Skip to Main Content
Boston University
  • Bostonia
  • BU-Today
  • The Brink
  • University Publications

    • Bostonia
    • BU-Today
    • The Brink
Other Publications
BU-Today
  • Sections
News, Opinion, Community

Culture.com brings crowd and John Malkovich to Tsai Center

The actor is honored, talks about culture, acting, and success

April 26, 2006
  • Art Jahnke
Twitter Facebook
Photo by Matt Kalinowski

As the family in Culture.com, Guila Clara Kessous’ one-act tribute to the actor John Malkovich, argues over the dinner table, enormous images of television shows play on a rear wall of the set. There are pictures of a tsunami in a distant part of the world, a vaguely disturbing commercial for laundry detergent (Click here to watch a video of that),  and a hilarious hip-hop number about the importance of getting into a good college. The video messages are all about culture — What is it? What’s it good for? What’s it bad for? — and so, of course, is Culture.com, a play that is sometimes funny, sometimes musical, and always provocative. In fact, the script was sufficiently provocative to persuade Cambridge-dweller John Malkovich to attend its sole performance at the Tsai Performance Center on Monday night, after which the actor took the stage and discussed his own notions of culture.

Culture.com, which was performed by Boston University students, uses a combination of media, music, and comic absurdity to challenge popular notions about the definition and the value of culture. As younger children in the play’s comfortably intellectual family fight over which television show to watch, a high-school age daughter studies for her SATs. A recently hired African-American housekeeper serves drinks and mistakenly unlocks the room where a literature-devouring son has spent his entire life. Chaos erupts, and the madness continues, until a woman in the fifth row of the audience stands and asks the actors when the play will end. That will not happen, we are told, until the entire audience recites a poem — the same poem, in unison. The poem, it turns out, is not a poem exactly, but a nursery rhyme: “Twinkle Twinkle Little Star” — the author’s point being that the only poetic work that a cross section of Americans knows well enough to recite is child’s play.

The performance done, Malkovich took a seat onstage and answered questions from Christopher Martin, a College of Arts and Sciences associate professor of English, and playwright Kessous, who said she dedicated her play to Malkovich because his work explores the same sorts of questions as does hers. Asked by Kessous about his idea of culture, Malkovich said he would have to define culture as “a way of satisfying the curiosity that I have.”

“I was recently in Amsterdam,” said Malkovich, who sported a goatee. “And in Amsterdam you have a lot of cultural choices. You can stay in the hotel and watch Finnish porno, which may be quite a sensible choice, or you could go see The Night Watch, which may also be a sensible choice.”

The actor, who lived for 15 years in France before moving to Cambridge, disputed the European conviction that America has no culture. America, he said, simply has a different kind of culture.

“People say this country has no culture,” he said. “But you could also say that there is more culture in Dylan’s “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall” than there is in some countries.”

Malkovich said the big difference between European and American notions of culture is that Americans tend to be less mindful of their own culture, and that may be because the history of this country is much shorter than the histories of European countries.“In America, culture is more of an elective,” he said. “It’s not a prerequisite to anything.”

Responding to a question about his method of acting, Malkovich said that when he is acting he tries very hard to simply act and not to think about what he is doing. “If you’re acting you can’t be thinking,” he said. “Acting is not about thinking. If you think about it too much, you’re going to be in trouble.”

The internationally famous actor shrugged when asked about his success. “I always think success is mostly luck,” he said. “And I run across so many talented people who have had no luck.”

Culture.com author Guila Carla Kessous is a graduate student completing a Ph.D. in modern foreign languages and literatures under the guidance of Elie Wiesel (Hon.’74), BU’s Andrew W. Mellon Professor in the Humanities, and tutelage of T. Jefferson Kline, associate chair of BU’s modern foreign languages and literatures department. She has taught at BU, the French Library and Cultural Center/Alliance Francaise of Boston and Cambridge, and at Harvard. In January, Kessous received the highest honor in drama issued by the French Ministry of Culture: the State Diploma in Performing Arts. The play was sponsored by the University Professors Program, the CAS Core Curriculum, NEH Distinguished Teaching Professor Christopher Martin, the College of Fine Arts, Pusteblume, and the French Cultural Society. For more information about the play, its cast, and its author, click here.

Explore Related Topics:

  • Culture
  • Local
  • Share this story

Share

Culture.com brings crowd and John Malkovich to Tsai Center

Share

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
  • Print

Latest from BU Today

  • Varsity Sports

    Women’s Basketball Advances to Patriot League Semifinals for First Time

  • Student Life

    Terriers in Charge: Elizabeth Slade (ENG’20)

  • Varsity Sports

    Men’s Basketball Terriers Go Head-to-Head with Colgate in Patriot League Championship Wednesday in New York

  • University News

    BU Puts Plan for Remote Learning in Place if Coronavirus Forces Campus Closure

  • Student Life

    Terriers in Charge: Valerie Nam (Sargent’20)

  • Varsity Sports

    BU Men’s Basketball Advances to Patriot League Semifinals, Hosts Bucknell Sunday

  • Fine Arts

    Accurate Art

  • Things-to-do

    Spring Break in Boston? There’s Lots on Offer

  • Varsity Sports

    Men’s Lacrosse Hungry to Take Program to Next Level

  • Campus Life

    BU Suspends Out-of-State Alternative Service Break Trips as Coronavirus Spreads

  • Student Clubs

    What’s New, What’s Hot on WTBU

  • Voices & Opinion

    POV: We Need Unemployment Insurance to Protect Workers and the Economy from Coronavirus

  • In the City

    Getting to Know Your Neighborhood: Roxbury

  • Arts & Culture

    Creator and Cast of ABC’s A Million Little Things Visits BU Tomorrow, Will Screen Latest Episode

  • Varsity Sports

    Women’s Lacrosse Sees Offense as Key to a 2020 Patriot League Championship

  • Computational Science

    Game Changer: Azer Bestavros’ Journey from Egypt to Cambridge to BU’s Computing Mastermind

  • Coronavirus

    Explaining BU’s Coronavirus Plan

  • Construction

    Private Development Project Advances Albany Street Makeover

  • University News

    BU Launches Coronavirus Website

  • Politics

    Video: Students on the Issues That Matter Most to Them in the 2020 Presidential Election

Section navigation

  • Sections
  • Must Reads
  • Videos
  • Series
  • Close-ups
  • Archives
  • About + Contact
Get Our Email

Explore Our Publications

Bostonia

Boston University’s Alumni Magazine

BU-Today

News, Opinion, Community

The Brink

Pioneering Research from Boston University

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Youtube
  • Linked-In
© Boston University. All rights reserved. www.bu.edu
© 2025 Trustees of Boston UniversityPrivacy StatementAccessibility
Boston University
Notice of Non-Discrimination: Boston University policy prohibits discrimination against any individual on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, age, national origin, physical or mental disability, sexual orientation, gender identity, genetic information, military service, pregnancy or pregnancy-related condition, or because of marital, parental, or veteran status, and acts in conformity with all applicable state and federal laws. This policy extends to all rights, privileges, programs and activities, including admissions, financial assistance, educational and athletic programs, housing, employment, compensation, employee benefits, and the providing of, or access to, University services or facilities. See BU’s Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Policy.
Search
Boston University Masterplate
loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.
Culture.com brings crowd and John Malkovich to Tsai Center
0
share this