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Frost, Nixon and Me

Once a researcher for David Frost and now a character in the motion picture Frost/Nixon, an author discovers what is gained and lost when history is turned into entertainment

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  • By James Reston Jr.
  • Smithsonian magazine, January 2009, Subscribe
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David Frost interviews Richard Nixon in Ron Howards Frost/Nixon
David Frost (Michael Sheen) interviews Richard Nixon (Frank Langella) in "Frost/Nixon." (Ralph Nelson / © 2008 Universal Studios)

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David Frost interviewing Richard Nixon in 1977

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Related Books

The Conviction of Richard Nixon: The Untold Story of the Frost/Nixon Interviews

by James Reston Jr.
Three Rivers Press (New York), 2007

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In May 1976, in a rather dim New York City hotel room filled with David Frost's cigar smoke, the British television personality put an intriguing proposition to me: leave your leafy academic perch for a year and prepare me for what could be a historic interrogation of Richard Nixon about Watergate.

This would be the nation's only chance for no holds barred questioning of Nixon on the scandal that drove him to resign the presidency in 1974. Pardoned by his successor, Gerald Ford, Nixon could never be brought into the dock. Frost had secured the exclusive rights to interview him. Thus the prosecution of Richard Nixon would be left to a television interview by a foreigner.

I took the job.

The resulting Frost-Nixon interviews— one in particular—indeed proved historic. On May 4, 1977, forty-five million Americans watched Frost elicit a sorrowful admission from Nixon about his part in the scandal: "I let down my friends," the ex-president conceded. "I let down the country. I let down our system of government, and the dreams of all those young people that ought to get into government but now think it too corrupt....I let the American people down, and I have to carry that burden with me the rest of my life."

If that interview made both political and broadcast history, it was all but forgotten two years ago, when the Nixon interviews were radically transformed into a piece of entertainment, first as the play Frost/Nixon, and now as a Hollywood film of the same title. For that televised interview in 1977, four hours of interrogation had been boiled down to 90 minutes. For the stage and screen, this history has been compressed a great deal more, into something resembling comedic tragedy. Having participated in the original event as Frost's Watergate researcher, and having had a ringside seat at its transformation, I've been thinking a lot lately about what is gained and what is lost when history is turned into entertainment.

I had accepted Frost's offer with some reservations. Nixon was a skilled lawyer who had denied Watergate complicity for two years. He had seethed in exile. For him, the Frost interviews were a chance to persuade the American people that he had been done an epic injustice—and to make upwards of $1 million for the privilege. And in David Frost, who had no discernible political philosophy and a reputation as a soft-soap interviewer, Nixon seemed to have found the perfect instrument for his rehabilitation.

Although Nixon's active role in the coverup had been documented in a succession of official forums, the absence of a judicial prosecution had left the country with a feeling of unfinished business. To hear Nixon admit to high crimes and misdemeanors could provide a national catharsis, a closing of the books on a depressing episode of American history.

For all my reservations, I took on the assignment with gusto. I had worked on the first Watergate book to advocate impeachment. I had taken a year off from teaching creative writing at the University of North Carolina to witness the Ervin Committee hearings of 1973, from which most Americans' understanding of Watergate came, because I regarded the scandal as the greatest political drama of our time. My passion lay in my opposition to the Vietnam War, which I felt Nixon had needlessly prolonged for six bloody years; in my sympathy for Vietnam War resisters, who had been pilloried by the Nixonians; and in my horror over Watergate itself. But I was also driven by my desire for engagement and, I like to think, a novelist's sense of the dramatic.


In May 1976, in a rather dim New York City hotel room filled with David Frost's cigar smoke, the British television personality put an intriguing proposition to me: leave your leafy academic perch for a year and prepare me for what could be a historic interrogation of Richard Nixon about Watergate.

This would be the nation's only chance for no holds barred questioning of Nixon on the scandal that drove him to resign the presidency in 1974. Pardoned by his successor, Gerald Ford, Nixon could never be brought into the dock. Frost had secured the exclusive rights to interview him. Thus the prosecution of Richard Nixon would be left to a television interview by a foreigner.

I took the job.

