Pages 87-96 of the long out of print book "The Cool Crazy Committed World of the Sixties" by Pierre Berton (McClelland and Stewart, 1966) The interview was conducted in Hollywood in February 1966, filmed for Canadian TV, Lenny's last TV appearance before his death. LENNY BRUCE A CHILD BEFORE HIS TIME "In freedom of speech, the accent is on freedom, not on speech" It was said of Lenny Bruce that he execrated all that is unctuous and sanctimonious in our society from Santa Claus to small "l" liberals. He was a man who attacked the real sacred cows to his personal cost, while others attacked the pretend ones to their personal benefit. He preached that sex is not dirty, that drug addicts are not criminals, and that homosexuals should not be persecuted. He said that "every man who professes to be a man of God and owns more than one suit is a hustler - so long as there are people in the world who don't have any." Kenneth Tynan, the British critic, praised him as an impromptu prose poet "who uses words the way a jazz musician uses notes," but few critics were as ecstatic. Others called him an egotist, a vulgar, tasteless boor, a hard-core pornographer, and a sick comedian for sick comedians. Bruce attacked the most sacred taboos of the Judaeo-Christian society: those short, explosive words that are commonly accepted shorthand for longer, more euphemistic phrases dealing with matters sexual. Because he believed these words derive their strength from being taboo, he tried to devaluate them by constant public use. It was this that got him into a peck of trouble and made it virtually impossible for him to perform anywhere in the United States, Canada, or Great Britain (from which he was barred in 1963). Bruce's career reached its peak around 1961. Then it went steadily downhill to the point where he was destitute. Over and over again he was hauled into court. Over and over again he fought back, his head bloody but unbowed. He became a man obsessed with the law. It consumed his waking hours and haunted his sleep. Toward the end of his life, he talked of little else; his friends, bored and exhausted, had deserted him; his social life, he told me, had been destroyed. In the mid-Sixties, he seemed less a child of his time than a child before his time. Just as Lady Chatterley's Lover, the cause célèbre of an earlier decade, seems mild fare today, so I suspect will Bruce's taboo-breaking monologues seem relatively innocuous to a coming generation. Though he was virtually out of business when I interviewed him, his prsonal following remained impressive. It is no accident that, without the advantage of any TV appearances, the recorded monologues of this essentially moral and unvengeful man have - when available - consistently outsold those darlings of the Critical Establishment, Mort Sahl and Jonathan Winters. The Critical Establishment wanted no truck nor trade with Bruce, the idol-smasher. But there was as enormous if largely incoherent underground movement that considered him one of its high priests. Bruce, who saw so much so clearly, understood all about this and the reasons for it, which is why he didn't blame the critics for disliking him. "It's not their fault they don't understand," he said. "Each generation is incoherent to the next. They can't help it. They're old." Bruce rarely appeared on television. Most of the time he wasn't wanted, and when he was he often declined. He had turned down a much fatter fee from another Canadian program just the week before he agreed to appear with me. It was, I believe, his last appearance before his death in August, 1966. The comments I heard about him in Hollywood, where we taped the program in February were discouraging: "You'll be sorry ... he won't show ... wait till he starts talking dirty ... you'll never get it on the air ... who can understand him? ... he'll put you down ...." But Bruce, arriving on the dot of time, turned out to be a mild-mannered man who, without histrionics, obscenities, or self-pity, calmly set out to discuss with me his trouble with the law. Since he had once been described as a man with a message for humanity who was willing to risk jail for it, I began by asking for his comment. LENNY BRUCE: I don't know if it's a message for humanity, but my point of view is that under our constitution no American citizen is born with an original sin. Therefore, the burden is not upon any of the citizens in our country to prove that our speech is beyond reproach, but respected and protected by the constitution. The difficulty I've had is with the people who confuse themselves with the authorities. Which I believe is a quasi-religious point of view. PIERRE: Well now, let's go back a moment and get some statistics here. I think I'm right in saying that back from 1956 to 1960, you made well over one hundred thousand dollars a year, whereas last year you only made about two thousand dollars, which is obviously quite a change in your life. You're almost broke. You've spent about one hundred and fifty thousand dollars in lawyers fees. Is this correct? LENNY BRUCE: Yes. Most of the money I've earned, in the courts - fighting with these people who act under the collar of the law, without the authority of it. PIERRE: There have been nine charges against you over the past three or four years. Seven have been for obscenity and two for narcotics. Now you still have not gone to jail for any of them. I think you have been acquitted on all but one. LENNY BRUCE: Well, there is a difference between going to jail: I have gone to jail on all of them, but there has been no judgment. I've appealed and I've won my appeals. But it has been a trial by ordeal. It's cut a lot of my income out, changed my social life, and