becoming a religious Alcoholics Anonymous zombie either,
but that’s a topic for another time). Even Charles Bukowski, who made his
reputation on being a habitual drunk, was able to quit drinking later in life
without it damaging his writing output. A biographer quoted him as saying he
hardly missed it.
Some people are determined to be
junkies or drunks. There’s no excuse for it. Trying to make sense of it will
break your heart. It doesn’t degrade the art they leave behind, but the loss of
their talent makes their passing much more contemptible.
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