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The Cover Photograph This is a picture of Wayne Martens playing PROSPERO in Shakespeare's THE TEMPEST. This production, in 1957, was the American premier of the score composed by Johan “Jean” Sibelius. The Detroit Symphony Orchestra (conducted by Valter Poole) performed on stage throughout the performance at the Bonstelle Theatre in Detroit, Michigan. Wayne was only twenty-one years old at the time. Sibelius died shortly after the play closed. SELF-PUBLISHING? I have never written a book before. I have poor vision and have never even read an entire book. I will certainly never write another book. So you can see why I thought it unlikely that I would ever find a publisher for this book. I did purchase a copy of Writer's Market. “4,000 listings for book publishers, trade journals, literary agents and more.” I sent out a few letters to see if anyone would at least read the first few pages. No such luck. It may be vanity, but I do believe that the book is filled with many interesting stories about the theatre, my autistic daughter, my relationship with God, and yes, I admit it, a lot about my love life. I do hope that if you have read this far, you will at least read the first few pages of the book. Then maybe, just maybe, I'll get you hooked. Wayne Martens When a working New York City actor becomes a single parent, he gives up his dream of stardom and spends full-time caring for his his severely autistic daughter. He then prays for miracles that never happen. In this book, he shares many laughs and a few very precious tears. .....from the TOP by Wayne Martens Copyright, December 14, 2006 Williston, Vermont You're standing on a stage, the curtain is about to go up and you're in a panic. It's not that you can't remember your lines; you can't even remember which part you're playing or the name of the play. If only you could look at the script one more time, then maybe, just maybe, you'd remember. This is a dream, so you can look in your dressing room, then your bedroom and then your car and get back on stage without missing a beat. But, of course, you can't find your script. You wake up in a cold sweat. You know it was a dream but the fear won't subside. You've just had the stage actor's nightmare. My name is Wayne, Wayne Martens. I know that if you’re reading this book, then you already know who wrote it, but I'm an actor; I like to see my name in print. Isn't that strange? As I begin to write this book, it is the year 2000, 32 years after I swore to myself that I would never act again, and yet, I still think of myself as an actor. God knows I still have that dreaded nightmare. Between the ages of eighteen and thirty, I was obsessed with the theatre. Within those years, hardly a week went by that I was not working on a play. I produced and directed but my true love was and always will be acting. Life, as I knew it, came to an abrupt halt one evening 1 in 1968 at the Pocket Theatre on Second Avenue in New York City. I was doing an Off-Broadway musical called How to Steal an Election. At that time in my life, I was a single parent of a fiveyear-old mentally disabled child, my darling daughter Michele. In order to make a living as an actor, I had often needed to go on the road and I would take Michele and a baby-sitter along on the tour. As she grew older, I knew that she would need more stability and so I had decided, come hell or high water, I would only work in New York City. One evening, my baby-sitter called and said that she couldn't sit for Michele that night. I tried desperately to get a replacement but failed to find one. I had to bring my daughter to the theatre and lock her in my dressing room. When I was on stage, I could hear my child crying. I knew, at once, that it would be a new nightmare that would haunt me from that day forward. I would, forever, be on a stage hearing my child crying. I would try to go to her, but would be trapped on stage, unable to find an exit. At that moment the acting, which had been the most important thing in my life, suddenly seemed insignificant. Like the apostle Paul, I needed to put away childish things. I decided that night to abandon my career as an actor and dedicate my life to caring for my child. 2 My interest in acting started in 1953 at Alma College where I was enrolled as a preministerial student. Forgive me for using such a hackneyed phrase as "God works in mysterious ways," but that is the only logical explanation I can give for the strange twists and turns of my curious life. I was born in South Bend, Indiana. I was told that we could see the golden dome of Notre Dame from our kitchen window. My family moved to Charlotte, North Carolina when I was three, but by the time I was eight, we moved back north again to Detroit, Michigan. So after five years of being called a Yankee, I was now a Rebel with a thick southern accent. A boy in our new neighborhood asked if I wanted to go to Sunday school with him. Being anxious to make new friends, I said yes. It was going well until the Sunday school teacher asked me if I knew why Jesus died on the cross. I said, “I'm not from this church. I'm only visiting.” “But surely you know that Jesus died for your sins,” she responded. I didn’t know I had any sins. When the Sunday school teacher told me that I was born in sin, I felt humiliated. I walked out. At that point I had no idea what I was, but I was certain I was not a Baptist. My brother Les, who's three years older than I am, had better luck. The church he visited had a basketball court. This was before anyone 3 had the idea of little league sports and so the chance to play with a team on a real court, as opposed to a hoop over a garage door, was a real big deal. My whole family became lifelong Presbyterians so that my brother Les could play basketball. The church, the Redford Avenue Presbyterian, became the center of my life. It had social gatherings every week for all ages. When I became a teenager, I was active in a group that met every Sunday evening. We would all talk and pray and sing, and then we would go to a member's house for a little party. There were never enough cars for transportation to the party. I was usually able to borrow the family car, which made me very popular, but it also made it next to impossible to find a way to be alone with a girl. I was excruciatingly shy and always felt that it would be easier to talk to a girl if we were alone together. But everyone wanted me to give him or her a ride. I would meet a girl who wanted me to take her home, but there would always be someone else in the car who would say, "No, take her home next. I live two miles past the blah blah and she just lives down the street." How could I say, “I want to be alone with her, stupid.” Of course, the girl in question would always say, “Yes, Wayne, it makes sense to take me home next.” Oh well, the best-laid plans. 4 I was always very self-conscious about my looks. Inside, I felt as if I was a dashing, handsome, romantic character, but when I looked in a mirror, I saw this skinny kid whose hair was always standing on end, who wore thick glasses. I never knew what I looked like without the glasses because, without them, I couldn't see myself in the mirror. One Sunday evening, a new girl to the church group sat next to me in the car on the way to the party. The minister rarely came to these parties, but he did that night and he rode in my car. The three of us were in the front seat and three others were in the rear seat. There wasn't much conversation in the car. Then, out of the blue, the new girl said, “Wayne, stop that.” Everyone giggled. Both of my hands were on the wheel. Keep in mind that even though the sedans of the fifties seated three in the front, it was a tight fit. This girl was sitting right next to me. Our legs were squeezed together. My hand was just above her knee as it moved the gearshift. There was nothing in the world that I wanted more than to gently move my hand down to her leg and then slide it along the inside of her thigh, but never, in truth, would I ever have the balls to do it. A few minutes later she said, "Wayne, get your hand out of there." I was dying of embarrassment. I kept both of my hands high on 5 the wheel to make sure that our minister could see them. Throughout the party this girl pretty much ignored me, but I knew there was a good chance that she would want me to drive her home. She must have some interest in me; why else would she have played that silly game in the car? She did ask me for a ride home, but she sat in the back seat. The car, as usual, was full. I dropped off everyone but her and one male friend. I kept asking the boy, "Where do you live?" I, of course, wanted to take him home next, but he never responded. I looked in the back through the rear view mirror and couldn't see anyone so I pulled over and turned around to look. Sure enough, they were doing it in the back seat. The radio must have been blasting away because I hadn't heard a sound. I didn't know what to do and so I just sat there and waited. After taking the girl home, I told the boy, Richard, that I thought what he did was sinful. He explained that, far from being sinful, sex was an act of faith. It was his plan to have sex with as many women as he could until one of them became pregnant; that would be God's way of selecting the girl he would marry. His soul mate. Well, he didn't have long to wait; the young lady in my car became pregnant that night. They both 6 quit school and got married. The strange part is, the last I heard, they were happily married. Everyone gets lucky now and then. The law of averages finally played in my favor. One night at one of the parties, a lovely young lady asked if I would give her a ride home. After I said yes, she requested that I not offer anyone else a ride; she wanted to be alone with me. Oh my god, oh my god. And believe it or not, my whole family was away on vacation. The house was empty. We drove straight to my house. She wanted a drink and so I poured her a shot of my father’s bourbon. I didn't drink and she called me a prude. She then lit up a cigarette. I didn't smoke then either. We began some heavy petting and I was in heaven. She told me she wanted to make love with me because I seemed to be so moral and self-righteous, it would be fun for her to teach me the joys of the flesh. I told her I was eager to learn the lessons she wanted to teach. Things were getting pretty hot and steamy, but I soon realized that the smoke that was permeating the room was not coming from our hot bodies. It was coming from the cigarette that she had dropped between the cushions of the sofa. I jumped up, got a pot of water, and dumped it on the fire. After making certain that the fire was out, I took the young lady home. 7 What could I do? My father was going to kill me. I gave myself a crash course in reupholstering. The situation was complicated by the fact that the sofa was part of a set. I would have to recover the entire set. I measured and went to the store and purchased a very nice fabric and new stuffing. I purchased a tack hammer and got out the sewing machine and went to work. Day and night I worked at it. When it was finished, it looked marvelous. Really, I did a good job. When my parents arrived, a day earlier than expected, my mother was overjoyed. The old upholstering was a bit worn and when I explained that I had wanted to do this as a gift for the entire family, the story seemed to play quite well, that is up until my father found the charred remains of the old upholstery and stuffing in the garage. I lived through it. I think my father was impressed that I was able to pull off such a good re-upholstering job. He must have found my explanation to be very funny. Of course, I left out some of the details. I tried to get another date with the girl, but she wasn't interested. She told me that she had a regular boyfriend and she was only interested in me as a charitable contribution, she called it a “mercy fuck.” While still in high school, a friend asked me to go to a revival meeting with him. Presbyterians are not too big on revival meetings, 8 they’re more of a Baptist thing, but I went because he said that this was a good way to meet girls. I really got caught up in the emotion of the evangelical service. I ended up with tears in my eyes and needed to tell the world how much I loved Jesus. I marched down the aisle. I was saved. Young, good-looking girls kept coming up to me and introducing themselves and hugging and kissing me and praising the Lord. From then on, I went to every revival I could find. I was "saved" every time. I liked this a lot, but as with all good things, I started to feel guilty. How many times could I be saved? Would a voice come out of the sky saying, “Hey, didn't I save you last week?” What if God knew that my favorite part was meeting the girls? Had I become a closet Baptist? The guilt became so great that I decided to become a minister, a Presbyterian minister. It’s easy, now, to make light of it, but at the time, I did sincerely believe it to be God’s Will that I become a minister. I had friends from my church who attended Alma College, a small Scots Presbyterian school, and they convinced me that attending Alma would be a good choice. I received a phone call from the business manager of the school. He explained that the student who headed the photography department was graduating and the school desperately needed a replacement photographer. He implied that he 9 would personally guarantee that it would be to my advantage to attend Alma College. Apparently some of my friends had told the business manager that I not only did the photography for the Redford High School paper and yearbook but also that I had won numerous awards and competitions as a photographer. I started in photography when I was ten years old after I had purchased a "photo kit" for twenty-five cents and three box tops from Kellogg's “Corn Flakes.” I took to photography like a duck takes to water. By the age of twelve, yes, twelve, I was the photographer for a local ultraconservative newspaper in Detroit called The Redford Record. We were among the first to point out that the Communists were about to poison all Americans by putting fluoride in the drinking water. By sixteen, I was on the staff of United Press. This is before it became UPI and before Associated Press was a contender. I carried around a 4X5 Speed Graphic camera, twenty film holders and forty flashbulbs. At each news event, you had to be careful not to use up your film or flashbulbs. Each shot had to count. I worked after school and was the only full-time employee on the night shift. I had a list of available freelance photographers throughout the state but I was in charge of all news coverage in the state of Michigan. My assignments came 10 directly from the New York City Headquarters. We were in constant communication by phone and wire. At that time, in order to get a divorce, you had to prove adultery and photos of the act in progress were often required by the divorce court. I had never heard of pornography, let alone seen it. As a joke, one of the New York operatives sent me a special packet of photographs over the wire. They had been used by the actor Franchot Tone in his divorce case against Barbara Payton. The modem did not print the pictures, it exposed the photographic paper which then had to be developed in a tray of developing chemicals. As the pictures began to develop, I wondered, “What is that guy doing with his face between that girl's legs?” As a “religious conservative,” I found it revolting. The New York office had a big laugh but I found it embarrassing to say the least. I was angry and I was tired. Not all that much went on in Michigan at night and I often got to sleep on the job but I had to be at high school in the mornings. I was now seventeen and this was my senior year. I quit. As I look back on this, the incredible thing is that at UP, we were scanning photos and sending them by modem in 1951, decades before the personal computer was invented. 11 Like most of us at the time, I was an avid hater of communism. That changed when I wanted to buy a car. There was a street in Detroit called Livernois, which was nothing but miles and miles of used car lots. As I walked up and down the street looking at all the cars, I thought to myself, “What a waste! All these cars are just sitting here. There are so many people, like myself, who want a car and these cars are just going to waste.” I said to one of my high school teachers that there must be some way to get these cars into the hands of the people who need them. He said there was. It was called communism. This did not make me run out and join the Communist party, but I did end up campaigning for Adlai Stevenson, the Democrat nominee for president. Eventually, with the help of my father, I saved enough money to buy a car, a 1947 Ford convertible. That car may well have been responsible for the skin cancer I developed in later years, but God, I loved that car. There can be no doubt that a convertible enhances a student's popularity. It was maroon, with a cream-colored top and trim. It was now the summer of 1953 and I was planning to enroll at Alma College in the fall. As it turned out, maroon and cream were also the school colors. It is a beautiful combination, but can you imagine being 12 at a football game and yelling, “Maroon and cream, fight, fight?” But before going to college I had to make some money, I needed a job. I answered an ad for a photo lab that was looking for photo printers experienced on automatic equipment. This was something new. All of my work had been by hand. I stretched the truth and implied that I was experienced on their new equipment. The "darkroom" was well lit with yellow safe lights and I was able to figure out how the equipment worked. I got the job. I was going to go to Alma College in the fall and I had no idea how I was going to pay for it. The offer made to me by the Alma College business manager was vague to say the least and I did not have anything in writing. Even if I received a full scholarship, I would still need money for room and board and textbooks. I needed to earn as much money as possible and I needed it as soon as possible. So when I learned that the lab where I was working the day shift was looking for help on the night shift, I came in one evening and applied for the job. The daytime foreman didn’t know that I was working nights and the nighttime foreman didn’t know that I was working days. It would only be for two months and I was young and strong. The problem developed when both shifts went on overtime. When a foreman for either shift came into work, he would see me and say, “Oh, you’re here early, 13 good.” I was working around the clock. I screwed up a lot of prints before I nearly passed out. Even though this was automated equipment, the processing was still being done by hand. One of the processing technicians yelled out to me, “I’m getting a lot of pictures with people's heads cut off. Is everything on your machine set up OK?” No, it wasn’t. I was set up for 35mm but was printing larger 120 negative sizes. I was cropping out about eighty percent of the image and had no idea how long I had been doing it. Food was brought in for breaks and it had been several days since I had been out of the lab. Management was not happy but this was only a few weeks before college would begin, so I was soon in my maroon and cream Ford convertible on my way to Alma, Michigan. Everything went smoothly at the registration until I got to the end when they requested money. “That will be Blah, Blah dollars,” the young lady said. “Oh, I don’t have enough money,” was my response. Remember, this is long before “student loans.” “How do you intend to pay your tuition?” the young lady asked. “I have no idea,” I replied. At that point, the business manager arrived and had a behind the scene conversation with the young lady. She then approached me and said, “Oh, no problem. You are now registered.” I found this confusing, 14 but I attended Alma College for three semesters without ever being asked for any money. Alma had a lovely campus in the very center of Michigan. In 1953, it was so small that it was required protocol to introduce yourself to anyone you saw whom you didn't recognize and, after a few weeks, you rarely saw anyone you didn't know. Even with free tuition, I needed money and I got a job as head of the photo department for New Moon Trailers, located in Alma. They co-produced the movie The Long Long Trailer with Lucile Ball and Desi Arnaz and I got to shoot a lot of the stills and promo shots. That was fun. I will always remember Alma College with a deep affection. It was there that I first discovered the arts and philosophy. It was at Alma that I became a radical. I was never asked to pledge a fraternity so I tried to form my own. Those of us who were not members of a fraternity were called "GDI's," God damn independents. Many of us joined together and became "The Bohemian Brothers." We would sit around and get drunk listening to classical music, reading poetry, and talking about art and which girls we wanted to sleep with. It was here that I learned that I was not the only man who wanted to spend a night with Elizabeth Taylor in a sleeping bag. ESP and reincarnation were also favorite topics. 