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David Mamet On 'Chicago': 'These Were The Stories You Grew Up With'

Chicago. David Mamet.

Maybe that's all that needs saying to introduce the first novel in more than 20 years by the celebrated and controversial playwright and screenwriter, who has so often made the city a signature in his works. It's a story of the mob era: hits ordered and adversaries iced; hooch in trucks which winds up in teapots; gunsels, madams, made men and molls.

"You know, I was thinking a lot about historical novels," Mamet says. "And Mario Puzo wrote The Godfather -- and then of course he and Francis [Ford Coppola] made it into a movie, which is rather different than the book. These were the stories that they grew up with. That was the stuff that being an Italian-American, whose grandparents had been connected with the immigrant generation and thus with the mob, just like Margaret Mitchell grew up with stories of the Old South. And in Chicago in my generation — I was born in 1947 — you grew up with stories of the mob, because my parents were the immigrant generation, and all the parents of my friends were the immigrant generation, and those were the people whom they were associated with, or were their adversaries starting off in America. So when you grew up in Chicago in the '50s, these were the stories you grew up with."

His new novel is simply titled Chicago. He spoke from NPR West in Culver City, Calif.


Interview Highlights

David Mamet speaks at the Rome Film Festival in 2016.
Ernesto S. Ruscio / Getty Images
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Getty Images
David Mamet speaks at the Rome Film Festival in 2016.

On protagonist Mike Hodge, and how his World War I service and journalism career shapes him

Well, I don't know – I mean, the whole trick to art is what you leave out, of course. Because I've been looking at the Olympics — maybe you have too — and there are some figure skaters who do everything correctly, and admire their athleticism. And there are others who you just — your jaw opens and you're struck by their grace, because they aren't adding anything to it. You know, there are a lot of pianists who can play Bach, but there's only one Glenn Gould. And if you listen to Glenn Gould, you think, "Hey, I can do that," because he left everything out. And that's what art is.

On the theme where many characters get ahead in the novel by cornering the franchise for sin

Well, it's true. You know, I'm over in Culver City, and there's a huge billboard about marijuana delivered directly to your door, OK? So what does government do? OK, when they can't make money or gain votes from combating sin, they take over the franchise. "Oh, you can't play the lottery, you can't play the numbers, oops, but you know, we're going to take over the lottery." So one of the themes of the book is the Chicagoan way of looking at the world, which is: Nothing's on the level. Which, as far as I can tell, is true.

On how to write David-Mamet-style dialogue, and on his craft in general

I wrote a book once called Some Freaks, which is kind of how I always thought of myself. It's what I do all day — I sit alone in a room and dream up stuff and write it down, just doing the best I can. Someone said to me, "How do I write like you?" I said, you know, "I have to, you don't."

Well the question is: Do I keep working on this piece of garbage and hope that something will come up, or do I put it aside and take up something else? And sometimes the answer is one, sometimes the answer is the other. But the only thing that I know is what Anthony Trollope said. He said, what does every writer need? He said, he needs cobbler's wax to stick him to his chair. ...

And just keep staring at it until you get so sick of yourself. You might write something. Because one doesn't know the difference between "this is a terrible idea" and "there is something so deep inside of me that every atom of my existence is resisting it." Because that might be genius. You don't know! Because not only does a good writer throw out what the others keep — a good writer keeps what the others throw out.

Sarah Handel and Viet Le produced and edited this interview for broadcast. Patrick Jarenwattananon adapted it for the Web.

Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Scott Simon is one of America's most admired writers and broadcasters. He is the host of Weekend Edition Saturday and is one of the hosts of NPR's morning news podcast Up First. He has reported from all fifty states, five continents, and ten wars, from El Salvador to Sarajevo to Afghanistan and Iraq. His books have chronicled character and characters, in war and peace, sports and art, tragedy and comedy.