changed my point of view on stage. PIERRE: Now the two charges against you for narcotics were for using drugs, and yet you claim you're not a drug addict - that you don't use drugs except for medical reasons. Is this not correct? LENNY BRUCE: The problem I had there was that the peace officers who had arrested me had arrested me previously on charges of obscenity. They had decided that the medication that I had, although it was prescribed by a doctor, was fooling the law. PIERRE: What do you mean by that? LENNY BRUCE: It's the only conclusion I can make. Again, that they have not a truly religious view but a quasi-religious view that the law is something that is out to trap you. They don't realize that it is created by We The People. They think there is a good and evil in the law instead of a right and wrong in the law - that the people who enforce the law are the goodness and anybody who has a prescription for any medication is obviously fooling the law because they are not supposed to have that unless they are in the hospital. PIERRE: You suffer from a nervous disorder that requires certain drugs? LENNY BRUCE: I never use any narcotics; I use a stimulant called methedrine which is listed as a dangerous drug. It is the same drug that the astronauts take. PIERRE: And you carry around with you a doctor's letter saying that you require the drug? LENNY BRUCE: Yes, and their opinion was that I was just doing that to trick the law. PIERRE: And it's your belief that, if you hadn't been up on the obscenity charges, there would have been no narcotics charges against you? LENNY BRUCE: That's really where it's at. PIERRE: Then let's talk about really what we are here to talk about: the seven charges against you for obscenity which really get down to your use of four-letter words in night clubs, don't they? Or do they? LENNY BRUCE: Well, they really don't. The law is very precise on what is obscene. I think that anyone will take judicial notice of the fact that what art is is a portrayal. For instance, if I was now to take a motion picture of you as an artist, all that anyone could judge would be my art as a motion-picture producer depicting another artist at work. And, since all art is just another portrayal of another art, what happened in my case is that a peace officer would view my art and then go before agrand jury or magistrate and would say: "Here's my resumé of Lenny Bruce." And the magistrate would watch the peace officer be a comedian and he would say: "That stinks!" PIERRE: The peace officer would be doing your act in court? LENNY BRUCE: Yes. PIERRE: But you weren't allowed to do your act in court? LENNY BRUCE: Well this was before the court case . This was on the complaints made against me. The peace officer says: "I saw a man who did an obscene show." The magistrate says: "Well, if you have the evidence...." The peace officer says: "I can do it for you." And he does the show. The magistrate, in effect, says: "That's a terrible show" and has me arrested for the peace officer's act. The irony of it is that I have to go to court and defend the peace officer's act. That's why, in the last case, I refused to appeal: I don't want to win the right to do another comedian's act. PIERRE: Let's get this clear: if something is considered art, it can't be considered obscene. You say that what you are doing is art. Even if it requires the use of certain taboo words, those words may be part of that art as, indeed, they are in books like Ulysees and Lady Chatterley's Lover. But you can't let somebody else do your act and still call it art. And that's what the police officer does when he gets the summons to haul you into court? LENNY BRUCE: Which is against the law. PIERRE: And that's really the irony of the whole thing? LENNY BRUCE: The reason it's against our law came from the British law. It was a case called "Regina versus Hicklin," and at that time there was a book called The Confessional Unmasked, and the judge was the Lord High Cockburn. It was in 1869. He ruled that the test of obscenity was it's effect on the most corruptible mind in the community. And that was the test the American courts adopted until about 1931. In 1931, when Ulysses came up, Judge Wolsey, and Judge Learned Hand in another case following, said: "I don't think that will be a good American system - to judge the work by the most corruptible mind in the community. Because if we use that for a standard, all the literature in our country will be directed at the most corruptible mind in the community." And, he said, instead of that we had better have it directed at the normal, average man with the normal, average sex instincts - and not use the isolated excerpts. Rather, judge the work as a whole. In this way, no artist will ever be judged on somebody else's work. That is the clear rule, and the Supreme Court has held to that rule. And people who don't agree with the Constitition - people who again have a quasi-religious view - continually interfere with that. PIERRE: You know a lot about the law. LENNY BRUCE: I've spent the last two or three years now reading about ten hours a day. First, the United States Constitution very thoroughly; then all the laws that were passed to enforce the provisions of the United States Constitution; then all the people who violated the Constitution - their arrests, their cases, and their appeals, their exceptions, and every footnote. PIERRE: This has changed your life, hasn't it? LENNY BRUCE: Oh yes, I have a much different view of the law. PIERRE: When you were first arrested in 1962, allegedly for an obscene act, did you think you were guilty? LENNY BRUCE: Well, the first time I was arrested for obscenity, I was ashamed. Because I never dreamed