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The
Ten Greatest Yalies Who Never Were
From Dink Stover to Niles Crane, some of our most prominent alumni
live in the alternate universe of fiction.
February
2003
by Mark Alden Branch
In the
world of fiction, the right detail about a character can convey
meaning with great economy. We
know -- or think we know -- what it means when we are told that
a character wears a tweed blazer or drives a Maserati or comes from
Iowa. But what does it mean when a character goes to -- or went
to -- Yale? It depends. A Yale pedigree might be used simply to
denote intelligence and drive, or it might signify someone who holds
too many cards in life and needs to be knocked down a peg by a plucky
underdog.
Surveying the realms
of novels, films, television, comic strips, and even our own pages,
we found a number of fictional characters -- some major, some minor
-- identified as Yalies. Here, in no particular order, are ten who
have made a lasting mark on our popular culture -- for better or
worse.
Frank
Merriwell
In the days when the
phrase "Yale man" conjured up an image of a solid, athletic fellow
who played fair and came from a good family, Frank Merriwell was
an ideal for many American boys -- an unequivocal paragon of virtue
who had, as one reviewer put it, "a body like Tarzan's and a head
like Einstein's." In short, he was the kind of hero that grown-ups
resent but boys adore. Gilbert Patten, using the pen name Burt L.
Standish, produced some 200 Merriwell novels
under the aegis of Street & Smith's Tip Top Weekly series
from 1896 to 1916. The series sold as many as 200,000 copies a week,
making Merriwell the most popular dime-novel
hero of his day, and people of a certain age knew what it meant
to call someone "a real Frank Merriwell." Merriwell also turned
up on radio from 1946 to 1949 when NBC aired The Adventures of
Frank Merriwell on Saturday mornings. Neither the novels nor
the radio show were very specific about their Yale setting, except
when Frank was called upon to give Harvard or Princeton a good thrashing.
John
Humperdink Stover
Like Merriwell, "Dink"
Stover was born in a series of books for boys, the Lawrenceville
books by Owen Johnson, Class of 1900. But Johnson had more on his
mind than boyish exploits when he wrote Stover
at Yale in 1911. Sure, Dink wrestles for his freshman class
during the annual Fence Rush, plays heroically on the football team,
and goes to Mory's, but Stover
is really about how Dink expands his mind beyond the shallow concerns
of his prep-school set -- not in the classroom, but through conversation
with bright but less exalted fellow students who aren't likely to
be on the Bones tap list.
Johnson was arguing -- half a
century before his time -- that Yale should be a meritocracy,
where extracurriculars and social activities are given their due,
but where intellectual life is also nurtured. As for Dink, he gets
to have his cake and eat it too. Though it looks for some time that
he will be blackballed by the senior societies for broadening his
horizons, in the end he receives Tap Day's highest honor: last man
tapped for Bones.
Tom
Buchanan '15
A snob, a racist, and
a bully who cheats on his wife and breaks his mistress's nose, The
Great Gatsby's Tom Buchanan is the dark side of the Yale
football hero. Even his wife Daisy describes him as "a brute of
a man, a great, big, hulking specimen." F. Scott Fitzgerald's narrator
calls Buchanan "one of the most powerful ends that ever played football
at New Haven -- a national figure in a way, one of those men who
reach such an acute limited excellence at twenty-one that everything
afterward savors of anti-climax . . . I felt that Tom would drift
on forever seeking, a little wistfully, for the dramatic turbulence
of some irrecoverable football game." Buchanan, who was played by
Bruce Dern in the 1974 film
of Gatsby, is made to stand for all the ills of a class-conscious
Eastern society that quashes Gatsby's American dream. But Fitzgerald,
a Princeton man, didn't have it in for all Yalies -- the narrator,
a sensitive bond trader named Nick Carraway, is a second-generation
Yale graduate and a member of Buchanan's unnamed senior society.
