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News
Memorable Man
10/30/2009
A Memorable Man
Reflections on the life of Paul Baker
By Meg Cullar
Photograph by Danny Turner
After a long and eventful life, former Baylor theater
professor Paul Baker (pictured in a 2001 Baylor Line photo) died Sunday, October 25, at the age of ninety-eight. Read news
obituaries of Baker in the Lariat and Dallas Morning News.
In 2001, Baker visited Baylor for the first time in nearly
four decades, and Baylor Line news
editor Meg Cullar had the privilege of interviewing him. Here, she reflects on
the experience:
In fourteen years at the Baylor
Line, I have to count the legendary Paul Baker as one of the most
interesting people I have ever interviewed. Of course, I was well aware of his history
with the university and the controversy surrounding his departure when I met
him, but I was interested for other reasons too.
In case you don't remember, Baker left the Baylor faculty in
1963 after a showdown with then-university President Abner McCall. The reunion
of Baker's former students held by the Baylor Theatre Department in the summer
of 2001 marked his first appearance on campus since that stormy departure, and
I was thrilled to have the chance to hear the story from Baker's perspective.
Baker had brought national attention to Baylor's theater
department from the late 1930s to the early 1960s, attracting noted actors and
directors to campus. He famously staged a 1956 production of Hamlet in which four different actors
played the title role. He recruited film actor Burgess Meredith to play Hamlet
and then split the main character into three parts--each played by a different
actor and each representing a different psychological aspect of Hamlet. These
three shadowed Meredith's Hamlet, speaking with him or echoing his words. Baker
was also known for designing and building an innovative Baylor theater in 1941,
where the audience sat in the center in swiveling chairs and turned to view
action on various stages.
In 1962, Baker acquired the rights from Eugene O'Neill's
widow to stage the only college production of O'Neill's posthumously published Long Day's Journey Into Night. But the
honor came with a stipulation: the play must be produced verbatim; no words
could be changed. This was significant at a Baptist university, since the play
contained curse words. When a church youth group attended the play, their leaders
were shocked--and angered--by the content. President McCall fielded their
complaint, and he informed Baker that the offensive words in the play would
have to be removed. When Baker refused, McCall shut down the play.
In response to what he called "censorship," Baker left
Baylor and took the entire faculty of the theater department with him, along
with one math professor--his wife. Trinity University, which had no theater
department at the time, hired the whole staff and established a respected
program in one fell swoop.
But it wasn't just this controversy about Baker--and the
prospect of hearing about it firsthand--that piqued my interest in him. Over the
years, I had met numerous Baylor alumni who said Baker had changed their lives.
Now that's a tall claim, and I wanted to meet such a person for myself. Some of
these former students were theater majors who had extensive contact with Baker,
but some of them had taken only one class from him--his introductory course, "The Integration of Abilities."
In class, students were instructed to clap out the "rhythm"
of someone they knew, and Baker would describe that person. He could actually
name the person if it was someone he knew. Or Baker might instruct his students
to choose an inanimate object, like a stick or paper clip, and then create four
forms of art based on it--a song, a poem, a painting, and a dramatic scene. The
sometimes irascible and gruff Baker enthusiastically promoted his theories
about perception, collaborative creativity, the five senses, and the interdisciplinary
nature of everything. And it was these ideas, in part, that changed people's
lives.
It was this power of Baker's to influence and inspire others
that I wanted to see firsthand. And I did. He undoubtedly had an aura about
him. While he was a major presence in any room he occupied, he tended to deflect
attention to others at the same time. There really was something about him that
sparked creativity. It's an intangible quality that's hard to describe, but he
certainly possessed it.
When I interviewed Baker, he was ninety years old. He walked
in a hunched-over shuffle, he was hard of hearing, and his voice had a whispery "godfather" quality that can come with age. But he was still quite feisty, and
he would barrel out instructions to a roomful of his former students, who still
hung on his every word.
The continued devotion of Baker's former students was
evident at their reunion in 2001. I'm left to imagine what his classes were
like, but after watching him over just one weekend, I think I have an inkling.
To share your own thoughts and memories of Baker, go to the Baylor Line Forum.