LEO HURWITZ
A Pioneer In The Beginnings Of America’s Documentary Film Part 2
Childhood Memories & Fantasies

Leo Hurwitz A Pioneer in America's Documentary Film Part 2 Childhood Memories & Fantasies
Leo Hurwitz A Pioneer in America's Documentary Film Part 2 Childhood Memories & Fantasies

Memories and fantasies originating in childhood influence the course of a life as it unfolds. So do childhood experiences. That was true of Leo Hurwitz and his films. Leo’s strong creative spirit enabled these impressionable early times to find powerful forms of expression in his creative work. And, because of this, Leo’s films speak for those abandoned by the societies they live in and for those who have no voice. We already know Leo’s family of origin had a strong social conscience. Yet, what are some of the personal, early, even unconscious sources leading to Leo’s passion?

My family made direct quotes available to me and gave me a window into Leo’s childhood. A big thank you goes out to rich interview material from my cousin, Ellen Hawley‘s (Pete’s daughter) 1985 interview with Leo; to Leo’s candor; and to confirmation by both Leo’s son, Tom Hurwitz, and his widow, Nelly Burlingham. Psychoanalysts and writers love to put puzzle pieces together and that’s what I’ve done. So, we see revealed, in Leo’s musings, some of the origins for his sensitivity to abandonment, for his creativity, and for the focus of his films.

Words & Images For Abandonment

The words and images in Leo’s early films bring to life the feelings of despair, fear, and anger that exist in silenced and marginalized populations. Some of his films speak for those attacked and murdered for labor organizing during the Great Depression (Native Land); for racial bias and mistreatment of Blacks in post World War II America (Strange Victory); for the persecution and freeing of Jews at Auschwitz-Birkenau (The Museum and The Fury).

Leo’s awareness of marginalized people came first from childhood dinner table discussions with his father Solomon. Yet, it was Leo’s own early experience of abandonment that proved to be a deeper unconscious source. This, he began to find words for later in his own psychoanalyses: “I realized how much I could not talk about, had nowhere to go with; the inability to communicate things that were explosive within one. Anger one didn’t necessarily know was anger.” (Hawley, 1985)

1st Experience Of Being Left

The earliest origin of Leo’s anger was an experience of being left: “I had double pneumonia at age one and a half and was taken to a hospital. I saw no one in the family. When I was brought home by Mother and Channah (Mother’s sister) on a trolley or horse-drawn – Mother asked questions. I wouldn’t talk to her. She then asked why I wouldn’t talk; I wouldn’t answer. Then I began to talk to her through Channah, telling Channah the answers. I knew the story as a child, it was considered cute (I talked well at that age). Mother understood that I was angry at being left.” (Hawley, 1985)

Tom, Leo’s son, believes that Mother (Eva) was tired by the time Leo, the youngest of eight, was born. And, perhaps, not as emotionally available. Plus, Eva tended to be practical and reserved anyway. These realities would complicate any baby’s feelings. His older sisters doted on him, though, and Leo’s understanding of the real impact of being left at the hospital surfaced when Rose, one of two sisters who became child psychoanalysts, died in 1981.

Knowing & Feeling Losses

“After Rose’s death, we took some of her furniture, which we thought was emptied. In a bottom drawer, it turned out there were toys and I saw all these toys two months after her death. It was a shock to have Rose present in the form of her toys, which she had there for little children to be able to open the drawer and dig out the toys and play as part of their therapy.”

“A bit later, I had an episode where I didn’t know where I was – where ordinary things had to be made conscious; a sense of disconnection and isolation. I was at home and lay on the bed to let material surface … it had to do, obviously, with Rose, with death. In 20 minutes, it passed. My connections: Rose, Rose’s death, children, disappearance; being left in the hospital, all familiar things gone; new faces, white walls, no sense of how I got there. This was a reproduction of an infant’s confusion in which the immediate environment makes no sense.” (Hawley, 1985) Talking well at age one and a half is one thing. But Leo did not yet have a language to understand or express his feelings. Or to make the necessary emotional connections he later made in his films.

