logo
Who's afraid of  James Joyce? Elevator Repair Service takes a tour of ‘Ulysses'

Who's afraid of James Joyce? Elevator Repair Service takes a tour of ‘Ulysses'

'Ulysses' may not be James Joyce's most difficult novel. That distinction would have to go to 'Finnegans Wake,' a book that has been described as unreadable even by its most fervent admirers. But 'Ulysses,' the modernist novel that changed the course of 20th century literature, is notoriously demanding.
The book bested me when I first gave it a go in my student days. I expected to sprint through 'Ulysses' in a couple of weeks but found myself running uphill in a race I feared might never end. I finally did make it to the finish line, panting and red-faced. But I knew Joyce and I would have to have another rendezvous when I wasn't in such a rush to check a canonical box.
It took more than 35 years for that reunion to happen. The book came back on my radar because Elevator Repair Service, the offbeat New York performance troupe best known for 'Gatz,' a marathon rendering of F. Scott Fitzgerald's 'The Great Gatsby,' was coming to town with its stage version of 'Ulysses.' (The production, presented by Center for the Art of Performance, had a brief run last weekend at UCLA Little Theater.)
But something else was drawing me back to Joyce, a need to breathe purer air. I could spend my free time doomscrolling, or I could challenge myself to a higher pleasure.
This time around I imposed no deadline. I would read 'Ulysses' for the sheer pleasure of reading. It didn't take long to be reminded that pleasure isn't necessarily pain-free. I struggled past the roadblocks, cursing at what I took to be Joyce's willful obscurity as I consulted Terence Killeen's 'Ulysses Unbound,' a user-friendly reader's guide, as well as myriad online resources, including Google Translate to contend with the polyglot author's staggering range.
I extemporized a program of reading a chapter on my own and then listening to it via the excellent RTÉ recordings of 'Ulysses' (available as a podcast) that bring to life the novel's symphony of voices. The exhilaration I came to experience entailed a fair amount of exasperation. The exertion that was required seemed to belong to a pre-internet age.
Joyce, allergic to exposition, plunges the reader into sink-or-swim situations. The architecture of the book follows the plan of Homer's 'Odyssey.' Leopold Bloom is the unlikely modern-day Ulysses (Odysseus' Latin name), a newspaper ad salesman with an adulterous wife who is making his circuitous way home to see what remains after his tactical daylong absence. Stephen Dedalus, Joyce's alter ego from 'A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man,' is thrust into the role of Telemachus, Odysseus' son, recast as a lofty aesthete grieving the death of his mother while keeping his distance from his overbearing, dissolute father.
Into this complex scheme, Joyce incorporates all sorts of radical literary experiments. The most important of these is the stream of consciousness technique that's developed in ways that had never been attempted before. Joyce tunes into the inner musings of his characters as easily as he samples the collective consciousness, past and present. The novel, Edmund Wilson writes in his super-lucid chapter on Joyce in 'Axel's Castle,' moves from the ripest naturalism, awash in bodily secretions and pungent smells, to the most feverish symbolism, where dream logic liquefies objective reality.
What I derived from the novel in my late 50s is not what I took away in my 20s. I was amused at what I had underlined as an overeager student, always on the lookout for the explanatory phrase. But I'm sure in time my latest markings in the book, like photos of an old hairstyle, will also elicit an eye roll. A literary work as dense as 'Ulysses' can't help but serve as a mirror of one's mental life.
My experience of this ERS production is unique to the moment of my encounter. Had I not just cohabited with 'Ulysses' for the last month, I no doubt would have spent the intermission reading chapter summaries on my phone to get a deeper understanding of the story.
I was relieved that this version of 'Ulysses' wasn't an eight-hour affair like 'Gatz,' which offered the complete text of 'The Great Gatsby.' (Joyce's novel would take at least 24 hours to read aloud, or all of Bloomsday, the annual celebration of the author.) The novel's 18 chapters are served cafeteria-style, a little from this section, a little from that, to provide an overview of the main action.
The focus is on Bloom's wanderings through Dublin on June 16, 1904, the day his wife, Molly, a noted singer, begins an affair with a professional colleague named Blazes Boylan. Subsidiary but no less integral is Stephen's crisscrossing path through the city. When these displaced, grief-laden men lingeringly intersect late in the novel, nothing really changes in terms of the plot but everything changes in terms of the book's spiritual design.
In the intimate confines of Macgowan Hall's Little Theater, seven actors took their seats at conference tables lined up for what looked like a panel discussion. An institutional clock kept track of the fictional time of day. Scott Shepherd, an ERS mainstay who was not only part of the ensemble but also co-directed with John Collins and served as dramaturg, introduced the proceedings in an impishly folksy manner reminiscent of the Stage Manager in Thornton Wilder's 'Our Town.'
