Author Roth weighed in on ‘Plot Against America’ TV series
LOS ANGELES — David Simon, the creative force behind stellar TV including “The Wire,” “Show Me a Hero” and “Treme,” found himself in unfamiliar territory with his latest series, HBO’s “The Plot Against America.”
He’d developed books into shows before, nonfiction works that demanded adherence to facts. But Simon didn’t necessarily feel liberated in adapting Philip Roth’s 2004 novel, a re-imagined history of World War II-era America made fascist in the grasp of a real-life, wildly popular hero, the aviation pioneer Charles Lindbergh.
“There were things I thought that worked as a novel that were not going to work in a six-hour miniseries,” Simon said. He broached his concerns in a 2017 meeting with Roth, the Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist who died in 2018 at age 85.
“I had an idea, but I didn’t have the guts to venture it. I mean, he’s in the canon, he’s one of our great literary voices, and I’m a TV hack,” said a self-deprecating Simon. “And I’m asking to play with the end of a novel he wrote. So I didn’t have the courage to say, ‘What about this, what about that,’ I just wanted to know if I had permission to try.”