Mr. Lincoln Goes to Hollywood
Steven Spielberg, Doris Kearns Goodwin and Tony Kushner talk about what it takes to wrestle an epic presidency into a feature film
- By Roy Blount Jr.
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2012, Subscribe
In Lincoln, the Steven Spielberg movie opening this month, President Abraham Lincoln has a talk with U.S. Representative Thaddeus Stevens that should be studied in civics classes today. The scene goes down easy, thanks to the moviemakers’ art, but the point Lincoln makes is tough.
Stevens, as Tommy Lee Jones plays him, is the meanest man in Congress, but also that body’s fiercest opponent of slavery. Because Lincoln’s primary purpose has been to hold the Union together, and he has been approaching abolition in a roundabout, politic way, Stevens by 1865 has come to regard him as “the capitulating compromiser, the dawdler.”
The congressman wore with aplomb, and wears in the movie, a ridiculous black hairpiece—it’s round, so he doesn’t have to worry about which part goes in front. A contemporary said of Stevens and Lincoln that “no two men, perhaps, so entirely different in character, ever threw off more spontaneous jokes.”
Stevens’ wit, however, was biting. “He could convulse the House,” wrote biographer Fawn M. Brodie, “by saying, ‘I yield to the gentleman for a few feeble remarks.’” Many of his declarations were too funky for the Congressional Globe (predecessor of the Congressional Record), which did, however, preserve this one: “There was a gentleman from the far West sitting next to me, but he went away and the seat seems just as clean as it was before.”
Lincoln’s wit was indirect, friendly—Doris Kearns Goodwin quotes him as describing laughter as “the joyous, universal evergreen of life” in her book Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln, on which the movie is partly based. But it was also purposeful. Stevens was a man of unmitigated principle. Lincoln got some great things done. What Lincoln, played most convincingly by Daniel Day-Lewis, says to Stevens in the movie, in effect, is this: A compass will point you true north. But it won’t show you the swamps between you and there. If you don’t avoid the swamps, what’s the use of knowing true north?
That’s a key moment in the movie. It is also something that I wish more people would take to heart—people I talk with about politics, especially people I agree with. Today, as in 1865, people tend to be sure they are right, and maybe they are—Stevens was, courageously. What people don’t always want to take on board is that people who disagree with them may be just as resolutely sure they are right. That’s one reason the road to progress, or regression, in a democracy is seldom straight, entirely open or, strictly speaking, democratic. If Lincoln’s truth is marching on, it should inspire people to acknowledge that doing right is a tricky proposition. “I did not want to make a movie about a monument,” Spielberg told me. “I wanted the audience to get into the working process of the president.”
Lincoln came out against slavery in a speech in 1854, but in that same speech he declared that denouncing slaveholders wouldn’t convert them. He compared them to drunkards, writes Goodwin:
Though the cause be “naked truth itself, transformed to the heaviest lance, harder than steel” [Lincoln said], the sanctimonious reformer could no more pierce the heart of the drinker or the slaveowner than “penetrate the hard shell of a tortoise with a rye straw. Such is man, and so must he be understood by those who would lead him.” In order to “win a man to your cause,” Lincoln explained, you must first reach his heart, “the great high road to his reason.”
As it happened, the fight for and against slave-owning would take the lowest of roads: four years of insanely wasteful war, which killed (by the most recent reliable estimate) some 750,000 people, almost 2.5 percent of the U.S. population at the time, or the equivalent of 7.5 million people today. But winning the war wasn’t enough to end slavery. Lincoln, the movie, shows how Lincoln went about avoiding swamps and reaching people’s hearts, or anyway their interests, so all the bloodshed would not be in vain.
***
When Goodwin saw the movie, she says, “I felt like I was watching Lincoln!” She speaks with authority, because for eight years, “I awakened with Lincoln every morning and thought about him every night,” while working on Team of Rivals. “I still miss him,” she adds. “He’s the most interesting person I know.”
Goodwin points to a whole 20-foot-long wall of books about Lincoln, in one of the four book-lined libraries in her home in Concord, Massachusetts, which she shares with husband Richard Goodwin, and his mementos from his days as speechwriter and adviser to Presidents Kennedy and Johnson—he wrote the “We Shall Overcome” speech that Johnson delivered on national television, in 1965, in heartfelt support of the Voting Rights Act. She worked with Johnson, too, and wrote a book about him. “Lincoln’s ethical and human side still outranks all the other presidents,” she says. “I had always thought of him as a statesman—but I came to realize he was our greatest politician.”
