Walter Abbott (1905â73) was a screenwriter and friend of Ayn Randâs.Â
This letter was previously published only in the Winter 2017-18 issue of The Objective Standard.
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173 East 74th Street
New York, N. Y.
March 19, 1938
Dear Mr. Abbott,
Thank you for the clipping about âNight of Jan. 16thâ. I was very glad to receive it from you, because it shows that you know I havenât forgotten you, in[ ]spite of my long silence. At least, I hope you do. Ever since your last letter, way back this summer, I have been trying to do something about getting some pull to get for you one of those scholarships you mentioned, or some form of scholarship, but I havenât had any luck. Iâm afraid my pulls are not so good, and Iâm not so good at getting any.
I have been hoping to hear that someone has had the good sense to produce âA better dayâ, but I am really beginning to think that people either have good taste or money. They donât come with both any more, in this damned century. I also had another hope, but nothing has come of it: I thought that if âWe the livingâ were produced, I would have enough money of my own, to do your play, if it were still available. You see, I am both optimistic and conceited. And I still think that âA better dayâ is the best play I have ever read in English, my own and everybody elseâs dramas included. But Iâm still sitting and waitingâfor a better day, literally and figuratively. âWe the livingâ has not been done yet (troubles both casting and political). There is a good chance of its going on next season. But you can see for yourself how uncertain everything is on Broadway. So I can do nothing but wait and hope.
And I HOPE that you have NOT seen âNight of Jan. 16thâ in Cleveland. I think Iâve told you how ashamed I am of the damn thing. In the first place, it was mutilated by Woods here, so that the New York production script was bad enough. But what is worse, I understand that in Cleveland they used not the Broadway but the amateur version of the play. And that is something to blush about and to crawl under the waste basket. It was âeditedâ by the publishers, Longmans Green, to suit the demands of the church and school acting groups. It was censored and âcleaned upâ and castrated. If, God forbid, you saw it, you canât even know whatâs mine in it and what is everybody elseâs. And collective creation never creates anything except a shameful mess. The jury gag and a vague outline of the plot in general is about all that is left in the amateur version from what the play really was. So, if you saw it, donât hold it against me. Forgive and forget.
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What are you doing now? What has happened to the play on married life that you mentioned writing this summer? I am sorry to hear that you are trying to go commercial, you who have so much real talent, but I canât take it upon myself to blame you, in view of the reception you got on your magnificent work and in view of the trash that is being produced every day here. They flop, they close one after the other, but there is always more coming. The public doesnât want it, but it seems that thatâs what the producers want. Iâll have to lose thousands out of my own pocket before I will be convinced that there is no audience for a play like yours. And even then I wonât be convinced. Oh, to hell with them all! Our day will come yet. Then weâll have the pleasure of telling all the BâŠâŠ..s âwe told you so.â
But donât go commercial more than once, if you have to. Have you done any real work? Have you any prospects of coming to New York? Or is it still a question of a job?
I do want to hear from you. Donât hold my long silences against me. Iâm one of those writers that have a horror of writing letters. When Iâm working I just canât coordinate my ideas on anything else, such as writing a coherent letter. Not that I donât want to. I try, but I give up. Then I take time off from work and concentrate on letters. Iâm a one track mind. Then all my friends hear from me at once. If you can understand and tolerate such a system, let me hear from you, when you can. I wonât always be such an unreliable correspondent about answering.
I have been very busy this summer and ever since. Finished a new playâno news on that so far. Finished a noveletteâa short novelâand sold it already in England. It will come out there this spring. Now Iâm working on a new novel, a tremendous one, about 400,000 words long and taking in a span of fifteen years, I judge. Itâs about American architects. I spent over two months this winter, working as a typist in an architectâs office, without salary, for the experience. Got great material, too.
Frank asks me specially to say hello to you for him and to send you his best regards. My ex-partner Albert is in Hollywood, got himself signed on a long term writing contract.
With all my best wishes,
Sincerely,
Ayn Rand