If and when I hear
Sandra Bernhard’s name in the future, I’m going to think of the flag scene. An image from this scene serves as the film’s
cover and the title line is uttered during it – making this moment very clearly
significant to the overarching themes of the work. The scene begins as Sandra walks back on stage
to say “I just wanted to tell you everything I told you tonight was a lie.” She
then expresses the desire to be able to refund her audience the price of attending
her show and delivers the line, “Without you, I’m nothing.” This line, a
familiar closing moment after reading Bretch’s The Good Person of Schezwan and
Shakespeare’s As You Like It, gives the
sense that identity is simply who you are interpreted to be, making identity a
concept constructed outside of self rather than an internalized, constant truth. The fact that she stumbles before delivering
this line, initially beginning with “without me” before stopping to start
again, seems telling. As we discussed in
class, identity is often conceptualized as internal, and this slip seems to nod
to this fact. Though Bernhard
acknowledges this conception of identity, she thoroughly destabilizes notions
of essential identity throughout her
performance. Sandra displays several different identities for the guests of the
same aged “supper club,” performing as an African American woman before
slipping into traditional Jewish songs and then slipping out of most of her clothing.
This performance destabilizes not only essential identity, but the notion that variable
identity is a product of differential relationships or ways of interacting with
certain people. Sandra slips in an out of identity performances, refusing to
envelop a marked space of identity and develop an identifiable comedic calling
card. Her calling card as a performer becomes this lack of coherency.
The American flag imagery
used in this last scene tied together her critique of mainstream American
culture. In particular, this moment was an interesting commentary on patriotism.
Showy displays of patriotism have become
necessary to succeed in some realms of our society, a lack of enthusiasm for America
an act of sacrilege. At the same time, these excessive displays of patriotism
are often a cloak to justify or disguise hate, ignorance, and greed. By wearing the flag as a cloak and then
shedding it to begin her dance, Bernhard comments on the often complex nature
of the performance of patriotism in our age.
1 comment:
I agree with your interpretation of the title, "Without You I'm Nothing", as a way to incorporate societal forces and stereotypes into identity that ultimately define who someone really is. I also think that the American flag is an interesting way to use patriotism as a mask for ignorance. It is interesting how people, especially in a post 9/11 world, view the flag and what it means, but how it can be skewed in several situations. I wonder if Sandra's final performance would have changed if it had been written after 9/11.
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