Sherman
McCoy
If Buchanan represented
the excesses of the 1920s, Tom
Wolfe's Sherman McCoy was intended as an exemplar of New York
in the "greed is good" 1980s. In The
Bonfire of the Vanities, McCoy (Tom Hanks in the film
version) is what Wolfe calls a "Master of the Universe" on the trading
floor of Pierce & Pierce. A product of the Buckley School, St.
Paul's, and Yale, with a Park Avenue apartment about to appear in
Architectural Digest, he seems to lead a charmed life as
he walks his young daughter to school: "As they crossed Park Avenue,
he had a mental picture of what an ideal pair they made. Campbell,
the perfect angel in a private-school uniform; himself, with his
noble head, his Yale chin, his big frame, and his $1,800 British
suit, the angel's father, a man of parts; he visualized the admiring
stares, the envious stares, of the drivers, the pedestrians, of
one and all." Naturally, he is headed for a fall, and when it comes
he is neither as ruthless as Tom Buchanan nor as upright as Dink
or Frank -- just achingly, embarrassingly human.
C.
Montgomery Burns '14
Thanks to the Harvard-infested
writing staff of The
Simpsons, Yale's Class of 1914 can claim one of television's
greatest cartoon villains. A far cry from Tom Buchanan's hulking
physical specimen, Burns
is notoriously weak and looks all of his 100-plus years, but he
is still capable of malice that ranges from the petty (literally
trying to take candy from a baby) to the grand (a scheme to block
the sun's rays from reaching Springfield so as to increase the demand
for electricity from his nuclear power plant), to the perverse (collecting
skins from endangered species). For all his faults, though, Burns
is a loyal alumnus. He leads calisthenics at the power plant in
a Yale letter sweater (though just what he lettered in is anyone's
guess), he attends the Harvard game in his private Pullman car,
and he tries to bribe admissions officials in order to get his illegitimate
middle-aged son (conceived at the Peabody Museum, incidentally)
into the College. When informed that the price would be "an international
airport," though, he balks, crying "I'm not made of airports!" Burns
is joined in the Yale Club of Springfield by Bob Terwilliger, aka
Sideshow
Bob, Bart Simpson's erudite but murderous archenemy.
Michael
J. Doonesbury
Neither hero nor villain,
the protagonist of the eponymous comic strip Doonesbury
is a kind of Everyman for Baby Boomers -- and surely the longest-running
Yale alumnus in fiction. In the early days, when Garry Trudeau '70,
'73MFA launched the strip as Bull
Tales in the Yale Daily News, Mike was a socially
clueless "doone" -- St. Paul's slang for a "genial fool," says Trudeau
-- from Tulsa, Oklahoma. He spent a decade or so frozen in time
as a student, during which time he established a commune with his
friends, tutored an inner-city child, and volunteered for the John
Anderson campaign. He finally graduated -- with classmates B.D.,
Zonker, Mark, and Boopsie -- in the 1983 stage show Doonesbury:
A Musical Comedy. His first job was in advertising, guiltily
trying to sell Ronald Reagan to black voters and cigarettes to children.
He married performance artist J.J. Caucus, with whom he has a precocious
daughter, Alex. After J.J. left him, he joined the dot-com revolution
in Seattle, where he now lives with Alex and his second wife Kim,
drives an SUV, and votes Republican. A footnote: Technically, Doonesbury
and his classmates graduated from the fictional and less prestigious
Walden College, to which they evidently transferred when Trudeau
made the jump from the Daily News to national syndication.
But since the development office considers anyone who ever matriculated
at Yale to be an alumnus, we'll claim him.
Dr.
Niles Crane
Yale graduate David
Hyde Pierce '81 has won nine Emmy nominations for his portrayal
of Yale graduate Niles Crane, a foil for his Harvard-educated brother
on the situation comedy Frasier.
