The Boston Globe
Boston.com
July 11, 2006
The Filmmaker and The Protest Singer
Peter Frumkin's PBS documentary blows the dust off Woody Guthrie's
legend to find the man and his legacy
By Joan Anderman, Globe Staff
³A lot of people know Woody Guthrie as the guy in dungarees with a
guitar on his back who played three-chord songs,² says Peter Frumkin. ³But
there's a lot more to him than that.²
That's why Frumkin, a Cambridge-based filmmaker, devoted the last
seven years to making the PBS ³American Masters² documentary ³Woody Guthrie:
Ain't Got No Home.² The film, which premieres tomorrow on WGBH-TV (Channel 2),
is a painstakingly crafted portrait of the folk icon's life, the roots of his
music, and Guthrie's political and artistic legacy.
It was, Frumkin says, a labor of love whose seeds were planted
many years ago.
³When I was growing up I listened to a lot of music by people who
were influenced by Woody Guthrie,² Frumkin says. ³He was this sort of mythical
presence in the background; you heard the name but nobody really knew that much
about him. At some point I bought an LP copy of the Library of Congress
recordings, interviews he did with Alan Lomax. I thought they were weird and
cool. Then about 10 years ago I read Joe Klein's book [³ Woody Guthrie: A Life²]
and it struck me that there was a really engrossing, tragic arc to Woody
Guthrie's life, and it would make a good film.²
At the time, not everyone agreed. Frumkin spent long hours in
discussion with staff at the Woody Guthrie Archives in New York, some of whom
overtly discouraged him from making the movie. One of them was the
organization's director, Woody's daughter Nora.
³I always feel that whenever you see these documentaries it's all
these sepia-toned stories about the Dust Bowl,² says Nora Guthrie. ³Then he
comes to New York, meets Leadbelly, gets Huntington's [disease], and dies.
Woody wrote 1 , 500 songs after moving to New York in 1940. But I went along
with Peter and my thinking really turned around. You have to keep telling these
stories or else it gets forgotten and trivialized. Woody's story is a mirror of
American history.²
Finding a new way to present the story was a challenge, says
Frumkin, whose documentary work has appeared on PBS, the Discovery Channel, and
the Learning Channel. Frumkin received an Emmy nomination for his work as
producer on the 2004 NOVA film ³The Most Dangerous Woman in America,² about ³Typhoid
Mary² Mallon. During five years of research , the filmmaker labored to unearth
images and anecdotes that would shed new light on the life and times of an
American hero.
The home movies that close the 90-minute documentary have been
made public only once, in the 2000 film ³Ballad of Ramblin' Jack,² about
folksinger Ramblin' Jack Elliott. Some of the archival photos Frumkin
discovered had never been seen, even by the Guthrie family. He scoured the
files at the local history museum in Pampa, Texas, where Guthrie moved in 1929,
for a pair of astonishing, previously unreleased photos of the walls of smoke
generated during the Dust Bowl. The film's soundtrack includes half a dozen Woody
Guthrie songs made from original metal masters that have never before been
heard in their pristine form -- among them an early-1940s recording of ³This
Land is Your Land.² (See sidebar)
Frumkin also investigates Guthrie's lesser-known creative pursuits,
as a visual artist and a prolific writer of prose, and reveals -- fascinatingly
-- a comfortably middle-class fellow who created and nurtured his image as a
hick minstrel.
³It's a time in the country's history when people wanted to find
truth in rural America,² says Frumkin, ³and Guthrie very consciously cultivated
that persona. He was clearly putting it on for Alan [Lomax]. Lomax wanted a
rural sage and Woody knew it and played to it.² Or, as Nora Guthrie explains
it: ³He was a performer. He worked a room like Sinatra. He was reaching out.
And he's performing mostly for very poor people. Don't you think it would be
inappropriate to perform in a suit at a migrant camp?²
Artifice notwithstanding, Guthrie's art captured the country's
mood during the dark days of the Depression, the Dust Bowl, and World War II.
As most people know, Guthrie wrote ³This Land is Your Land² as a response to
the Kate Smith hit ³God Bless America.² His was a people's version of a
national anthem, one that reflected the country's turbulence and its citizens'
struggles, and Frumkin opens the film, powerfully, with the story of that song.
³How that song came to be is so representative of who Woody
Guthrie was,² says Frumkin. ³He saw something that pissed him off and wrote a really
good song about it.²
It's that simple imperative, delivered in plain-spoken language in
what is believed to be between 2,000 and 3,000 song lyrics, that continues to
draw a remarkably broad cross-section of contemporary musicians to Guthrie's
songs.
Later this month the Klezmatics will release ³Wonder Wheel,² a
collection of Guthrie songs inspired by the melting - pot life in Coney Island,
where the songwriter lived during the late 1940s. In recent years artists as
diverse as Wilco and Billy Bragg, the Native American rock trio Blackfire, and
the Boston punk band Dropkick Murphys have set Guthrie's words to their own
music.
³These songs will remain rallying points for generation after
generation after generation,² explains Bruce Springsteen in the film. ³Some
people are going to rap them. Some people are going to thrash them out. But
people are going to return to them and find something in them.²
When a friend asked Frumkin several months ago what he thought
Woody Guthrie would be doing if he were alive today, the filmmaker said he
believed Woody would be writing the same songs, but that he would probably be a
punk musician.
³He was so in-your-face,² Frumkin says. ³It was all about the
message. I think that given the politics of the country right now, Woody is
more relevant than ever.²
Joan Anderman can be reached at anderman@globe.com.