15 We all tried to communicate with aliens via ESP as we waited for flying saucers to come and save the world. My Bohemian Brothers and I had many discussions about the relationship between religion and science. We decided to write a letter to Albert Einstein. A science professor at Alma, Harold Potter, was a personal acquaintance and knew Einstein’s address. He forwarded our letter. To everyone’s surprise, Einstein responded, explaining that science was nothing more than man searching for the laws of God. In an effort to broaden my horizons, I decided to learn more about the form of music called jazz. I went to the record store and thumbed through the jazz section. I found a record with abstract modern art on the jacket. This was a good thing; I could show my new appreciation for art and jazz at the same time. I listened to the record in the store but was not overly impressed. It was an "Octet" headed by someone named David Brubeck. As it turned out, I had played it in the store at the wrong speed. When played at 33RPM it was a whole new audio experience. All my friends loved it. Many, many years later, when I ran a photo studio and lab in New York, I did some work for Dave Brubeck. When I mentioned that I 16 had purchased the recording of his octet, he said that I may have been the only person to have purchased the album who was not a personal friend or relative. My first week at Alma, I was playing ping-pong in the recreation room and I heard a blood-curdling scream, a female in distress. I ran through a door and sped through a dark labyrinth of curtains and leapt onto what turned out to be a stage. The screaming was coming from a rehearsal for The Taming of the Shrew. After the laughter subsided, a voice that I recognized as my English Professor, William Gregory, called out, "Martens... if you have any interest in passing English, I recommend that you take a few 'walk on' parts in our play." I had reason to believe that his threat was not made in jest. The first day of school, Gregory gave us our first assignment. He explained that an "A" paper with one misspelled word would be graded as a "B;" two misspelled words would get a "C," and so forth. Considering that I had 26 misspelled words on the first page, I thought it best to accept the walk on parts. My inability to spell is more than likely related to my inability to read. I was born with weak eyes. As a child, I had to wear a patch over 17 my better eye in an effort to strengthen the weaker eye. This "pirate" image probably increased my natural inclination toward adventure. I started with the patch in North Carolina, but in Detroit, I was sent to an experimental eye doctor who had a new treatment. Every Saturday, I would go downtown by bus and sit in front of this strange contraption that would flash lights and spin wheels, performing optical illusions. One day, it seemed to me that I had been looking into this machine forever. I was sick to my stomach. I was about to pass out when I heard a female voice screaming, "Oh Jesus! Oh Jesus!" It was the nurse. She had closed up and gone home, then she must have realized that she had forgotten about me and left me at that contraption. I got the feeling that she had been repeating "Oh Jesus!" for about an hour as she rushed back to the office. Maybe that experience was the cause of my strange eyesight. I see the image from both eyes in the part of the brain normally reserved for the right eye. In other words, if I close my right eye, everything that I see from my left eye appears to the right of my nose, as if the image was in front of my closed right eye. You have to admit, that's weird, especially when trying to put in eye drops. The bottom line is that I see two of everything. Not double vision, but two distinct images. But even if 18 I close my left eye it is still difficult to focus on anything close up and so it is very difficult to read. I have never finished reading a book, any book. I went through High School and three years of college without ever buying a textbook. I got a few “A”s, a few “B”s, and a lot of “C”s but never failed a course. In the ninth grade, I was determined to read Crime and Punishment by Dostoevsky. I wanted so much to be an intellectual. If people knew that I couldn't read, I would be considered an idiot. I never made it as far as chapter two. I came close to finishing Kipling's Jungle Book in grade school and at Alma College I put a big dent into Gibran's The Prophet, a very short book. At any rate, I was about to alter the course of my life. I accepted a few walk-on parts in The Taming of the Shrew and we rehearsed for a month. The evening before opening night, the father of the student playing the role of Biondello, a small part with one long staccato speech, passed away. I wasn’t asked; I was told the part was mine. I spent that evening and the entire next day repeating the speech over and over again. "Why, Petruchio is coming, in a new hat and an old jerkin, a pair of old breeches thrice turned: a pair of boots that have been candle cases, one 19 buckled another laced…” It just goes on and on. I kept repeating it right up until show time. My first entrance brought the house down. I thought it was comedic talent, but lets face it, skinny boys look funny in baggy tights. My every entrance was greeted with laughter. By the time of my big speech I was feeling pretty full of myself. Then the moment came. "Why, Petruchio is coming, in a new hat and an old jerkin, a ... a.... a....” I went totally blank. Then I blurted out, “He looks like hell!” At least it was in iambic pentameter. I could hear my English professor rolling on the floor. I was hooked. The theatre became my ministry. I preached it from the hilltops. My roommate, Bob Fritz, and I lived in a little two-room cabin off campus. It was about six feet from the railroad tracks. Luckily only one train passed per day, at about 3 A.M. One of my ambitions in life was to be making love to a woman when the train went by. It would be an experience that she would never forget. Unfortunately, I was still a virgin. Outside of the incident with the burning sofa, I had never even been close. 20 This was long before co-ed dorms. Boys at Alma could live off campus but girls could not. The girls' dorm was locked up at 11 P.M. That meant that if you got a girl to stay out past 11 P.M., you had a fighting chance. She was locked out of the dorm. There were ways a girl could sneak out, but she couldn't get back in unless she had someone waiting by the back door to let her in. One night, November 8, 1954, (I remember the exact date), a young lady told me that she had to speak with me in private. Could I meet her by the back door of the dorm at 11:30pm? This was a girl that I hardly knew. I couldn't imagine what she had to say to me that couldn't be said in the coffee shop. I pulled up in my Ford convertible. She came out the door and we drove away. She knew of a secluded parking lot where we could park. She told me how she was having a hard time with her boyfriend and how she had been attracted to me since she first saw me. The next thing I knew we were kissing and feeling and rubbing so hard that I was afraid that I would rip a hole in my pants. "Take me to your place," she said. "What about my roommate?" I asked. She responded, 21 "He and his girlfriend went upstate for the weekend; that's why I wanted to get together with you tonight. I knew your cabin would be empty." All of this was said in between heavy breathing. This was it, my moment of truth. We drove back to my cabin. Sure enough, the lights were out. Just before entering, she kissed me while gyrating her hips over my trembling body. We went in. The foreplay was over. We were both ready. I grasped the rubber that had been in my wallet for the past two years and had it ready when the lights went on and a chorus of Happy Birthday rang out. Everyone seemed certain that the party was a complete surprise. I had to sit down. It seemed like hours before I was able to stand up without embarrassment. The girl's boyfriend was at the party. The whole thing was his idea. As popular as I had become as an actor at Alma, I remained a virgin. One day, the president of the school, John Stanley Harker, asked me to stop by and see him in his office. Theatre had become very popular at Alma. Dr. Harker felt it was a little too worldly for a church school and he wanted theatre deemphasized. He told me that William Gregory's contract would not be renewed and he requested in a polite but firm tone that I not return to Alma College the following semester. This didn't bother me. I wanted to do more theatre not less. Dr. Harker may have considered my devotion to the 22 theatre to be a distraction from my desire to be a minister but I thought my talent as an actor was a gift from God. The theatre was my church. I saw this as God's Will. I was predestined to be a star. I would transfer to Wayne University in Detroit where I would major in theatre. Thy will be done. 23 24 Chapter 2 Wayne University would have to wait. Alma College refused to release my transcript unless the three semesters of tuition, previously held in limbo, were paid in full. That was very unfair. It meant that all the photographic work I did for the school was not compensated for at all. My father got me a job in a "Tool and Die" company across the street from his restaurant. He had given up his career as a salesman to open a tiny little restaurant in an industrial area of Detroit. It had six stools at the counter and four tables. The people who hired me often ate at the restaurant. My father was always my hero. During my very early childhood in Charlotte, N.C., my father worked as a traveling salesman. Everyone on our block on Chesterfield Avenue knew when my father was returning from a sales trip. I would ride my tricycle up and down the sidewalk, my Captain Marvel cape floating in the breeze and yell, "My daddy's coming home! My daddy's coming home!" He had played minor league ball with the Chicago White Sox, but what impressed me most was that he had been a sparring partner for Tommy Loughran, the Light Heavyweight 25 Champion of the World. Years later, my mother explained to me that my father's employer, Bendix Aviation, had been on strike, which was bad news because my father worked on commission. During the strike, he had no income. So in order to put food on the table, my father let a champion fighter beat the crap out of him. As a child, I never knew much about my mother. My father loved to talk about himself. Like father like son. My mother never mentioned anything about her past. I knew that her mother, my grandmother, was a stern woman. She had come to the U.S. from Sweden, by herself, at the age of twelve, and worked as a live-in servant for a wealthy Swedish family in the Chicago area. I don't know what age she was when the family's teenage son began to fool around with her, but I do know that my grandmother became pregnant with my mother as a result. They were married, but soon after, the boy died. I don't know how or of what he died. My mother and grandmother were then kicked out of the house. My grandmother got another job working as a live-in servant. My mother was raised without ever feeling that she lived in her own home. As a young child, while playing in the attic, I found a box filled with dozens of drawings of naked people. Sex was never discussed in any way in our house and I was not about to ask what 26 pictures of naked people were doing in our attic. I learned many years later that my mother did the drawings. She was a student at the Chicago Art Institute. A very good one I must add. I probably got all of my creative genes from my mother. When I was six, and started school in North Carolina, I began to have a problem with two bullies who lived down the street. One was seven and the other was nine. I don’t remember their names, but I’ll never forget them. One day, they forced me into an alley that was strewn with garbage. They took off my shoes and socks and then picked me up and put me down feet first on a large watermelon rind that was covered with bees. I was stung repeatedly on the soles of my feet. I ran home screaming. My mother was small and gentle but she was very angry. She stormed down the street to talk to the bullies’ mother. Kids in the neighborhood told me that my mother punched the bullies’ mother in the face and knocked her on her butt. My mother denied it, but I never had a problem with those two kids again. I wanted my father to teach me how to fight. In addition to having been Tommy Loughran’s sparring partner, he was always telling stories about how, as a kid in school, he had to fight his way to school and back. This was on the south side of Chicago; my father lived in 27 the German neighborhood. On the way to school, he would fight the Irish kids in the Irish neighborhood, the Italian kids in the Italian neighborhood, etc. I wanted him to teach me how to box, but he only wanted to teach me how to protect myself. “The first thing you need,” he told me, “is speed.” “You must be able to run fast. The only way to win a fight is to not have a fight. There’s no pride in a broken nose. If you sense a fight is brewing, get out of there. Being a coward is smart; getting in a fight is dumb. If there is no way to get out of it, then hit first, hit hard, and then run like hell!” That was it. That was my lesson. I can’t deny that I was disappointed. Our house in Charlotte was in the center of the city, but we had chickens, pigeons (for roasted squab), ducks, geese and even a goat with a cart. No one complained because my father was the Bar-B-Que king. We had parties every month for the whole neighborhood. Many people in Charlotte still insist that my father invented BarB-Que. He never made that claim, but he never denied it either. No one can seem to agree as to what Bar-B-Que is let alone who invented it or how to even spell it. 28 Let me throw in a bit of trivia. The Ford Motor Company used to make a station wagon partially made of hard wood. Henry Ford hated throwing out all of the scrap wood left over, and so he hired a think tank to come up with an idea of how to put the scrap wood to use. The result was "Charcoal Briquettes." Mr. Ford's brotherin-law, who helped him in this project had the last name of “Kingsford.” When it comes to Henry Ford trivia, did you know that in 1942, Ford built a car made entirely out of plastic? It ran on ethanol. No one seemed interested. It never went into production. But I digress. Let's get back to Charlotte. I'm in the first grade and I am very fond of my two pet ducks. They would follow me to school. They would sit in the schoolyard until the end of the school day. I could see them out the window of my classroom. Then they would follow me home. One Sunday, we were having "pheasant" for dinner. It tasted pretty good, but I noticed that no one else was eating it. I asked why, but no one would give me an answer. Then I figured it out. I ran to my room, slammed the door and cried into the night. If that didn’t make me a vegetarian, nothing will. 29 After the second grade, my family left Charlotte and we moved to Wilmington, N.C. I think my father quit his job and got a new job that was going to make us rich. Our new house was nearly a mansion. A horse stable was next door and my father bought a horse. His name was Happy. I hated Wilmington, but I loved Happy. I had a hard time adjusting to the new school. The first week in the third grade, I had to urinate real bad. I asked the teacher if I could go to the bathroom. She said, “No, school will be out in an hour. You can hold it.” I couldn’t. I just sat in my seat until everyone else had left so that I could sneak home without being seen. I've been told that this has happened to many children at that age, but at the time, I was certain that only a moron would wet his pants in school. I had been told that our next door neighbor was a big executive with a tobacco firm. One day, I was sitting on our front porch and he came over to talk to me. He told me that under no circumstance should I ever smoke a cigarette. I do not believe he ever said a word about nicotine. He told me that the tobacco was sprayed with arsenic and that arsenic was highly addictive. This was 1942, long before smoking was considered to be evil. I recently investigated arsenic on the Internet and discovered that arsenic is still sprayed on tobacco and that it is highly addictive. I can't help but to wonder why 30 this is never mentioned in the anti-smoking commercials. All you hear about is nicotine. Fortunately, we weren't in Wilmington very long. We moved to Detroit. At the time, I had no idea as to why we were moving. I later learned about my father’s job in Wilmington. He had been hired as sales manager for a new company called Differential Wheel. When large trucks with double sets of tires negotiate a turn, the outside tire has further to travel and burns rubber in the process. This shortens the life of the tires. Differential wheels had a clutch between the tires so that the wheels could move back and forth on a turn and the tires would wear evenly. It was a good idea but unfortunately, the clutch would burn out and it ended up costing more than it cost to replace the worn out tires. Our first house in Detroit was across the street from a golf course. There was a deep hill leading down to a small river, the River Rouge. In the winter we could sled and toboggan down the hill and ice skate on the river. When we were freezing cold we'd just walk across the street to warm up and then back to the "slopes." The big drag was that each time you went down the hill, you had to walk back up. One year, there was a light snow followed by rain. Then for several days, it would rain and 31 then freeze. The golf course became covered with ice. I got the idea first, but soon every kid in the neighborhood was doing it. We would ice skate down the hill. We would go so fast that we would coast to the top of the next hill and then zoom down again. We found a route where you could just keep going around and around with hardly any pushing. No more walking back to the top. As an adult, I realize how dangerous this could have been, but oh my, that was fun. Have you ever heard of anyone else having such a wild experience? Ice skating down hill? In the summertime, I would sell soda pop to the golfers. We had a large freezer in our basement. I would go to a local beer and soda distributor with a wagon and pull back five or six cases of soda at a time. In Detroit, it was just known as "pop." We were across from the tee for the seventeenth hole. Golfers were pretty thirsty at that point. On an average weekend, I would clear well over $100. For a twelve-year-old in 1948, that was pretty good money. Our house had a unique feature that no one else in the family knew about. In one of the upstairs bedrooms, there was a small bookcase built into the wall. Once while playing, I bumped into it, and it opened up. It was just a storage area, but when I discovered it, I hoped to find money or treasure inside. All that was there were 32 old newspapers. No one else knew of this space so I hid my money in there. When my younger brother, Randy, had the same experience of accidentally opening the bookcase, he went in and found a box full of money. You can imagine how difficult it was to convince him that it