A Feeling Language In Leo’s Films

Leo’s films give powerfully us, his viewers, an emotional language for such unspeakable traumas as discrimination, persecution, murder, and abuse of power. They speak of losses; of people abandoned by society, isolated and alone – people who can’t make sense of the situations they are in. These are people, too, who didn’t have words to speak and had every reason to be angry. Leo’s films also reveal important concerns that many of us turn a blind eye to and would rather not know. What Leo always focused on was seeing, never hiding from the truth. Turning a blind eye was not something Leo Hurwitz could do. That he learned early.

Never Turning A Blind Eye

At the young age of three or four years old, Leo Hurwitz learned not to turn his eyes away. An early memory shows what made Leo began to keep his eyes wide open. He’d just run a summertime potato race and won his first heat, putting him into the semifinals. But Leo was standing on the iron fence, watching what was outside. He was distracted and missed the semifinal run. This upset him: “The threat of missing something by virtue of not being alert haunted me for many years.” (Hawley, 1985)

From then on, Leo’s eyes were focused. At age three or four, he missed what was most important. That never happened again. Early in his life, Leo became vigilant to what he might not see if he wasn’t paying close enough attention.

Being alert was also necessary for Leo to find his voice. Being small and being heard wasn’t an easy task in a large family of powerful voices – especially the voice of his father, Solomon.

Leo Hurwitz Finds His Voice

“When the family was together, it was a struggle who got the floor. I was the youngest. And, I began to save up a reply, wait for an opening and I’d have to smash in the reply in a second and a half … no expectation that anyone’s going to listen. And who needed them? The expectation was that everyone was independent.” (Hawley, 1985)

Independent ideas weren’t always easily accepted (despite the family value on independent thinking) with his father’s powerful presence. Especially if they differed from Solomon’s certain, even absolute, beliefs about Socialism and how to achieve change. When Leo turned from Socialism to a keen interest in Communism (and later a more active involvement), there was a conflict between them:

“Mother didn’t take an extreme position. She was a Socialist but had not as much vehemence against Communists. She saw something there worth watching. Mother read some papers … she didn’t have Father’s political passion but a cool understanding that something was wrong with capitalism. She’d experienced it. I never had to fight with her. Only, I had to fight with him.”

“Underneath the discussions, the arguments, there was some satisfaction in being able to discover weaknesses in Father’s position and being able to prove it… one has a father who’s big with a big voice and a big laugh who can roar with violence, and it’s fun. But you’re the little one who can get eaten up with the violence …” (Hawley, 1985)

The “Threat” Of Father

Father’s big presence posed a “threat.” Leo remembers more: “He had an armchair at the head of the dining room table. Even if there was no meal, he sat there. At five or seven, I would come along and somehow would sense an invitation to come closer. I’d stand between his legs. One of the forms of play was that I’d feel the hills and valleys and texture of his face, his heavy stubble, mustache, and smooth forehead. Strange landscape. Then my hand would come close to his lips and he would let out a roar as if he would bite off my hand and I would withdraw my hand … Scared me to death but I couldn’t resist the enjoyment of being scared to death. It was the power and fright of Father. But clear that the threat was a mockery. There was a twinkle in his eye.” (Hawley, 1985)

Later, in his psychoanalysis, Leo discovered that in spite of Father’s twinkle he was afraid of him. Leo fought against Solomon’s loud authoritarianism and his own fear, throughout his early life. Standing up to Solomon and becoming a Communist was part of overcoming this fear and articulating his right to be heard, in his own way. Then, Father lost his voice.

