How To Fail With Elizabeth Day - Agony Uncle Salman Rushdie – ‘I walked into a glass door and fell in love’
Episode Date: September 4, 2024This is a very special one-off edition of How to Fail, where I bring you a peek behind the paywall to hear one of my favourite subscriber editions of ‘Failing with Friends’. If you’re not alread...y a subscriber (and if not, why not, quite frankly?) then this is a little glimpse of what we’ve been up to. Failing With Friends is where my lovely listeners write in and ask for advice about their failures, problems or just to say hello. In this episode, the highly-acclaimed author, Sir Salman Rushdie kindly stayed on after his interview with me, to help answer your questions. Salman certainly lived up to his role as Agony Uncle, revealing his thoughts on people who bulls**t, his hack for writer’s block, and even giving excellent dating advice. I hope you enjoy it! And if you do, don’t forget to subscribe for a weekly Failing With Friends episode as well as the chance to listen to How To Fail completely ad-free. (You also get exclusive access to the How To… channel and will be able to binge all 12 episodes of How To Write A Book). Have something to share of your own? I'd love to hear from you! Click here to get in touch: howtofailpod.com Production & Post Production Manager: Lily Hambly Studio and Mix Engineer: Gulliver Tickell and Josh Gibbs Senior Producer: Selina Ream Executive Producer: Carly Maile Head of Marketing: Kieran Lancini How to Fail is an Elizabeth Day and Sony Music Entertainment Production. Find more great podcasts from Sony Music Entertainment at sonymusic.com/podcasts To bring your brand to life in this podcast, email podcastadsales@sonymusic.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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or domain. Hello and welcome to How To Fail, the podcast that flips the traditional interview on its
head and asks its guests to talk about three moments that things went wrong.
This week for an extra-specialty fabulous one-off, I thought it would be nice to give some of
you who aren't yet subscribers to Failing With Friends a little taste of what we've been up to behind the paywall.
Failing with Friends is where we ask our very special guests to stay and put on their agony
aunt or uncle hat to answer some of our listener questions, problems, failures and much, much more.
Today I'm pulling back the curtain to bring you one of my favourite subscriber episodes
of the year, in front of the paywall. You're welcome, don't say I never spoil you. My
guest agony uncle this time is none other than Sir Salman Rushdie. We talk about how
to deal with professional bullshitters, how to get over writer's block and, unbelievably, he gives
brilliant dating advice. I hope you love it as much as I do. Roll tape.
So Salman Rushdie, welcome.
Thank you.
Are you often asked for advice?
Not by anybody who wants to listen to the answer. Do you ask your wife Eliza for advice? Is it more often that way around?
Yeah, it's more often that way around.
She seems very wise.
Yeah, she tells me what clothes to wear.
Does she?
Yeah.
What does she say this morning?
Yes, she said put a suit on.
And you look, wasn't that one of the first things I said to you?
Thank you, yes.
The grey goes very well in the pink of the podcast.
You see, well, she knew all that.
Well thank you, Eliza.
Okay, the first email is from Philippe, who is writing from Lyon, France, and he says,
Hi, Elizabeth.
Five years ago, I was all set to make my first short film with the support of my friend.
I had the cast and crew sorted and the dates were locked in, but my friend, who was also
a filmmaker, criticised
the film and I ended up abandoning the project altogether. Now I feel like I want to revisit
the project and actually make it, but I'm scared and full of self-doubt. How do I move
on from my first time failure and find the confidence to finally make my film? Thanks,
Philippe." That's such a good question because making a film is, there are so many ways in which
it can go wrong and not happen. That I have enormous respect for anybody who gets a film
made. It can be Animal House 12. Never mind what the film is. You get your film made,
I think respect you got your film made. When they were going to make the film is, you get your film made, I think respect, you got your film made.
When they were gonna make the film of Midnight Children,
which I was working, I ended up writing the screenplay
and I ended up working with wonderful
Indian Canadian director Deepa Mehta.
I sold her the rights for $1
because I wanted her to make the film.
And there were so many obstacles, you know,
other people not liking what you've done
is just the smallest, you know.
Then there's, I mean, one of the biggest obstacles
is not surprisingly is money.
And we would find, because we were not,
it was not a big studio film, it was an indie movie.
And so we had to do a lot of smiling at the money. And people, I learned
that the level of bullshit in the film industry is higher than anywhere else in the world
that I've experienced. People would come into these meetings, money people, and they would
say to her, you know, we revere you. You are like a goddess to us. We will support you
to the blast dollar we have."
And they would say similar nonsense to me. And then not one dollar would show up. And
I understood that this was just their way of saying hello.
Right. Yes, yeah.
