Posted on 08/23/2002 4:34:50 PM PDT by RJCogburn
The following article appeared in the New York Daily News' "Big Town Classic Characters" series on "New Yorkers of the American Imagination" on Friday, July 26, 2002 (page 43). It is reprinted here by permission of the author and the newspaper.
"You want to stand alone against the whole world?" That's certainly how it seems for Howard Roark as he's expelled from architecture school for refusing to copy the classical styles of the past. He'd sooner work as a day laborer than compromise his imaginative designs. He knows that every building, like every person, must have integrity if it is to survive in a harsh world. He'll take his lumps, but at least he'll keep his self-respect.
Long before Atlas Shrugged became the bible of Ayn Rand's Objectivist movement, and long before fans and critics would argue over Rand's status as novelist or philosopher, there was The Fountainhead, and Howard Roark.
A representation of his creator's romantic ideal, Roark is tall and strong, all straight angles, like the structures he builds. He's a student when we meet him in the New York of the 1920s, standing naked on a cliff, laughing, staring down into the caverns of granite that beckon belowthe raw material for his buildings-to-be. He's an original, and the dean sends him packing.
Others will stay on because they have learned to mimic the traditional styles, but Roark will have none of it. He'll succeed on his own terms and no othersalthough, under the wing of architect Henry Cameron, he learns that such success comes at great cost.
Cameron is a bitter man. He warns Roark that survival is not possible in a city ruled by Gail Wynand, publisher of The New York Banner, a vulgar, mass-circulation tabloid that dictates popular tastes. With no commissions coming his way, Roark takes a job in a quarryand pretty soon he's locking stares with Dominique Francon, a Banner columnist who just happens to be the daughter of the country's most prominent architect.
She sees him, drill in hand, all sweaty, and there's no turning back. The sex explodes in a "rape by engraved invitation," as Rand would later call it; the scene risked irritating the censors in King Vidor's 1949 film version of Rand's 1943 novel, but it clearly didn't irritate Gary Cooper and Patricia Neal, who were steaming it up off-screen as well as on.
Francon eventually discovers who Roark is, only after he has designed the innovative Enright House, which becomes the focal point of public fury. She begs Roark to renounce architecture, for she can't bear the thought that he might be destroyed by those who protest his work. Not until the novel's end does she fully respect her lover's courage, taking his hand in marriage.
The Banner's architectural critic, Ellsworth Toohey, instigates the protests. Spouting humanitarian platitudes, he urges everyone to sacrifice "selflessly" for a higher good, all the while conniving for personal power. Toohey recognizesand mocksRoark's greatness, stirring up a public outcry against the architect's "monstrosities."
Roark is undeterred. He'll design anything from skyscrapers to hotels to temples to gas stations, so long as he can build in his own way. This leads him into a deal with former school classmate Peter Keating, who desperately wants a commission to design a cost-effective, low-rent housing project called the Cortlandt Homes. Roark has perfected plans for cheap, good-quality housing, but he knows the influential Toohey will block him from getting the commission, so he allows Keating to submit the plans as if they were his own.
Keating must only promise that the project be built exactly as Roark specifies. Smelling Roark's ingenuity, however, Toohey is not fooled. He helps engineer the alteration of Roark's designsand leaves Roark with no recourse but to dynamite the disfigured Cortlandt Homes.
In Rand's version of the Trial of the Century, it is American individualism that has been indictedand must be vindicated.
By now, however, Roark has a surprising new ally: Wynand, who recognizes an inspiring and incorruptible soul and attempts to sway public opinion in Roark's defense. But Wynand soon discovers that he is less influential than he believed: Banner circulation dwindles, Toohey leads an employee rebellion, Wynand capitulates. And Howard Roark is left to argue his own case.
He does this with a psalm to all the martyred creators in human history:
"Thousands of years ago, the first man discovered how to make fire. He was probably burned at the stake he had taught his brothers to light. ..."
Creators, says Roark, are not "second-handers," not parasites on the achievements of others; they are self-motivated and independent; they have a right to exist for their own sake. The gallant Roark is acquitted of all criminal charges, and he agrees to rebuild Cortlandt Homes according to plan.
Randwho immigrated to the U.S. in 1926 after escaping Soviet communismfaced similar challenges. She was scorned by left-wing critics for her admiration of capitalism and by right-wing critics for her atheism. She nonetheless would sell millions of books, influencing philosophers, psychologists, entrepreneurs and even a future chairman of the Federal Reserve Board.
The Fountainhead has been a cult classic since its publication, a rite of passage for many a young soul who identified with the lonely struggle of its hero.
At the end of the story, as in the beginning, Roark stands atop a cliff. But this is a cliff of his own making, of girders and steel. It is the peak of the construction site for the Wynand Building, the tallest skyscraper in New York, which means the tallest building in all the world. It is but another icon placed on the grand altar that is New York's skyline, "the will of man made visible."
Ayn Rand worshiped at that heroic altar: "Is it beauty and genius people want to see? Do they seek a sense of the sublime? Let them come to New York, stand on the shore of the Hudson, look and kneel. When I see the city from my window ... I feel that if a war came to threaten this, I would like to throw myself into space, over the city, and protect these buildings with my body."
The movie was OK, but once again... I thought the book was better. For some books, there is just too much going on that can get lost when adapted for the "Big" screen.
That being said, from what I've read of L. Neil's stuff... his style LENDS itself to screen interpretation. His books read much more like full fledged stories instead of lectures thinly covered with a barely opaque veneer of a plot.
In real life the Roarks of this country are allowed almost full latitude to succeed or fall flat on their faces. But gracelessly falling flat on your face isn't heroic, so Rand invented the sinister Toohey for the sole purpose of propping up Roark and giving an artificial forced expression to his latent "heroic" victimhood.
Without Toohey, Roark would be left to languish and pout in obscurity, wondering why the rest of the world didn't instinctively sense and gush over his "genius." Many libertarians suffer from the same malady of bewliderment: "I'm s-o-o-o smart. How come nobody notices? Because they're all stupid! It isn't easy being blindingly brilliant. It is a heavy, heavy burden." *Gag*
There is better reasoned prose on the back of cereal boxes than in any of Rand's three hundred page swoons.
LOL! :^)
Lines to be remembered as the "the WTC space must not be built upon" voices continue to yammer.
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