was my money that he had found. He may well still have doubts to this day. For my graduation from Holcomb grade school, June, 1949, my parents decided to throw a party for my fellow graduates and me. The boys came in suits and ties and the girls were all in pink and baby blue formals. I had heard of a new game that I had wanted to play. It was called Sardines. It was the opposite of hide and seek. One person would hide and everyone else would look for them. When you found them, the idea was to cram into their hiding spot. After a few people found the hider, it became a lot like a can of sardines. This seemed to me to be a neat way of getting real close to some of the girls. I was chosen to be "it." I would be the first to hide. I found a real good spot. Too good of a spot since no one could find me and they all gave up and left me in my hiding spot. After hiding for what seemed to be an eternity, I heard the sounds of screaming and laughter. I went to investigate. The noises were coming from the golf course. One of the young male guests had invented his own 33 game. The girls would stand on the top of the hill and the boys at the bottom. At a given signal, the girls would run down the hill and try to reach the "goal line." The boys would chase the girls and kiss any girl they caught. There was one problem with this game. Did you ever try to run down hill? This is the same hill I was just telling you about in the ice skating story. My parents received phone calls from each of the girls’ outraged parents. "What happened at that party? My daughter came home with her dress torn to shreds, covered with grass stains, and scrapes and bruises on her elbows." It must have been difficult for my parents to explain. But once again, I digress. I want to return to February of 1955. I've been kicked out of Alma College and need to earn some money so that I can enroll at Wayne University. I do not want to work in a photo lab. Outside of photography, I had no job skills. Photo labs were extra busy in the summer, but for professional photographers, the summer is the slow season, so jobs were hard to find. The previous summer, 1954, I had a job as a Fuller Brush Salesman. After a week of training with no 34 pay, I had to purchase a bunch of items that were to be given out to each household as a free sample. During my first week of going door to door, I had developed what I thought was a pretty good sales pitch but by the end of the summer, I was ringing the bell and when someone came to the door to answer, I would say, "You don't want any brushes do you?" They would say "no" and then I would give them their free gift and go to the next door. After paying for the free gifts, I may have broken even by the end of the summer. So now you can understand why I needed my father to get me this job as a tool grinder. I worked from February through August of '55, and paid off my debt to Alma College. My father had told all of the tool shop employees that I was studying for the ministry and they all called me "Deacon." I got along well with my co-workers but the shop foreman seemed to resent me. He was angry with the owners for having hired me. The machine that I worked on made a lot of noise. I would spend the day singing at the top of my lungs and no one could hear a sound. The shop foreman would look at me and see my lips moving all day. I knew him to be a devout Catholic. During a break, he came up to me and said, "I have heard that people who talk to themselves are crazy." I said, "That may be true, 35 unless of course they are praying." He was embarrassed and apologized. On my next to last day on the job, I confessed that I was not praying, but singing. I was at last able to transfer to Wayne University, this is September, 1955, before it became Wayne State. I majored in theatre. My first role was in Saroyan's The Time of Your Life. After opening night, we had a cast party, which lasted all night. I was living at home at the time. My father woke me up shortly after I went to bed. He was all excited. "Listen to this," he said. He was reading from the morning edition of the Detroit Free Press. "Wayne Martens is a master of deadpan comedy." I don't know which was more thrilling, the rave review or the fact that my father was so proud of me. My family had only begun to accept the idea of my being a minister and now I was going to be an actor? They had hoped that this would be a passing fancy. Although I now thought of myself as an actor, I did not abandon my "ministry." I thought that I could use the power of the theatre as a "voice" to preach my message. While still attending Wayne University, I began producing plays at local churches. The Enchanted by Jean Giradoux opened at a large downtown 36 Presbyterian Church. It was intended for the parishioners, but the critics showed up and it was a hit. A man by the name of Fred Barnett came to see it, and after the show he asked if he could have a word with me. He and I had worked together at a theatre in Detroit called World Stage. Fred had an idea, an idea that would alter the course of my life forever. 37 38 Chapter 3 In 1952 a new theatre opened in Detroit. It was called World Stage. It had been started by a group of professional actors in need of a space to perform. I was not involved with it. I was still in high school and had not yet discovered my talent as an actor. World Stage was a wonderful, unique experience. There is not much in the way of recorded history when it comes to American theatre and when you think about the arts in the United States, Detroit, Michigan is not a city that comes to mind. However, the success of World Stage was unique and perhaps unequaled in American theatre history. Today, it is just assumed that theatre designed to be creative, artistic, inspirational, or that intends to have an influence on our culture in any way, cannot be self-supporting. It must be supported by grants and donations from wealthy individuals, corporations and foundations. When World Stage opened, there was not much of anything available in the way of grants for the arts. The Ford Foundation offered "matching grants" to a handful of theatres in the U.S., but never even considered giving a grant in Detroit. The theatres that did receive Ford Grants, The Arena in Washington, D.C., The Alley in Houston, Texas and The Actors’ Theatre in San 39 Francisco, are all remembered as making important contributions to American theatre, but World Stage is only remembered by a few aging Detroiters who sit around reminiscing about the good old days. One of the main criteria for grant consideration was the "quality" of the Board of Directors. The board of directors of World Stage did not consist of society leaders who found it fashionable to be associated with the arts and have their names on a letterhead. World Stage was originally run and operated by the artists themselves. As time passed, and actors moved to New York and Hollywood, one man became more and more responsible for the day-to-day operation of the theatre: Fred Barnett. The original World Stage was located in a loft on the second floor of a rundown building on Woodward Avenue in Highland Park, Michigan. Highland Park was then an independent city located in the heart of Detroit. The theatre consisted of director chairs set on platforms arranged around an open space in the center that was the stage. It seated 200. One of the fun World Stage stories, from before I was associated with it, centers around the stairwell that was located in the rear of the theatre and led to an alley behind the building. The actor involved was Clifford Pellow, an actor who later became well known as 40 Flo's boyfriend on the TV series "Alice." I don’t recall which play the theatre was doing, but it was staged so that Cliff would wait in the alley. On his cue, he would slam the door, run up the stairs, and make his entrance. The sound of the slamming door and footsteps running up the stairs was an important part of the scene. One night, the Detroit police were waiting in the alley in a squad car with the lights off, apparently on a stakeout looking for a suspect. They had been watching Cliff in the alley smoking a cigarette. When Cliff got his cue, he ran for the door, slammed it, ran up the stairs and made his entrance. The police were in hot pursuit. They ran up the stairs and onto the stage. The audience thought that this was part of the play, but the police didn't know what to think. They grabbed Cliff and threw him against the wall and began to cuff him, and then they realized that they were under bright lights surrounded by people. They drew their guns and pointed them at the audience and yelled "Don’t anyone move." When the director, Fred Barnett, went on stage to explain, the cops all aimed their guns his way and yelled, "Don’t move." They then frisked Fred, who told them, "You're on stage during a play. You're making asses of yourselves." The police wandered about the stage, waving their guns. One of the cops said to the other, "I think we're on stage during a play." The police hemmed and hawed and mumbled to themselves and then 41 apologized, took a bow, and went out the way they came in. Would this be classified as improvisational theatre? The audience gave the police a round of applause and the play continued. World Stage presented the works of Odets, Miller, Shaw, Pirandello, Giraudoux, Sartre, Anouilh, Beckett, Ionesco, O'Casey, you get the idea, six to ten plays a year for over seven years without ever asking for a donation. Actors were paid according to the success of the play at the box office. Part of the effectiveness of World Stage productions was due to the intimacy of the theatre. The action was taking place before your eyes. Unlike the movies, where the actors are not real and appear on a humongous screen, or large theatres where the actors must project their voices and appear to be set apart on a stage that is far away and removed, an intimate theatre places the audience in the midst of the play. It can be an experience that is not forgotten. The problem with a small theatre is, of course, the lack of potential income. One out of every three productions needed to be a sell out. The area was becoming more and more crime-ridden and the audiences were having second thoughts about coming to the theatre. The first time the theatre had three box office flops in a row, it was broke. 42 Not in debt, but broke. It did not renew the lease on the space. Fred Barnett produced one more play under the World Stage name: The Vegetable. It was F. Scott Fitzgerald's only play. Fred rented a small proscenium theatre in downtown Detroit for one month. I played a small role and acted as technical director. It was a flop. Nevertheless, Fred wanted to reopen World Stage in a new permanent location. He wanted my production of The Enchanted to be the opening play. He would use his personal finances for the venture and we would be partners. To me, World Stage was a legend. This was more than I could have ever dreamed. We scouted for a location and found the perfect spot at Livernois and Six Mile Road. A few miles down the road from all the used car lots, right across from the University of Detroit. We converted the space to a theatre and moved The Enchanted from the church to the new World Stage. It was in its own building, a little smaller, with 150 permanently installed theatre seats arranged in a horseshoe around the stage. Fred called all the shots, but I had the title "Managing Director." I was now making a living in the theatre. I was a professional. I would never again be affiliated with a church. It's not that my faith in God diminished but I believed that the theatre was my ministry. I 43 still considered myself a devout Christian but had difficulty in understanding the position taken by many of the Christian Churches. How could a Christian believe in the death penalty? How could a Christian go to war and kill people? And how about the third commandment? How could a Christian, knowing that God made the Sabbath on Saturday, decide to celebrate the Sabbath on Sunday? And how about Easter? If Jesus, a religious Jew, were to attend our Easter dinner, would we really serve him baked ham? As you can see, I had difficulty in understanding some church doctrine. Jesus referred to himself as the son of God but he also referred to us as his brothers and sisters. Did this not imply that we were all the sons and daughters of God?. Although my religious beliefs may have been a bit unorthodox, I had no doubt that I had been selected by God and was predestined for greatness. My brother, Les, always found it difficult to understand my "holier than thou" attitude. If he did not approve of my being a minister, he certainly did not approve of my being an actor. He was my older brother in every way. He cared for me and watched over me. Les had success written all over him from the start. He played first base for our high school city championship team. He was also the "Teenage MC" for the weekly radio show, "Make Way for Youth." When I was opening the 44 new World Stage, Les was the host for the American Airlines radio show "Music 'Til Dawn," host for the broadcasts of the Detroit Symphony, and the "Voice" for the Chevrolet commercials. I lived at his apartment and he never asked me to contribute in any way. This worked out very well. He was gone all night with Music 'Til Dawn and I had the place to myself. One morning, I woke up and there was a strange woman in my bed. I'm embarrassed to say that at twenty, I was still a virgin. Could I have gotten drunk and picked up a girl, made love, and not remembered any of it? I didn't think so. Maybe my lust was making me delusional. I went to the theatre for rehearsal and just left her there asleep in the bed. My brother never said anything about coming home after work and finding a strange girl in the apartment and there was nothing missing so I just tucked the entire incident into the recesses of my memory. It wasn't until a year later, in New York, that I discovered the truth. As it turned out, my brother Les had given the apartment key to a close male friend of his who was in Detroit for the weekend. The friend was staying with his parents and he needed a little privacy for a few hours. I don't know how private it was considering that the apartment only had one bedroom with twin 45 single beds, but I apparently slept through it all. After the friend left, the woman crawled into bed with me. I would never have known, but I ran into Les' friend in New York and he asked me if I enjoyed being with Barbara. At first, I had no idea what he was talking about, but when he said, "As I was leaving your apartment I noticed that she crawled into your bed." Oh my God. It wasn't a dream. How many men ever wake up in the morning and find a beautiful unknown woman in their bed? How many men ever wake up in the morning and find a beautiful unknown woman in their bed and remain a virgin? At Wayne University, I came to believe that I was a local star. When I was performing in O'Neill's Great God Brown, an usher came back and told me that after I died at the end of act two, a lot of the audience would walk out. He told me that when they left, he would ask them why they were leaving. "Martens is dead," was a common response. The last play that I did at Wayne U. was The Tempest, by Shakespeare. I played Prospero. Leonard Leone was the head of the theatre department and directed the play. Mr. Leone called me into his office before auditions were held. I knew he didn’t like me. He considered me to be arrogant and temperamental. I was involved with World Stage and had ambitions in 46 the professional theatre. Mr. Leone was dedicated to educational theatre and had seen too many of his students waste their lives trying to break into professional theatre. He told me that he admired my work and wanted me to play Prospero. He added that he knew I had a reputation for being difficult to work with. "If you agree to play this part, you must also agree to do it my way," He said. "No arguments, no fights, just my way." I agreed. As a teacher, Mr. Leone would always talk about acting and writing. "Theatre is not about sets or costumes, theatre is about good writing and good acting," he would say, but when he directed, he would insist on the grandest sets and most magnificent costumes imaginable. The entire production was performed with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra on stage behind a cyclorama. This was the American premiere performance of the score by Jean Sibelius. At crucial moments, the shadows of violin bows would streak across the cyclorama. Everything in the show had to be larger than life, especially Prospero. Mr. Leone and I would often work oneon-one late into the night. One evening, he put his arms around me and said, "Wayne, all my life, I've wanted to play this role, but I will never get the chance to play it. My Prospero must live in you." That sounds pretty corny, but I believe he meant it. I understood what he was saying. 47 I disagreed with much of what he was asking me to do with the role. Sections that I felt should be small and tender, such as "We are such stuff as dreams are made on," were done in an overly dramatic manner. But I had learned to respect and love this man; I would try my best to give him what he wanted. To me, Leonard Leone was himself larger than life. One of my favorite stories centered on the first time I saw him. He had directed Hamlet at the Bonstelle Theatre and I attended a special matinée performance given for high school students. I was a senior at the time and had not yet discovered my love for the theatre. The audience of teenagers was somewhat unruly and someone began throwing gumballs at the stage. During a scene that involved some swordplay, a man dressed in a suit and tie walked on to the stage. The actors all stopped and looked at him with amazement. The house lights went on to half intensity as the man walked toward the footlights. As they say, a hush fell over the crowd. He looked up and dramatically pointed toward the balcony and said, “You! You up there! Get out! We don’t want your kind.” He turned and left the stage. The audience yelled and applauded like crazy. From then on, you could here a pin drop. That was my introduction to Leonard Leone. 