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Chester Himes

Page 34

by James Sallis


  Marianne, meanwhile, had delayed her departure until December, and once released from the hospital at Neuilly, Chester flew to Stockholm to spend a week with her. Returning to the Riviera, he rented Marianne’s apartment at Antibes. Himes spent the year’s final weeks courting Lesley, who had known of this affair almost from the first. In March he moved into her new ground-floor, two-room apartment on rue de la Harpe in the Latin Quarter near the Saint-Séverin church.

  While at the American Hospital, Himes had been contacted by Pierre Gaisseau, whose feature film The Sky Above the Mud Below had gained much attention and who now with Arthur Cohn wanted to make a film about Harlem life. Himes began drafting the script of what would become Baby Sister while in hospital and completed it at Marianne’s apartment at Antibes. Baby Sister was never filmed, the project crippled by failure to find support among American studios, conflicts between Cohn and Gaisseau, and, at one point, a breakdown on Gaisseau’s part; Himes published the script in 1975’s Black on Black.

  That July, settled back in with Lesley, at the suggestion of Pierre Lazareff of France-Soir, and despite the unhappy collapse of an earlier collaboration with Lazareff, Himes traveled to New York to work with Gaisseau on a documentary of Harlem for French TV. Headquarters established at Lewis Micheaux’s bookstore across from the Theresa Hotel, Himes, Gaisseau, and crew ranged far and wide: the Afro-American bank on 125th Street, Rosa Meta’s beauty parlor, the upper fringe of Central Park, Adam Clayton Powell’s Abyssinian Baptist Church. This was the film at a private showing of which Himes sat beside Lesley “sizzling with fury.” Believing it filled with derisory, insulting clichés, not only did Himes withdraw his name from the project, he also wrote the article “Harlem, an American Cancer” in rebuttal. He had hoped to print it in Lazareff’s own paper, such a piece being part of his and Lazareff’s agreement, but France-Soir ignored it; eventually it appeared in Présence Africaine and Die Welt.

  Back in Paris from New York and before the private showing, Chester had gone with Lesley, on vacation from her job, to Corsica, stopping off in Marseilles, where Chester was given royal treatment by the local Communist party paper, to visit Himes’s old friend, physician and jazz drummer Roger Luccioni.

  With Marianne, however, there was to be one further rendezvous. In January of the new year, 1963, using money advanced by Plon for a new detective novel, Himes flew to New York claiming business with agent Samuel French, and within the fortnight had touched down in the tiny fishing village of Sisal in the Yucatán. With little else to do, he turned out almost half of a new book, making no mention of Marianne in regular letters to Lesley, intimating to John A. Williams that he and Marianne had come to recognize irreconcilable differences both in their careers and their very personalities. Carl Brandt, meanwhile, whom Chester had approached to be his agent, wrote that upon asking around he had been told that Himes was “untrustworthy,” and declined taking him on. Frequent letters from Lesley left Chester sodden with guilt.

  One morning while in the Yucatán, February of 1963, Chester woke to find himself virtually unable to speak and paralyzed on one side. At the Merida Hospital it was believed that he had been stung by a scorpion. Lesley tried to get money to him and failed; finally he was able to return to the States on money wired to him by Van Vechten. There, while at New York’s Presbyterian Hospital, he was looked after by Van Vechten and John A. Williams. Doctors diagnosed a stroke—the first of many that would eventually confine him to a wheelchair and make speech increasingly difficult. Ed and Constance Pearlstein remember his speech being slurred at this point. Discharged, Himes recuperated at the Albert Hotel before returning to Europe, and in March of 1963, one year after first moving in with Lesley, he again settled into the apartment at rue de la Harpe.

  His old agent Samuel French refused to release him until he paid $500 they claimed he owed them. For all his labors, The Lunatic Fringe had failed either to develop into a viable novel or to attract publishers’ interest. He proved unable to resell rights to The Primitive and Cast the First Stone, as he had felt certain of doing. Gallimard, having advanced money on two books still unwritten—and having learned in the bargain that Himes had contracted with Plon for a detective novel—was growing impatient, and now said that he owed the firm some 13,000 francs. Himes replied with complaints that Gallimard had billed him unfairly for costs incurred by them, while he often had spent his own funds for publicity on the publisher’s behalf. To Duhamel he penned a bitter, spiteful letter that much upset the editor.

