I'm Not There.
There he lies.
God rest his soul,
and his rudeness.
A devouring public can now share
the remains of his sickness,
and his phone numbers.
There he lay...
poet,
prophet,
outlaw,
fake.
Star of electricity.
Nailed by a peeping Tom
who would soon discover...
A poem is like a naked person.
Even the ghost...
was more than one person.
But a song is something
that walks by itself.
# Aw, the ragman draws circles #
# Up and down the block #
# I'd ask him what the matter was #
# But I know that he don't talk #
# And the ladies treat me kindly #
# And they furnish me with tape #
# I know I can't escape #
# Oh, Mama #
# Can this really be the end #
# To be stuck inside of Mobile #
# With the Memphis blues again? #
# Well, Shakespeare, he's in the alley #
# With his pointed shoes and his bells #
# Speaking to some French girl #
# Who says she knows me well #
# And I would send a message #
# To find out if she's talked #
# But the post office has been stolen #
# Oh, Mama #
# Can this really be the end #
# To be stuck inside of Mobile #
# With the Memphis blues again? #
# Now the rain man gave me two cures #
# Then he said, "Jump right in" #
# The one was Texas medicine #
# The other was just railroad gin #
# And like a fool I mixed them #
# And it strangled up my mind #
# And now people just get uglier #
# And I have no sense of time #
# Oh, Mama #
# Can this really be the end #
# To be stuck here inside of Mobile #
# With the Memphis blues again? #
Hey. How old are you, boy?
Eleven years old.
Oh.
What's your name, son?
Woody.
Woody Guthrie.
Just like the singer.
Way I see it,
singin's kept me right in this world
more than any Bible's ever done.
And somethin' else I learned?
Takes just about a fountain pen
to get yourself robbed.
Hey, Joe. What do you
make about that?
Uh, son...
you wouldn't be stashin' no weapons
in that case of yours?
No, sir. Not in any literalized way.
What'd you say his name was?
A- R-T-H.
Please sit down.
"A-R-T-H-U-R...
R- I-M-B-A-U-D."
Born October 20th.
That makes you 19,
nearly 20.
Is that correct?
That's correct.
So what's all this about?
Well, Missouri, originally.
But all over, really.
Been to Gallup, Phillipsburg,
Sioux Falls...
I got me a cousin in Sioux Falls.
Yeah! That's right.
Uh, is there really
a town called Riddle?
Tell you the flat truth,
that's sort of a... a whatchamacallit.
A, uh...
A composite.
A compost heap is more like it.
Truth is, my mind
got mixed with ramblin'
when I was, oh, so young.
the blind protest singer from Chicago.
four...
about five years back.
That's also when I first started
writin' songs on my own.
I've written some hillbilly songs.
You know Carl Perkins,
from Nashville?
Yeah, yeah.
He sings some of my songs.
Yep. Talkin' blues kind
of stuff, you know?
Union songs.
I also played piano with Bobby Vee.
I would've been a millionaire
if I stayed with him.
Well, what brings you
around these parts?
Carelessness.
I lost my one true love.
And I started drinking.
Next thing I know, I'm in a crap game.
I wake up in a pool hall.
One night, I meet up with a Chinaman
working at a dime store
who says he loves my sound.
And next thing I know,
I'm all booked up
at his boss's establishment.
The Tiny Troubadour!
# I've been a... #
# Moonshiner #
# For 17 long years #
There you go, boy.
Of course, success ain't all
it's cracked up to be, now.
There's something
sort of freakish, I suppose,
setting someone up on stage
apart from all the rest,
when down in every boxcar
there's men of all ranges bouncing together.
You got hobos, nobos,
gentlemen loafers.
One or all-time losers.
Call us what you will.
Deep down, we're all getting ready
to tuck our heads
under our wings for sleep.
We of the Pullman side-car
and the sunburned thumb.
We ain't kidding ourselves.
It's lonesome roads we shall walk.
Till I joined the Union cause!
Don't he know it's 1959?
We done unionized 20 years ago.
Records indicate that you've been away,
that you've stopped writing.
I've been on too many streets
to be doing the same thing
over and over.
Can I smoke in here?
You sound,
a bit fatalistic.
I'm not fatalistic.
Bank tellers are fatalistic.
Clerks are fatalistic.
I'm a farmer.
Who ever heard
of a fatalistic farmer?
# The sweet, pretty things
are in bed now, of course #
# The city fathers,
# The reincarnation
of Paul Revere's horse #
# But the town has no need
to be nervous #
# The hysterical bride
# Screaming, she moans,
"I've just been made" #
# Then sends out for the doctor
# Says, "My advice
is to not let the boys in" #
# Where Ma Raney and Beethoven
once unwrapped their bed roll #
# Tuba players now rehearse
around the flagpole #
# And the national bank for a profit #
# Sells road maps for the soul #
# To the old folks home
and the college #
# Mama's in the factory #
# She ain't got no shoes #
# Daddy's in the alley #
# He's lookin' for food #
# I'm in the kitchen #
# Hey, hey, yeah #
Whoo!
Oh!
Boy, look like you found...
you found your freedom
before you found your technique.
Now, real American music
come from the bottom up.
He's the best blues singer
east of Cannery Row.
He say, "Son, if you can
sing these songs
and understand them,
ain't no place you can't go.
Ah, thank you very much, ma'am.
You're welcome.
I reckon I come out the womb
singing and picking
and playing and all that mess.
Your kinfolk?
Oh, they back in Stockton, ma'am.
California.
That's where I was raised.
I figured they got plenty
of mouths to feed as it is.
Not that I care a fig about material things,
you know, except for
maybe a decent car.
See, us thumb-slummers
and box-jumpers,
we get a little peckish
when it comes to cars, you know?
That boy sound just like Doughboy Hawkins,
a fella I met in the Dust Bowl.
Tell you what I think.
I think it's 1959,
and this boy's singing
songs about the boxcar?
Hmm. What a boxcar
gonna mean to him?
Right here, we got race riots,
folks with no food.
Why ain't he out there
singing about that?
The boy a guest in our house.
I know he's a guest.
I'm just trying to speak what's in my mind.
No!
Say it.
Live your own time, child.
Sing about your own time.
Greenwich Village,
once the in spot
for beatnik jazz and bebop,
is today home
to the popular folk music fad,
a do-it-yourself musical expression
that's attracted youngsters
from all across the nation.
For them,
these homespun songs of the working man
express a truth and candor
sorely lacking in today's
growing consumer society.
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"I'm Not There." Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 5 Nov. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/i'm_not_there._10553>.
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