The movie project began with Goodwin’s book, before she had written much of it. When she and Spielberg met, in 1999, he asked her what she was working on, and she said Lincoln. “At that moment,” says Spielberg, “I was impulsively seized with the chutzpah to ask her to let me reserve the motion-picture rights.” To which effrontery she responded, in so many words: Cool. Her original plan had been to write about Mary and Abe Lincoln, as she had about Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt. “But I realized that he spent more time with members of his cabinet,” she says.
And so Goodwin’s book became an infectiously loving portrait of Lincoln’s empathy, his magnanimity and his shrewdness, as shown in his bringing together a cabinet of political enemies, some more conservative than he, others more radical, and maneuvering them into doing what needed to be done.
Prominent among those worthies was Secretary of the Treasury Salmon Chase. Goodwin notes that when that august-looking widower and his daughter Kate, the willowy belle of Washington society, “made an entrance, a hush invariably fell over the room, as if a king and his queen stood in the doorway.” And yet, wrote Navy Secretary Gideon Welles, Chase was “destitute of wit.” He could be funny inadvertently. Goodwin cites his confiding to a friend that he “was tormented by his own name. He fervently wished to change its ‘awkward, fishy’ sound to something more elegant. ‘How wd. this name do (Spencer de Cheyce or Spencer Payne Cheyce,)’ he inquired.”
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (6)
I couldn't help but remember those history re-enactment films we saw in grade school narrated by Walter Cronkite called You Are There. This film is a highly stylized version of what were in the 60's informative teaching tools. However it came as a bit of a surprise to hear the F word used in some dialog. Has nothing to do with being a prude, more to do with accuracy of common English vulgarities in mid 1800's. Within the context of verbal exchanges that were well written, pithy, highly verbose---the inclusion twice as I recall nudged the film in an unwelcome direction. Granted this film is a deification of Lincoln but gratifying to hear adults speak as adults and see admirable costumes and sets.
Posted by Barbara Koslosky on November 29,2012 | 03:45 PM
Unfortunately, Spielberg based his film on a problematic book by confessed plagiarist, Doris Kearns Goodwin. But Spielberg’s film will probably please typical moviegoers as a result of his tendency to be “overly sentimental and tritely moralistic”; characteristics that are de rigueur for a Lincoln film. The film dramatizes Lincoln’s “courageous” efforts on behalf of the 13th Amendment, an amendment that freed the slaves but did not grant them citizenship, equal protection or voting rights. Some historians try to rationalize Lincoln’s omission of these basic rights ignoring his oft-stated comment that he was opposed to such rights for freed slaves. Lincoln also expressed his fear that the “amalgamation” of white and black races would contaminate the white race
Posted by Gail Jarvis on November 22,2012 | 02:21 PM
Smithsonian’s consecutive front-page articles on Jefferson and Lincoln both underscore the role that race plays these days in distorting history. Jefferson, who risked his very existence to help create a bastion of individual liberty unlike the world had ever seen, is pilloried because he participated in slave society that was common in his day. Lincoln, who waged a brutal military campaign against the South that bombarded, blockaded and burned civilian areas in the name of “preserving the Union”, is hailed because he ordered, as a political tactic, the emancipation of slaves. Jefferson was the consummate idealist, whose enlightened concepts were boldly spelled out under threat of execution. Lincoln was the calculating opportunist, who in 1862 had revoked Union General David Hunter’s order to free slaves in occupied territories, and later used the Emancipation Proclamation to salvage waning support for his war of conquest against the Southern states. Political correctness is no excuse for historical inaccuracy.
Posted by Michael Trouche on November 13,2012 | 04:21 PM
Alas, Daniel Day Lewis did not take Edmund Wilson's words to heart: "The cruelest thing that has happened to Lincoln since he was shot by Booth was to fall into the hands of Carl Sandburg."
Posted by Amos Humiston on November 8,2012 | 02:51 PM
Thrilling to look forward to a movie about Lincoln..but not all about him; would that all of us could be known more by our inner strivings towards our goals. We will probably know him better by understanding his friends and even those opposing him. We also know more about the authors, seeing what fascinates them about the one of focus. A special wedding gift from my new husband was a book about Lincoln; I loved him from the little I had learned of him and my husband who was a walking encyclopedia of people and events of history, was encouraging my curiosity, that we would have even more of common interest. Looking forward to getting to know him better.
Posted by Carol Dixon Klein on October 27,2012 | 11:51 AM
When I saw ads for this film on TV, I was interested, as a student and a teacher of History. Then I realized that Steven Spielberg made it. Too darned bad! I do not go to Spielberg movies, as I am afraid after investing my emotions in his film, he is going to whip out a pencil and draw another cartoon tire under the dying airplane. I do not trust the man and his fiction is better than truth views.
Posted by James Breakey on October 25,2012 | 06:45 PM