It really didn't mean more than that. That's what I'm saying is, and I would say to Philippe
that there's endless blows to your confidence in the process of making
a film, because it's like nobody wants you to do it. And so you just have to, if you
believe in your project, you have to put that aside.
Yes.
And give yourself the opportunity to fail. I think it's very important not to think,
oh, well, I have to make a masterpiece. Just make your film.
Yes.
And if it doesn't work out, make another film.
Well, I think, as you said so eloquently in the How to Fail interview, you found out who
you were through the process of those three unpublished novels and the first published
novel that didn't get the reviews that you necessarily wanted. And I think that that is a great piece of advice. No piece of art
that you put out there is ever really a failure because it will teach you something meaningful
about how to create art next.
Yeah. I mean, if you're paying attention, it will. But I think certainly the best thing
to do is to leave aside the question of success and just do the thing.
You know? Preach. Yes.
And if it doesn't work out, it'll teach you something and then do the next thing,
and then do the next thing. Exactly. And also remember, Philippe,
it's one person's opinion and great art elicits response, whether that be negative and positive,
and obviously we'd love it to be positive. But the worst thing I think is if you create something and the response is,
well, it's fine, but doesn't elicit any strength of feeling.
Richard Lange Yeah, I remember there used to be this little book that you could get in
in bookshops here called Rotten Reviews. And what it was, was terrible reviews of great works of art.
Genuine ones. Written at the time that they came out.
You know, Virginia Woolf's trashing of James Joyce's Ulysses.
I actually spent, so my first novel got, the first two reviews it had were excoriatingly
bad. And I spent a lot of time on Google, Googling terrible first reviews for great
works of
literature and it really made me feel better.
And there is, you know, I'm sure Homer had bad reviews.
Exactly.
So, so forget about it, as we say in New York.
Also both Jane Austen and Salman Rushdie and I found out Zoe Heller, your greatest successes
came with your second novel.
Yes.
And not the first one.
That made me feel better too.
Yeah, no, I think that's true. People always say the second novel is a difficult one, but
actually in my case, the second novel was the lucky one.
Okay, the next one is from Rena. Dear Elizabeth, I keep meeting very avoidant guys who never
seem to want to commit. How do I stop myself from feeling like such a failure in love?
Thanks so much, Rena.
I can't wait to hear what you're going to say about this.
Well, I don't know how old you are, Rena, but it does seem to be a generation in which
people don't want to commit.
There's a lot of hookups, more than attempts to create something lasting. So maybe you just have
to accept that you're part of the generation that you're a part of.
That's depressing. What do you think? So you don't strike me as avoidant at all. If anything,
you're probably a commitment addict.
Yeah, I like one thing. I mean, in all parts of life, including romance, I like one thing. I'm in all parts of life, including romance, one thing at a time.
Yeah, so you're long-term monogamy, but you'd be married five times.
Yeah.
Yes.
But this time round, everybody in my family said, finally.
I know. Eliza got t-shirts made up with finally, Prince of Cambridge.
Finally, yeah, which I have.
She seems completely wonderful.
I'm not just saying that because she uses
the middle name, she's Eliza.
No, no, she is completely wonderful.
Yeah.
Reena, as someone, so I, I don't know how much you know
about my personal life.
I got divorced in my mid-30s,
and then I was single in my late 30s
and was using apps for the first time.
And it was terrifying for multiple reasons.
And I think in that phase of my life, I definitely had a tendency to meet avoidant men. And after
a while, I realized that that's probably because that's what was familiar to me in some way.
And there was a part of me that felt it was extraordinarily passionate, never
quite to know what you were going to get, like whether someone was going to turn up
or not, whether they wanted to commit or not. And this sort of sense of uncertainty, I confused
for romance and love. And actually I now realize I needed to learn that lesson that I was making
that error because now true love for me is feeling safe and having
consistency.
No, but I also think, and I would say this constructively to Rina, is that it never arrives
from the direction you're looking in.
It comes up behind you and smacks you on the head and then you've got no option but to
be in love.
Well, literally for you because you walked into a glass door.
I walked into a glass door and fell in love.
I, the day that I met my husband,
who I did meet on Hinge, a dating app,
I walked into this bar and I sat down,
it was raining outside and I was taking my coat off
and everything and the bar stool started wobbling
and I fell over.
The bar stool wobbled fatally.
I fell onto the floor
and it was the most embarrassing moment of my life. In the first five minutes of meeting this very handsome man, anyway, I also literally
fell in love.
Literally fell in love. Well, there you are. You see, a little falling over might help.
Yes. Yeah. And Reena, actually the same thing that we said to Philippe, treat every date
as data acquisition. It's not a rejection of you if someone is emotionally avoidant.
It's data that you can acquire about what you want to do differently next time and what
you want differently in someone else.
So that's a way to avoid feeling like a failure.
