CHAPEL HILL - Lou Lipsitz
had never written a play before he wrote "The Limits of Dissent." But
the play practically wrote itself, the former UNC political
science professor said earlier this week.
That's because the play is based on
the 1950’s trial
of Junius Scales. In 1956 and 1957, Scales was tried and
convicted in Federal Court in Greensboro for violating
the Smith Act, which was
passed in 1940 and prohibited even being a member of an organization
that advocated the violent overthrow of the government.
"There's nothing invented in the play. All the characters,
all the testimony are real. I did some editing, a little
smoothing out here and there for the sake of clarity," Lipsitz
said.
Lipsitz had been commissioned to do the play in 1976 by
Warren Nord, then with the N.C. Humanities Council. Nord
now directs UNC's Program in the Humanities. Nord knew
Lipsitz was a writer and that the UNC political science
professor had a strong interest in civil liberties issues.
Lipsitz retired UNC in the 1990's, continues to write poetry,
and also works as a psychotherapist.
The playwright said he chose the trial of Scales because
of local interest and issues involved. Scales lived in
Carrboro and Chapel Hill and went to UNC.
Joe Herzenberg, who performs in the play, said he recently
went by Scales' home in Carrboro at 201 Carr St. and took
a photograph to display during the staged readings. The
exact location of where Scales lived in Chapel Hill is
not known. Scales and his mother moved to Chapel Hill,
where Scales graduated from Chapel Hill High School in
1936, Herzenberg said. Scales came from a prominent family
in the state; his great-uncle had served as governor.
Issues also made the case of Scales
good fodder for a play, Lipsitz said."There are
always people for various reasons who want to suppress
controversial speech. There
are free speech issues of different kinds. It's good to
have a historical perspective. In America, we have these
episodes of suppression.”
Then there are the moral questions raised by Scales' case.
There was the issue of his honor: not wanting to dishonor
himself and his friends by testifying. There are the questions
about the tolerance of unpopular views as well as how honesty
and truth, or the lack thereof, figured into the verdict.
The main issue, as Lipsitz sees it,
and the reason why he titled his play as he did: "What
kinds of limits are there to dissent against a government
you think is
corrupt and evil? When does free speech turn into the advocacy
of action? Where's the limit?"
The prosecution could not prove that Scales had committed
any violent acts or had plans to overthrow the government.
The trial had consisted of 13 days of
prosecution testimony mostly about the organization of
the Communist Party, portrayed
as a secret and violent conspiracy, but there was no actual
proof the organization had done anything. "They were
trying to convict people for their thoughts. The
case against Scales was very weak, but he was convicted
both times because of the atmosphere of the times."
The playwright said what struck him
about the trial in particular was the disillusionment
of the ex-communists
who testified for the government, and the loss of a sense
of proportion. "Scales is obviously not a dangerous
man," Lipsitz said. Scales was not even a member of
the Communist Party during the trials in 1956-57. He had
joined the party in the 1930s when he thought it the best
way to address the racial situation as well as poverty
brought about by the Great Depression. He, as others, later
became disillusioned about the Communist Party.
The playwright read through a three-foot-tall
stack of transcripts from the second trial of Scales
to get material
for his 90-minute play. "There is moving and funny
testimony buried in the three weeks of testimony. I chose
the compelling human moments and humor that I found," Lipsitz
said.
The play has a lot of humor, including the evasive testimony
of Esther Gillis, a textile worker from High Point who
was asked to name people who attended a meeting and who
managed, in various ways, to not answer the question.
The Supreme Court upheld the verdict barely at 5-4 and
prominent people campaigned to get Scales out of jail.
But Scales wound up serving about a year and a half in
a federal prison in Pennsylvania, and while there hosted
an opera show on the prison radio.
President John F. Kennedy commuted Scales' sentence on
Christmas Eve 1962. Scales then worked as a proofreader
for The New York Times and vowed never to return to North
Carolina because he thought it would cause more pain to
his family and friends here, Lipsitz said.
In 1976, Lipsitz said he had written to Scales about the
play, and Scales had told him not to do it because the
incident had brought pain to so many people. But Lipsitz
said he thought Scales was wrong, that the play should
be written because it would help to heal what had happened.
Scales wound up coming to see a performance
of the play in 1977 in Raleigh. "It changed his life," Lipsitz
said. "He came out of seclusion, wrote an autobiography,
published by The University of Georgia Press. He taught
at the Journalism School at Columbia University."
Herzenberg said he attended the performance
of Lipsitz's play in the '70s at an Orange County courthouse,
where
a "jury" of community members wound up being
hung because of a debate about whether to make the decision
based on the standards of the '50s or of the present day. "Juries" at
the other 29 performances, all held in courtrooms throughout
the state, found Scales innocent, Lipsitz said. What had
seemed threatening 20 years before did not seem that way
when the play was performed. "People were really afraid
in the '50s," Lipsitz said.
The play premiered in the Federal Courthouse
in Greensboro where Scales was tried. "What really gets to me is
how difficult it is to transport ourselves back in time.
Audiences of today laugh at things that people found very
serious back in the 1950’s,” Herzenberg said. "I
just hope people remember these things weren't intended
as jokes.”
The Smith Act was passed before World
War II to attack radicals, Herzenberg said. "Throughout our history,
there have been repeated periods of political paranoia,
usually about the far left." "The main point
is that you should know that these things can happen in
our society." But the limits of dissent have broadened
since Scales' trial, Herzenberg said. "We're a much
freer society than we were then."
Junius Scales died in 2002.
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