that the man who was arresting me didn't know the law! Because when a man says to you: "You're under arrest for violation of 326!" and he is a law enforcement officer, you assume that you must have violated the law. But after I was arrested for the second and the third time, I started reading the law, and I realized that I was not violating the law. I realized that the California legislature passed the law. I realized that We The People are the law! Any law that's on our books today, we agree to it either by not voting against it or by voting for it, and that the only people who enforce the law correctly are the people who do enforce it correctly. PIERRE: You've had a rough road, and yet you don't feel very bitter about this. Instead, you seem more intrigued and interested. LENNY BRUCE: I think you get sort of depersonalized when you start to read. From reading, especially now, I believe we are the most successful country in the world because we worship a charter, a blueprint - the United States Constitution. In some countries that are ruled by a religious faction, they can hand out franchises, like Howard Johnson, and each person can use the franchise in their own way. In our country, you can't. You go right to the charter. The charter is correct; it is precise. If it's not there, it's just not right. PIERRE: Now tell me what happened. Is it hard for you to get work? Because of the charges against you? LENNY BRUCE: Like what happened to me in England: I liked England, and I was very well received by the press; but then, when i came back from this country, I was arrested. I was arrested in town A, and if towns B, C, and D don't arrest you, they are not doing their jobs. That's the big problem we have in our country: unfortunately we elect people on their record. I think that law-enforcement officers should be treated like the postman. They shouldn't have to be keeping busy all the time. We demand that the man do his job and keep busy; and when the crime rate drops - which it has in this country because the welfare is up and the economy is up - it results in a lot of false arrests. The poor police officer is put in the position of doing his job when he's not required to do his job. Because he's of shore tenure, and that's what he's elected on. You find it with a [civil rights] demonstration. How do we have law in our country? Well, let's reduce it to the very first law. Let's say we all made an agreement; we said: "We'll sleep in area A; we'll eat in area B; we'll throw our garbage in area C. Because that's the rules." Everybody agreed on it. Everybody went to sleep. Then, say, some guy woke up and he got a face full of garbage. So he says: "What's the deal here? I thought we had a rule: A, B, and C." So they discovered that although they had a rule, there was no way to enforce it. So then they had to get somebody to enforce the law. So they said: "All right; this is what we'll do: if anybody throws any garbage on us while we're sleeping, he gets thrown where the garbage is. But the problem is that we have to do business with these people so we can't throw them where the garbage is. So we'd better get someone else to do it. We'll get some 'law-enforcement officers.'" And they said: "Look, we're trying to get some sleep, but people are throwing garbage on us. So if anybody throws any garbage on us while we're sleeping, they get thrown in the garbage. But don't do it in front of me - because I want somebody to be the bad guy, and I've got to do business with these people, and you've heard me say a lot of times that it takes a certain mentality to do this work." So when the demonstrations come, that's the way the law is. You can't change the law without repealing it. So you've got a poor peace officer with a stick in his hand, and fifty thousand people throwing rocks, sticks and stones - and the thing stopping them is him. In fact, he is really doing the job of a public servant, but people always sort of want to beat the devil. The newspapers - they can only sell papers, you know, by showing what they assume is the bad guy. This creates, you know, a bit of a problem. PIERRE: Now, Mr. Bruce, let's talk about the business of taboo words - the so-called four-letter words that you do use. What is their purpose? Is it necessary to use these words? LENNY BRUCE: Well, first of all, I never talked about sex on the stage. I discuss religion . . . I criticise the authorities . . . but sex, that's not my point of view, that's not my interest. The way I do my act is that I portray many different characters throughout many different regions. I do the dialect of the regions; therefore, I do the portrayal of the character. To have each character speaking like a Cockney, but talking as an Italian, the people would think I was absurd. So the character has to be real. And that cliché about freedom of speech doesn't mean you can go far in a crowded theatre. Because the stage is make-believe: you can kill Christ on stage, and no one takes you away at the end and puts you in jail. It's make-believe! The mistake is to believe that the American theatre is an instruction of morality, which it is not. The reason the Supreme Court is very concerned with the First Amendment is that it is the only strength our country has. In freedom of speech, the accent is on freedom, not on speech. It's the right to get it across, to communicate - the right of the reader to read it and the person to say it. In other words, a discussion on syphilis is not an instruction to get it. A country can only be strong when it knows all about the bad - the worst, worst things. When it knows about the bad, then it can protect itself. The country that only knows all about the nice things about