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Its been said that Eudora Welty was more comfortable writing
short stories than novels. Her publisher nudged her in the direction of longer narratives.
Critical consensus has over the years echoed Weltys misgivings: it is as a short
story writer that her reputation has largely rested. But the truth is that her five novels
have quietly gained the same canonical stature as her Collected Stories. The funniest and sharpest of
her novels is The Ponder Heart (1954), which tells of the eccentric Daniel Ponder,
generous heir to the Ponder fortune and, unexpectedly, a holy fool charged with
first-degree murder. A stage adaptation played Broadway in 1956. ExxonMobil
Masterpiece Theatre is now chiming in with a version of The Ponder Heart for its American Collection
series. If not the best of all possible tributes to the author, who passed away last
summer at the age of 92, this is an above-average and entertaining PBS offering.
Filmed on location in Mississippi, the production effectively uses
existing architecture and landscapes to suggest the novels pre-World War II setting.
Director Martha Coolidge (Rambling Rose, HBOs If These Walls Could Talk 2) keeps the farcical
proceedings low-key and believable. Close attention is paid to atmosphere. Lush tree-lined
country roads, Southern manses, and the lazy charm of rural communities are all nicely
evoked, albeit scrubbed and romanticized to a greater degree than in the authors
work. If theres a casualty here, its not Welty, but rather pop composer Van
Dyke Parks (like Welty, a native Mississippian), whose Dixieland-inflected score for The Ponder Heart is a surprising disappointment.
Only a few snatches of music appear to have been composedowing no doubt to budget
constraintsand theyre repeated annoyingly throughout the program.
Edna Earle Ponder (JoBeth Williams) is proprietor of the Beulah Hotel
in the fictional town of Clay. On the cusp of spinsterhood, Edna Earle has settled into
her role as mediator between staid Grandfather Ponder (Boyce Holleman) and impulsive Uncle
Daniel Ponder (Peter MacNicol of TVs Ally
McBeal). Daniel, like Kris Kringle in Miracle on 34th Street, walks a fine line
between lunacy and blithe philanthropy. When the young scion begins giving away tracts of
family property and business holdings, the apoplectic elder Ponder escorts Daniel to the
insane asylum in Jackson. (The summer storm that greets their arrival looks like real
Mississippi rain rather than special effects weather.) A staff nurse assumes that the old
man with the high blood pressure is the crazy person. Its a punch line we can smell
a mile away, but is no less funny for it: Grandfather Ponder finds himself
institutionalized while Uncle Daniel heads back to Clay in the family Studebaker.
Plan
A having failed, Grandfather and Edna Earle put Plan B into play. They decide to
fork up a good wife for Daniel in the form of the matronly widow Miss Teacake
Magee (Joanne Baron). Moments before the wedding, however, kismet intervenes and Daniel
meets the love of his life: seventeen-year-old Bonnie Dee Peacock (Angela Bettis). Much of
the storys comedy centers on the disastrous marriage that ensues between Daniel and
Bonnie Dee. Peter MacNicol and Angela Bettis are funny together and near-perfect
embodiments of Weltys peculiar brand of humor. One of the authors
distinguishing traits is her sly ability to hint at a dirty joke without succumbing to
easy prurience. (The kimono-clad Uncle Rondo in the short story Why I Live at the
P.O. is a classic example.) Rather than a nymphet disguised as a petulant child,
Bonnie Dee is a petulant child with no disguise or guile (or sex drive) whatsoever.
Daniels willful innocence all but crumbles in her presence.
The adaptation (by Gail Gilchriest) has reconfigured the novel in a
number of ways, some elements more successfully than others. The alleged murder committed
by Daniel Ponder has been simplified in its motivation and execution. Moreover,
Weltys cold-eyed depiction of racial and class divisions in the South is missing
from the production. (Although, to be fair, full-strength Welty can seem gauche and
politically incorrect to todays readers.) Her method of storytelling favors tone and
voice over plot. The teleplay captures enough of the plot and some of the tone. The voice
isnt so easily conveyed. Because the novel is narrated by Edna Earle Ponder,
its as much about her idiosyncratic state of mind (and her nostalgic longing) as it
is about Daniel Ponders predicament. Reading The
Ponder Heart can make you dizzy with pleasure over its multiple levels of irony and
silliness. Masterpiece Theatre goes no deeper than one level here, but its performed
admirably, and may inspire viewers to further explore Eudora Weltys unique literary
world.
- Bob Wake