[Note: This a reposting of one of my favorite "holiday" posts. Regular blogging will resume tomorrow.]
Frank Capra and Ayn Rand aren’t names that are often mentioned together. Yet the cheery director of Capra-corn and the dour novelist who created Objectivism have much in common. Both were immigrants who made their names in Hollywood. Both were screenwriters and employees of the film studio RKO. And during the last half of the 1940s, both created works of enduring cult appeal, Capra with It’s a Wonderful Life and Rand with The Fountainhead.
Capra and Rand were also both masters of sentimentality, a literary form that is foreign to those of us weaned on irony. Our inability to appreciate sentimentality leads us to dismiss Rand and Capra as amusing but minor talents rather than as gifted storytellers. Yet each produced work that will outshine their more critically acclaimed peers. People will still be reading Rand’s novels long after the works of Sinclair Lewis and Norman Mailer have been forgotten. And Wonderful Life has already earned its place on the short list of great American films, surpassed only by Citizen Kane and The Godfather Part II.
My purpose, however, is not to defend the genius of these creators but to compare two of their protagonists, The Fountainhead’s Howard Roark and Wonderful Life’s George Bailey.
To anyone familiar with both works it would seem that the two characters could not be more different. I contend, however, that they are not only similar but a variation on a common archetype.
Howard Roark, for example, is an idealistic young architect who chooses to “struggle in obscurity rather than compromise his artistic and personal vision” by conforming to the needs and demands of the community. In contrast, George Bailey is an idealistic young architect-wannabe who struggles in obscurity because he has chosen to conform to the needs and demands of the community rather than fulfill his artistic and personal vision. (Howard Roark is essentially what George Bailey might have become had he left for college rather than stayed in Bedford Falls.)
While both represent the artistic, ambitious, talented individual who is surrounded by stifling mediocrity, each character’s story unfolds in dramatically different fashion. Rand portrays Roark as a demigod-like hero who refuses to subordinate his self-centered ego for the wishes of society. Capra, in stark contrast, portrays Bailey as an amiable but flawed man who becomes a hero precisely because he has chosen to subordinate his self-centered ego to society.
[Digression: Ironically, Rand’s protagonist has become something of a cult figure, an ideal to aspire to, while Capra’s hero, a far darker and complex character, is considered an “everyman.” Such a misreading is laughably absurd. Howard Roarks can be found just about anywhere. Although they may not be as talented as drafting or speechifying, the self-centered libertarian fratboys found on every college campus exemplify Roarkian morality. But while Roarks are all around us, where can the George Baileys be found?
Every Christmas audiences flatter themselves by believing the message of Wonderful Life is that their own lives are just as worthy, just as noble— just as wonderful—as the life of George Bailey. Despite the fact that the left their smalltown communities for the city, put their parents in an “assisted living facility”, and don’t know the names of their next door neighbors, they truly believe that they are just like Capra’s hero.]
But what makes George Bailey one of the most inspiring, emotionally complex characters in film is that he continually chooses the needs of his family and community over his own self-interested ambitions and desires – and suffers immensely for his efforts.
Although sentimental, Capra’s movie is not a simplistic morality play. In the end, George is saved from ruin but the rest of life remains essentially the same. By December 26 he’ll wake to find that he's still a frustrated artist scraping out a meager living in a drafty old house in a one-stoplight town. In fact, all that he has gained is recognition of the value of faith, friends, and community and that this is worth more than anything else he might achieve. Capra’s underlying message is thus radically subversive: it is by serving our fellow man, even to the point of subordinating our dreams and ambitions, that we achieve true greatness.
This theme makes Wonderful Life one of the most counter-cultural films in the history of cinema. Almost every movie about the individual in society—from Easy Rider to Happy Feet—is based on the premise that self-actualization is the primary purpose of existence. To a society that accepts radical individualism as the norm, a film about the individual subordinating his desires for the good of others sounds anti-American, if not downright communistic. Surely, the only reason the film has become a “Christmas classic” is because so few people grasp this core message.
The fans of The Fountainhead are therefore not likely to appreciate Wonderful Life. Indeed, the messages are so antithetical that I only a schizophrenic personality could truly admire both George Bailey and Howard Roark. For even though they are surprisingly similar characters, when the spell of sentimentalism has faded the contrasts become clear.
