166 LAW 22
allmore
intelligent
thanthemembersofthecommittee.
Why
lowerthem-
selvestotheleveloftheir
opponentsbyarguing
with
them?
Why
notout
foxthecommittee
by
appearing
tosurrendertoitwhile
subtlymocking
it?
The
Hollywood
19 listenedtoBrecht
politely,
butdecidedtosticktotheir
plan,leaving
Brechtto
go
hisown
way.
The
committee
finally
summonedBrechtonOctober30.
They
ex-
pected
himtodowhatothers
among
the
Hollywood
19 whohadtestified
beforehimhaddone:
Argue,
refusetoanswer
questions,challenge
the
committee's
right
toholdits
hearing,
even
yell
andhurlinsults.Muchto
their
surprise,
however,
Brechtwasthe
verypicture
of
Congeniality.
He
worea
suit
(something
he
rarely
did),
smoked
a
cigar
(he
had
heard
that
thecommitteechairmanwas
a
passionatecigar
smoker),
answered
their
questionspolitely,
and
generally
deferredtotheir
authority.
Unliketheother
witnesses,
Brechtansweredthe
question
ofwhether
he
belonged
totheCommunist
Party:
Hewasnota
member,
he
said,
which
happened
tobethetruth.Onecommitteememberasked
him,
“isit
true
you
havewritten
a
numberof
revolutionaryplays?”
Brechthad
writ-
ten
manyplays
withovertCommunist
messages,
buthe
responded,
“I
havewrittenanumberof
poems
and
songs
and
plays
inthe
fightagainst
Hitler
and,
of
course,
they
canbe
considered,therefore,
as
revolutionary
because
I,
of
course,
wasfortheoverthrowofthat
government.”
Thisstate
ment
went
unchallenged.
Brecht’s
English
wasmorethan
adequate,
butheusedan
interpreter
throughout
his
testimony,
atacticthatallowedhimto
play
subtle
games
with
language.
WhencommitteemembersfoundCommunist
leanings
in
lines
from
English
editionsofhis
poems,
hewould
repeat
thelinesinGer
man
for
the
interpreter,
who
wouldthen
retranslate
them;
and
somehow
they
would
come
outinnocuous.Atone
point
acommitteemember
read
oneofBrechfs
revolutionarypoems
outloudin
English,
andaskedhimif
hehadwrittenit.
“No,”
he
responded,
“IwroteaGerman
poem,
whichis
very
differentfromthis.”Theauthor'selusiveanswersbaffledthecommit-
tee
members,
buthis
politeness
andthe
way
he
yielded
totheir
authority
madeit
impossible
forthemto
getangry
withhim.
After
only
anhourof
questioning,
thecommitteemembershadhad
enough.
“Thank
youvery
much,”
saidthe
chairman,
“Youarea
good
ex-
ample
tothe
{other}
witnesses.”
Not
only
did
they
free
him,
they
offeredto
help
him
if
hehad
any
trouble
with
immigration
oficialswho
might
detain
himfortheirownreasons.The
followingday,
BrechtlefttheUnited
States,
nevertoreturn.
Interpretation
The
Hollywood
19’sconfrontational
approach
wonthem
alot
of
sympa~
thy,
and
years
later
theygained
akindofvindicationin
publicopinion.
But
they
werealso
blacklisted,
andlostvaluable
years
of
profitableworking
time.
Brecht,
ontheother
hand,
expressed
his
disgust
atthecommittee
more
indirectly.
Itwasnotthathe
changed
hisbeliefsor
compromised
his
values;instead,
during
hisshort
testimony,
he
kept
the
upper
hand
byap-