The Scotsman

Jim Haynes

Visionary co-founder of Scotland's legendary Traverse Theatre

- MARTIN BELK

James Almand Haynes, co-founder Traverse Theatre. Born: November 10 1933 in Louisiana, USA. Died: 6 January 6 2021 in Paris, France, aged 87

Born in Louisiana in the United States, Jim Haynes was destined for an artistic ally driven, internatio­nal life. His precocious literary influences included Lang st on Hughes, Henry Miller and Dorothy Parker. During the Second World War, his family entertaine­d a steady stream of internatio­nal military guests who would later influence Haynes’ s Bohemian lifestyle of unlocked doors, universal friendship­s and creative ideas.

In 1956 Haynes joined the United States Air Force and was stationed at Kirknewton, West Lothian. He obtained permission to attend classe sat Edinburgh University, and in 1957 attended his first Edinburgh Internatio­nal Festival, becoming friends with Richard and Ann Demarco. By 1959 he obtained an early release from the military, and opened The Paperback Bookshop in George Square, the first soft back-only bookshop in the country. The shop attracted a litany of literary figures, including publisher John Calder. Along with the Demarcos, these friendship­s would change the face of British theatre and publishing.

The Paperback was a new mix of bookshop, coffee house and salon – mainstays of successful book retailing today – and became a hub for art and the avant-garde, supporting the blossoming Edinburgh Fringe Festival. Haynes hosted internatio­nal readings by the likes of Marguerite Duras and Nathalie Sarraute. Artist Tom Mcgrath described the atmosphere as“an absolutely great feeling of what the art scene could be”. The lively shop was frequented by Edinburgh University students and business people alike – as well as an angry church missionary who set fire to her copy of Lady Chatterley’s Lover.

Haynes filled the shelves with mass-market titles as well as counter-culture imprints, such as American publisher Barney Rosset’s Evergreen series –featuring such writers as Beckett, Ginsberg, Kerouac, Stoppard, S ontag and Malcolm X–a far cry from the other conservati­ve Edinburgh bookshops. The eclectic shop was on a par with Ferlinghet­ti’s City Lights Books in San Francisco and Godwin‘s Better Books in London; Scotland suddenly found itself hipped to a new beat.

In August 1962, Haynes, Calder and Sonia Or well organised the first Edinburgh Internatio­nal Writers Conference. It featured a cacophony of literateur­s such as William Burroughs, Arthur Geddes, Mary McCarthy, Hugh MacDia rmid, Henry Miller and Muriel Spark.

The event drew an unpreceden­ted crowd and the writers debated East-west relations, South African Apartheid, censorship, sexuality, and how such issues transcende­d internatio­nal borders. The conference was a triumph, attracting widespread coverage and furthering the debate on censorship. In contrast to to day’s festivals, the conference focused on ideas rather than book promotion.

Going from strength to strength, in 1963 Haynes and Calder, along with Demarco and others, founded the Traverse Theatre Club. The Traverse notoriousl­y opened with the accidental stabbing of an actress during its second performanc­e of Sartre’s No Exit, and was under constant surveillan­ce by authoritie­s for open depictions of homosexual­ity and other progressiv­e themes – illegal at the time in Calvinist Scotland.

Under a dark cloud of American anti- communism coupled with Frank Buchman’s Moral Rearmament movement( which once praised Hitler and aligned with “Free and Wee” Church of Scotland extremists ), The Traverse mounted a real challenge to the parochial status quo.

Drawing on them omentum of the writers conference, Haynes, Calder, Kenneth Ty nan and others brought forth a 1963 Internatio­nal Drama Conference. This event saw even greater attendance and scandal when a “Happening” was performed featuring a nude onstage – routinely cited as the pinnacle of the event by tabloid historians; however, the conference saw a substantiv­e cross-class discourse on the commitment to political change which contribute­d indirectly to the eventual dissolutio­n of the Lord Chamberlai­n’s censorship office.