Father Lost His Voice & Made Leo’s Stronger

It happened when Leo was in college at Harvard in 1926. A growth on Solomon’s vocal cords was discovered: “he had an operation … [and] after the operation, he had trouble speaking. He had a ring in his throat and could have learned to speak but didn’t want to. It gave him a breathy voice and I think he thought it was ugly and didn’t want to subject people to it. Communication was by little notes. I took a portrait of him when I was twenty-one or so – it reveals great sadness, and it had to do with his voice. His voice was the drama of his life. He talked dramatically and passionately. Father had been robust, energetic, laughing …” (Hawley, 1985)

This tragedy, in one unwished-for way, made room for Leo to have a stronger voice, a voice he couldn’t have as a small child with his father’s very large presence. Yet such tragedies, if children have wished to find a Father’s weaknesses or to overpower him (although a normal part of development), come with conflicting feelings. Leo’s voice, in his films, is as dramatic and passionate as Father’s. I found myself wondering whether, as much as Leo speaks for himself and for the people his camera captures, he might also reparatively and lovingly speak for Father.

A Voice For Those Who Couldn’t Speak

It took courage, but Leo did and could take a stand about his ideas with Solomon. And, to both their credits, despite Solomon’s opposition; they worked it out. But, the battle for more equitable conditions for workers, something all the Hurwitz’s were committed to, was not so easy to win. Corporations, government, and police quickly quashed any form of protest for labor rights, organizing, or striking, sometimes with violence. This was the climate of Leo’s childhood and it angered Father. Father did not tolerate injustice in society and he certainly didn’t abide injustice against his children:

“My 4th-grade teacher was called Fats Davis – Mrs. Davis. Threatening, tough teacher … She left the class alone for a while. Erasers were thrown. She came in and asked, “Who did this?” Silence. She pointed to several students to stand in front of the room, including me. Had us hold out our hands – eight or ten kids, random. I hadn’t enjoyed the earlier chaos. Felt it was an atrocious thing to do and told Father: ‘You must talk to Mrs. Davis because that was a monstrous thing to do – none of those people were any more guilty or innocent than the others.’ He did talk to her. Father had flowing white hair and spoke imperfect English. But she used no physical punishment the rest of that year. Injustice, you could go to him about.” (Hawley, 1985)

Speaking Out Against Injustices

It’s true that Leo and Solomon agreed about injustice. This was their common ground. And, to this end, Leo Hurwitz’s films expose many injustices. Speak out about them with poetic words and images. Yes, Leo grew up with an authoritative father and two parents who leaned more towards intellect than feeling. So, I don’t find it a surprise that he and Paul Strand developed a style of documentary called: “the structure of need.” Importantly, in structuring his films, Leo took into account the needs of his audience. What do they need now? Leo infused his films with a kind of emotional accessibility to the needs of others that weren’t readily available from either Solomon or Eva:

“I remember childhood as being full of mystery and the withholding by grownups. In terms of school, grownups were the enemies of children with some few exceptions. At home, grownups weren’t the enemy, but a different set of beings – [with] barriers to the feelings, needs, attitudes of the child. Except in unstated ways. Mother was very loving when you needed to be loved, separate at other times. Father was both loving and remote as the gods were to the Greeks. The virtue in the family was independence, not dependence. I inherited a sense of obligation, order, without it being connected with the satisfaction of my needs …” (Hawley, 1985)

Leo Hurwitz made sure this wasn’t true in his films. His films show deep empathy for those who’ve been hurt and abandoned by society. To tell their stories well, he brought the power of something emotional into the world of the documentary. I don’t think it’s an accident, in fact I know it’s not, that Leo’s films speak for those who couldn’t speak for themselves – about human things, with feeling.

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Dr. Sandra E. Cohen

I’m Dr. Sandra Cohen, a psychologist and psychoanalyst in private practice in Beverly Hills, CA. I work with creatives in therapy, story/character development, and entertainment consulting. If you are a writer, actor, or director and want help with a character – or a chance to do some of your own personal work - call at 310.273.4827 or email me at sandracohenphd@gmail.com to schedule a confidential discussion to explore working together.

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