LGBT
Related: About this forumZachary Quinto: 'There's a tremendous fear around openly gay men in our industry'
Ihear Zachary Quinto before I see him. The voice of the actor who played Mr Spock in the rebooted Star Trek films comes thundering through the closed door of the central London rehearsal building a repurposed church as I sit outside waiting. Hes rehearsing the climactic scene from the play Best of Enemies, a restaging of the infamous Sixties TV confrontation between novelist and essayist Gore Vidal (Quinto) and right-wing TV host William F Buckley. The play moves at a tremendous clip, Quinto tells me shortly after. It feels like youre sitting on top of a locomotive, and you have no choice but to stay there. Judging by the combustible force I overheard, it certainly sounds that way.
The rehearsal breaks for lunch, and I am allowed in; Quinto follows me up a steep flight of steps to a small platform at the top of the building. He may have sounded ready for the Noël Coward Theatre, but the vibe is still very much come as you are: a pair of overalls and a beanie hat. The 45-year-old Quinto joined the production after its Broadway run, replacing Charles Edwards. Buckley, meanwhile, is played as before by David Harewood, in an intriguing piece of race-blind casting. Speaking to The Independent last year, Harewood described Best of Enemies as tough, noting that it included an enormous amount of lines. Its certainly chewy material, a change of step from the genre work for which Quinto is best known Heroes; American Horror Story; the Star Trekreboot. Written by James Graham, the play fictionalises the real-life 1968 ATV debates between Vidal and Buckley a vitriolic sparring session which culminated in Vidal calling his opponent a crypto-Nazi, and Buckley threatening violence and calling Vidal who identified as bisexual a queer.
The debate was, says Quinto, a portentous moment not just for the tenor of TV newscasting, but for the entire American political discourse. It was a revolutionary act in terms of the format of the news, Quinto explains. Consider what debate used to be, a generation or two ago: two people with different beliefs would have an opportunity to express their point of view in turn. Then look at where the last 55 years has taken us.
He continues: Its just continued to deteriorate, to the point where now, debate has largely just become about people screaming at one another and saying, Im right; youre wrong. Not only do I disagree with you, I hate you for your beliefs. I think television is the variable in that equation. It changed and in many ways denigrated the integrity of debate.
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ProudMNDemocrat
(19,061 posts)During the Presidential/Party Convention
and campaigns in the late 60's through the 70's.
Gore Vidal was pivotal in helping me to shape my Liberal views.
yankee87
(2,343 posts)Have to look at these debates.
bahboo
(16,953 posts)Vidal always a hero of mine....