  Still, while recuperating, Himes had finished his new detective novel, Back to Africa, which as Cotton Comes to Harlem became for him something of a breakthrough novel.

  Through it all, even if sometimes patchily, work continued. Besides Run Man Run, All Shot Up, The Heat’s On, and Cotton Comes to Harlem, Himes wrote the film treatment “Blow Gabriel Blow” for Louis Dolivet and the script of a documentary on Harlem (this is before the collaboration with Gaisseau) for Pierre Lazareff, neither of which was filmed. While living across from the park at Les Buttes-Chaumont, in two months he rewrote Mamie Mason for Olympia Press. He may have written in whole or in part another script, “An American Negro in Black Africa,” that has been lost; in March of 1962, at any rate, he applied to the Association des Auteurs de Films for a copyright of that title. For some time, also, he was occupied in planning a multirecord history of jazz (which projected production costs prohibited taking any further) for Nicole Barclay, for whose company Richard Wright had begun writing liner notes late in life. And while in hospital, of course, Himes had begun, finishing soon thereafter, Baby Sister.

  Whatever else he was, Chester Himes was visible:

  1954:

  The Third Generation

  World

  1955:

  The Primitive

  NAL

  If He Hollers Let Him Go

  Berkley

  1956:

  La fin d’un primitif

  Gallimard

  The Third Generation

  Signet

  1957:

  For Love of Imabelle

  Fawcett

  La Troisième génération

  Plon

  1958:

  La reine des pommes

  Gallimard

  Il pleut des coups durs

  Gallimard

  1959:

  The Real Cool Killers

  Avon

  Dare Dare

  Gallimard

  Tout pour plaire

  Gallimard

  Couché dans le pain

  Gallimard

  The Crazy Kill

  Avon

  1960:

  The Big Gold Dream

  Avon

  Imbroglio Négro

  Gallimard

  All Shot Up

  Avon

  1961:

  Ne nous énervons pas!

  Gallimard

  Pinktoes

  Olympia Press

  1962:

  Mamie Mason

  Plon

  The Real Cool Killers

  Berkley

  1963:

  Une affaire de viol

  Les Yeux Ouverts

  1964:

  Retour en Afrique

  Plon

  Did Himes exaggerate his renown? “My name had become a byword,” he wrote. “I felt I had become more famous in Paris than any black American who had ever lived. Maybe I was right.”32 He was acclaimed, no doubt about it, and had been around the Latin Quarter long enough to have become a kind of sage to younger writers and artists, with Melvin Van Peebles, John A. Williams, poet Ted Joans, Cuban novelist Carlos Moore, Phil Lomax, and many others paying court. Still, Himes’s manner is rarely less than hyperbolic; this is the man whose egocentricity allowed him to persuade himself, upon seeing Marcel Duhamel’s new home, that it had been built with money swindled from Gallimard’s authors—chiefly from his own detective novels, one senses that he wants to say, though he comes short of doing so.

  In th
e arts, if you stay around long enough, if you survive, eventually you get acknowledged, even if but grudgingly so: reviewers, journalists, and the reading public can go on stepping over you only so long. Himes found himself becoming a sage, idolized not for the work itself (which was always in some measure cast away, as he said) but for the ideas and attitudes the work expressed. Interviews and articles became plentiful. L’Arche wrote of Himes and anti-Semitism in the United States. Adam wrote of Himes and poverty in the ghettoes, the black man’s compulsion for white women. Nouvel Observateur wrote of Himes and of integration versus race nationalism. This was the dialectic around which black intellectual life had revolved since the days of W. E. B. Du Bois and Booker T. Washington. Now, though, the urgency had become such that speaking of it was like reading from a paper set on fire. (In New York in July of 1962 Himes saw for himself the early, non-combative manifestations of the burgeoning civil-rights movement, from which he would draw for the protestors of Blind Man with a Pistol) Publication of Une affaire de viol in 1963 at the height of the Algerian War by a small leftist publisher famously sympathetic to the Algerian cause brought some notoriety, though much of this was secondary to the preface by novelist, feminist, and secretary of the Cannes Film Festival Christiane Rochfort, for the book was little read. Himes’s account of the book’s reception, Michel Fabre affirms, is grossly exaggerated: “To most French people who knew of him, he remained simply a writer of great detective stories.”33