You're just experimenting and you're learning more and you're gaining more valuable knowledge
and good luck.
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Right. This one is from Trudy in Manchester. SOS, at the minute I'm stuck in a major creative
rut, do you have any tips for freeing yourself up?
I don't care about my writing being good at this point, I just really need to get out of my head.
Appreciate you, Trudy.
You know, there's a thing that Trudy may find hard to understand, but it actually works.
Because I know I do this and I know a lot of writers who do this. When you're stuck
I know I do this and I know a lot of writers who do this. When you're stuck and you don't know what the next sentence is or how the next bit goes, I very often walk over to the
bookshelves and pick up a book at random and open it at random. And what I look at tells
me what to do.
That's a brilliant piece of advice. And I've talked to, I can tell you five or six writers I've talked to, they all do the same thing.
Is that because of the, is there a serendipity to it every time?
No, it's just something happens in your brain. It's magic is what it is.
Well thank you. I mean, I don't know if I have anything to add to that. I think that's what you
should do immediately Trudy. I mean, I suppose the thing that I would say is sometimes you can get caught up so much in your solitary
writing brain that you forget to be out in the world.
Yeah. I mean, one of the things that happened, there was one time when I was writing a book
and I was in the middle of writing it and I thought, I don't know how to fix this, is
that I left it to one side and went and wrote something else. Completely different. I mean, the book I was writing
was fiction and I went and wrote a piece of non-fiction and then came back to it and felt
my head was in a different place and I could continue.
Yes. And if you're not Salman Rushdie, you could just go and get on a bus and just look
out of the window. And
I think that thing about being engaged with something outside of your own head is quite
helpful. And you're not wasting time by doing that. You're actually living the life that
you need to live in order to inhabit your writing better.
No, getting out of the house, very good idea.
Yeah. Okay. So get out of the house. Okay. Final one is from Chloe in Ipswich. A fun one for you both.
I'm someone who really takes joy in imperfection.
I love mistakes, well Chloe, you sound very enlightened,
and think they make us appreciate life's
inherent gorgeous messiness.
With that in mind, what are your favorite imperfect
or messy works of art and why?
One of my favorite lines of literary criticism
is by the American critic called Randall Jarrell,
who said, a novel is a long piece of writing
that has something wrong with it.
Oh, that's so good.
Because the point he's making
is that perfection is a pipe dream.
Yes.
You know, no such thing.
And I don't care who you are.
You could be Dostoevsky or Virginia Woolf, but there's going to be a false note somewhere.
Yes.
And you see, once you let go of the idea of perfection, then you're kind of free.
You just try and make it as good as you can, but you don't ever think there's going to
be anything you do that doesn't have something wrong with
it.
For example, let's take really great books.
Love in the Time of Cholera, I think has one of the greatest openings and one of the greatest
endings that I've ever read.
In between, there's an enormous amount of repetitive stuff about all the love affairs
that the guy has.
I think, you know, okay, we get the point after 10. Maybe we don't have to have 20.
So I think that's a great novel with something wrong with it.
That's a perfect example. And also a great note. I remember interviewing Marina Abramovich
for How to Fail recently, and she talked about teaching art students and how she would make them write down ideas and the ones that they weren't happy
with, they had to screw up and throw into a waste paper basket until they arrived one that they were
happy with. And at that point she said, okay, you've got your idea that you're completely happy with,
I want you to disregard it and fish out all of the failed ideas from the waste paper basket and make
art from that. Very good idea. And I think she's a very good representation of messiness in art that makes you think some
of her performance art really is extraordinary because of its inherent danger and edge.
I'm not comparing myself to Marina Abramovic, but this podcast is obviously born out of
the glory of imperfection and I hand drew my logo on like with felt depends you can probably see on the microphone but for me that stands for
something you know I I felt that I wanted to show up as my messy and perfect
self and hopefully to create a space where I guess could do that too and I
wanted the logo not to be perfect deliberately for that reason so I suppose
those would be my two. I've just been thinking well while we were chatting
about about books that have something wrong with
them. And you know, Kafka was such a perfectionist that he thought all his books had things wrong
with them and he didn't want them published. And he considered them to be unfinished. There's
only three novels, there's The Trial, The Castle, and America. And he
didn't want anybody. He wanted his best friend who was his executor to destroy them all.
And fortunately, his best friend did us all the service of not destroying them all, but
allowing them to be published. But he was somebody with such self-doubt, and this is one of the greatest
writers in the history of forever, but he had such self-doubt that he published very
little in his lifetime. And the three great novels were all unpublished in his lifetime
because he thought they weren't any good and they weren't done and he was embarrassed
by them. And by the way, he was wrong.
Yes. And also, if you think about the birth of Impressionism and that idea of those paintings
seeming undone and causing such a scandal at the time.