48 The Tempest opened and everyone agreed that it was a spectacular production. The critics, however, were not kind to me. I was panned for the first time in my life. Mr. Leone said to me, "It was magnificent; do not change a thing." I had been taught that an actor’s job was to please the director; I had also made a promise to do it his way. If anything, I became even more intense and dramatic. I will always think of that performance as a highlight in my life. After The Tempest, I gave my full time to World Stage. I will always think of myself as an actor, but at World Stage, I was a director, a production coordinator, a set designer and builder. Did I mention lighting designer? Costumer? I would do anything to keep this theatre alive. I found an old printing press that had been discarded in an alley behind a printing firm. I rebuilt it and began to publish a monthly newspaper promoting World Stage. So now I was also a writer. Unfortunately, as I've mentioned, I am a terrible speller. There may be many “pretenders to the crown” of World's Worst Speller, but I am certainly a contender. Regular readers developed a game to see who could find the most misspelled words. They got extra points if they could find the same word misspelled several different ways. 49 Fred Barnett worked for his father, who owned a large truck rental firm in Detroit. Almost every night after the theatre, a group of us would go out drinking. Our entourage kept growing and I always suspected that our popularity was partly due to the fact that Fred always picked up the tab. The favorite hangout was a place called Momo's. It had sofas and easy chairs and was very comfortable. The main attraction was Phil Gaberman. He was a very talented jazz musician, who also was our friend. He played the piano there three nights a week. One night, after about a year of picking up the tab every night, Fred was about to pick up the check and he leaned over to me and said, "Why am I the only one who picks up the tab?" I could only laugh. Fred's father sold his business to "Ryder Trucks" and moved to California. He asked Fred and his family to join him in a new venture. Fred got the speech about being a husband and a father. Fred's wife, Veronica, was an incredibly beautiful woman. How any man could go out drinking every night when he had a wife like that at home is beyond my understanding. Veronica said, "I'm going, with you or without you." Fred 50 went. He and I were partners, but he was always the boss. Now, I would be the boss, a real producer. I could do any play I wanted, cast myself in any role I wanted. O Paradiso. I got a call at the theatre one day from a couple in Florida. They had heard that World Stage was going to do Beckett's Waiting for Godot. They wanted to audition. I pointed out that one, there were no female parts in Godot, and two, it would be a very long drive just to audition. The odds were overwhelming that they would not be cast. They said that she wanted to read for Lucky and he wanted to read for Vladimir. All they wanted was a chance to audition. I said, "No promises, but anyone can audition." They came. They auditioned. I loved them, but I still was not about to cast a woman as Lucky. I feared that Samuel Beckett would have a fit. At any rate, Whij was cast as Vladimir. He was a tall thin man with radiant blond hair. I have no idea of the origin of the name Whij. I had never heard of it before nor have I heard of it since. Whij and Dee Nolde. Two beautiful people, inside and out. Dee was short with long hair that went beyond her waist. Neither of them knew a soul in Detroit. I found a place for them 51 to stay and for the next five weeks we were inseparable. Whij's interpretation was brilliant and exciting but as rehearsals progressed, he began to lose all of his energy. During the final dress rehearsal he was so slow that I stopped the rehearsal and asked to speak with him privately. We went into my office. I closed the door and shouted at him, "What the fuck's the matter with you?" He looked me straight in the face and said, "I'm dying." He then explained that he and his wife knew that he was dying from a terminal illness. That is why they quit their jobs and were touring the country trying to find interesting things to do. He said that he was sorry. He had felt certain that he could last through the run of Godot. His wife, Dee, and I took Whij to the hospital. He died later that night. I never saw Dee again, but she wrote me a letter that I have kept to this day. Whenever I feel that life is not worth living, I get it out. Sometimes I don't even read it. I just hold it and cry. Just holding it reminds me how precious life is and how every moment is a moment to be cherished. Godot opened. I played Vladimir holding the script in my hand, which meant that I had to wear my glasses. Nevertheless, it was a big success. Godot sold out for over three months. In Detroit, that is still unheard of. 52 I do not know how or why, but Detroit became a critic's town. The only time World Stage had any national press coverage was when a national magazine was doing a special article about Detroit. One line went something like this: "Detroit is a cultural wasteland with the sole exception of World Stage, a semi-professional theatre which produces classical and avant-garde plays." Personally, I love Detroit. That is where my roots are, but I saw no reason why good drama critics would be attracted to Detroit. We had three of the best drama critics in the world, Josef Mossman of the News, Harvey Taylor of the Times, and J. Dorsey Callaghan of the Free Press. Broadway producers loved to have shows open in Detroit. If it was a hit in Detroit, it was a hit. Period. The Nederlanders, the entire family, became very successful on Broadway, but they started out as the managers of the Schubert Theatre in Detroit. It was the respect that Broadway had for the Detroit drama critics that helped make their success possible. One day I was walking down the street in downtown Detroit discussing a new project with Josef Mossman, the critic for the News. We ran into Joey Nederlander and Mr. Mossman suggested that we all have lunch together. As we entered the swankiest restaurant in Detroit, I was 53 very nervous. I only had a few dollars in my pocket. There were no such things as credit cards then, but it would not have mattered, I had no credit. As we were looking over the menu, Mr. Mossman looked up and said, "Which one of you big time producers is buying?" Joey Nederlander looked at me and said, "I guess I will." Mossman said, "Good, in that case I'll have the Porterhouse steak instead of the cheese omelet." Today, only the Shuberts own more Broadway theatres than the Nederlanders. Joey became a good friend and we still communicate with each other. 1959, however, was the last time we had dinner together. Thurber Carnival had its Grand Opening in Detroit and Joey invited me to join him and James Thurber for dinner. I was in such awe that I do not recall saying a word. The owner of a very large bar/restaurant in Detroit came to me at World Stage. He had a proposition. His club seated 250, and on a good night, he might have fifteen customers. If I could fill his place with people, he would make me a 50/50 partner. It was a brilliant idea. He owned a bar that had no patrons, I owned a theatre. There is not much of a profit potential in a theatre, but if I could get the theatre's audience to come and buy booze and food, we could both be rich. Better 54 yet, the place was large enough to put on shows right in the club. We redecorated, built a stage, and, in honor of the Detroit drama critics, renamed it The Critic’s Club. I began rehearsals for a new musical revue called Slings and Arrows. It was written by two Detroiters and in my opinion was a damn good show. The critics loved it and it was a hit. The success of World Stage continued. The press became more and more attentive and the audience was growing, but as successful as World Stage was, it was still Detroit's equivalent of a Greenwich Village, Off-Broadway theatre. There was a group of wealthy Detroiter's who wanted to open a theatre a little more like Broadway. This group of wealthy would-be producers was given a beautiful old legit theatre in downtown Detroit rent-free. It had once been a successful theatre but had recently been used as a foreign movie house. It was re-named The Vanguard Playhouse. The elite of Detroit society threw fund raising parties and celebrities from New York and Los Angeles came to support the fund raising effort. An experienced Broadway producer, Kenneth Schwartz, was hired to manage the operation. In addition to being one 55 of the producers of Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin In The Sun on Broadway, Mr. Schwartz also managed the Cass Theatre, which was Detroit's second Broadway touring house, and he produced the Northland Playhouse, a large star system summer theatre. I went to see Mr. Schwartz in an effort to convince him that Detroit did not need a second professional theatre. Instead of opening a new theatre, he should be supporting World Stage. He pointed to a spot on his desk and said "Do you see that spot? That's you. Do you see my thumb? That's me." Then he pushed his thumb on the spot and twisted his thumb. He looked at me and smiled. "You've just been squished," he said. "You're gone." Two years after this incident, World Stage was still going, stronger than ever. The Vanguard Playhouse was still having fund raisers but had not opened one production. Then my prayers were answered. A phone call came from the chairman of the board of The Vanguard Playhouse. "Wayne, we would like to discuss the possibility of your taking over the management of The Vanguard Playhouse." The producer who threatened to squish me had quit. I was elated. I had won. I thought I was going to get what I wanted, a well-financed, fully professional 56 theatre. In truth, I was a lamb being led to slaughter. After a preliminary meeting between Byron Lasky, the primary force behind The Vanguard Playhouse, and myself, I was invited to a meeting of the board of directors. In attendance were the leaders of Detroit Society. We talked for hours. They interviewed me extensively. It never entered my mind that I should be asking them questions and looking over their financial statements. At the end of the meeting it was decided that World Stage and The Vanguard Playhouse would merge. I would be a director on the board, a co-producer with Byron Lasky, and hired as managing director of The Vanguard Playhouse. The Critic’s Club was doing well and making money, but The Vanguard was going to be big time. This would require my full attention. One of the first things that I did was call my old English Professor at Alma College, William Gregory. Remember, he threatened to flunk me in my freshman English course if I did not take a small role in The Taming of the Shrew at Alma. Now, I was offering him his first professional job in the theatre. He had been teaching at another small college somewhere in Washington State. We had not kept in touch and I was just calling to let him know that I was doing well. To my 57 surprise, when I offered him a job, he accepted. I was delighted. He would be my Artistic Director. This gave me a sense of pride. The student who had been flunking English giving his professor his first job in professional theatre. In the meantime, I began to make some rather startling discoveries. First of all, there was no money in the bank. The hundreds of thousands of dollars that had been raised over the past two years had all been spent. To make matters worse, the coupon that was used by donors to make their contributions had a little footnote. It said that all funds would be held in escrow and if the theatre did not open by a specified date, all funds would be returned. Where was the escrow account? There never was one. This created a potential problem. The deadline was approaching and if the theatre did not open on time, all the funds raised would have to be returned. Could spending the money that was intended for an escrow account be a criminal offense? It suddenly became clear that the motivation for getting Wayne Martens, who was already producing eight to ten plays a year, named as managing director, was to avoid major litigation. Just get this guy to open the theatre and then everyone is off the hook. I had closed a theatre that not only had a rich history of successful productions, but was, as 58 Linda says at the end of Death of a Salesman, free and clear, so that I could open a theatre that not only did not have a dime in the bank, but also was hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt without ever having opened its doors. I may not have realized it at the time, but as I look back on it, World Stage was probably one of the best “regional” theatres in the history of the country. Seven years of artistic productions and not one dime in debt. If there is a fine line between genius and idiot, I was clearly on the wrong side of the line. About this time, Tyrone Guthrie sent out word that he was interested in opening a new theatre in the United States. He was requesting that cities send him “bids.” Like rats on a sinking ship, many Vanguard board members got together and made an offer to Guthrie. I went to see Al Glancy, the Chairman of the Board. He had just spent $250,000 on his daughter's society debut; surely he could afford to donate enough money to get the theatre open. I had been told that he owned a building in New York City called the Empire State Building. When he said no, I pointed out that as Chairman of the Board, he could be held culpable in the fraud that had been committed. He looked at me and smiled. "No Wayne, I don't think so. There will be no fraud because you will find a way to 59 open The Vanguard Playhouse and then the money will not need to be returned. And you will find a way to do it without spending any of my money. It was so nice of you to stop by and see me. Good day. Oh, by the way, Tyrone Guthrie is going to Milwaukee.” Glancy read me very well. Without The Vanguard, I had nothing. I was not about to let go. It was a clear-cut decision to come up with the needed money or face criminal charges. The board of directors came up with enough money to open the playhouse with a staged reading of Don Juan in Hell by George Bernard Shaw. The board would only provide the needed funds if the show was directed by an established New York director with an all New York cast. This production met the requirement for the release of the non-existent escrow funds but left the theatre without a penny to finance a season of plays. The reading was actually very well done, but lost a lot of money and left the playhouse in even worse financial condition. At that point, Al Glancy and most of the board resigned but Byron Lasky remained as my co-producer. Bill Gregory and I came up with a season of plays and began selling season tickets. Our first production was to be Peer Gynt by Ibsen. Bill Gregory would direct and the casting would be done in Detroit. I began recruiting new board 60 members whom I thought would be faithful to my management. By now, the playhouse was so far in debt that the electric company was trying to turn off the electricity. They needed access to the building and we kept the doors locked. During rehearsals, the electric company would be banging on the doors trying to get in, but we managed to keep them out. A regular patron of the old World Stage, Lillian Jackson Braun, purchased season tickets to The Vanguard Playhouse. She was very upset to discover that her check, with which she had purchased the tickets, had been cashed at The Brass Rail. She had difficulty believing my explanation that I had not eaten for some time, and I did not think that she would mind. Ms. Braun became a best-selling author but she never forgave me. Bill Gregory had cast his brother John as the lead in Peer Gynt. I did not think that he was very good, but I chose to keep my mouth shut. The second production was Anouilh’s Ring Around the Moon. John Gregory was again cast in the lead. The friction between Bill Gregory and myself was beginning to surface. When John was cast as the lead in the third production, The Boyfriend, I was beginning to realize that either John Gregory or I had to go. 61 A new, unknown Detroit actor had auditioned for The Boyfriend. His name was Bill Bixby. I thought he was perfect for the lead. "Doc" Gregory and I openly disagreed. My old English professor had recently earned his PhD and everyone was calling him "Doc." Bill Bixby was cast in the chorus. Bixby told me that he didn't mind. He was just doing this one show so that he could get his "Equity Card." He was then going to Los Angeles to become a star. Anyone who watched TV from 1960 to 1980 knows that he did just that. He was the star of four successful TV series. I had a problem that was not related to the theatre but contributed to the termination of my theatre career in Detroit. Parking tickets. When I was a student at Wayne University, driving a car was the only way to get to and from school. Everyone drove but there were very few places to park. Students who had parked on the street would stand by their cars when they were leaving, and sell their parking spots. My brother Les, who also attended Wayne University, had gotten so many parking tickets that a policeman left a Christmas card on his windshield. The card read, "I look forward to serving you in the coming new year." 62 I had accumulated dozens of tickets and had never paid any of them. I was getting nervous. I decided to go to the Motor Vehicle Court and see if I could get the tickets voided. I had to stand in line forever to get copies of all the tickets. Then I had to wait in the courtroom for my turn to appear before the judge. When my turn came the Judge picked out one of the tickets and asked "September 2, 1956, 10am, innocent or guilty?" I tried to respond, "I have no way of remembering the circumstances…" "Guilty!" he said. "September 3, 1956 2pm, innocent or guilty?" "But your honor…." "Guilty!" and so it went. When I explained that I produced the city's only professional theatre and had been given the Golden Key to the City by the mayor, he looked at me and said, "Do you think your work is more important than the work of a milkman who delivers milk to children?" He then told me to go over and have a seat in the empty juror's box. I sat there for the rest of the court session. Everyone had left the courtroom and I could have gotten up and left. But I sat there and waited. A policeman came up to me and said, "Are you Martens?" I said, "Yes." "Follow me," he said. He took me to the bullpen. "No, there must be a mistake," I said. There were pay telephones in the bullpen but I didn't have any change. When I requested change I was told that 63 I would have to wait until I got to the jail. I was taken to the jail by bus and fingerprinted; of course, I was told that it was too late to make a phone call; I should have made my call from the bullpen. I had no idea what my sentence was. Would I be in there a night? A month? I didn't know. The next morning, someone was getting out and everyone was giving him messages and names and numbers of people to call for them. I gave him my brother Les' name and number. Late that afternoon, my name was called. I thought I was getting out. I was fingerprinted again and put on a bus. I should have known that something was wrong when I was handcuffed. I definitely knew something was wrong when the bus left the city limits and was on the way to the countryside. I was on the way to the "Big House," the penitentiary. I was given a physical, given my work clothes and taken to my cell. The next morning I was expecting to wake up in my own bed, but no, it wasn't a bad dream, I was still in my cell at “DEHOCO,” the Detroit House of Correction.. I was given my work assignment and about to be taken some place, I don't know where, when my name was called. The person from the jail had made the phone call. My brother paid the tickets. I was a free man. 64 During my three days in jail, my signature on the Vanguard Playhouse bank account was forged and I had been removed as Managing Director by the Board of Directors. I could have fought it but why? I had no fight left in me. It was time for me to go. I never had any doubt that I was predestined to be a big star. To be a big star on Broadway I had to be in New York. Good-bye Detroit. 