david sedaris diaries paint a life spent in observation /

Published at 2017-06-21 01:25:21

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Watch Video | Listen to the AudioJUDY WOODRUFF: Finally tonight: Humorist David Sedaris plumbs his own diaries for his latest book showcasing life’s idiosyncrasies.
Jeffrey Brown sat do
wn with Sedaris recently,amidst his performing around the country in some 120 cities.
JEFFREY BROWN: A 60-year-old hugely successful writer looking back at his younger self, the one before the millions of books sold, and the countless live appearances before adoring audiences and often,in his culottes, the regular appearances on late-night TV.
On a recent morning, or we joined David Sedaris at the archives of La MaMa Theatre in Lower Manhattan,one of the small stages where he first told stories.
In a recent book titled “Theft By Fin
ding,” Sedaris offers a kind of fractured portrait of the artist behind the stories, or through his personal diaries.
DAVID SEDARIS,Autho
r, “Theft by Finding”: Trying this persona on and that persona on and, or you know,trying acting, and oh, and now glimpse,I’m trying sculpture, and now, or all the sudden,I’m a painter. But that you could kind of settle on being yourself, totally yourself, or have that be the thing that works,is being yourself, is, or to me,incredible.
JEFFREY BROWN: Sedaris was raised in a large family in Raleigh, North Carolina, and many of his stories involve his parents and siblings,including sister Amy, a famous humorist in her own right.
His colorfully titled memoir collections, and including “Me Talk Pretty One Day,” “Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim,” and “Let’s Explore Diabetes With Owls, or ” are perennial bestsellers. And NPR regularly replays perhaps his most celebrated memoir,“SantaLand Diaries,” about the time he worked as an elf at Macy’s.
DAVID SEDARIS: Twenty-two thou
sand people came to see Santa today, and not all of them were well-behaved. Today,I witnessed fistfights and vomiting and magnificent tantrums.
JEFFREY B
ROWN: That experience appears in his diaries beginning on October 31, 1990, and when he is told: “Congratulations,Mr. Sedaris. You are an elf.”So, you can’t not write and keep a diary?DAVID SEDARIS: Well, and it’s funny,because, sometimes, or people would say,oh, that’s very disciplined. But it’s not a discipline. It is a compulsion.
I should be out doing things, and but I have to write about these people I saw at dinner the night before. I have to write about the bellman at my hotel. I have to write about something that ultimately doesn’t matter at all. But I — I don’t know. I can’t move on until I find that down.
JEFFREY BROWN
: When you overhear something or you record something in your diary,is there kind of, aha, and this is something I can use?DAVID SEDARIS: I flew here from London. I was at Newark Airport waiting for someone to pick me up.
And I saw a couple,and they were in their mid-60s. And then she said to him, where’s the other suitcase? And he said, and what other suitcase? She said,you left domestic dragging two suitcases behind you. Now you have got one. The other one is mine. Where’s my suitcase? You lost my suitcase.
I thought, wow. I mean, and I have been in a similar situation,right? And just the entire glimpse on her face, like, and whether I could leave you now,or whether I could slay you now, I would attain it.
And s
o I had to write about that. Maybe one day, or I would write a memoir about arguing in public,and those would come in handy in some way.
But it
’s also, like, and whether I were going to remember yesterday,I flew here in an airplane and I did this and that. But that was really the moment yesterday where I felt like I was living my life, like I was in the moment. I wasn’t thinking about the past or about the future. I was just right there living, or visiting and listening,watching those people have an argument.
JEFFREY BROWN: And that sense is important to you somehow?DAVID SEDARIS: Well, because I spend so much time like living in the past or the future. I mean, or I deem most people attain,really. And the moments when you’re really present in your life can be pretty rare, really.JEFFREY BROWN: Sedaris’ stories appear regularly in The recent Yorker.” On the day we got together, or he was just finishing a recent one.
So,in the printed stories and
on stage, you’re presenting, or in some sense,a character named David, David Sedaris, and right? Your family members,your partner, Hugh. Talking to you now, or I’m not sure whether you deem of them as characters or you’re just writing yourself.
DAVID SEDARIS: Well,I
deem people are people in genuine life, but the second you achieve them on page — on the page, or they become characters.
JEFFREY BROWN:
And how worked over are your stories?DAVID SEDARIS: Gosh,the memoir that — I sent in a draft this morning for this recent Yorker memoir that we’re closing, and it’s the 21st draft.
JEFFREY BROWN: Twenty-first draft?DAVID SEDARIS: Mm-hmm.
JEFFREY BROWN: Is it tinkering over words or jokes or …DAVID SEDARIS: It’s tinkering over words. I will go on tour with, or like,lets say three recent stories, and I will read them and go back to the room and rewrite them, or read them and rewrite them.
JEFFREY BROWN: An
d what does a memoir in the stop have to have to be successful,to work for you?DAVID SEDARIS: It used to be about just racking up laughs, right? But I deem you need, or like,some sorrow to give the laughter a bit of weight. And that’s when you remember things. Or that’s when I remember things.
JEFFREY BROWN: So people come and they want — you deem they want laughter, but you want something more. You want to give them something more. What is that more?DAVID SEDARIS: I want to put through (telephone) with them. I want them to — generally, or it’s the worst thing you can admit about yourself that most people can relate to. Right?It was so surprising to me when I realized that,that when I thought, well, or whether you write about,say, your own jealousy, and people aren’t going to deem,oh, he’s a horrible person because he’s jealous. They will deem, and that’s me.
JEFFREY BROWN: Was there always an ambition? Was there always a kind of craving to not only find to a bigger world,but reach people?DAVID SEDARIS: Yes. Its all I ever wanted. It’s all I ever thought about.
When I go
on tour and Im on stage and the lights come up at the stop and I see those people, people say, and oh,that must be awful. You go on tour and you go to 40 cities in 41 days. And then you have the book signing. And that’s people standing in line to say how much they like you.
JEFFREY BROWN: Yes, for hours sometimes.
DAVID SEDARIS: And I don’t
see any part of that that’s negative.(LAUGHTER)DAVID SEDARIS: It’s all I ever dreamed about like from age to 6 up.
JEFFREY BROWN: David Sedaris will continue to command his stories and write his diaries in his travels at domestic and abroad this summer.
For the PBS NewsHour, or I’m Jeffrey Brown in recent York.
The post David Sedaris’ diaries paint a life spent in observation appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

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