Yes. In fact, the word Impressionism was an insult. These people can't paint, they can
only give an impression of something. And now they're the heart of every modern art
collection in the world. Every book when you start it is perfect in your head.
And then you have to fight with the fact of your talent or lack of it.
And the book that you finish is never as good as the book that was in your head.
But it's the best you can do.
That you know has to be enough.
I'm going to leave it there.
Thank you so much.
You've been a wonderful agony uncle.
Thank you. much. You've been a wonderful agony uncle. I'm sitting here in the studio with my lovely
producer Selena, who has already told me she doesn't like the sound of her own voice. So
she's not going to join in this conversation about the wonder that was Sir Salman Rushdie.
But I know that we are both giddy. So I'm going to try and convey the giddiness and
enthusiasm that we both feel through the tone of my soul voice. I always love interviewing
people who have really thought about the world and also who are so highly intelligent that they have that innate level of intelligence, which makes
everyone around them feel that they have a valid point of view as well. So he is not someone who
ever talks down to anyone. And I think that that is such a generous expression of his own intellect.
I immediately felt at ease. And I have to say, you know, I get nervous before every single interview still, you know, 25 plus years into the business. I get nervous and that's appropriate because
it shows that I care. But with someone like Salman Rushdie, who I have grown up with,
not only the idea of him on the TV news that I remember my parents watching when I was 10,
when the Fatwa was issued, but also his books. He has been such a cultural giant for me and for other people of my generation.
So obviously I was incredibly intimidated and because I write books too, nowhere near
his level, but because I write books too, I really wanted to pay him that respect of
getting everything right and doing my research. So I was intimidated
and nervous. And then obviously there is a very special setup to ensure his safety, which
involved emptying the building that we record in of other people. His two met police protection
officers came and scouted everything out and checked that it was all okay. And then he arrived and so that's the context. So the nerves were definitely at a higher level than
usual. But as soon as he walked in, he was so kind. I think the kindness was something
that I maybe hadn't anticipated. He was kind, he was funny. I said before we started recording,
I know we're about to cover some
very traumatic territory and I'm very aware that I can't know how that feels. And if at
any point it feels too much, he sort of stopped me. He was like, no, it's absolutely fine.
And I will tell you and thank you. But that again is an act of generosity and made me
feel that I could ask anything. And honestly, I could have spoken to him for hours. There's so much
I want to ask him about, about life, about literature, but also about the fascinating
people he has met along the way. And we didn't even get into the fact that he had this sort
of celebrity life, this celebrity social life after he came out of hiding and he moved to
New York, he became a fixture on the social scene. And some of you might
know that he married Padma Lakshmi, who presents Top Chef in America and is one of the world's most
beautiful women. I didn't ask him about that because it felt a bit undermining given the
gravity of everything that he was talking about and the fact that he's got a wonderful wife,
Rachel Eliza Griffiths. Yeah, I just imagine he's just a fund of anecdotes, let alone E.M. Forster and Gunter Grass, who
he's actually met in person, and Margaret Thatcher. I bet there's way more where that
came from. But also his insights. He speaks as lyrically as he writes and said so many
wonderful things about failure and success being their own shadow twins. And then another thing that
we were chatting about before recording Failing with Friends was star signs. So I mentioned
to him that I had interviewed Martin Amis for Radio 4 a few years ago and had the most
wonderful chat with him. And it was shortly before he died and I'm so glad I got to speak
to him. And I was saying to Salman, yeah, you forget that these sort of literary giants of which you are one and Martin was one, do you have this great sense of comic absurdity
and are really, really funny? And Martin and I started talking about star signs because
in Martin's memoir experience, there is a footnote in which he says that all astrology is bunkum
apart from everything written about Scorpios, which is true. And
I said, like, what Scorpio has done you wrong because I am a Scorpio. And he immediately
was like, are you a Scorpio? I said, yes. He said, well, that's a classic Scorpio question.
Anyway, it was very funny. And I was telling Salman this and then we got into a really
nice discussion about his star sign. He's a Gemini. It's about to be his birthday. We're
recording in May. His birthday is in June. My husband's a Gemini. It's about to be his birthday, we're recording in May. His birthday is in
June. My husband's a Gemini. It's the sign of communication. A bit like a Scorpio, we
get a bad reputation, but it's unfair. And a good Gemini and a good Scorpio, you just
can't get better than. So I didn't think I'd be talking about star signs with Salman Rushdie
when I got up this morning, but I enjoyed every single minute of it.
And remember, you can be part of Failing with Friends too. I'd love to hear your failures
or any questions you might have. Just follow the link in the podcast notes to contact me.
This is an Elizabeth Day and Sony Music Entertainment original podcast. Thank you so much for listening.