He explained that the text would be fast-forwarded regularly. When this happened, the sound of a screeching tape catapulted the company to another passage in the book. Joyce's words rang out mellifluously at the start of the production, but as the main characters emerged from the reading, some of the musicality of the writing was lost.
ERS doesn't traffic in emotional realism or literal re-creation. The company's aesthetic mode is wayward, oblique, loose and jocular. In 'Gatz,' the novel's narrative texture was conveyed through zany approximation — the troupe finding Fitzgerald not by effacing itself but by embracing its eccentric difference.
The same eventually happened here, but I had to resign myself to what was missing.
What I find irresistible about 'Ulysses' is the clarity with which the interior lives of Stephen and Bloom come into view. Amid all the rhetorical puzzles and literary pyrotechnics, these characters reveal to us their longings and insecurities, their preoccupations and rationalizations, their alienation and sociability — in short, their souls or, as Bloom more scientifically defines this mystical human substance, 'gray matter.'
Hamlet-figures dressed in inky black, they are both processing loss. Bloom, whose day's journey takes him to the funeral of a friend, is still mourning his son, Rudy, who died shortly after birth. Stephen, called back from Paris as his mother was dying, is tormented a year later by his refusal to pray over her as she entreated him to do.
Estranged in different ways — Bloom as a Jew (with a wife with a loose reputation) and Stephen as a freethinking young artist in Catholic Ireland — they have complementary needs. Bloom to love and to pass on some of what he has learned, Stephen to become secure and stable enough to realize his enormous potential.
On stage, Stephen (Christopher-Rashee Stevenson), wearing the suit jacket and short trousers of a schoolboy prince of Denmark, was a strangely recessive presence. Stevenson seemed to deliberately deflect attention from Stephen's words, mumbling lines as though they were the character's private property and not meant to be spoken aloud. (A defensible literary interpretation but a theatrically deadening one.) Stevenson actually created a more vivid impression in his brief appearance as Bloom's cat.
Vin Knight was more dynamic as Bloom, the adaptation's clear protagonist. Costume designer Enver Chakartash dressed the character, described at one point in the book as a 'new womanly man,' in a mourning jacket and complicated skirt, with green socks adding a fey accent to the gender-fluid ensemble. Knight found the gravity of the pragmatic, rational Bloom while preserving his essential nimbleness.
The surrogate father-son flirtation between Stephen and Bloom accumulated power more through the staging than through acting. Scenically, the narrative built as it proceeded. The conference tables were imaginatively reconfigured by the design collective dots for the surreal brothel scene, and the lighting of Marika Kent made wild magic without disrupting the minimalist scheme.
The production was somewhat more adept in telling than showing. (Stephanie Weeks, Dee Beasnael and Kate Benson, in addition to playing numerous supporting characters, helped keep the narration smoothly on track.)
I wish everyone had Shepherd's command of the company's house style. His cameos as Blazes Boylan, jitterbugging across the stage with the self-satisfied air of a country rake, were not just enlivening but renewing, capturing the character in a new idiom.
Maggie Hoffman delivered Molly's stream of erotic consciousness that ends the novel with just the right touch of unabashed earthiness. If I hadn't recently listened to the brilliant rendition of Pegg Monahan in the RTÉ Broadcast, I might not have missed the ferocious Irish lilt that animates the animal lusts and petty grievances of Joyce's character.
I should confess that I turned to the novel as an escape from my disgust with our political situation. But politics runs through the book. Ireland is under brutal colonial rule, and partisan conflict is as inescapable as religious strife.
But Stephen and Bloom don't want to be dominated by ideology. Stephen resists having his intellectual freedom ensnared by patriotic sanctimony: 'Let my country die for me,' he drunkenly tells a British soldier.
Bloom contends that 'Force, hatred, history, all that' are 'not life for men and women, insult and hatred.' It's the opposite of these things 'that is really life,' by which he means 'love.'
Joyce gives us this insight in a book that understands that it's no more possible to dismiss politics than it is to do away with the demands of the body. We exist in concentric realms, and our multifarious lives can only be lived. The same is true for art. There are things I wanted from this stage production that I didn't get. But there were unexpected rewards, and my view of 'Ulysses' expanded.
We must make room on the bed of life and say, as Molly does in the book's last word: 'Yes.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