65 66 Chapter 4 So here it is, the fall of 1959. I was only twenty-four years old but I needed a fresh start. There was nothing that I needed to take with me. I left everything I owned, even my Steinway grand piano. World Stage never did a musical, but every Tuesday night we had jazz concerts. I always wanted to learn to play the piano, but that’s something I’m still looking forward to. I got into my car and started to drive to New York. Who needs this producing shit? I wasn’t a producer; I was an actor. I belonged in New York. I was going to be a star. As I drove, I dreamed of the excitement and drama that lay ahead in my life. Then I started to think about my ex-girlfriend, Mary Lou. She lived in New York now. I would have to make sure that I didn't make an ass of myself. Sure, I still loved her, but she didn't love me and it would be a big mistake if I tried to get her back. I needed a new life. You don't get a new life by chasing an old girlfriend. Yes, after all of my moaning and whining about being a virgin, the moment of truth had come and gone and I never even mentioned it, but I thought this relationship was a lot more than just sex. Mary Lou was my first true love. I just couldn't believe that it was over. She and I had 67 met at the Wayne University Theatre. We had been going together for several years and I had always thought that we would get married. Ondine was the last production at World Stage before the merger with The Vanguard Playhouse. I cast Mary Lou in the leading role. In the leading male role I cast a New York actor, Chuck Olsen. In addition to being a fine actor, Chuck was an extremely handsome young man. He was married and his wife was an airline stewardess. Chuck, Mary Lou and I became a team during the after-show routine, going to bars and parties together. We always had a good time together but I often felt that Chuck was getting in the way of my love life. But he was alone and his wife was traveling about the world. The show ran for about two months, after which Mary Lou moved to New York. Chuck stayed in Detroit and worked with me on opening the Vanguard Playhouse. He received a telegram informing him that his wife may have been killed in a plane crash. At that time airlines did not hire married women. Chuck's wife had lied and said that she was single. He had to fly to Ireland and identify the body. From there, he returned to New York. During the next few months, I traveled to New York many times for casting and other theatre-related business. Each time I would stay with Mary Lou at her apartment. On one visit I 68 ran into Chuck. He asked if we could meet that evening at Downey's, a popular hangout for actors. Sure, that would be fun. I arrived a little early and was enjoying a drink at the bar when Chuck entered. He was carrying my suitcases. He threw the suitcases on the floor. "I love Mary Lou," he stated. "We live together. I'm sick of moving out every time you come to New York. I don't want you sleeping with the woman I love." What could I say? I was stunned. He told me how they had been in love all through Ondine but neither one had had the nerve to tell me. They both knew that I would be heartbroken. They were right. I would have been and I was. All those nights that we all spent together in Detroit, I would take Mary Lou home and then Chuck would take her out again. I always felt so bad that he was alone. It turns out that I was the one who was alone, only I didn't know it. To make matters worse, I was the only one who didn't know. All of my friends in Detroit and New York knew that I was the odd man out, but no one told me. What could I do or say? I spent the night at the Dixie, a notorious sleaze bag hotel in Times Square. It is now only a few months later, and I’m driving on the Pennsylvania Turnpike, on my way to New York to become a star, but I can't bear the thought of being near Mary Lou. She was the first and only woman in my life. I 69 realized that New York was not the place for me, not at this time. I turned the car around. I returned to Detroit and spent the night at my parents'. The next morning, I looked in the classified section of the previous Sunday's paper. It had a section for drivers wanted. There was an ad by a schoolteacher who wanted her car driven to Los Angeles. I gave her a call. She was leaving for Los Angeles the next morning by car but did not yet have a driver. She was so glad to hear from me. An old German lady and her twelveyear-old granddaughter had also answered her ad. They needed cheap transportation to L.A. and offered to share expenses. I only mention that she was German because she didn’t speak English. Her granddaughter acted as translator. I wouldn’t need to share transportation expenses if I could do the driving. Once again I was leaving Detroit. This time I even left my car behind. The first part of the trip was uneventful, but we had all discussed whether we should go out of our way to see the Grand Canyon. None of us had ever seen it. We arrived about 5:30 am. It was pitch black and we could not see a thing. I wandered off by myself and was just waiting for the sun to rise. It was incredible. I had always loved Ferde Grofe's Grand Canyon Suite, but there is no way in words or music to describe the magnificence of seeing the sunrise at the Grand 70 Canyon. As a former ministerial student, I had always wanted God to speak to me. He spoke to others throughout the Bible, why not to me? I was now alone with God. I began to sing at the top of my lungs, "Oh, what a beautiful morning..." A voice rang out, "For Christ's sake, shut the fuck up!" I looked around. There were sleeping bags and tents all around me. So much for my moment alone with God. We continued on our journey. We decided to cross the Mojave Desert at night. That meant sleeping during the day at Needles, California. This must have been a common way to cross the desert because we got the last three rooms at the motel. In my room the AC did not work. I tried to sleep in the shower but that only left me hot and wet. We arrived in L.A. about 4am and the teacher dropped off the German lady and her granddaughter. We were on an expressway, and the teacher asked me, "Where do you want to get off?" "I don't know," I replied. I had no idea where I was going or what I was going to do, but I was not in New York and not in Detroit. "Take the next exit and drop me off," I said. There I was, I didn't know where, in the darkness, in a strange new land. I stood there for 71 a long time and then I began to walk. I was lucky to have had only one suitcase. To this day, I do not know what part of Los Angeles I was in. I suspect that it was not one of the choice L.A. locations. When the sun rose, I was near a Spanish-looking hotel. It was cheap and so I got a room. I slept all day and went out exploring that evening. There was a curious trolley car that traveled about 200 feet going up and down a steep hill. Perhaps that would be a clue to those of you who know L.A. I was also near the Japanese area of town. Most cities have a "Chinatown," but I've never heard of a "Japantown." Anyway, that's where I was. I went to a Japanese restaurant that had a floor show. It was a lot of fun and I fell in love with the waitress. The next morning, I realized that I had no idea what to do or where to go. I didn't know a soul in Los Angeles. Fred Barnett lived near San Francisco, so I took a Greyhound bus to San Francisco. It was much further from L.A. than I realized. Fred lived in Redwood City. He came and picked me up and treated me like a long-lost relative. That was a very good thing considering that I had only nine dollars left. We spent several weeks reminiscing. Fred and Veronica took me 72 into San Francisco several times so that I could get the lay of the land and sample some of the nightlife. When I first met Fred and Veronica, their son Murray was just learning to speak. His first word was not "Mama" or "Dada." It was "shit." Every time Fred would say “shit,” Murray would say “shit.” So Fred would say, "No Murray, Daddy said 'ship', a boat." Murray's second word was "shit-boat." I was happy to learn that Murray had increased his vocabulary. I got a job in a photo lab in San Francisco and found a small studio apartment, but had no furniture and no clock. On my first day of work, I arrived an hour late and was certain I would be fired before I had even started. Sure enough, I walked in and one of the bosses asked me to step into his office. "I thought you weren't going to show up," he said. "I knew my partner didn't offer you enough money. Young men with your experience are hard to find." He offered me a $50 per week raise. I realized that I was going to like San Francisco. The photo lab was in North Beach. This was in the late 50s. The "Beat Generation" was winding down but the air was still filled with excitement. The City Lights book store, Vesuvio, The Jazz Cellar. Creative people roamed the 73 streets. How could I be working in a photo lab? I needed to be part of the action. I began to explore the streets looking for an empty space that could house a theatre. How a theatre could be opened without any money never entered my mind. I found the perfect spot on Green Street, near The Hip Bagel. It had been a supermarket. It had high ceilings with no pillars. I called the San Francisco drama critics. I told them about my experience in Detroit and explained that I wanted to open a theatre in San Francisco. All three papers ran articles about this theatre producer from Detroit who was looking for a location to open a theatre in San Francisco. I then met with the owner of the building on Green Street and showed him the articles and told him that his building would be perfect. I wanted to get a six-month option on his building. We worked out the details and made a verbal agreement. I wanted to have a large meeting of actors and other creative people in the San Francisco area so that I could introduce myself and explain what I intended to do. There was a large restaurant/bar next to the intended theatre space. I went to see the owner and told her I was going to open a theatre next door that would be good for her business. I needed to use her space for a few meetings. 74 I then returned to the papers and told the critics that I had obtained a space and now needed to hire a staff and cast a company of actors. I would need notices in the newspapers. They obliged but pointed out that in the future I should hire a press agent to handle my relations with the papers, so I did. At the meeting, the restaurant was filled to the brim with curious actors and theatre lovers. The restaurant owner had never sold so much beer in her life. By this time, Fred Barnett had read about the new World Stage in the papers. He couldn't call me; I didn't have a phone. He came to San Francisco and found me and asked how I could re-open his theatre without him. I pointed out that, in essence, he had given it to me. He said, "Yes, but that was in Detroit. How could I know that you would come to San Francisco and open up here?" I took him over to see the space. "How much do you think it will cost to convert it to a theatre?" he asked. "I don't know," I said. "How much money do you have?" he asked. "None," I said. "Can I be your partner?" he asked. "Sure," I said. 75 Fred explained that he had no money other than the savings that he and Veronica were going to use to buy a house. If he lost that, Veronica would kill him. He asked how I intended to raise the money. "Sell tickets," I said. Fred reached into his pocket and pulled out some money. "You need to make a better impression. Here, go buy yourself a suit," he said. The first thing that I did with my new suit was to go out on a date. At one of the meetings at the bar next to the proposed theatre, a lovely young lady stood up and said, "My name is Norma Fire." Norma was an actress that I had hired for The Critics Club in Detroit just before taking over the Vanguard Playhouse. Another director had been hired to replace me and I regretted that Norma and I never had the chance to work together. There she was. It must have been fate, so I asked her out. We went to the Sausalito Playhouse and saw a production of Anything Goes. The tickets were, of course, complimentary, as I was the producer of World Stage. We were invited to a cast party after the show. It was up in the mountains overlooking San Francisco. We had a wonderful time. After the party, when we got to Norma's apartment, she explained that I must be very 76 quiet. Her roommate, apparently an acquaintance of mine, did not want me to know that she was in San Francisco. She was pregnant and giving up her baby for adoption. She panicked when she learned that Norma was dating a man she knew from Detroit. I had no idea who this roommate could be. I fell in love with Norma, but there was no way it could work. Norma left New York and came to San Francisco so that she could get away from actors. It would be a Jewish doctor or no one, but at least I was no longer losing sleep over Mary Lou. I quit my job at the photo lab. Opening a theatre with no money was a full time job. With no income, I could not afford to keep my apartment. What I needed was to find a girlfriend, a girlfriend with an apartment. I was invited to a party and I thought that it would be the perfect opportunity to meet someone. At the party, I was making moves on every female that would talk to me and, of course, was getting nowhere. By the end of the party, it was obvious to everyone that I was trying to find a place to stay. A man came up to me and said, "I hear that you need to find a place to stay. I live in a house on Grant Avenue and have lots of room." I said, "No, I'm fine. I don't need a place." He then convinced me that he was straight and that he 77 really did have a large place with plenty of room. I moved in that night. This was a beautiful home, one of the last buildings on the northern end of Grant Avenue. After staying there a week, the young man whom I had met at the party told me he was moving out. I could stay there as long as I wanted. I said, "But how much is the rent?" He said, "There is no rent. It's too complicated to explain. I don't understand it myself. All I know is that there is no rent. Someone pays the electric, I don't know who, just live here and enjoy it. Oh, there is one problem: there are no keys. So don’t ever lock the door when you go out." With that, he left. About two months later, early in the morning, I was awakened by a stranger standing over my bed. "Where is Frank?" he asked. "Who the fuck are you?" I asked. "We need to talk," he said. He went into the kitchen and made coffee. He acted as if he owned the place. Turns out he did. He explained that he had gone to Europe four years earlier and had let a friend of his stay in the house. He made arrangements for his attorney to pay all the bills for the house. His friend apparently moved out and gave the place to another friend, who then gave it to another friend, etc. I was the end of a long list of free tenants. 78 I then moved into the space we were converting into the theatre. I opened a charge account at a lumber company. To my amazement, I had no difficulty in getting credit. Fred found a closed movie theatre in Oakland. We could have the seats free. All we had to do was to take them out. A number of homeless actors soon moved in with me. I applied for a building permit and submitted hand-drawn plans to the building department. I ordered lumber and tools, and my live-in volunteers and I began to construct a theatre. Fred supplied the cash to rent a truck to get the seats. I don't even remember how we got the lights and light board, but I do remember that we painted everything khaki with red trim. I had found army surplus paint in ten gallon containers for 20 cents per gallon. They only had one color, khaki. A phone was put in the theatre, and the first calls I made were to some of my closest actor friends in Detroit. When I told them that I was opening a theatre in San Francisco, I failed to mention that I had no money and that the "theatre" was nothing but an empty old supermarket. They drove out to San Francisco and got real pissed off. Where I saw a beautiful theatre, they saw an old supermarket. When I handed them a hammer and saw and said, "Let's 79 get to work," they didn’t feel this was a role they wanted to play, so they returned to Detroit. The first play was to be an adaptation of James Joyce's book Ulysses called Ulysses in Nighttown, a play that I became obsessed with doing. I had done it in Detroit and did it again later in New York. I think that the basis of this obsession lies in the fact that intellectuals revere Joyce and I have always yearned to be classified as an intellectual. Casting notices were put in the San Francisco papers and hundreds of actors came to audition. We constructed the theatre in the daytime and rehearsed at night. Leonard Yorr, one of my Detroit actor friends who came out for a few days and then left, had played the lead character, Bloom, in Detroit. It's difficult finding the words to describe a truly accomplished actor. Great, magnificent, and stupendous are often used, but let's face it, these terms should be reserved for people who make earth-shaking contributions to mankind, not someone who gives a convincing theatrical performance. In theatrical circles the word "adequate" is considered to be an insult. I do not understand this. I would think adequate would be a compliment. Let me just say that Leonard Yorr was an exceptional actor and I feared that it would be difficult to find a replacement. After an 80 extensive search, I settled on a young man named Paul Schoemacker. Settled is the key word. I told him that he was the best of the people that I had auditioned but I did not think he was capable of playing such a complex yet whimsical character. I'm happy to say that he proved me wrong. He was much more than adequate. One of the reasons that artists and beatniks were drawn to North Beach was free food. This was an Italian neighborhood and it was the custom for shopkeepers to give out free food on birthdays and anniversaries. You could walk up and down the streets and eventually you would find someone out on the sidewalk with a grill, yelling, "Mangia, mangia." North Beach was filled with Italian family restaurants. They had no menu. Whatever they made, you ate. If you did not want what they made, you would go to another restaurant. This came as more than a shock to me. I had gone in a restaurant and was waiting for a waitress to hand me a menu. Instead, she served me a bowl of soup. I thought that she served it in error. I tried to communicate with her, but she spoke no English. I ate the soup. It was fantastic. Then came several courses, all excellent. She served wine in a bottle that had obviously been re-filled. It had no label and the cork was sticking 81 out so that you could pull it out by hand. A tray of cheeses was put on my table. I was afraid that I would not have enough money to pay for all of this. I had visions of doing dishes for a long time. The tab? $1.25. The most unbelievable give-away that I experienced happened in The Coffee Gallery on Grant Avenue. I was sitting at the bar. Two beatnik types were talking to a gentleman in a suit and tie. After listening to a tale of woe from one of the two beatniks, the suited gentleman handed over a ten-dollar bill. The other beatnik said, "Hey, I'm just as hard up as he is," and out came another ten-dollar bill. Before you knew it, everyone was in line receiving ten-dollar bills. The bar ran out of tens and so the gentleman began giving out hundreds and requesting that people run out and get change. To my amazement, everyone that received a hundred actually returned with the change. It was getting late, so I left, but I heard the next day that the gentleman was a Texas millionaire. After giving out the tens, he invited everyone to his suite at the Fairmont. The party got a little too big and rowdy for the Fairmont and he moved the party to the new Jack Tarr. Unfortunately, there were not always people giving out money or free food, so we 82 collected deposit bottles and bought Drake's cupcakes, three for five cents. Once tickets went on sale we were able to raise our standard of living. The theatre was built. We passed the building inspection and were scheduled to open the next night. The fire inspector came for a final inspection and said, "I want another exit right over there." "But the plans were approved," I said. He said, "I don't give a shit about the plans. I want an emergency exit!" The wall he was pointing to was reinforced concrete. Fred went out and bought a sledgehammer. I took the first swing. How can I describe it? I vibrated for five minutes. There was not even a chip in the concrete. After swinging for ten hours there was a small hole in the wall. By now it was the morning of opening night. Fred and I were on the sidewalk taking turns with the hammer. Two soldiers came by and watched as Fred and I were swinging the sledgehammer. "Need some help?" one of them asked. "Yes," Fred said. "Can you afford a case of beer?" the one soldier asked. "Yes," Fred said. "Do you have a chair?" the soldier asked. We got the beer and set the chair by the opening in the wall. The Sergeant sat in the chair and opened up a beer. The private picked up the sledgehammer. "Swing!" the Sergeant ordered. This continued 83 until the opening was large enough for a midsized human to pass through. We had our emergency exit. The fire inspector was a bit taken aback, but he had to admit that this hole in the wall qualified as an emergency exit. The show went on. After the show, when we were all going out to get drunk, I realized that there was no way to close the emergency exit. I spent the night sleeping on a cot in front of the opening in the concrete. The next morning we hired a crew to finish the job and to put in a door. The reviews came out. We were a hit. Standing Room Only. I got myself a small, inexpensive apartment on Green Street, two blocks away from the theatre. It was on the foot of Telegraph Hill. The "view" is very important in San Francisco. My new apartment was first floor rear. It had a large bay window that overlooked a brick wall about eighteen inches from the window. That is