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Unlike The Sopranos, to which Six Feet Under tends to be unfavorably compared,
HBOs new series about the lives and lovesand deathsof a southern
California family of undertakers treats its audience to a cross-section of contemporary
American types and attitudes. Viewers cannot miss the imprint of Alan Ball, the man who
wrote American
Beauty. The tone, the characters, the humor, the tragedy, the surrealistic
qualities of everyday life all balance uneasily between the sublime and the banal of real
peoples lives. We know these characters; sometimes we are one or another of
these characters. The only comparable take that comes to mind is the Death
segment of Absolutely Fabulous, wherein the corpse of
Edwina Monsoons recently deceased father ("Hes dead he looks
totally out of it.) raises the all-important aesthetic
question, Yes, but is it Art?
No other society and no other era has so distanced itself from the
ubiquity of death, nor transformed it into a source of high-margin profit, nor so
pseudo-mystified it, that grief itself often seems an embarrassing and shameful mental
disorder. The story-line of the Six Feet Under
pilot is interspersed with several send-ups, mock-commercials hawking products to enhance
the funeral performance (embalming fluid as suntan lotion, funeral coaches as quasi-1950s
height of elegant status, or funeral supplies as a Gap commercial dance performance). The
pilot story centers on the unexpected death of Nathaniel Fisher (the elder) in a fatal
accident, totaling the new family hearse in a broadside collision with a city bus. The
viewer is left cringing as much at the loss of the magnificent vehicle as at the death of
some guy we know nothing about yet. He comes back to his family, almost immediately,
reified as a wisdom-dispensing ghost.
In American culture it is
virtually taboo to "speak ill of the dead," and the sort of psychological
ambiguity Ball plays with emerges as the viewer witnesses the paterfamilias revisiting
each of his surviving family members. Was he in life wise, careless, a jerk, domineering,
reformed hell-raiser, as he appears to be in turns to individual family members? Or are they reinventing the man to suit how they would like
to remember him?
The overtly sardonic humor fades, alas, as the series unfolds. Death
brackets the soap opera contents of each showthe opening scene presents a typically
untypical death (so far no one has died of old age) and each segment closes by fading to
white signifying, perhaps, the soul of each segments unexpected death crossing over
and entering the light. After Nathaniel pays a visit to each of his surviving family
members, everyone is back in the midst of their messy and self-inscrutable lives.
Since sexand romantic loveare mainstays of any contemporary
narrative, Ball quickly hones in on the primary relationship, between Nate Fisher (the
younger), prodigal son returned from his extended adolescent Seattle lifestyle, and his
quirky (selfish? psychopathic? lost little girl?) zipless fuck, Brenda Chenowith, living
proof of the fallacy of Skinnerian behaviorism. (Her wealthy psychiatrist parents are as
manipulative and smug as they come.) Peter Krause (who plays Nate) and Rachel Griffiths
(who plays Brenda) are eye-candy enough to carry the burden of all of the explicit sex
scenes.
But, never you fear, in this Freudian labyrinth, even Mom (Ruth Fisher,
played by Frances Conroy) in her oddly Puritanical-Midwestern way had been cuckolding her
husband with a tweedy and willowy (heterosexual) hair-dresser. Dark-haired,
anal-retentive, and deeply closeted brother David (played by Michael C. Hall) is seeing a
black cop (Keith, played by soap-opera heart-throb Matthew St. Patrick), who is endlessly
patient and nurturing (racial role reversal)
in helping David find his way into the light of gay love.
And then theres Claire (played by Lauren Ambrose), the one real
live wire in the lot, the only family member who is honest enough to know she
is messed up, and in love with life enough to rush in where other Fishers fear to tread.
She inherits the old family hearse, redone in post-hippie detail. She steals an amputated
foot to attain justice the only way she knows how against an erstwhile boyfriend who has
branded her a slut for sucking his big toe.
(Apparently, all the girls do this, but only Claire was made to pay the price.) She is
suspected of setting fire to the property across the street from their funeral home.
Did she do it? Rival Kroehner Service Corporation has been turning up
in each installment, the Evil Empire incarnate, using every trick in the Devils bag
to seduce, cajole, threaten, or otherwise attempt to force the Fishers out of business. While out on an Upward-Bound kind of survivalist
training trip, Claires nemesis-turned-confidante suggests otherwise.
The promise of a complex archetypal subtext gives hope that Balls
current series (renewed for a second season) will live on as a classic.
July 25, 2001 - Les Wright