Six Degrees of Separation (film)

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Six Degrees of Separation
Directed by Fred Schepisi
Produced by Arnon Milchan
Written by John Guare
Starring Stockard Channing,
Will Smith,
Donald Sutherland
Distributed by MGM
Release date(s) 8 December 1993 (USA)
Running time 112 min
Language English
IMDb profile

Six Degrees of Separation is a 1990 play by John Guare that was adapted into a 1993 film directed by Fred Schepisi and starring Stockard Channing, Donald Sutherland and Will Smith. It explores the existential premise that everyone in the world is connected to everyone else in the world by a chain of no more than 6 acquaintances (see six degrees of separation).

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[edit] Plot

The plot of the play was inspired by the real-life story of David Hampton[1], a con man who managed to convince a number of people in the 1980s that he was the son of actor Sidney Poitier. After the play became a critical and financial success, Hampton was tried and acquitted for harassment of Guare; he felt he was due a share of the profits that he ultimately never received.[2]

Another strong influence on the play and film is the novel The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger. There are some very overt references to it, such as when Paul (the David Hampton character in the piece) explains the thesis paper he has just written on The Catcher In The Rye[3] to a family who takes him in for the night, but there are also many more subtle allusions made (both in the script and in the cinematography of the film version) that one has to be quite intimately familiar with the original work in order to pick up on. In addition, there are references which fall somewhere between these two extremes, such as when various characters begin to take on Holden Caulfield-esque characteristics and attitudes.

One of the most disturbing, yet provocative, themes in the play and the film is the assertion that the ultra-rich privileged members of American society, at least in New York, live right next to people who are poor and frequently victims of violent crime. In order to forget about these unpleasant aspects of modern urban life, the rich concentrate their considerable free time on collecting and discussing art (works by Kandinsky and Michelangelo are prominently featured) and show little to no interest in any of the millions of people living in their city who are not members of their privileged class. Equally disturbing is how easily Paul is able to make his audience believe that he is the son of Sidney Poitier and, later, that they desperately want to earn the respect of their (ungrateful) children, or, more humorously, that they could so desperately want to have small roles in a film version of Cats. An incidental detail, often overlooked, is that these bored, urbane rich people have all (claimed to have) seen the stage-play of Cats. Kittredge expresses concern at being asked to dress up as a cat for the small role being suggested, until Paul explains that they would be playing the part of the humans. Whereas it is possible, albeit unlikely that a film version of Cats may need to expand the cast to include people -perhaps defeating the object- there are no characters other than cats in the existing cast list. Neither Kittredge nor the rest of his fellow theatre-goers seems to question this point. Either they haven't seen the play and don't want to admit it, or perhaps they didn't really pay attention, or more likely, their eagerness to believe everything Paul tells them allows them to be so taken in.

The film features cameo appearances by a number of New York society types including Kitty Carlisle Hart and the artist Chuck Close.

"I read somewhere that everybody on this planet is separated by only six other people. Six degrees of separation between us and everyone else on this planet. The President of the United States, a gondolier in Venice, just fill in the names. I find that extremely comforting, that we're so close, but I also find it like Chinese water torture that we're so close because you have to find the right six people to make the connection. It's not just big names -- it's anyone. A native in a rain forest, a Tierra del Fuegan, an Eskimo. I am bound -- you are bound -- to everyone on this planet by a trail of six people. It's a profound thought -- how Paul found us, how to find the man whose son he claims to be, or perhaps is, although I doubt it. How everyone is a new door, opening into other worlds."

- character Ouisa Kittredge

[edit] Play Cast

The play's original production opened at the Vivian Beaumont Theatre at Lincoln Center on November 8, 1990.[4]

Kelly Bishop moved into the lead role of Ouisa later in the show's run, and Laura Linney made her Broadway debut as a replacement for the role of Tess.

[edit] Film Cast

[edit] See also

[edit] External links