For instance, Roark lives to create inspiring works of architecture but cannot do so without relying on others. When society fails to appreciate his “genius”, his egotistical purity leads him to engage in a massive destruction of private property. By the end of The Fountainhead Roark is revealed to be an infantile, narcissistic, parasite.
Bailey, on the other hand, has all the marking of a repressed, conformist, patsy. He lives for others (a sentiment that would make Ayn Rand gag) rather than “following his bliss.” He compromises everything but his integrity. And yet he discovers that he has all that makes life worth living.
I admire the genius of Capra and Rand. Each has given the world an enticing vision of the role of the individual. But given the choice, I’d much prefer to live in a world with more George Baileys and fewer Howard Roarks.

I think you are a bit off. Society needs both the radical individualist and communitarian to make it work. Without the selfish, devoted ego of the former, radical economic progress that lifts up the majority is rarely possible. Without the latter, you end up with a community that is entirely economic. The majority of people, even libertarians, are neither the radical individualist nor the communitarian. In fact, I have never personally met a libertarian who agrees with Objectivists that a parent can do things like just abandon a child if they decide it is a burden on their liberty. I know they exist, but they don't seem to be even close to the norm, especially when you get into the greater category of "minarchist" from libertarianism.
It's fun to bash the radical individualist who devotes him or herself to their business, but I wonder how many people today would do that while chatting on their iPhone and buying goods on eBay using PayPal from their Windows-based PC?
The fact is that if you want to be very good at something, and you aren't a prodigy, you have to be at least partly a selfish, radical individualist to accomplish it. Doesn't mean that you have to lose your sense of community and priorities, but if you aren't willing to devote yourself to it, you'll end up purely mediocre.
Howard Roark was infantile and narcissistic, but he was not a parasite. He earned his own way, and his collaboration with others was done willingly and knowingly. Nothing parasitic about it -- he was a through and through symbiote, and proud of it.
George Bailey was a good guy, but I wonder about the apparent ease with which he was willing to end it all and take the coward's way out. The movie does a good job of finessing this aspect of his personality, but it is just as disturbing in its way as Roark's willingness to engage in architectural terrorism.
Neither Bailey nor Roark are good role models for the "everyman". Both have fatal flaws which disqualify them from being worthy of emulation.
Perhaps the key to success and happiness in life is in striking a balance between living-for-others and promoting one's own welfare, and in calmly confronting crisis without resorting to bombs or self-annihilation.
Oddly enough, I posted on Roark today also, in a completely different context, including video of the reason why he blew up the project. I think you're off base in your character analysis, but I'll just say this much:
Not quite. They're not willing to pay the price for it; they whine and cry for others to pay it for them. I don't think anyone can deny Roark was narcissistic - to Rand, that was a feature, not a bug - but infantile? No.
Just caught this - "massive destruction of private property." No, actually, it wasn't. It was a government housing project. Mind you, I haven't seen the movie, and maybe the movie was different from the book and that's what you're basing this on.
I actually do appreciate both The Fountainhead (and Rand's other works) as well as It's A Wonderful Life. John Piper has a very interesting article that describes how such a thing can be possible - if you have time, take a look.
Hey Joe,
Good post. Reading The Fountainhead this year, I have to disagree with your statement to the effect that there are many Roark's running around college campuses as frat boys. These frat boys will spend four years drinking and then settle into their suburban lives either out of a Bailey-like desire to sacrifice for their families or simply and less honorably because they are afraid to do anything more with their lives. Ayn Rand probably despises both types. But I think Howard Roark is very different from what I picture as a frat boy. I think both Roark and Bailey are respectable in their own way. I agree with you that Bailey is the more respectable of the two. But the "frat boys" of our society don't hold a candle to either character.
To me, the prime quality that is shared by both characters is integrity. Knowing what you believe and come what may, acting on it. Obviously, the way Roark acted on it is far less respectable, not to mention legal, than the way Bailey did. But both do what they do honestly and I think that is the message for me, you, and the rest of the frat boys who read their story.
Thanks!
But I think Howard Roark is very different from what I picture as a frat boy.
Well, Roark was a date-rapist... ; )
Thanks for the link Laura. I found "The Fountainhead" depressing. I guess she does OK with Roark but the rest of the characters are wooden and their actions don't logically follow their character. It mystifies me why so many people read this and other Ayn Rand writings and have a conversion experience following it.
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