  In his memoirs, typically, in a matter of pages Himes turns away from delight at his Parisian fame to complaints that he never made money from his books in France.

  The only French people who saw me were those who thought they could use me or get something out of me. I thought often of Duhamel; I have always thought he permitted French acquaintances to steal me blind but I do believe that every now and then he spoke up for me and said, “Enough’s enough.”34

  This manifest of the victim mentality echoes Himes in his Chicago speech: “the effects of oppression on the human personality.” Yet “It is not enough,” remember, “to say we are victims of a stupid myth. We must know the reasons for this stupid myth and what it does to us.”35Like Malcolm, Himes believed that one urgent revolution had to be against the misshapen black psyche itself. The other revolution believed necessary, that of a violent delivery from white society, he would try to describe, and finally abandon, in Plan B.

  The hopscotch game, the movings-about, remained as frantic as ever. There were trips with Lesley to Biot and Cannes, to Antibes for summer holiday, Chester’s retreat in December 1963 to Saint-Laurent-du-Var near Nice to work on Back to Africa. Chester and Lesley moved together in January of 1964 to a new flat at 3, rue Bourbon-le-Chateau near the Buci market, where their neighbor was painter Jean Miotte—truly a world away from the three-room shack where Chester wrote much of Lonely Crusade, or from rooms at the Theresa Hotel and Hotel Rachou.

  It was a fantastic location with the market at one end of the block and a clear view of St. Germain-des-Prés on the other side, with a small park just beneath the windows—Place de Fürstenburg. But the difficulty was one had to climb seven flights of stairs to get to it … It had a big, ornate bath with many mirrors inside the door, then a medium-size bar, behind which was the stove and sink for washing up and in front of which was a large expanse of living room with a window and a big dining-room table built around the central beam; beyond was the open chimney with a long settee in front, then stairs that climbed to a bedroom upstairs with large double doors opening onto a large railed balcony which held six or eight chairs with a clear view of the nearby park and St. Germain-des-Prés at the end of rue de I’Abbaye.36

  Chester and Jean Miotte often came across one another in the St. Germain-des-Prés, and began spending time together at one another’s apartments. They had first met the year before, 1962, at the Café Old Navy, when Chester and Lesley were living at the Hotel de Seine. Miotte’s wife, like Lesley, worked at Time-Life; it was Miotte who found the apartment for them, having lived in the building since 1959. These two artists of a different sort would go on visiting and corresponding over the years. On one of the visits, for which Chester met Miotte at the Harbor of Valencia in his Jaguar, they engaged in a series of conversations of which Miotte kept a record, later transcribing them into the dialogue Miotte-Himes, published by SMI/L’art se reconte in 1977. There was also talk of a proposed ballet, Angels in Harlem, for which Miotte would design sets, and for which Chester drew up a scenario. Miotte believes that both Chester’s comedy and the sheer force of his personality shining through, his deep and abiding anger, tend to obscure the work’s intense tragedy. He remembers going into the Doubleday bookstore on Fifth Avenue and asking for the newest Chester Himes book and no one there knowing who Chester was. He remembers Chester smiling and laughing with friends, not at all a difficult man, though he kept his reserve among people he didn’t know. Of course he was upon occasion bitter at the reception of his books, Miotte says—how could he not be?—but for all that always charming, intelligent, spiritual and open-minded. Even in later years, after a number of strokes and through heavy pain, Chester went on producing strong work, Miotte says; we must admire that. Miotte last saw his old friend during one of the final visits to Paris when he pushed Chester in his wheelchair across the Luxembourg Gardens to Montparnasse to dine at La Coupole.