The resulting Frost-Nixon interviews— one in particular—indeed proved historic. On May 4, 1977, forty-five million Americans watched Frost elicit a sorrowful admission from Nixon about his part in the scandal: "I let down my friends," the ex-president conceded. "I let down the country. I let down our system of government, and the dreams of all those young people that ought to get into government but now think it too corrupt....I let the American people down, and I have to carry that burden with me the rest of my life."

If that interview made both political and broadcast history, it was all but forgotten two years ago, when the Nixon interviews were radically transformed into a piece of entertainment, first as the play Frost/Nixon, and now as a Hollywood film of the same title. For that televised interview in 1977, four hours of interrogation had been boiled down to 90 minutes. For the stage and screen, this history has been compressed a great deal more, into something resembling comedic tragedy. Having participated in the original event as Frost's Watergate researcher, and having had a ringside seat at its transformation, I've been thinking a lot lately about what is gained and what is lost when history is turned into entertainment.

I had accepted Frost's offer with some reservations. Nixon was a skilled lawyer who had denied Watergate complicity for two years. He had seethed in exile. For him, the Frost interviews were a chance to persuade the American people that he had been done an epic injustice—and to make upwards of $1 million for the privilege. And in David Frost, who had no discernible political philosophy and a reputation as a soft-soap interviewer, Nixon seemed to have found the perfect instrument for his rehabilitation.

Although Nixon's active role in the coverup had been documented in a succession of official forums, the absence of a judicial prosecution had left the country with a feeling of unfinished business. To hear Nixon admit to high crimes and misdemeanors could provide a national catharsis, a closing of the books on a depressing episode of American history.

For all my reservations, I took on the assignment with gusto. I had worked on the first Watergate book to advocate impeachment. I had taken a year off from teaching creative writing at the University of North Carolina to witness the Ervin Committee hearings of 1973, from which most Americans' understanding of Watergate came, because I regarded the scandal as the greatest political drama of our time. My passion lay in my opposition to the Vietnam War, which I felt Nixon had needlessly prolonged for six bloody years; in my sympathy for Vietnam War resisters, who had been pilloried by the Nixonians; and in my horror over Watergate itself. But I was also driven by my desire for engagement and, I like to think, a novelist's sense of the dramatic.

To master the canon of Watergate was a daunting task, for the volumes of evidence from the Senate, the House and various courts would fill a small closet. Over many months I combed through the archives, and I came across new evidence of Nixon's collusion with his aide Charles Colson in the coverup—evidence that I was certain would surprise Nixon and perhaps jar him out of his studied defenses. But mastering the record was only the beginning. There had to be a strategy for compressing two years of history into 90 minutes of television. To this end, I wrote a 96-page interrogation strategy memo for Frost.

In the broadcast, the interviewer's victory seemed quick, and Nixon's admission seemed to come seamlessly. In reality, it was painfully extracted from a slow, grinding process over two days.

At my suggestion, Frost posed his questions with an assumption of guilt. When Nixon was taken by surprise—as he clearly was by the new material—you could almost see the wheels turning in his head and almost hear him asking himself what else his interrogator had up his sleeve. At the climactic moment, Frost, a natural performer, knew to change his role from inquisitor to confessor, to back off and allow Nixon's contrition to pour out.

In Aristotelian tragedy, the protagonist's suffering must have a larger meaning, and the result of it must be enlightenment. Nixon's performance fell short of that classical standard—he had been forced into his admission, and after he delivered it, he quickly reverted to blaming others for his transgressions. (His reversion to character was cut from the final broadcast.) With no lasting epiphany, Nixon would remain a sad, less-than-tragic, ambiguous figure.

For me, the transition from history to theater began with a letter from Peter Morgan, the acclaimed British screenwriter (The Queen), announcing his intention to write a play about the Frost-Nixon interviews. Since I loved the theater (and have written plays myself), I was happy to help in what seemed then a precious little enterprise.

At lunches in London and Washington, I spilled out my memories. And then I remembered that I had written a narrative of my involvement with Frost and Nixon, highlighting various tensions in the Frost camp and criticizing the interviewer for failing, until the end, to apply himself to his historic duty. Out of deference to Frost, I hadn't published it. My manuscript had lain forgotten in my files for 30 years. With scarcely a glance at it, I fished it out and sent it to Morgan.