This must be Sawtelle
This must be Sawtelle

Los Angeles Times

time10 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

This must be Sawtelle

While most Japantowns across the country have vanished, Los Angeles is home to not just one, but two, Japanese enclaves. Most people know Little Tokyo. But on the Westside, past the 405 and tucked between strip malls and office buildings, there's another: Sawtelle. Smaller in footprint but steeped in history, Sawtelle reflects the legacy of Japanese immigrants — their resilience, resourcefulness and ability to reinvent. That spirit lives on in one of L.A.'s most dynamic neighborhoods today: a cultural crossroads where you can slurp the best ramen, dig into sisig, cool off with Korean soft serve, try a California roll burger or sing your heart out at karaoke until 4 a.m., all within 2.69 square miles. Long before Sawtelle became a hotspot for buzzy restaurants and boba shops, it was a refuge. Named after the manager of the Pacific Land Company that developed the area, Sawtelle in the early 20th century was a haven for Japanese immigrants barred from owning property or signing leases under exclusionary laws, like the 1913 California Alien Land Law. In this less developed pocket of the Westside, landowners looked the other way — allowing Japanese immigrants to carve out enough space to build new lives. The proximity to the coast reminded them of home, mild weather and fertile soil made outdoor work a pleasure, and local Kenjinkai organizations offered vital community support. By the 1910s, Sawtelle — 'so-te-ru,' as it was affectionately called — had become a magnet for Issei, or first-generation Japanese immigrants. Between 1920 and 1925, its population tripled, driven by an influx of Japanese farmers, a booming film industry and the opening of UCLA. Here, they set up nurseries and small businesses, tended gardens for wealthy Westsiders, built temples and schools and laid the groundwork for a close-knit community. The neighborhood flourished until World War II, when residents were forced into internment camps and their lives upended. Those who returned started over, restoring what had been lost. In many ways, Sawtelle is a testament to the immigrant instinct to endure, adapt and rebuild — even with the odds stacked against them. In 2015, that resilience was officially recognized when the city named the area Sawtelle Japantown, sparking a renaissance of Japanese influence with restaurants, markets and shops celebrating Japanese culture and identity. These days, Sawtelle's prewar landmarks are fading, giving way to office buildings and rising commercial rent. Traci Toshiyuki Imamura, a fifth-generation Japanese American, remembers when her father's business, Tensho Drugstore, stood at the corner of Sawtelle and Mississippi — a neighborhood fixture in the mid-1940s. Today, it's the Furaibo restaurant. 'I miss the regular everyday people and how close people were with each other in the community,' she said. 'It makes me emotional just thinking about what Sawtelle felt like to me when I was a young girl in contrast to what it is evolving to.' Now living in Torrance, Imamura serves on the Westside Community Planning Advisory Group and advocates against Sawtelle's gentrification and upzoning. Over the years, the neighborhood has certainly changed, and its identity has expanded beyond its Japanese roots. But you'll still find traces of what made it special to begin with: Family-run Hashimoto Nursery and Yamaguchi Bonsai Nursery trace back to Sawtelle's early days and serve as nods to its agricultural past. And every summer at the Obon Festival, a traditional Buddhist celebration honoring the spirits of one's ancestors, hundreds still gather — dressed in kimono, yukata and hachimaki headbands to dance to the steady beat of taiko drums. Kids crowd around the balloon fishing pool, parents line up for takoyaki, and for a moment, the old Sawtelle feels as alive as ever. To walk down these streets today is to experience not just what's current, but what endures — in the smell of yakitori on the grill, the sight of bonsai trees still tended by the same families and the beat of the taiko drums that call people back, year after year. Sawtelle is a neighborhood shaped by people who made every inch count and built a community, and in a city that's always changing, that may be the most enduring legacy of all.