why the rent was cheap. The landlord would come by each month to collect the rent. The apartment had a Dutch door. You could open the entire door, or just 84 open the top half of the door. One morning, while I was still in bed, there was a knock on the door. I went to the door in my underwear and opened the top half of the door. Standing there was my landlord and the building inspector who had worked with me during the construction of the theatre. He was doing an inspection of the apartment building. "Wayne," he said, "I didn't know you lived here. Your landlord is in deep shit. This place has so many violations that I may need to close it up. Can we come in?" I let them in and put on a pot of coffee. The building inspector and I had become very friendly during the theatre construction. He would come in and say "Wayne, don't do it that way. I wouldn't approve it. Do it this way or that way." He was very helpful. My landlord seemed to be very impressed with the apparent friendship between the building inspector and myself. The inspector explained to me that the bathrooms were adjacent to the kitchens throughout the building. Every apartment in the building would need to have the bathroom and kitchen ripped out and rebuilt. We finished our coffee and they both left. What happened with the building department, I don't know. I only know that my 85 landlord never came by again to collect the rent and I never got a bill in the mail. Free food, two free apartments; was this a great town or what? All was not rosy however. The woman who owned the restaurant next door never got the increase in business that she had anticipated. The cast didn’t like her and had no interest in spending its after-show time at her establishment. The audiences preferred to spend their aftershow money at places where the cast hung out. In retaliation, the restaurant owner hired a twelvepiece bongo band that was lined up along our adjacent wall. I'm not talking those little drums that you put on your lap. I'm talking four feet high with eighteen-inch tops. I mean loud drums. Whenever the play started, the band started. Any quiet tender moments in the play became totally obliterated by the bongos. We called in soundproofing experts to give estimates. This was a sixty-foot wall with sixteen foot ceilings. It would be very expensive with no guarantees that it would work. One member of the company suggested that we cover the wall with egg crates, the type used for large shipments of eggs to restaurants. They are about eighteen inches square. Just glue them to the wall 86 and spray-paint them. A very inexpensive but effective means of soundproofing. This all became academic when our landlord decided that World Stage was so successful that he could demand double the rent we had verbally agreed on. He knew damn well that a renovated theatre was worth a lot more than an old supermarket. He could easily re-let the space at a higher rent. One more snag. Our second production was William Saroyan's The Cave Dwellers. Mr. Saroyan had given us written permission to do the play royalty-free. I was shocked when I was served papers from Samuel French, the company that owned the amateur rights to the play. I wrote a letter to French and enclosed a copy of Saroyan's consent. They wrote back that Saroyan did not own the rights to amateur productions of his plays. I pointed out that World Stage was a professional theatre. Samuel French would not accept that concept. Although the majority of our cast members were members of Actors' Equity (AEA), the professional actors union, World Stage was not operating under an Equity contract. Only one theatre in San Francisco operated under an Equity contract. The Actors Theatre had a special contract under which the 87 theatre agreed to keep three members of the union under contract at a minimum salary of thirty dollars per week. The three Equity members just happened to be the three producers of the theatre. All other actors worked free, but this was deemed a professional company. I contacted the local AEA representative and asked for a similar contract but he said no. He added that we should just do our plays and not worry about it. There were many Equity actors in San Francisco and they worked without a contract all the time. The legal question of what constitutes a professional theatre was never resolved. It would have made for interesting litigation. What distinguishes a professional theatre from an amateur theatre? Many non-Equity theatres pay a salary to the actors. Doesn’t this make them professional? The union says, "NO." The Actors Studio in New York puts on plays that are often cast with some of the best-known actors in the country. In these "showcase" productions, the actors are not paid. Does this make them amateur productions? I was not about to spend the time or money to litigate and find out. World Stage closed. We started with nothing and ended with nothing, but it created a lot of memories. All bills were paid and the thirty or so people who worked 88 day and night for several months received a check for their part of the profits. It was a mixed feeling of humiliation and pride as I handed out checks. I was proud that we opened a theatre with no money and made a profit on the first show. On the other hand, it was embarrassing. These people had worked so hard and they were being paid so little. This may sound a bit farfetched, but many of the actors never cashed the checks. They were more valuable as a keepsake for a memory they would hold for life. Fred and I made a deal with the new owner of the Coffee Gallery, on Grant Avenue, similar to my deal in Detroit that created The Critics Club. Give us fifty percent of the bar and we would put on shows that would keep the place packed. We did one-act plays and improvisational theatre. Unfortunately, we never got a liquor license. Mayor Christopher was a reform mayor. He discovered that North Beach had a bar for every 50 residents. He denied all requests for liquor license transfers in North Beach. I decided to call it quits. Fred and Leo Ziegler (our new partner) decided to continue. At last, I was on my way to New York. I had a bus ticket, a loaf of bread, a slab of salami, a jar of mustard, and 35 cents. This should last me the four days on the bus, I thought. 89 The bus had four stops in Nevada. Each stop was wall-to-wall slot machines. An old lady from the bus hit the jackpot on her first nickel. Back on the bus, we all helped her count the nickels. She hit it again on the second stop. By the third stop, I could not resist. I put in a nickel and got three nickels back. Within two minutes my thirty-five cents was gone. The fourth and final stop in Nevada was at a casino. I stood next to a man with a stack of silver dollars. One after the other they kept going in and nothing came out. I wanted to ask for just one but couldn't do it. I wasn't going to make it. I got off the bus in Chicago. As I have done so many times in my life, I called my brother Les for money. I hadn't had a bowel movement for three days. I bought Ex-lax. I had never had this problem before, and did not know how laxatives worked. I bought a bus ticket to Detroit. When we arrived at the station, I woke up with a need to go at once. Not soon, at once. I ran to the men's room and discovered that they were all pay toilets and I had no change. Remember the episode of "Seinfeld" where George wanted the Yankees to extend the length of the toilet doors so that people could have more privacy? I am thankful there was room to crawl under. Not just once, over and over again. How humiliating. 90 After a few days in Detroit, I was again on my way to New York, but not by bus. I had what they called a "drive away." I drove a new Cadillac that needed to be delivered to a dealer in New York. This was more like it. 91 92 Chapter 5 New York, New York. I was finally going to live in New York. For years, when I couldn't find an excuse to go to New York on theatre business, I would go on my day off. I would drive fourteen hours from Detroit, just to spend one day in New York, and then drive back to Detroit. I'd walk along Bleeker Street; drink a beer at the White Horse. At McSorely's, you could get two ales and a pickled egg for fifty cents, but you couldn't bring a date. Women were not allowed. There were still spittoons on the floor. A knish at Katz's Deli on Houston Street cost fifteen cents. By the time I was in New Jersey, my heart was racing. This was 1960. The longest running show in New York history was The Threepenny Opera. The Iceman Cometh was playing at The Circle in the Square. A new musical, The Fantasticks, had just opened at the Sullivan Street Playhouse. This was my kind of town. Mallory, a friend of mine from Detroit, was living on the lower East Side. She had been offered a job touring with a show in Africa. She said that I could have her apartment for three months if I took care of her eight-year-old son, Dennis, and her cat, Evinrude, who purred like a motorboat. That sounded good to me. I should be 93 able to find out if I was going to make it within three months. Mallory loved Dennis very much, but was determined not to let a child interfere with her lifestyle. Dennis had been pretty much taking care of himself since the time he learned to walk. Mallory knew that I would have to get a job and that Dennis would have to get home from school on his own. I love kids and I love to cook. Dennis and I got along very well. He introduced me to the TV show The Twilight Zone. Dennis was a bright, very inquisitive child and was wise far beyond his years. His mother was a unique woman, bohemian to the core. She was an artist who maintained a wild, free love, lifestyle. She always used just one name, Mallory. I enjoyed my time with Dennis, but felt incredibly lonely. I had a job at a photo lab with the understanding that I could take off for auditions and interviews. I had no social life. Each time I returned from work, I would think of how nice it would be to have someone waiting for me, to hug and kiss me on my return. She would not have to be a great beauty, just someone kind and loving, just someone who cared about me. I wanted to be married and raise a family. One evening, I called Fred Barnett in San Francisco. He wouldn't talk to me. He was really 94 pissed off. It seems that the press agent that I hired in San Francisco sued him. She never did a thing and I forgot all about her. I did, however, sign a contract. She sued Fred and won. How could that be? If it was deemed to be a personal contract, then I was liable, not Fred. If it were deemed to be a corporate contract then neither Fred nor I would be personally liable, unless her attorney somehow "pierced the corporate veil," which is very unlikely. At any rate, after constructing a theatre and producing two plays without losing a dime, Fred lost his savings account to a press agent who he never even knew existed. We never spoke again. Over the years, I have tried and tried to reach him with no success. I tried a search on the Internet and got thirty-five Fred Barnetts. One of them was listed in Detroit and so I gave him a call. He turned out to be a football player with the Philadelphia Eagles. I had an interview for a summer directing job. The interview was on Sixth Avenue and 52nd Street. As I walked to the subway, I passed by Katz's Deli. In the window they had those fifteencent knishes. They looked so good and I was hungry. Fifteen cents was also the price of a subway token and that’s what I had, fifteen cents. I was going to take the subway there and then walk back, but those knishes looked so good. I went in and ordered one. The counterman asked, "Do you want potato or kasha?" "What's 95 kasha?" I inquired. "The germ of barley," he answered. "Like wheat germ, only from barley." I loved barley and so I ordered one. Yuck! It must be an acquired taste. I couldn't eat it. I had to walk both ways and was still hungry. It was an easy walk. I began to realize how small Manhattan really is. This may be a non sequitur, but I am reminded of an article I read that stated that if the population of the world were concentrated with a density comparable to Manhattan, the entire world, including China and India, would fit into a third of the state of Texas. Think about it. After three months in New York, it looked as if I was not going to make it. I was working in a photo lab. Mallory had returned, and I had to leave. I packed my bags and was walking out the door when the phone rang. It was the directing job that I had interviewed for at a summer theatre in the Adirondack Mountains. Not an acting job in New York but a theatre job. Mallory let me stay with her until it was time to go upstate. Timberland was a mountain resort. Everyone lived in cabins. It was one step above camping out. It had a theatre just for its patrons. The director the year before had been Harry Guardino. He was on his way to being a 96 successful movie and TV actor, so I thought that I could do the same. The original director that summer had been fired. I think he made inappropriate advances toward the leading lady. This meant the shows had all been cast and I would have no say in the casting. We rehearsed the first production, The King and I, in New York City. On nice days we rehearsed in Central Park. One day people started coming over to ask for autographs. We were all unknowns, but more and more people kept coming and we kept signing. You could hear people asking, "Who are they?" and others would respond, "I don't know." But they kept coming. It was like being a star for a day. I also made inappropriate advances toward the leading lady, but instead of getting me canned, she decided to marry me. Joan Porter was a gifted actress. She had been married once before and had lost a baby in childbirth. As I look back on it, I now believe that we never loved each other in the classic sense, we each just both needed someone to be with. She was very dedicated to her career in the theatre, but like myself, needed to have a life apart from the theatre. She was always thoughtful and considerate and very rarely selfish. Upon receiving news that his daughter was engaged to be married, her father came up from Florida to 97 meet me. After arriving in the mountains, his first request was to talk to me privately. We went for a walk in the woods. We walked for a while in silence and then he said, "You're not going to get a cent. Do you still want to marry her?" I said, "I didn't know you had a cent." We continued to walk. Then he stopped and took out his wallet. I thought he was going to offer me money to not marry her. Instead, he pulled out a photograph of an enormous young woman; I'd say about 250 pounds. "This is Joan before she lost weight. She'll probably gain it back. Do you still want to marry her?" I was stunned. I didn't know about "the weight" and it came as a big surprise. But I looked him in the eye and said, "Yes." We returned to the theatre without a word. Joan ran up to us and asked, "How did it go?" Her father grumbled, "He passed the test." Joan's father was quite a character. He had been one of the last of the "medicine men" that traveled from town to town, selling tonics and elixirs. While in York, Pennsylvania, he met a man who had an idea for a business but needed a partner with a talent for sales. I don't know much about the business they started except that they later sold it for four million dollars. Joan told me that every kid in grade school knew that one of the teachers was being kept by a "sugar daddy." They made jokes about it. Of course, as 98 it turned out, the sugar daddy was her father and it became quite a scandal in York, Pennsylvania. Back in the Adirondacks, I had another type of sex scandal to deal with. One evening after a performance, one of the actresses in the company came up to me and was very upset. "It's Frank," she said, "I've fallen in love with him but the only time he kisses me is in our love scene in the play. Why doesn't he like me?" This girl was so young and naive that she was not aware of homosexuality. I explained to her that I was certain Frank liked and respected her very much but that he was not interested in a sexual relationship with a female. Any female. It wasn't her fault. The next day, Frank came storming into my room. "How dare you!" he said. "How dare you insult my masculinity!" "Let's go out for a walk in the woods, Frank. We need to talk." I explained to him that this young girl had no understanding about homosexuality and that she thought that if he showed no interest in her, it meant that there was something the matter with her. It was not fair to let her suffer. "Do you feel that it is insulting to be called a homosexual? Have you no sense of self worth? Do you take no pride in who you are?" He stood silent for a while and then looked at me and said, "You're 99 right. I apologize. Thank you." I had helped someone out of the closet. I do not understand the concept of "choice" when it comes to sexual orientation. Female sexuality may be more complicated, but with a male, it seems to me that whatever makes his penis erect is what he goes after. Where is the "choice?" When I was a young man there were no "dirty magazines." I remember drooling over the bra and girdle ads in the magazines. It just happened. I don't recall having a choice. One of the other traits often associated with masculinity, aggressive behavior, was not, however, included in the makeup of my genes. I always chose to follow my father’s advice about running away from a fight. Not because I think of it as good advice, but because whenever faced with a situation that may lead to a fight, I get scared to death. I am without doubt a coward, but I did hit someone once. His name was Neil Budnick, and during the fifth grade he stole my lunch money every day. Then one day, out of the blue, wham, I hit him in the mouth with a right. Then bam, a left. He stumbled back to the brick wall behind him. Then a straight right headed for his nose, but he jerked his head and my fist went into the wall. Humma-na humma-na, ooey-ooey that hurt. A classic 100 situation leads to a classic lesson. When it comes to fighting, you lose even if you win. All of this is leading toward a most unique response to an invitation to a fight. It was our night off and the owner of the resort had offered to let me use his car so that Joan and I could go into town and see a movie. This was our first time together off of the resort. After the movie we went to a local bar and had a few drinks. As we were about to leave, a motorcycle gang came into the bar and made it clear that they were religious. They intended to put the fear of God into everyone they met. Joan and I tried to leave, but they blocked the door and began to taunt us. I was scared, I mean really scared, but I didn't want Joan to see how frightened I was. I walked up to one of the gang members and said, "Please let us leave without a fight. I don't want to fight. I don't like to fight. They never taught me how to fight. They only taught me how to kill. I don’t want to kill. Please don't make me kill. Please! Please! Don't make me kill!" By the end of this tirade, they were all looking at me as if I were a real nut case. I looked each one in the eye as if to say, "Do you want to try me?" Then Joan and I walked out. When we got into the car I was trembling, but Joan broke into laughter. 