In the succeeding months I answered his occasional inquiry without giving the matter much thought. I sent Morgan transcripts of the conversations between Nixon and Colson that I had uncovered for Frost. About a year after first hearing from Morgan, I learned that the play was finished and would première at the 250-seat Donmar Warehouse Theatre in London with Frank Langella in the role of Nixon. Morgan asked if I would be willing to come over for a couple of days to talk to Langella and the other actors. I said I'd love to.

On the flight to London I reread my 1977 manuscript and I read the play, which had been fashioned as a bout between fading heavyweights, each of whose careers were on the wane, each trying to use the other for resurrection. The concept was theatrically brilliant, I thought, as well as entirely accurate. A major strand was the rising frustration of a character called Jim Reston at the slackness of a globe-trotting gadfly called David Frost. Into this Reston character was poured all the anger of the American people over Watergate; it was he who would prod the Frost character to be unrelenting in seeking the conviction of Richard Nixon. The play was a slick piece of work, full of laughs and clever touches.

For the play's first reading we sat round a simple table at the Old Vic, ten actors (including three Americans), Morgan, me and the director, Michael Grandage. "Now we're going to go around the table, and everyone is going to tell me, 'What was Watergate?'" Grandage began. A look of terror crossed the actors' faces, and it fell to me to explain what Watergate was and why it mattered.

The play, in two acts, was full of marvelous moments. Nixon had been humanized just enough, a delicate balance. To my amusement, Jim Reston was played by a handsome 6-foot-2 triathlete and Shakespearean actor named Elliot Cowan. The play's climax—the breaking of Nixon—had been reduced to about seven minutes and used only a few sentences from my Colson material. When the reading was over, Morgan turned to Grandage. "We can't do this in two acts," he said. The emotional capital built up in Act I would be squandered when theatergoers repaired to the lobby for refreshments and cellphone calls at intermission. Grandage agreed.

I knew not to argue with the playwright in front of the actors. But when Morgan and I retreated to a restaurant for lunch, I insisted that the breaking of Nixon happened too quickly. There was no grinding down; his admission was not "earned." I pleaded for the inquisition to be protracted, lengthened, with more of the devastating Colson material put back in.

Morgan resisted. This was theater, not history. He was the dramatist; he knew what he was doing. He was focused on cutting, not adding, lines.

Back at the theater, after a second reading, Langella took up my argument on his own. Nixon's quick collapse did not feel "emotionally right" to him, he said. He needed more lines. He needed to suffer more. Grandage listened for a while, but the actor's job was not to question the text, but to make the playwright's words work. The play would stay as written.

It opened in London on August 10, 2006, to terrific reviews. The critics raved about Langella's performance as Nixon, as well as Michael Sheen's as David Frost. (I tried not to take it personally when the International Herald Tribune critic, Matt Wolf, wrote, "Frost/Nixon provide[s] a snarky guide to [the] proceedings in the form of Elliot Cowan's bespectacled James Reston, Jr.") No one seemed to care about what was historically accurate and what had been made up. No one seemed to find Nixon's breaking down and subsequent contrition unsatisfying. Not even me. Langella had made it work, brilliantly...not through more words, but with shifting eyes, awkward pauses and strange, uncomfortable body language, suggesting a squirming, guilty man. Less had become more as a great actor was forced back on the essential tools of his art.

Langella had not impersonated Nixon, but had become a totally original character, inspired by Nixon perhaps, but different from him. Accuracy—at least within the walls of theater—did not seem to matter. Langella's performance evoked, in Aristotelian terms, both pity and fear. No uncertainty lingered about the hero's (or the audience's) epiphany.

In April 2007 the play moved to Broadway. Again the critics raved. But deep in his admiring review, the New York Times' Ben Brantley noted, "Mr. Morgan has blithely rejiggered and rearranged facts and chronology" and referred readers to my 1977 manuscript, which had just been published, at last, as The Conviction of Richard Nixon. A few days later, I heard from Morgan. Brantley's emphasis on the play's factual alterations was not helpful, he said.

Morgan and I had long disagreed on this issue of artistic license. I regarded it as a legitimate point between two people coming from different value systems. Beyond their historical worth, the 1977 Nixon interviews had been searing psychodrama, made all the more so by the uncertainty over their outcome—and the ambiguity that lingered. I did not think they needed much improving. If they were to be compressed, I thought they should reflect an accurate essence.

