Hannah Arendt
1
But, Hannah,
how can you defend him?
But I'm not defending him.
You can hardly forget that your
husband is my friend because of you.
And I don't throw
my friends away so quickly.
No matter what happens, even if Jim
were killed in an airplane crash,
I would never, ever
go back to Bowden.
That's clear.
And poor Bowden knows absolutely that he
cannot prevent you from loving another man.
He is not stupid.
Then why is he trying
to prevent our divorce?
Because, under such circumstances,
it's only natural...
that people imagine-
or at least hope-
to have some possibility of power.
Hans Jonas is on the phone.
Not now, later. I'll call him back.
Oh, Mary, they are beautiful.
Thank you.
I don't know how you can
believe anything he says these days.
Well, you trusted him enough
to be married with him for 15 years.
It's Professor Miller calling from Connecticut.
He said it's urgent.
He has some questions about your syllabus.
Phone appointment-
tomorrow, please.
And unplug that phone.
Look, Mary, either you are willing to take
men as they are, or you must live alone.
- You won't change Jim either.
- I don't want to change Jim. He's perfect.
Perfect?
The men in your novels
are not perfect.
Why do you expect the real ones
to be any better?
That was Heinrich.
Oh, no.
That's the one phone call
I would have taken.
He said not to disturb you
when your darling Mary is here.
- When will he be home?
- He's spending the night up there.
He has to meet a student
early in the morning.
Thanks, Lotte.
No student meets early in the morning.
Mary, don't start. I would be far too
jealous for your charming Heinrich.
It's fine. Well, I suppose we can't
all be wild Berliners like you.
Wild because we don't marry
all our lovers?
Oh, I didn't marry all of them.
But almost.
I couldn't sleep at all last night.
We don't have to talk about it
right away.
Haven't you read the newspaper?
From beginning to end, Frau Professor.
They want his trial to be in Jerusalem!
Why else would the Mossad
have kidnapped him?
You think that's right?
They should have shot him
on the spot in Buenos Aires.
But then of course...
You forgot to say hello.
Hello.
The investigation has revealed...
that Adolf Eichmann's escape
from Germany to South America...
was made possible with a Red Cross passport
that the Vatican helped him obtain.
a Nazi escape.
was such a good Catholic.
But God didn't let him get away.
God didn't.
But the Germans did.
You'll see.
They won't try to extradite him.
followed what was secretly known in
espionage circles as the ratline.
Eichmann received his forged
identification and passport in Genoa,
and then he boarded an Italian
ship to Buenos Aires.
"You will perhaps understand
why I want to attend Eichmann's trial.
I left Germany in 1933,
and I missed Nuremberg.
I never saw a Nazi"-
Um-Oh, wait.
"I never saw 'these people'
in the flesh"?
"People in the flesh."
I think that's better.
Better, yes.
Isn't it incredible that the Hannah
Arendt is offering to report for us?
It would be a privilege to have a German-Jewish
migr of such high standing cover the trial.
There's no doubt about that.
Who is she to be offering?
She should be begging to write for
the New Yorker, like everyone else.
Frances, she wrote
The Origins of Totalitarianism.
Catchy title.
One of the most important books
of the 20th century.
Read it.
Uh-oh.
She's not one of those
European philosophers, is she?
She was the first person to write about the Third
Reich in the context of Western civilization.
It was brilliant, but abstract.
I understand why she wants to go.
Philosophers don't make deadlines.
Call now.
Do it.
Do you really have to do this?
You remember how shocked we were
when we heard
the awful news from Europe...
How destroyed you were?
if I didn't take this opportunity.
You told everyone how smart and
brave I was to escape from Gurs.
And so you were, my love.
their husbands wouldn't find them
if they left the camp.
I'd have found you anywhere.
Maybe not.
While it was still summer and warm...
we hoped it would soon be over.
But then...
The waiting...
More and more women let themselves
go, stopped combing their hair...
Stopped washing themselves.
Just lay there on their straw sacks.
Sometimes I was strict,
sometimes friendly.
But then, one evening...
it had rained all day
and the straw sacks were falling apart.
I suddenly lost my courage.
I was so tired.
So tired...
that I wanted to leave
the world
that I so loved.
And in that instant...
I saw you in front of me.
How you'd look for me, and...
not find me.
Now do you understand
why I don't want you to go?
Summis cum gratulationibus.
Hannah... great!
You asked them?
And they just said yes?
Yes. Simple as that.
Everything's simple for a genius.
Don't exaggerate.
I hope you're still teaching next term.
You will hear all about that
when the tribe comes over.
You know,
I almost dread this trip.
I wish I could accompany you.
Oh Hans, that would be so nice.
Need a light, Mrs. Arendt?
Oh. Thank you.
You're very welcome.
Nixon's usually an unrepentant
bulldog, but he's lost his nerve.
He's like a frightened schoolboy
wanting to be liked.
He's even trying to get
Kennedy's approval.
Nixon is a liar. It's a strategy.
He only cares about his career.
- That's why he's going to win.
- No. Nixon calculates.
handsome and inspiring,
and that is what matters
when the ships are down.
"Chips."
Hannah, "chips," not "ships."
Oh, that must be Hans and Lore.
"chips."
English can only be
a second-rate fiddle for us.
If you want to hear Hannah play her
Stradivarius, you should learn German.
- She asked me to correct her.
- Ah, at last!
Impossible.
Must have been someone else.
Our train was late.
Of course.
We know that excuse.
Coats off.
Everyone's here.
Great that you made it.
Meet the latest member of the tribe.
Professor Miller, Hans and Lore Jonas.
Such a pleasure to finally meet you.
Professor Miller, it's an honor.
Hannah tells me you're her oldest
and dearest friend.
The oldest for sure,
but not the dearest.
Oh, Heinrich is much older than me.
And much better looking.
Did you already know
each other back in Germany?
Thomas, I said "old friend." In Europe that
means we met more than 10 minutes ago.
They met in the '20s as students of
Heidegger, the Hosenmatz philosopher.
Don't say my name
in the same breath as that Nazi.
Not here, Hans!
So, you were all students
of the confounding Martin Heidegger.
Oh, I didn't even finish high school.
But aren't you
a professor at Bard?
Original thinkers don't need degrees, Professor Miller.
To Hannah,
in honor of her trip
to Jerusalem.
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"Hannah Arendt" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 22 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/hannah_arendt_9562>.
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