When I was fourteen I happened to meet the celebrated drama critic,
Jack Kroll. We were in his New York office at Newsweek when he
asked me what I wanted to do with my life. I told him I'd like to
write plays, if I could.
"Would you now?" He handed me a Grove Press edition of Pinter:
Plays One and said, "You'd better have this then".
In 1995 my first play was put on at the National Theatre
One night, I was knocking around the lighting box just before
curtain up, "Anyone in?"
The Deputy Stage Manager, said, "Harold Pinter".
"Yeah, yeah".
"No, really".
A few days later I received a little note from him,
congratulating me on the play. I kept the note in my breast pocket
for a month.
In May of 1999 we had lunch. Harold wore a black shirt and drank
white wine. In fact, we drank a fair amount of white wine together.
I'd put it about, via our mutual agent, Judy Daish, that I'd be
pretty keen to direct The Caretaker and word came back that Harold
would not be averse. So we discussed the play in an adult fashion,
director to play-wright. I wondered when someone was going to tap
me on the shoulder and wake me from this fantasy.
A month or two later I called Harold to discuss some bit of
production business. He came to the phone, full of beans.
"Hallo, Harold. You sound well".
He told me that he was "well" and that he was writing a new
play. He spoke like a man who had never written a play before,
thrilled and delighted that the words were flowing. I was stabbing
around in the dark with a new one. Harold asked after it
delicately; he treated me like a fellow writer, as if all writers
are equals, all prone to the same problems.
When I directed my second play, Closer, onBroadway, Jack Kroll
came to interview me for Newsweek magazine. We chatted away in the
lobby of the Algonquin Hotel where I was staying. I told him he'd
given me a book some twenty years ago and that it had been more
than useful. He was delighted. He spoke at some length and with
great admiration for and about Harold's work.
Jack Kroll died this summer.
It was an honour to have met him.
The book he had given me was upstairs in my hotel room.
Why would I ever part with it?
It's here on my desk, as I write.
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