Key to Jim Haynes’s successful contributi­ons was his ability to reach people en masse. Calder described Haynes’ s demeanour as a “casual and easy friendline­ss” with an “openness and charm that made him many friends”. In The Traverse Theatre Story, Scotsman critic Joyce Mcmillan documents the thoughts of fellow founding member Tom Mitchell :“Jim would meet people at the door, and make them feel marvellous for being there” and drama critic Ronald Mavor: “Jim's greatest gift was to believe anything possible.”

Under Haynes’ s 196466 artistic direction The Traverse brought forth enigmatic production­s such a sC P Taylor’ s Happy Days Are Here Again, Arrabal’s Orisons, Bellow’s The Wen and Orange Soufflé; with the British premieres of Brecht/weil’s Happy End, and Ableman’s Green Julia quickly receiving London transfers. During the time, The Traverse boasted 30 world premieres and today the theatre thrives on Haynes’s concept of bringing forth new voices.

In 1966 he left The Traverse, and Minister of the Arts Jennie Lee summoned him to the English capital to launch the “London Traverse”. Despite ample funding and a West End transfer of Joe Orton’s Loot, it didn’t work. Haynes found the project stifling and felt more shopkeeper than producer.

Haynes opened the L ondon Drury Lane Arts Lab in 1967 fuelled by a frenzied counter culture. David Bowie composed; Ro el of Louw, John Lennon and Yoko Ono and Jeff Nut tall exhibited. Beat poet Ted Joans, Mama C ass, Leonard Cohen, the Rolling Stones, John“Hoppy” Hopkins, Kenneth Tynan and Barr y Miles were among the milieu. Forbidden films, from Warhol’s Chelsea Girls to Kubrick’s Lolita debuted. The notorious Arts Lab delivered.

It held the first feminist show produced in London –Jane Arden’ s Vagina Rex, and Heath cote Wil li ams’ s

The Local Stigmatic, a BBC commission. Richard Crane –the National Theatre’ s first resident play wright– had a successful run of The Girl with No Arms. David Hare, Howard Brenton and Tony Bicât’s Portable The at rest aged its first producti on, Inside Out; Steven Berk off performed his first solo show; Jeff Nut tall and Mark L on g’ s‘ The People Show’ was born at the Arts Lab.

The Lab received little or no funding, but the people came: it was a Sixties countercul­ture hotbed, driven by the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmamen­t and anti-vietnam War effort. The original lab sparked dozens of others and was a“sister” venue to La ma main New York City.

In 1969, Haynes re located to tea chat the University of Paris, and founded two publishing companies. In addi - tion, he wrote and published more than 14 books. He furthered his experiment­al pursuit s with oddities such as the Wet Dream Film F es tival in Amsterdam and SUCK Magazine, and was an outspoken supporter of women’s equality.

Over the past 40 years, Haynes also became in famo us for weekly Sunday dinner sin Paris–catering to tens of thousands. They sparked numerous friendship­s, love affairs and long term relationsh­ips and were featured in an internatio­nal After Eight dinner mints ad campaign. Over the years, Haynes was a regular correspond­ent at the Ed inburgh Festivals, Frankfurt Book Fair, Cannes Film Festival and Prague Writers Festival, among others.

In August 2016, the Jim Haynes Living Archives were launched as a permanent collection at Edinburgh Na pier University, and his last book, World Citizen At Home In Paris, was publi shed. In 2018, he joined Calder in being awarded an honorary doctor ate by the university. A series of commemorat­ive and ongoing learning events are planned (details at jim-haynes.info).

Edinburgh Na pier is committed to preserving and making the enormous legacy of Jim Haynes available to all in the way he lived: with an open door, a hug, smile and a “Thanks for Coming”.

 ??  ?? 0 Haynes was an influentia­l countercul­ture figure
0 Haynes was an influentia­l countercul­ture figure

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