Susanna J. Sturgis   Martha's Vineyard writer and editor
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Docu-soaping the Island

The Vineyard is coming to the Vineyard. It's true: I read it in the Martha's Vineyard Times (Feb. 19 and 26). The Vineyard, according to its executive producer, Dave Broome of 25/7 Productions, is a "soft-scripted docu-soap." (I'm not sure what that means, but it sounds meaningful.) Broome says he's big on authenticity. "It's really critical to do this very genuine and very authentic," he says. He wants people to watch the show and say, "That's exactly what life is like on the Vineyard in the summertime."

Having lived through quite a few Vineyard summers, I can't begin to tell you "exactly what life is like on the Vineyard in the summertime," but that's OK. 25/7 Productions, which is based in L.A., is going to set me straight. Summer on the genuine, authentic Vineyard, it seems, is about recent college graduates. Some of them come here to work; others don't have to work and just want to have fun. Summer on the Vineyard is about the "interaction" (Broome's word) between twenty-somethings of the upper class and twenty-somethings of the upper middle.

Although these twenty-somethings will be marooned on an island, you know this isn't anything like Survivor because this island isn't deserted. According to 25/7 Productions' website www.marthasvineyardcasting.com, Martha's Vineyard is "inhabited by high-profile residents, movie stars, politicians, writers and artists." This is the Vineyard that those high-profile types, including L.A. production companies and New York publishers, know best, the one that winks into existence around Memorial Day and winks out by the middle of October. The stories they tell are the ones they know: the ones about college-educated summer hires and high-profile residents. The rest of us, the low-profile year-rounders, are the stage crew, indispensable for sure, but nearly invisible. The lucky (and photogenic) among us might get a walk-on part, but we don't get to write the script.

And that's what bugs me. The voices of year-round working people are rarely heard on the other side of Vineyard Sound, and when they are, they're cut-and-pasted into "soft-scripted docu-soaps" and other stories dreamed up by the well-connected, the journalists, the producers, the novelists and academics from somewhere else. True, the complex vitality of the year-round Vineyard can be heard and seen in, for instance, the stories of Susan Klein; the mystery novels of Cynthia Riggs and the late Phil Craig; the story songs of Dillon Bustin; and the nonfiction of Jill Nelson (Finding Martha's Vineyard), Nora Ellen Groce (Everyone Here Spoke Sign Language), and the late Dr. Milton Mazer (People and Predicaments).Their works are all informed by a deep knowledge of the place, its past as well as its present. They show us new facets of Vineyard life even as they convey something about us to the wider world. But will their combined audiences ever add up to more than a fraction of those who will see The Vineyard and as a result think they know something about the Vineyard? I doubt it.

What happens when outsiders get to tell other outsiders what the Vineyard is really about? When their version trumps our versions over and over? Outsiders get a lot of distorted if not totally bogus information about Martha's Vineyard, but that's not the worst thing. The worst thing is that we who live here and actually know something about the place start to think that our stories aren't worth hearing, or even worth telling. "The universe is made of stories / not of atoms," wrote the poet Muriel Rukeyser. So is Martha's Vineyard. If we don't tell those stories, the place becomes less visible, not only to outsiders but to ourselves. Stories connect us across space and across time. Nora Ellen Groce's Everyone Here Spoke Sign Language, about the up-island community that incorporated both deaf and hearing people as equal participants, is out in the world inspiring people who may never visit Martha's Vineyard. Few people now living have firsthand memories of that community, but it lives on in the stories that were told to Groce, and from which Groce created the story that she told to the world.

I believe that stories playing out right now on Martha's Vineyard, some on terra firma and others in people's imaginations, are at least as dramatic, at least as funny, at least as worth hearing, as 25/7 Productions' docu-soap about recent college graduates sun-and-funning on Vineyard beaches. How do we tell our stories when we fear we have nothing worthwhile to say? When we're working two jobs and trying to meet the never-ending challenges of living in a manic-depressive seasonal economy? And if we do, against considerable odds, manage to get them told, how do we get them into the wider world when so many gatekeepers in the mass media think their version of Martha's Vineyard is more exciting, more sexy, more commercial, more authentic than ours?

Damned if I know, but I suspect we have to make it up as we go along. We've got plenty of raw material: writers' groups and workshops; people with the technical skills to produce books, videos, CDs, TV shows, radio shows, and websites; talkers, storytellers, singers, actors, and teachers. If we can put it all together, maybe someone out there will listen. We might have a hit. Got any ideas?

 

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