Briggs writes for Lou Lublin Productions. (Huxley wrote screen versions of 19th century English novels for producers
Hunt Stromberg,
William Goetz,
Kenneth Macgowan and
Orson Welles, as well as
a life of Mme. Curie for
Sidney Franklin). He has just been denied a raise, a disappointment with repercussions for his love life. The industry is tightening its belt; Hollywood mogul
Schmuel Gelbfisz has announced to the press that those under him may well see their salaries reduced by half. He has no automobile of his own, but uses his wife Miriam's
Buick convertible. Briggs is—or was—serious about art; he deplores popular escapism as an abuse of it. He knows exactly how many tens of millions of dollars were raked in by
Amanda, a vapid musical love story, three winters previously—during the
Ardennes Offensive. In early 1946 he began scripting a life of
Catherine of Siena, who in 1366 had mystically married Jesus. Having to sex it up, he elaborated a character from a suitor mentioned in her letters. His script has been reworked three times by others before getting to production, but the lover-character remains; Lublin hopes to get
Humphrey Bogart for the part (an unlikely prospect, as 1948 will see him starring in several films by
John Huston). Brigg's relationship with Elaine began as his involvement in the Catherine script was concluding. His long avoidance of its physical consummation—i.e. of technical
adultery—mirrors his disenchantment with what in Hollywood passes for the creative process. "When you finally get what you want," he tells his friend, Huxley's narrator, "it's never what you thought it was going to be." Another symbol of spiritual death is the long drought (or
drouth) upon southern California; this finally breaks when Briggs instinctively reads a script by a Mojave recluse (rejected by Lublin) after the Narrator reads him part of it. ==Romantic Identity==