  The lease on the rue Bourbon-le-Château apartment having expired, Lesley moved to another on rue d’Assas while Chester withdrew to the Palais Ravage in Cannes to work on Blind Man with a Pistol From there he soon wrote to complain of pedestrian progress. The book was coming along but would not come alive. He had little notion where it was headed, worried that he had lost control. Whatever he did, the story refused to “swing” the way he wanted it to do.37 There was no sense of style, his pacing was off.38 Old doubts swarmed up, that eternal horror of the creative artist before bare canvas or page, the suspicion that, this time, he won’t be able to bring it off, the magic won’t return to him, he hasn’t a clue. Autumn weather wore on Himes, underscoring his isolation, uncertainties and self-interrogations. To make matters worse, the Colemans’ marriage was breaking up before his eyes.

  Following a trip to New York to resolve problems with Pinktoes, to be published that year (1965), Chester moved in with Lesley at the apartment on rue d’Assas. In New York he learned that Bill Targ was about to marry literary agent Roslyn Seigel. In Paris he bought a Jaguar.

  Chester and Lesley had vacationed that June in Greece. In October Lesley gave up her job at Time-Life and the couple drove in the new Jag to Denmark, where they lived for some months near Copenhagen. Chester first began writing about his early European experiences while here. By February he and Lesley had grown weary of the harsh winter and (to Chester’s thinking) the equally harsh Danish character. Mid-March, before proceeding on to Aix-en-Provence, they were Daniel Guérin’s guests at La Ciotat, no longer an artists’ colony but again Guérin’s private residence; here Chester began his autobiography in earnest.

  They removed then, in July, to Aix-en-Provence, to a farmhouse near Saint-Hippolyte at Venelles, outside Aix on the route to Manosque where Jean Giono lived. Chester loved the seclusion, lack of distraction, and easygoing pace, loved even having visitors. He was increasingly troubled by arthritis, however, and lacking in energy. He puttered about the farm, retired early, worked sporadically at the autobiography and piecemeal at novels or other projects. From the congested manuscript of Plan B he worried out “Tang” and “Prediction” for publication as short stories.

  Beset for years by dental problems, and mistrusting French dentists as he mistrusted Danish barbers, in May Chester flew to New York to have dentures made. While there, at the insistence of Samuel Goldwyn, who had bought the book the previous year, Himes wrote a treatment for Cotton Comes to Harlem that was nonetheless rejected. Lesley joined him in mid-June, after which they returned to Venelles, briefly since the farm had been sold, then sublet a friend’s Paris flat in t
he 5th arrondissement at 21, rue de I’Estrapade, close to the market on rue Mouffetard and just off tourist-thronged Place de le Contrescarpe.

  In October then, at the invitation of Chester’s Dutch agent, Chester and Lesley relocated to Holland for several months. Later in the year they went to Spain, touring Madrid, Alicante, and Gibraltar, crossing to Tangiers for the holidays. In Alicante, overlooking the sea at Moraira-Teulada, they bought land upon which to have a house, Casa Griot, built. Remaining in Spain till the following May, they returned to Paris in time to witness the student riots, staying first in an apartment on rue Abel-Ferry in the 16th arrondissement belonging to Nicole Toutain, longtime companion of Himes’s old friend and Tournon compatriot Larry Potter. Upon return from a brief trip to London, however, they discovered that the rioting had broken out of the Latin Quarter and grown to dangerous levels, and they withdrew to quieter lodgings near Montparnasse.

  That September, 1968, Chester and Lesley moved to Alicante, after which time visits to France were rare and of short duration: a stopover in May of the following year on the way to London, attendance at the Nice Book Fair from May 26 to June 2 of 1970, a trip then with the Targs to St. Tropez and Aries. Also in 1970 they returned to Paris to celebrate publication of Blind Man with a Pistol with parties at Gallimard, a TV program from ORTF and a private showing of Cotton Comes to Harlem. This was one of only three visits to Paris in the whole of the seventies, these generally for medical reasons. Chester’s French decade, seven years in Paris, three mostly in the south of France, was over.

 

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