101 When the season was over, Joan and I were married in Florida. We had a big church wedding and my brother Randy was best man. Outside of my family, I did not know a soul at the wedding. I will always remember my father, with tears in his eyes, hugging Joan and saying, "Please, take care of my little boy." The wedding present from her parents was two weeks in the Bahamas for a honeymoon. It was not allinclusive. We had no money for food or entertainment. I tried to sell back one week to the hotel so that we would have some money. The hotel did not like that idea. We cut our honeymoon short and took a bus to Detroit to visit my parents. From Detroit, we returned to New York. Detroit has a lot of cars needing to be delivered so once again I used a "drive away." Only this time, the car wasn't going to New York. It was going to some town in Connecticut. Real close to New York City, I was assured. We got to New York with no problem. Getting out of New York was the problem, no gas and little money. Nowadays, most everyone has a credit card to deal with such emergencies, but in 1961 it was cash only. I would get one hundred bucks when the car was delivered. We pulled into a gas station and I ordered two bucks worth. The attendant filled it up and said it would be sixteen dollars. I said, "I ordered two bucks worth." He said, "No, you 102 said fill it up." I said, "I know I ordered two bucks worth because that's all I've got. Two bucks." We were put on the lift and they siphoned out all but two dollars worth of gas. Welcome to New York. I dropped Joan off with a friend with whom we were going to stay until we got an apartment. I then headed for Connecticut. I got there without running out of gas and got my hundred bucks. "How do I get back to New York City?" I asked. "Go across the street and wait for a bus that says New York on it and then wave like crazy," I was told. I crossed the street and I waited, and I waited. No bus that said New York came by. After a long wait, a car pulled over. A man yelled out "Are you waiting for the bus to New York?" "Yes," I answered. "They are on strike," he yelled and then drove away. I had to hitchhike back to New York. I didn't get back until late that night. Joan and I both agreed to get "bread and butter" jobs and build up a nest egg before seeking theatre employment. No need to guess where I got a job. It repeats and repeats in my life like a Greek chorus foretelling the doomed hero's destiny, at a photo 103 lab. I don't remember what Joan's job was. She quit after two days and never worked again, at a "job job" I mean. This is always the actor’s dilemma. What is the point of coming to New York to become a star if you spend all of your time working in an office, or a photo lab, to pay the rent? Our apartment was on West 75th Street with a balcony overlooking the park. It was rent controlled, $125 per month. But with only one salary, there would be no way to save any money. We moved to East 11th Street for $60 per month. It was called a "railroad flat", the bathtub was in the kitchen and the toilet was in the building's hallway. My new job was with a company called G&W Photo. It was affiliated with Black Star, which at that time was the foremost photo agency in the world. They handled the best-known photographers and worked for publications like Life and Look. Many people answered their ad in the help wanted section of the paper, but I was not surprised that I got the job. With my knowledge and experience, I was clearly one of the best-qualified lab technicians in the business, or so I thought. After about a week I learned otherwise. I felt totally incompetent, but I was ready and willing to learn, and learn I did. I 104 learned that if you think you know it all, you will get left behind in someone else's dust. G&W was a very small lab, with only the two owners and five employees, but the conversation between employees was incredible. An old German man with no teeth named Henry had fought for Germany in World War II. A younger Polish man, Tebor Schwartz, about thirty-eight years old, had fought for Russia. They had been in battles against each other. They would re-live the battles. There was no cable TV then, but this was better than the History Channel. Tebor was a Polish Jew. During the war, he and his family were split up and put in Nazi concentration camps. When the Russians liberated Tebor's camp, he was drafted into the Russian army. After the war, by some miracle, Tebor's wife and child were still alive. They were allowed to come to the USA, and settled in New York. He was able to get a job in his chosen profession, photography. It was one of the most startling days of my life when he got a call at work from his wife; he received the news that their son had been murdered on the street in front of their apartment in the Bronx. Tebor remained a friend long after I left G&W, but we never discussed his son or how his son was murdered. I do not believe 105 that I could comprehend the extent of Tebor's pain. Joan was cast in a children's show called Absolutely Time. It was a wonderful show and all the people involved were extraordinary. A cast party was held at the home of one of the actresses. I've always been a bit shy, and I was not a member of the cast, so I felt a bit out of it. I spent the evening playing with the hostess' sevenyear-old little brother. He sat on my lap and I told him stories. If you haven't noticed, I enjoy telling stories. His sister Ellen came by and said, “Johnny's going to be a star one day.” I thought, “Fine, just let me be a star first.” It was Johnny's bedtime and he hugged me and kissed me goodnight. How could I have known that forty years later, I would be telling people that John Travolta kissed me nighty-night? Now considering that I never saw John Travolta again, you may accuse me of name-dropping, and of course you would be right. But that is the very point. I spent half of my adult life acting, and yet, one of my biggest claims to fame is having a seven-year-old John Travolta sit on my lap. It's like a person who played an extra in The Ten Commandments making reference to the last time he worked with Charlton Heston. 106 Martin Shakar, one of my closest friends from Detroit, was in Saturday Night Fever. He played John Travolta's brother. Shortly after the movie opened, Marty was in a local deli in Brooklyn. A police officer, who was in the store, kept looking at him. When Marty left the store, the cop grabbed him and threw him against the wall. "No, no, no," Marty yelled. "You saw me in Saturday Night Fever." The cop stopped and looked at him. "Oh yeah," he said. "I thought I recognized you from a wanted poster in the station house. Can I have your autograph?" Joan and I were both hired at a summer stock theatre in Michigan, The Petoskey Playhouse. Joan was cast as the company's leading lady. I was hired as a character actor but ended up playing most of the leading men. I even played Sky Masterson in Guys and Dolls. I directed The Miracle Worker and Joan played Annie Sullivan. When we returned to New York in the fall, I started looking for another job in a photo lab. I answered an ad in the Sunday Times by mail, and on Monday I opened up the Yellow Pages to "Photo Labs." A place called Modernage asked me to come down and try out. I did. I was hired. A few days later, I got a call from the place where I had mailed my resume. I went in and was offered a lot more money. This was a very small lab run by the German master, Axel Grosser. 107 When I told Modernage that I was quitting to work for Axel Grosser, Modernage offered even more money. This went on, back and forth, until I had more than doubled my original salary. As it turned out, Axel Grosser was the original manager of Modernage. He was fired after a big fight with the owner. Axel Grosser won the bidding war, but the owner of Modernage told me, "You will not last a week with Grosser. He is a mad man. And I will tell you, here and now, that you will never work for Modernage again!" He was right about Grosser. He was the greatest photographic printer in history. He was also insane. I quit after two weeks. I was, however, re-hired at Modernage, at my original salary. I would work on and off, between shows, at Modernage for many years. In Detroit, I had been treated like a celebrity. I had, indeed, received the Golden Key to the city from the mayor. Yet, here in New York, no one could care less. Agents would not talk to me and I had difficulty getting auditions. One place in New York where I could get an audition was the Equity Library Theatre (ELT), a theatre run by the union as a showcase for actors. At ELT, I was cast in every show I auditioned for. Surely, after seeing me in a play, some agent or casting director would give me a 108 call. But for some reason I still do not understand, no one ever recognized me "in person" as the person they had seen on the stage. One evening after a performance of a showcase, the cast and friends met for drinks after the show, as we often did, and two lovely young ladies sat next to me at our large table. We were not introduced. They were talking about the play, and one of them said to the other, "I think that I am in love with Wayne Martens." As they were discussing my performance, I tried several times to join the conversation. Each time I tried, they would turn and look at me and then continue their conversation as if I wasn't there. After a few more attempts to make their acquaintance, one of them turned to me and said, "Look, we are trying to have a private conversation here. Would you just butt out?" I said, "But I heard you say that you were in love with Wayne Martens, and I am Wayne Martens." She looked at me for the longest time and then said, "You're full of shit." At ELT, I was in the U.S. premier of a play by Arnold Wesker called Roots. I was in my late twenties at the time but was playing an eighty-year-old Scotsman. The morning after opening, I got a call from the office of Fifi Oscard, a major theatrical agent. She had seen the opening of Roots and wanted to know if I had 109 an agent. I didn't. I'd never been able to get an agent to talk to me, let alone represent me. She said that my performance was extraordinary, and asked if I would come by and talk with her. I said that I was on my way. I flew to her office. My feet never touched the ground. At last, I was going to get a chance. That's all I wanted, just a chance. When I arrived, I told the receptionist that Ms. Oscard had asked to see me. She escorted me to Ms. Oscard's office. I did not go in. She met me at the door. She stood in the doorway and said, "Yes?" I said, "I'm Wayne Martens." She looked at me in a strange way, and said, "No, you're not." I said, "Yes, I am. You just called and asked to see me." She said, "No, there must be a mistake. I was trying to reach the actor who played Stan Mann." I said, "That's me. I played Stan Mann." She said, "No, you didn't." She then went into her office and returned with the program showing that Wayne Martens played Stan Mann. I showed her my Actors' Equity Card and my driver's license. She looked at me and said, "Young man, if you played that part, you would have to be one of the most gifted actors of all time." With that, she slammed the door in my face. This strange phenomenon of not being recognized plagued me throughout my acting career. I've tried to rationalize that it has 110 something to do with being a good actor, but other good actors are usually recognized. Perhaps I'm just bland when I'm off stage. One actor, who was never bland on or off stage, was George C. Scott. George worked a lot in Detroit. He had gone to the same high school as my brother Les and I, Redford High. Les always used George as a reason why I should not go into the theatre. Everyone in Detroit recognized that George was an exceptional actor, but after seven years in New York, he had not been cast in anything and did not have a pot to piss in. We never worked together and were acquaintances, not close friends. I was in the audience for opening night at the Willoway Playhouse when he took over the part of Willy Loman in Death of a Salesman on a few days notice. After the performance, I went back stage to say hello. There was a man there who said that he was a talent scout for MGM. He was one of the last of a breed; I do not believe that talent scouts exist today. The man offered George a five-year contract for $250 per week. George looked at the man and said, "I don't need to read it. Do you have a pen?" and signed the contract. During the contract period, he never did a film, but years later, as the story goes, he was offered $500,000 to play Pontius Pilate in the MGM re-make of The Greatest Story Ever Told. Scott said no, but offered to play Jesus Christ for free. 111 After that night in the dressing room at the Willoway Playhouse, I never saw George Scott again until one evening at the Theatre Bar on 45th Street in New York. It must have been about six years later, around 1962. I was sitting at the bar by myself when George came in. I was surprised that he even recognized me. He sat down next to me and asked how I was doing. As we talked, I could not resist asking him a question. I had worked with a number of actors who became famous, but never saw any of them after they became famous. "George," I asked, "How does it feel now that you've made it?" He looked at me and said, "The only thing that I have ever made that was worthwhile was Ava Gardner." He then explained how he idolized Ava Gardner on the screen. During their brief affair, he said that he would lie in bed at night and look at her. "Jesus Christ, that’s Ava Gardner in bed with me. I just fucked Ava Gardner." It was at this same bar that I overheard a conversation that I would never forget. As with most of the people who come to New York as actors, I began to get that hopeless feeling. I realized that an actor has no control over his life. I was sitting at the bar next to three other actors. One says, "God it's been a bad year. I did a few small parts in a film. I did the lead in a Broadway 112 show, but it closed in two weeks. Really a bad year." The actor next to him says, "That sounds like a really good year. I did a few showcases and had an audition for a soap. At least I got a few callbacks." The third one looked at them both and said, "Both of you guys had very good years. I didn't have a part last year. I never even had an audition. In fact I've never had a part. I wish I could get out of this business." All right, I didn't hear that conversation. It's actually an old theatre joke. But it's not funny, it’s very sad. The Bible makes reference to “not hiding your light under a bushel basket,” but it offers no advice as to how to get an agent. 113 114 Chapter 6 I'm trying to remember when the big New York City newspaper strike took place. It was late 1962 or early 1963. Anyway, there was a big newspaper strike. All of the papers shut down except the Christian Science Monitor. During the strike, I had this idea. Do a TV show based on the news. Not a news broadcast but a show, comedy, music, entertainment all based on current events. I mentioned this idea to a friend and neighbor, Jonathan Knopf, and he liked the idea. It would need actors with a lot of improvising experience. He knew someone who could help. He set up a meeting over dinner at Frankie and Johnny's, a well-known steak house in NYC. Jonathan and I met Sandy Baron for dinner and we discussed my idea. Sandy had worked with the Second City in Chicago and was well known in the business. Lauren Bacall and Jason Robards, Jr. were in the restaurant along with some other people. One of them recognized Sandy and we were all invited to join them. I was all excited. I could say I had dinner with Lauren Bacall and Jason Robards,Jr. One of the people at the table kept asking Lauren Bacall questions about Humphrey Bogart. She was polite, but obviously did not want to talk about her marriage to Bogart. The guy would not let up. Robards was on the verge 115 of punching the guy out. This was not an atmosphere in which to promote my idea for the TV show. We finished dinner and all went our separate ways. I made several calls to Sandy Baron, but he never returned my calls. A few weeks later I read in the paper about a new TV show based on the news. Not a news broadcast, a show, comedy, music, entertainment based on the news. It was called That Was the Week That Was. One of the performers was named Sandy Baron. What a strange coincidence. Jonathan and I became involved in a new project. We became co-producers of the International Theatre Festival (ITF) in Windsor, Ontario. Jonathan, as it turned out, was the son of Edwin Knopf, the executive producer of MGM and nephew of publisher Alfred Knopf. I thought, "Hey, this could be big time." We formed a limited partnership. Jonathan and I both sold shares in our new project. Jonathan's uncle, Alfred Knopf, invested, and so did their family friend, Richard Rodgers. The ITF was held at the Cleary Auditorium on the Detroit River. This was not the small, intimate kind of theatre I had grown to love. This was 1,400 seats, a large proscenium stage, full union house and full Equity contract. The union requires each acting company to elect 116 a cast member to become "deputy," the union representative. The first time we missed the payroll, our deputy, Philip Baker Hall, would not allow the show to go on. As tickets were sold at the front box office, an apprentice would run the money backstage to give to the actors. We just made it as the last $10 of ticket sales was handed over to the last actor. If you are familiar with the phrase "time wounds all heels," you may enjoy this story about the ITF production of A Connecticut Yankee by Richard Rodgers. As I've mentioned, Richard Rodgers was an investor in the ITF. He had requested that we do A Connecticut Yankee. The script may be a little weak, but this has some of the most beautiful music ever written. I was overjoyed to do it, especially considering that I would cast myself in the lead. In the part of Morgan LeFay, we cast Marcia Levant, the daughter of Oscar Levant, the famous pianist and confidant of George Gershwin. Marcia agreed to do the part over the phone, and we sent her a plane ticket to fly in from New York. She had not signed a contract and when she arrived in Windsor, she refused to sign a contract. She couldn't decide whether to do the part or not. The ITF was doing eight plays in eight weeks. Under the best of circumstances, one week is not sufficient rehearsal for a musical. Equity rules state that no rehearsals can be held until all 117 actors are signed to contracts. Normally this rule is not enforced, but our deputy insisted that each and every rule be enforced. Phillip was a good actor and a good person, and from the union’s point of view, he was just doing his job. Philip Baker Hall may not be a name that you know, but you have seen him in countless movies. His starring role in the film Hard Eight is a truly great performance. Anyway, we were not allowed to rehearse until two days before opening, when Marcia signed her contract. Two days of rehearsal for a full-scale musical production. On opening night, Marcia went blank in the middle of her big musical number. After making her exit, she ran to the back of the theatre and began kicking the brick wall. She broke her foot. Now this is the incredible part. She could have demanded to be taken to a hospital. We had no standbys and we would have had to stop the show and give refunds. She insisted on continuing the performance even though she must have been in great pain. For the rest of the run, she performed in a cast and used crutches. The biggest problem we faced that summer was caused by an entertainer named Sammy Davis, Jr. Windsor, Ontario was the home of a very large nightclub called the Elmwood Casino. I had worked out a package deal with the Elmwood that offered customers a play at the theatre and then dinner and a floor 118 show at the Elmwood, all for a very reasonable price. This was a good deal for the patrons, a good deal for the theatre and a good deal for the Elmwood. That is, up until Sammy Davis, Jr. played there. The tickets were sold at the theatre, not at the Elmwood. For every ticket sold, the theatre would owe the Elmwood “x” amount of dollars. When word got out that Sammy Davis was playing the Elmwood, tickets started to sell like those famous hotcakes. Sammy worked on a percentage of the gate. He had his staff count the money as customers came in to ensure he got his portion of the gross. They used the Abbot and Costello system for counting the money. One for the Elmwood, one for Sammy; two for the Elmwood, one, two for Sammy; three for the Elmwood, one, two, three for Sammy. He would not accept the package tickets. I had a valid contract with the Elmwood, but Sammy would not accept the tickets. Ticket holders were outraged. They had seen the play but were not allowed into the Elmwood. They wanted their money back. For every one person in line to buy a ticket for a play there were ten people demanding refunds. They were yelling and screaming. It was awful. 