Saturday, June 12, 1976 -THE MICHIGAN-DAILY rage Seven Saturday, June 12, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY page Seven nly uprising SMART ALECK: Nostalgic glance at Woollcott's past tp frr, small v e say, lost height. As the two of is sat an easy thousand feet over int hber, he recounted the adventure whicortly a i-tonth ago made him the firs hu ran being to sit on the rim of a balooi more thar seven miles above the ear:h. " .JE I TO'K off at Louisville (Ky.)," Jeff began. By the time he reached h maximum height he was right over Lexington (Ky.), there was Lexington right below me, A hile Louisville was sev- enty t:ve miles away. And you know that these nit towns looked like they were both right onler me It seemed like I could spc o either one of them." Cnden'otion on he red-hot burners ac- coated for a number of supernatural ef- ficts straight out cf a science fiction mo- vie. "I turned into a snowman so every- time I reached for a burner there was all Ihs cracking and crunching because I Sas all covered with ice," he said. Meanwhile, toe balloon donned its own f'ggy cest at 23,O0s feet. What's more it left its von cosmic contrail of vapor trail- i,g Lehird - isibte to the ground crew all the while. ThouGl HE HASN'T finished his re- search paper en the first high alti- tuide proiect Jeff is already thinking about the possioilities of attempting 50 or 60 thousand feet. Bui he's not thinking too .hrd yet. "We (lie and several close ballooning cotmmerede's) are going to take the sum- ner off from all of these crazy ideas and do some fun Flying," the balloonist said wi±h a boyish -rin spreading across his young - looking face. Jeff's fun includes free-flying and sanctioned competition which is the rage at county fairs. In fact, Jeff and a number of balloonists from this area, a virtual balloon capital, are gear- ing up for a 3-day event to be held in a pinprick of a town called Pinckney. While '-he sky above Pinckney will look like a Jacksor. Pollack painting: splatter- eJ with colorful balloons, its a far cry from the Nationals where the city of Ken- tucky gains a rainbowed-nylon ceiling of balltons. "A" the firs: US National there were eight balloons and at the 1975 one there were 1i0," Jeff said pausing to let the figures make their impact. "If you could no+ this into context, he went on, "the first one was in 196P . . . that was only seven yccrs ago so l'e sport has obviously mush- ronmed." "UTi lET'S FACE it, ballooning isn't the pasttine tof the masses at $6000 a craft See HOT, Page 10 Sue Ai.s is a D frly night editor. SMART ALECK by Howard Teich- mann. New York: William Morrow & Corpany Inc., $10.95 By JEFFREY SELBST ALEXANDER WOOLLCOTT, t h e noted drama critic spent his life in the middle of a glittering crowd, because he chose it t h a t way. He orchestrated his actions, his friends, his words, and indeed, his life around the theatrical, and reaped the rewards in reputation. One problem with that, of course, is that his two previous biographers, Samuel Hopkins Adams and Edwin Hoyt, were scar- ed away from the subject of his sexual peculiarities and his cruel- ty, in their awe of his stature. Woolcotts new biographer, H o w- ard Teichmann, swears up and down that he will cut to the heart of the matter, in Smart Aleck, that he will not write fluff. Hmmm. The fact of the matter is, that Teichmann is scarcely less ador- ing. His previous bio was of George Kaufman, a Woollcott friend, and like Woollcott, a Round Tabler, a select group of Broadway luminar- ies who gathered at the Algonquin Hotel. That previous book was pep- pered with both men's witty re- marks, but traveled lightly over the terrain of heir lives -- with some focus on Kaufman. Woollcott's life is given the same sort of treatment herein. And granted, there is a bit of a cult that has formed about the heyday of the Round Table, and certainly around its other stars Dorothy Parker, Harpo Marx, Robert Bench- ley et. al., yet this seems to me flimsy excuse for such an unscath- ing glance at what might have been America's most famous (for a time) and most strange man. Too, large sections of the book are lifted whole from the Kaufman tome, especially the parts dealing with the humorous remarks and viperish good-fellowship of t h e Round Table. Yet the wit is left intact. The wit that characterized his enor- mous man and his counerparts is stil as fresh and clever as ever. And in fact, the very presence of Wooll-- cott encouraged cleverness e v e n from the mouths of those not par- ticularly well-suited for that type of thinking. THOSE DAYS, the early days of New York's dominance in the media, the days of the Round Table and the multitudes of maga- zines, could properly be termed helcyon, and now they have be- come the subject of much nostal- gia. One reason is perhaps that it is no longer easy for a group of talented friends to dominate t h e country's tastes and thoughts so completely, another reason is that perhaps there is not so much com- ing out to review. In any case, some of the elan of the times can never be recaptured, and Teichmann writes about that as a little boy with his nose pres- sed up against the window of a bakery shop. But Teichmann him- self can be excused, for he colla- borated with Kaufman on the last of the tatter's hits, The Solid Gold Cadillac. Teichman tasted the last of a glittering group, and is now understandably sorry to see those days go. This might mean that we can expect upcoming bios from him on the rest of the group, and this is fervently hoped not to be the case. Rehashing of their stories, as inertwined as they are, and by the same writer, could only be hack work. YET ONE GETS the distinct im- pression from this book that the life and times of Alexander Woollcott weren't nearly so jolly as Teichmann himself would like us to believe. Oh, he plays for the standard pathos content when he recounts how Woollcott confessed to Anita Loos that he'd always wanted to be a mother, and that was why he behaved as he did, yet these deviations are not unexpect- ed, and not terribly downcasting. What is depressing is the picture of the self-imposed exile, living out his days increasingly on Neshobe Island in Lake Bomoseen, Vermont, where he shipped his friends up for visits at his convenience and char- ged them for the privilege. Wooll- cott's life was going fast. In t h e last few years before his death in 1943, he had been getting weaker, and was undoubtedly aware that his time was near. Yet Woollcott, practically t h e first of the group to fail, must too have had a feeling that they were all slipping by him. For all his pro- digious cruelty with words, he was still beloved by his friends. As The New Yorker put it in his obituary, "We were glad we knew him well, for he was a most uncomfortable man to know slightly." There will never be another like him, and though cliched, that holds true because the times that nur- tured his talent will never be seen again. That is perhaps his mysti- que. In an honest appraisal of his talents, Dorothy Parker said she thought little of a man who could say that "reading Marcel Proust is like lying in someone else's dirty bath water" and then wax rhapso- dic over something called "Valiant is the word for Carrie". Yet it was this prodigal foolish- ness, as well as the incisive under- standing, not his theatrical person or his fabled wit, that made the man and the legend around him. The man is gone, and Smart Aleck can but stoke the legend. Jeff Selbs/ is the Daily Arts editor. Fv5n though he remembers the weather "lcisnstairs" as being quite hazy, Jeff said, ' Nhere I was it was crystal clear. "Timre wore ne clouds, no anything." But no anything a'so meant no breathable air not to mention the lack of such ameneties as earthsly heat. Breathing, even with a tt, required cs much concentration as a rcalls problen and warmth was some- tig gotten from the "bestest ever arc- t'c expiration gear' in Jeff's words. "Now I knew it was cold and it (the suit) was sPisei to be go'd to minus 80 and boy wa5 it, cause the stuff was toasty warm ed I couldn't believe it because it was a Mot 75 outside."