Page 170

By Jack Joseph Smith

The sun shone a colored stream across his desk; The Irish Catholic in him made him laugh about the curved stain glass windows. He looked down at his paper; but his mind flash- ed back to the men at the table. "What have you done?" they had asked. "Followed the great stars well, because sence childhood I have wanted to be an actor." "In what rolls? Your resume doesn't mention any hits." "In my own life sir I've done most classical things you've seen in the movies." "Indeed; you're twenty-six?" (He had to be the accountant to the business man,) Jiven Joe's soc- ial cutting up mood thought. "That's right sir, shucken' and jiven' at twenty- six." "What you have done is what we want to know?" "You're a real lead man mister." "No, we called you in here to be the lead man... What do you think fellows? Does he still make it in terms of what he looks like?" Jiven Joe laughed remembering the intellectual telling him that his hair looked good. (But sure- ly it has something to do with my mind for me to be primping.)

Original Scan

Page 170

AI Interpretation

GPT

The audition memory becomes an argument over whether lived experience can count as classical substance when the gatekeepers only know how to read credits and surfaces.

The page is sharp about resume culture and the performance of authority. Jiven Joe's answers are comic and defensive at once, because he knows the system wants proof, polish, and moldability more than the already-lived intensity he believes makes him a lead. This reading remains provisional because the marginal handwriting still needs follow-up.


Claude

The audition memory becomes a conflict over legitimacy, with Jiven Joe insisting that lived experience outranks credential. The page is his core argument said aloud.