itself ends in failure, as Hitler did. PIERRE: What you're saying is what is being argued on behalf of novels - that in dialogue, to be realistic, you must let the character speak the way he would in real life - in the army, say. LENNY BRUCE: Well, anywhere they speak Jewish, they speak Jewish. And if they speak a verbotten language, then they speak a verbotten language. PIERRE: This right has now been won by the authors who write the printed word. LENNY BRUCE: It's never been lost. That's the thing: the protection has always been there. There's been a misreading. Actually, it's a handful of insurance attorneys who don't practise law. They feed upon all of these cases. There's a lot of money to be made in pornography. Let me tell you where the money is made: there is a whole department devoted to pornography. And none of these pornography cases is ever brought by the people. They are always brought by the police officer. So what we have is an army of peace officers searching about in cellars for pornographic books. They find the books - they're supporting all of the books - and then it goes to court. It's a bunch of nonsense! It's an obscenity circus! The people are not concerned with it; and it costs a fortune. And, of course, there's the fact that each book costs five dollars and it comes from some kind of a fund. We end up with a dirty-book tax fund to support these cases, which is nonsense. People who are so on the band wagon for cleanliness really don't realize what's happening. PIERRE: Let me ask you this, in this connection: is there such a thing as obscenity, and if so what does it mean to you? LENNY BRUCE: All right, "obscenity," in the dictionary sense, is entirely different from "obscenity" in the legal sense. The reason those things have to be different is that none of us voted on the dictionary. When we agree on the legal sense of the word, that's where its firmed up and nobody can change it. Now, the legal meaning of "obscene" is that, first, you have to take the thing, judge the matter, whatever the work is - whatever the medium of expression is. And the law writes with sort of parenthetical statements: such as "obscene" means "to the average person" - which refers to the earlier case we talked about, "Regina versus Hicklin" - and in the second parenthetical statement - "applying contemporary community standards." Of course, realizing that a judge that doesn't get out much, doesn't see too much - might perhaps be a little Victorian in his standards - they keep warning the laws to provide for exceptions. Obscene means again "to the average person applying contemporary community standards" - that must be the predominant appeal. That's what we are really talking about: to be "obscene," it must appeal to the "prurient interest." That means that if the work is dedicated to do nothing else but to upset the happily married couple, then the people decide they don't want it. And that's what "obscene" is. You see the difference between the artist who depicts life and the artist that takes out a piece of life and predominantly pushes that point across for just one reason: to exploit that part of life that is considered forbidden. There is no artists work that ever gets into court because, if it is art, the court doesn't look at it. You see, that's the mistake of all these cases: that the right of property has to be forfeited before the trial starts. The bad thing has to happen. In other words, somebody had to bring the work before the judge and say: "Here it is; here is the bad thing." PIERRE: Somebody had to decide that without recourse to anybody but himself. LENNY BRUCE: Yes; "Here is the contraband." When it is decided that it is contraband, then the trial starts. PIERRE: Do you think that it is necessary for us to have an obscenity law at all? LENNY BRUCE: Any law that we have on our books is necessary. PIERRE: You accept that? LENNY BRUCE: Oh yes. In other words, we make the law - the people. And the way to solve any judicial abuse, any legislative abuse, is right at the polls. The only way you can argue it is to vote against it, and that's where it's at. All of our laws. So there's nobody can say: "Well, what do you think about our law?" They have to obey the law. PIERRE: So you don't object to the law. You object to the way it has been used. LENNY BRUCE: Yes, but unconstitutionally applied. The law is crystal clear, and these people who abuse it are very dissatisfied with the law. PIERRE: How do you earn your money now? How do you support your child and your mother? LENNY BRUCE: Well, I haven't in the last six months. PIERRE: Is this mainly because you have occupied yourself with the law, or mainly because you just can't get work? Your albums aren't selling; you can't get people to buy them? They won't stock them and put them in their windows. LENNY BRUCE: Well, no; I'm a fugitive from justice from New York, which I intend to solve by going to Federal Court and bringing these people to justice. PIERRE: You can't work in the New York night clubs? LENNY BRUCE: Yes, and that's what has happened all over - just through hearsay. The people whose duty it is to preserve the moral fibre of the community are naturally not put upon to search around and see if I got a fair trial. If they just hear about it that there may be a danger to the community, it may be their duty to keep me out - which is understandable. The fact is that they would have no idea that i've been arrested nine times maliciously without provocation. It wouldn't seem reasonable until that point is brought out. The way to bring it out is in the proper place, and that is in court. I intend to go into the Federal Courts and sue these people under the civil rights act.