Morgan's attention was on capturing and keeping his audience. Every line needed to connect to the next, with no lulls or droops in deference to dilatory historical detail. Rearranging facts or lines or chronology was, in his view, well within the playwright's mandate. In his research for the play, different participants had given different, Rashômon-like versions of the same event.

"Having met most of the participants and interviewed them at length," Morgan wrote in the London program for the play, "I'm satisfied no one will ever agree on a single, 'true' version of what happened in the Frost/Nixon interviews—thirty years on we are left with many truths or many fictions depending on your point of view. As an author, perhaps inevitably that appeals to me, to think of history as a creation, or several creations, and in the spirit of it all I have, on occasion, been unable to resist using my imagination."

In a New York Times article published this past November, Morgan was unabashed about distorting facts. "Whose facts?" he told the Times reporter. Hearing different versions of the same events, he said, had taught him "what a complete farce history is."

I emphatically disagreed. No legitimate historian can accept history as a creation in which fact and fiction are equals. Years later participants in historical events may not agree on "a single, 'true' version of what happened," but it's the historian's responsibility to sort out who is telling the truth and who is covering up or merely forgetful. As far as I was concerned, there was one true account of the Frost/Nixon interviews—my own. The dramatist's role is different, I concede, but in historical plays, the author is on the firmest ground when he does not change known facts but goes beyond them to speculate on the emotional makeup of the historical players.

But this was not my play. I was merely a resource; my role was narrow and peripheral. Frost/Nixon—both the play and the movie—transcends history. Perhaps it is not even history at all: in Hollywood, the prevailing view is that a "history lesson" is the kiss of commercial death. In reaching for an international audience, one that includes millions unversed in recent American history, Morgan and Ron Howard, the film's director, make the history virtually irrelevant.

In the end it is not about Nixon or Watergate at all. It's about human behavior, and it rises upon such tran­scendent themes as guilt and innocence, resistance and enlightenment, confession and redemption. These are themes that straight history can rarely crystallize. In the presence of the playwright's achievement, the historian—or a participant—can only stand in the wings and applaud.

James Reston Jr. is the author of The Conviction of Richard Nixon and 12 other books.


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Comments (11)

I think the movie was very accurate. Obivously some parts had to be made up in order to make an entertaining movie. Besides the drunk phone call from Nixon to Frost the night before the enterview, I dont think there were any major parts of the movie that were just completely made up. Things as irrelevant as the way Frost met his girlfriend, in my opinion, seemed to be a little to coinsidential. As far as Frost's approach to the interviews, I feel they were very accurate. It seems like he had the weight of the world on his shoulders with everyone iching to get a confession out of Nixon but maintained his composure when everyone else paniced after the first couple unsuccessful interviews.

Posted by Denzell C on May 28,2009 | 11:37 AM

Nixon's line, "Well, when the president does it that means that it is not illegal" was not spoken during the Watergate part of the interview as depicted in Frost/Nixon but appeared earlier in the interview during the Vietnam War segment. The context in which Nixon uttered this line referred to national security matters that the president has to deal with. To juxtapose this as Morgan and Howard did, is unfair to Nixon, history and the audience. A more recent corollary to this Nixonian dictum, is the Bush/Cheney Theory of the Unitary Executive.

Posted by Sam La Sala on January 25,2009 | 01:50 PM

Reston seems still hung up on his misappropriated animosity for Nixon for the Vietnam War. He somehow as always been blind to the fact that the impetuous Kennedy and the bungling Johnson created such a mess it took years to unwind. I certainly can't justify all the actions Nixon took but I also don't envy the position he was put in. To the Watergate coverup - let us for one minute presume Nixon did not know what they were doing till after the fact and then simply tried to protect his cohorts from their own stupidity. I can't help but believe Reston would have done the same for a close friend or confidant - then again maybe he has never had one.

Posted by John Scopaz on January 24,2009 | 11:21 AM

The Lie That Tells The Truth is a fine book by John Dufresne, a novelist, short story writer, and English professor, that says all that needs to be said on the subject. Recreating an historic moment is wonderful and has its place. Creating the essence of such a moment through a dramatic device has its place. Both the play and the film have their own verities. Authors of histories and participants in historic events are brave and smart when they stand aside and allow an artist to paint a new picture of what they wrote or saw as participant. Fish and fowl. Sometimes foul. C'est la vie.