Michael Madsen's Health Was Cleared by Doctors Just Days Before Death
Michael Madsen's Health Was Cleared by Doctors Just Days Before Death

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

Michael Madsen's Health Was Cleared by Doctors Just Days Before Death

Michael Madsen's health was cleared by doctors just days before his sudden death -- this according to his longtime friend and assistant, Dougie Smith. Dougie tells TMZ the 'Kill Bill' star was doing a routine hospital visit at UCLA last Friday to get his rotator cuff looked at, citing complications from a fall off a horse about 2 years ago. Michael was apparently considering getting surgery ... but due to his upcoming schedule, he decided to put it in a brace for the time being. Michael had also suffered a minor brain bleed from the fall, so he received a PET scan to ensure everything was looking A-okay ... and according to Dougie, Michael got the all-clear from docs. That's what, Dougie says, makes Michael's death so shocking to family and friends, adding ... "He looked like he had been in the best health he had been in all year!" Dougie tells TMZ he was the one who found Michael deceased Thursday morning. He says he had not heard from him all day Wednesday, so he gave his pal a visit ... only to find him lifeless in his bed around 8:30 in the morning. He last spoke to the "Reservoir Dogs" actor Tuesday night, and he describes him as sounding "great." He noted he was looking forward to Nashville Comic-Con in the coming days. As we reported ... Michael was pronounced dead Thursday morning at his Malibu home. Law enforcement sources tell TMZ Michael's death is being treated as natural causes. Michael's rep Liz Rodriguez tells us he suffered cardiac arrest. In addition to being pumped for Comic-Con, Michael was preparing to release a new book called "Tears For My Father: Outlaw Thoughts and Poems" before he died. He was 67. RIP.

The Saddest NYC Restaurant Closures in August
The Saddest NYC Restaurant Closures in August

Eater

time3 days ago

  • Eater

The Saddest NYC Restaurant Closures in August

is a born-and-raised New Yorker who is an editor for Eater's Northeast region and Eater New York, was the former Eater Austin editor for 10 years, and often writes about food and pop culture. This is Eater's guide to all the New York City restaurants, bars, and cafes that closed in August 2025 (see: July, June, May, April, March, February, and January). This list will be updated weekly, serving as a round-up of the dining and drinking places that have shuttered around the city. If a restaurant or bar has closed in your neighborhood, let us know at ny@ August 1 Hell's Kitchen: Dueling-piano bar Bar Nine closed on Tuesday, July 29. W42ST reports that the current owner Steve Padernacht, explained that the over-20-year-old bar never 'fully recovered from COVID.' 807 Ninth Avenue at West 54th Street Hell's Kitchen: Thai restaurant Noodies closed on Wednesday, July 30, after 11 years of operation. Co-owners Joyce and Paul Worachinda decided not to renew their lease and move back to Thailand, per W42ST. 830 Ninth Avenue, at West 54th Street Lower East Side: All-day cafe Eva's Kitchen, which opened in April 2024, closed on Thursday, July 31, as reported by the Lo-Down. The shutter announcement notes that it had to close because of 'unforeseen and overwhelming circumstances' that had made running the restaurant 'impossible.' 359 Grand Street, near Essex Street Park Slope: 15-year-old Japanese restaurant Naruto Ramen closed on Sunday, July 27, per Instagram account Here's Park Slope. A shutter announcement was posted on the restaurant's storefront, explaining that the team is 'exploring new ideas' and that 'while this is the end of this chapter, we hope it's not a goodbye forever.' 276 Fifth Avenue, between First Street and Garfield Place Prospect Heights: Just over 40-year-old Southern comfort food restaurant Mitchell's Soul Food closed on Sunday, June 29. A message posted on the door notes that 'This was not an easy decision, but we know it's time.' The restaurant, founded by Marie Mitchell, was notable for its 'fabled' fried chicken. 617 Vanderbilt Avenue, near St. Marks Avenue

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store