Meek, haughty, and a terrible snob, Niles has nonetheless won
viewers' affection, perhaps because of the uncharacteristic passion
he has displayed for his father's working-class English nurse since
the first episode. Exacting in his tastes, he orders a latte with
nutmeg and a brush of cinnamon in a coffee shop and a Stoli Gibson
with three pearl onions in a bar. Like the Ivy schools from which
they hail, Frasier and Niles seem indistinguishably arrogant and
effete to the rest of the world but dwell forever on their differences:
Niles is a Jungian, Frasier a Freudian. Niles did graduate work
at Cambridge, Frasier at Oxford. Niles writes academic papers, Frasier
hosts a call-in radio show. And they engage in one-upsmanship as
creatively as any Cantab and Eli, as seen in this exchange:
Frasier: You
know, this building isn't as exclusive as you think -- your doorman
waved me through.
Niles: That's
because he knows you.
Frasier: Oh, fan of my show?
Niles: No, he lives in your building.
Andrea
Zuckerman Vasquez
After only 30 years
of coeducation, the "Yale woman" has not yet become a staple of
fiction like her male counterpart. But when Yale women are found,
their "Yaleness" almost invariably means something more positive
than a man's: Yale women are typically smart, attractive, and virtuous.
On the teen television drama Beverly
Hills 90210, Andrea Zuckerman (played by Gabrielle
Carteris) was the nice, smart, poor girl on a show full of spoiled
princesses, working hard in classes and on the school newspaper
in hopes of fulfilling her dream of going to Yale. With the help
of nice rich boy Brandon Walsh, her colleague on the school paper,
she became popular and still made valedictorian and was accepted
to Yale. But since it would have been difficult for her to stay
in the story line while away in New Haven -- 06520 is a long way
from 90210 -- she was forced to attend the fictional California
University with the rest of the cast so that she could care for
her ailing grandmother. It was only after Andrea married Jesse Vasquez
-- who got a job at the Yale Law School, his alma mater -- that
she was able to transfer to New Haven.
Jamie
Stemple Buchman
For seven years, viewers
of the situation comedy Mad
About You dissected the marriage of Yale graduate Jamie
Buchman (Helen Hunt) and her husband Paul (Paul Reiser). Like Andrea
Zuckerman, Jamie was not a child of privilege: She grew up in New
Haven, the daughter of a butcher. After a college career in which
we are told she had "two majors and seven boyfriends," she moved
to New York and the public-relations business. There she met Paul,
an NYU grad and documentary filmmaker who regularly marveled at
his wife's Yale pedigree. Beautiful, funny, and (mostly) successful
in her career, Jamie was called "the most perfect woman that television
has ever produced" by one critic. But Jamie was not without foibles:
In one episode, it was revealed that she never paid back her student
loans.
Dave
Henderson '43
A fictional Yalie who
sprang illicitly from this magazine's very pages, Dave Henderson
was an irrepressible bon vivant and all-around ugly American
known to us by his regular submissions to the Class of '43 alumni
notes in the 1980s. Henderson traveled the world aboard his
yacht with his wife Marge, frequently issuing invitations for classmates
to come aboard when they docked in Portofino or the Cote d'Azur.
A sample entry: "Enclosing a color snapshot of his 54-room palacio
in Cancun, Mexico, Dave Henderson writes: 'Marge and I are heartsick
that in July, pirates boarded our motor-yacht "Triunfador II" as
it was passing through Malacca Straits, stripped it clean, and then
opened the sea valves, sending the most comfortable cruiser we ever
owned to the bottom of the sea. Two of our crew were killed scuffling
with the boarding party, and the remaining ten were put off in lifeboats
with little water and no food. They drifted 36 hours before being
rescued. Fortunately, Marge and I had disembarked in Dar es Salaam
and flown back to Johannesburg to check on some of our investments.'"
It was only when one of Dave's missives was quoted in the New
Yorker that the Yale Alumni Magazine staff figured out
that Henderson existed only in the mind of class secretary Jim Nelson.
Once the jig was up, Nelson attempted to kill off Henderson in his
column, but the magazine declined to publish it. He ended up writing
the whole story for Smithsonian,
including the tale of Dave's sad end: He was hit by a speeding mango
truck in Panama. A note to class secretaries: Don't try it. We check
now.
Related: ". . . But I Play One on TV" (March/April 2007) |
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