Posted by Richard McDonough on December 30,2008 | 03:37 PM

Having lived through those times I was skeptical of how the new movie presented the interview since it was not how I remembered it. This article confirms my suspicions. Rewriting history and presenting it as fact (which is how the film has been received) is dishonest and dangerous to all of us. The major media needs to take a page (literally) from a magazine like Smithsonian on how to report history.

Posted by Kris on December 26,2008 | 02:19 AM

Mr. Morgan's statement about history is disingenuous. In this case, there is a factual history to refer to, namely the tapes of the original interview. So, if the playwright wants to exercise artistic license for the sake of creating a stage drama, he could call it more truly: "An Artist Impression of the Frost/Nixon Interview", just as painters title their works. I don't object to Mr. Morgan writing a play; but I have to object to his corrupting attitude towards history, in which it doesn't matter what actually happened. If you don't think it matters, just consider the horrible consequences of our current president's lack of any grasp of historical reality, especially in terms of near eastern geopolitics.

Posted by Martin Tornheim on December 20,2008 | 06:16 PM

Having directed the piece myself, in Toronto and Vancouver, I must say it does NOT bear scrutiny, the kind of scrutiny that a play normally has to withstand. It is a clever screenplay, written, oddly, for the stage, and now, rightly, a film. The truth is definitely sacrificed for entertainment value. Enjoyable ride though...

Posted by ted dykstra on December 19,2008 | 12:05 PM

I LOVE the Smithsonian Museum and am also a charter member of NMAI. I read every article in the Smithsoniam magazine. Thank you so much! Aloha ~ Sally from Kailua, Oahu

Posted by Sally A. Miller on December 18,2008 | 03:59 AM

I do NOT attend movies, they announce that they are telling a story from a known book. Watched it is impossible to recognize the book you have read. I am afraid that the history being taught is much of the same. Producers chose toHOLLYWOODIZE every story ! They change so much of the original that I loose respecdt for the authors who accept the cash to have their name assoicated with the production. I find much to argue with in much that is presented on Film and television and toof often in subsequent print, magazines and newspapers. WE ARE IN DESPERATE NEED OF HONESTY.

Posted by GEORGINE ISELI on December 17,2008 | 12:47 AM

"Memory is the mother of the muses" goes the old saying, perhaps because the arts help make their subjects more memorable. Surely "The Iliad" has held human imagination far longer and more vividly than any purely factual account of the so-called Trojan War. Shakespeare's history plays are likewise not chained to pure fact but to memorable drama. Those under forty have hardly heard of Watergate, but this play and film may well increase their awareness of it. That seems like a good thing to me.

Posted by Marilyn Goodman on December 17,2008 | 08:38 PM

I was busy raising 4 kids during this time and I'm ashamed to admit that I didn't watch this interview. Where can I purchase a copy of it for myself? I plan to buy the book, also. Joanna

Posted by Joanna Cowell on December 17,2008 | 06:19 PM

I think I come down on Reston's side. Factual history is History, imaginative history is Fiction. Fiction may well be stronger dramatically than History but it is important to maintain the distinction. Greek tragedy was a characteristic of that civilization and was a teaching vehicle. History should be as accurate as possible and improving it to make it saleable is a perversion that, though in this case modern, has been a problem throughout recorded history.

Posted by Don Borden on December 17,2008 | 06:09 PM

The author of Frost, Nixon, and Me, Mr. James Reston, Jr was extremely graceful in his acceptance of the alterations of his material for the play and movie. I don't know if I would have been as forgiving or tollerant of the changes even though they were for "entertainment" sake. I appreciate all Mr. Reston did and am happy that his works have been published. Thank you for your clarity of vision and the demonstration of your kindness.

Posted by Dene McFadden on December 17,2008 | 04:32 PM

If Nixon had actually been tried for the crimes of Watergate, US and World history would be different. Jerry Ford would have been (re)elected. The sequence of US presidents would have changed. Misdeeds of US presidents of the future would have been inhibited. Misdeeds such as the invasion of Iraq would have been inhibited and likely prevented.

Posted by Fred on December 17,2008 | 04:27 PM



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