119 The Festival finished the season but never reopened. All the investment was lost and we left Windsor under a cloud. Did I mention that Joan was now nine months pregnant? We moved in with my brother Les and his wife and daughter in Detroit. Once again, I was dependent on my brother. The obstetrician’s office was in Windsor, and we didn’t want to return to New York until after the baby was born. Shortly after taking a job at yet another photo lab, I got a call from an actor friend at Wayne University. James McKinney was working as the tech director for the Association of Producing Artists. The APA was playing in residence at the University of Michigan. Jim had been offered a better job, and he asked me if I would take over his job. Ann Arbor is near Detroit, so I could commute. Bye-bye photo lab. October 25th, 1963. Michele Elizabeth Martens was born. This same day the wife of Ed Flanders, one of the actors with APA, also gave birth to a daughter. We went out together that night and got blotto. Ed kept saying, "I wouldn't care if she were deformed as long as her brain worked. But 120 she's perfect. Every toe. Every finger. Perfect." We vowed that we would be friends for life. The next week, my staff and I had been working around the clock for three days. I told Ellis Rabb, the head of the APA, that we had to take some time off. He said he wanted the set that we were working on in place by 8am the next morning. I told him to go fuck himself. He fired me. Ed Flanders and I never saw each other again. As it turned out, Michele had a problem. After her birth in the hospital, she would not eat. She was tube fed for a week before she was released from the hospital. The doctor's last words were, "Don't worry. She will always be petite, but mentally she'll be fine." Joan, Michele and I returned to New York. Once again I said to hell with this producing shit. I'm an actor. I'm going to be a star. We got back to New York and, as you might guess, I got a job at a photo lab. I had often tried to get an audition with Joseph Papp for Shakespeare in the Park. All of my pictures and resumes had been ignored, and I could not find an agent to submit me. I had to do 121 something drastic to get his attention, so I sent him a letter threatening to sue him for discrimination if I did not get an audition. After the initial threat, the entire letter was of a comical nature. I told him that the heart of his discrimination against me was that he had accomplished everything in life that I had hoped to do. I thought it was funny and flattering. I got a call from Gladys Vaughan, one of Papp's directors. She wanted me to audition for Macbeth. James Earl Jones was playing Macbeth, so I knew not to study that role. I decided on the small role of the gatekeeper. After giving my short monologue, she asked me to read from several other parts of the play. It was going well. Very well. She would often offer some direction and then ask me to do the scene again. She then looked at me and said, "Well Mr. Martens, I must tell you that I am very surprised. You are a very fine actor, and under different circumstances I would love to work with you, but you must understand that you will never work for the Papp organization." But.. but... but the letter was in jest. I never intended to sue him. It was meant to be funny. Apparently Mr. Papp did not find it amusing. By giving me an audition, he negated the threat of a lawsuit. 122 Joan and I began getting some acting work, but it was always out of New York. We took turns caring for Michele. Then we were both hired at the Triangle Repertory Theatre in Durham, N.C. I was hired as a business manager and she as an actress. This was one of those large tent theatres. I may have been hired as a business manager, but there was no way they were going to keep me off that stage. Soon I was acting and directing and nobody was tending to the business. The theatre did mostly musicals, but the occasional play was always a good one. This was North Carolina. All of Thomas Wolfe's relatives came to see Look Homeward Angel. When it was announced that we were going to do Waiting For Godot, I began to fight tooth and nail to get the role of Gogo. I had played the role of Didi in Detroit, but Estragon (Gogo) was the part I was born to play. One reviewer said, “Martens' performance was pure magic. It seemed his feet never touched the ground.” One night a big thunderstorm started in the middle of a performance. It was impossible to hear a word said on the stage. What should the actors do? This wasn't taught at Wayne University. 123 Not wanting the audience to miss any of the play, I began to mouth words without saying anything. The actor playing Vladimir, my old friend from Detroit, Jerry Greenwood, immediately picked up on it. We ran and jumped and gyrated and mouthed words until the rain stopped. During all this, the audience probably assumed they were missing a lot of dialog because they couldn’t hear a word. When the rain suddenly subsided, the audience realized that, on stage, we were just mouthing words, passing time until the rain stopped. They began to laugh and then began to applaud. We picked up where we left off and continued the play. It was in North Carolina that I first heard the word "autism." An actor in the company, Alex Burk, suggested to Joan and I that Michele suffered from autism. We had never heard the term before. It was coined by Bruno Bettelheim. As it was explained to us, it meant that a child was so withdrawn that he or she would not speak. Not could not, but would not. Michele was now 18 months old. She didn't walk. She didn't talk. It was clear to everyone but Joan and me that something was wrong. We took her to see the doctor often, but he never implied that anything was wrong. We thought that she was slow but would be fine. 124 Soon, the season in Durham was over. Joan, Michele and I headed back to New York. Always trying to save money, we accepted an offer of a ride back to New York from a young couple that worked at the theatre. Their car was a wreck. This is the stuff that adventure is made of. It was not a question of if the car would break down, just a question of when. We made it to some city in West Virginia. The fuel pump was working sporadically. Sometimes the car would go; sometimes it wouldn’t. We limped into a gas station. "Yep, it's the fuel pump." "Do you have one that will fit?" "Yep." "How much?" "150 bucks." The young couple that owned the car had no money. I said that I would pay for it. We had to get to New York. We all killed an hour in the local coffee shop and then returned to get the car. "Is it fixed?" I asked. "Nope." "Why not?" "Part don't fit." "Did you put the old one back?" "Nope." "Why not?" "That'll cost you an extra 100 bucks." "Can I use your phone?" I asked. "You wanna call the police?" he asked. "Yep." I said. "I'll do it for ya." He dialed the phone. "Hey Billie, I got another Yankee who don't wanna pay his bill." "Okay, okay, you win. Can you get the right pump in the morning?" "Yep." "The sign says you're open 24 hours. Can this 125 young couple spend the night in their car?" "Yep." "Are we near a train station?" "Yep, train to New York at 11:30 pm. Wanna taxi?" "Yep," I said. I gave the money for the fuel pump to the young couple and Joan, Michele and I took a taxi to the train station. It was now 11pm. At least it was good timing. We were dead tired, so I splurged and got a Pullman berth. We boarded the train and the porter took us to our room. "Do you want sheets?" he asked. "Of course we want sheets," I answered. He said, "Sheets are $5 extra." "It costs extra for sheets?" I asked. "Of course it's extra for sheets. Not everybody wants sheets. Do you want two sheets?" " We want four sheets," I said. "You want four sheets?" he asked. " Of course," I said. "We want a top sheet and a bottom sheet on each bed." He looked at me for the longest time without saying a word. Then it dawned on me. He had a speech impediment. He was asking if, in addition to our Pullman, we wanted "seats" in the coach. I apologized and we all went to bed. What a night. Before going to Durham, we gave up our Manhattan apartment. I had found a larger apartment for the same rent in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn. Shortly after returning to New York, 126 Joan got a job out of town. I don't remember where or which theatre, but I remember Michele and I were alone together and I was trying to teach her to feed herself with a spoon. The next few weeks of my life seemed similar to the play The Miracle Worker, which Joan and I had done together in Michigan. I spent all of my time teaching Michele how to feed herself and to drink out of a glass. I bought a "walker" on wheels. She learned that if she fell, the walker would catch her. With the fear of falling removed, she was running around the apartment in no time. Soon after, she was feeding herself with a spoon and drinking from a glass. There were many spoons thrown across the room, many plates of food dropped on the floor, and many glasses of milk spilled on her clothing, but she learned. Michele and I were soon walking down the street holding hands. I was sure that I would soon hear "Dada." Michele had two pull-string toys that she adored. One was a musical toy that was strung across her crib. When the string was pulled, it played an up-tempo version of Brahm's Lullaby. Michele never slept much at night, and I would hear "la di da, la di da" into the wee hours of the night. Her other toy was a Woody Woodpecker puppet. When its string was pulled, it would select at random one of several responses, all in Woody's unique woodpecker dialect. 127 When Joan returned, she and I went to visit some distant relatives of hers in New Jersey. The relatives had a son in his early twenties. He and I and Michele were sitting in the living room and the young man was talking to Michele. "She doesn't speak," I told the young man. "Oh, is she retarded?" he asked. "No, she's not retarded, she's just a slow learner," I responded with a little edge to my voice. He looked at me as if I had hurt his feelings. "There's nothing wrong with being retarded," He said. "I'm retarded and I don't think it's anything to be ashamed of." He then explained to me that he had a very low IQ and had gone to a special school for retarded children. It was during this conversation that I realized I had to accept some very important realities and learn to cope with them. I will always be grateful for what I learned from this mentally retarded young man. Joan was cast in a show in Puerto Rico and I was cast in another Equity Library Theatre show, Earnest in Love, a musical based on Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest. It was Joan's turn to take care of Michele and besides, it was a brutal winter, and Michele would enjoy the warm weather. She went with Joan and I was left alone. It was going to be difficult to get to rehearsals and performances of Earnest. There 128 was a subway strike. At this time, John Lindsey was the mayor of New York. I think of John Lindsay as the greatest mayor in New York's history, but you would be hard pressed to find one other New Yorker who would agree with me. Lindsay was one of the last of a breed, a liberal Republican. As a Democrat and a member of Actors' Equity, I think of myself as a strong union supporter, but the Democrats had kissed the municipal unions’ asses for so long that they felt as if they owned New York. After years of Democratic control of City Hall, the unions decided to sock it to a Republican mayor. The policemen's union was demanding retirement with full pay, after fifteen years of service. Retirement with full pay at thirty-five? Firemen wanted anything the policemen got. Garbage men felt that they worked harder than policemen and firemen, and the subway workers wanted more money regardless of what anyone else got paid. They all went on strike. The ELT theatre was on 103rd Street and Riverside Drive. I walked every night from Cobble Hill, Brooklyn to 103rd and Riverside during one of the worst cold spells in New York history. It was hard to get any sympathy, because everyone in New York was doing the same. 129 I got a call from a director with whom I had done an ELT show. He was directing a new Off-Broadway show called Dames at Sea. He said I was perfect for the male lead. "Do not sign any contracts for this fall," he said. "I want you for this part." When the show opened and I had never heard another word, I called the director. He told me, "We rewrote the script, and you were no longer 'right' for the part." If I had gotten it, my leading lady would have been Bernadette Peters. I was so close I could taste it. Actors are often thought of as egotists, and I believe there is some truth in that assessment. Why else would an intelligent, rational human being try to make a living in a profession in which he knew there was almost no opportunity of making a living? Most actors get their first taste of celebrity in college or in community theatre. After they take their first curtain call and hear the applause, they are hooked. Many don't dream of stardom; they just want to make a living in their chosen profession. Just a few months in New York or Hollywood and they will find out if they have the right stuff. If not, then back to the drawing board. At this point the rejection begins. The agents won't talk to you. "Call me when you get a role in something. I'll try to come by and see it." You go to open calls and get typed out, but good acting is all about being able to play many different types. 130 How can you get a part if you can’t get an audition? Soon you begin to think, "Why won't they give me a chance? I'm good. Really good." It doesn't take many more rejections before "really good" becomes "damn good." More rejection leads to "great." Soon you are the greatest actor that has ever walked on a stage. The only problem is that you do not have a stage to walk on. It takes a strong sense of self-worth to survive. That next summer, I was hired at a theatre in Eaglesmere, Pennsylvania. This was the first and only time that I was hired as an actor and a photographer. I photographed every show. When I was on stage, I had an assistant do it. I set up a darkroom and made prints for the producers. Michele stayed with Joan. It was a fun summer and I made some good friends. This was the first time I did The Fantasticks. I played the Indian, "The Man Who Dies." There was a large resort hotel nearby, the only place to hang out after the show. One evening I made reference to a certain laugh that I got. The man playing the Old Actor looked at me and said, "What do you mean your laugh? That's my laugh." At that moment in the play we both did these little bits that we thought were getting the laugh. We were both convinced that it was "our" laugh. To settle the argument, I said that, in the next performance, I 131 would not do my bit. Sure enough, without my bit there was no laugh. That proved my point. So the next performance I did my bit but he did not do his. No laugh. So was it the combination of our bits that got the laugh? We will never know. We never got the laugh again. We lost it. It was dead. It was at this same hotel bar that I had an interesting experience. I was sitting alone. I was depressed. I missed my wife and daughter. A very, very old woman sat down next to me. She said, "You look as if you need a friend." She took my hand and looked at it. "Take heart," she said. "I see before you a magnificent career in the theatre and a life of joy and happiness." She then got up and left the room. The bartender ran over to me. "What did she say to you?" he asked. "Do you know who that is? She’s Matisse's mistress. She is a world-renowned seer. A fortune teller." At the time, it seemed like a possible scenario. In the spring of that year, I had auditioned for a touring company of The Fantasticks. In its seventh year Off-Broadway, it was the longest running play in American history, but this was the first time it was going on the road. Considering that I auditioned at an open call, my chances of getting a part were very remote. Considering that the touring production was called "The New York Cast on Tour," and, at the time, I had never been part of the New 132 York cast, I probably had a better chance of winning the lottery. Incredibly, I was cast as the girl's father. This was the break that I had been waiting for. The Fantasticks would be my path to stardom. 133 134 Chapter 7 The Fantasticks opened at the tiny 150 seat Sullivan Street Playhouse in Greenwich Village in the spring of 1960, several months before I arrived in New York. It didn’t get very good reviews. I had no interest in seeing it; I thought it was a musical revue. I'd been told that the actors would beg people on the street to come and see it free of charge. A little girl who lived next door to the theatre would come and see it almost every night. As the story goes, ten years later, the little girl played "The Girl," the only female part in the play. As I write this, nearly 40 years later, The Fantasticks is listed on many a résumé. Not only is it the longest running show in American theatre history, it has probably been performed in little theatres and college theatres around the world, in almost every language known to man, more than any other play in history. When I first auditioned for it in 1966, it was already the longest running show in New York history. One month, in the theatre listings of The New Yorker magazine, some creative employee who edited the listings decided to drop the usual blurb that said something like "boy meets girl." Instead, he put in, "Stately, plump Buck Mulligan …,” the opening lines of James Joyce's Ulysses. For the next several months, the listing would continue with the subsequent text 135 from Ulysses. The implication was that The Fantasticks would run so long that The New Yorker could publish the entire book, a few lines at a time, before The Fantasticks would close. At the time, that concept seemed absurd, and The New Yorker eventually dropped the Ulysses text and returned to the more traditional "boy meets girl" blurb. I cannot help but wonder how far into the book they would have gotten during the show's forty-year run. A large part of the audience of The Fantasticks consisted of people who had seen the show over and over again. There are people all over the country, indeed, all over the world, who came to New York once a year to see The Fantasticks. In spite of this incredible phenomenon, the New York critics and the press in general still refer to The Fantasticks as a piece of romantic fluff, not worthy of consideration as a serious work of art. This is such a shame. In its simplicity, it conveys a message that moves its audience to a renewed faith in love and life, a message that needs to be repeated whenever the weight of the world is more than one's shoulders can bear. The entire cast of The Fantasticks on tour was from the New York production except for two, Walter McGinn, who played The Boy, and myself. Walter had been the star of The Subject 136 Was Roses on Broadway. I have no doubt that he would have been a major star if he had not been killed in an auto accident a few years after leaving our production. We gave a few performances in New York in order to give credence to "The New York Cast on Tour" promotion. The tour started soon after the summer season in Eaglesmere ended. I received a lot of praise during The Fantasticks run. With due respect for all of the actors who had played Bellomy before me, a lot of people connected with the show were saying, "This guy's great. Where did you find him?" When I look back on that time, it was one of the happiest of my life. It was during this tour that I discovered that I was not a toad; women could actually find me attractive. I tried to make the most of it. I do hope that my first wife, Joan, can somehow forgive me. George Riddle, an actor I worked with in Eaglesmere, was also in The Fantasticks. He and I looked so much alike and yet we were opposites. We were both tall and thin and wore mustaches, but he was extroverted and I was introverted. He was conservative, while I was liberal. The other cast members referred to us as "Frick and Frack." He was the only person I ever knew who ironed his underwear. We became close friends. His idea of a joke was to polish just one of my 137 shoes. When asked why he became an actor, George always said, "I'm too lazy to work and too nervous to steal." While at the theatre in Eaglesmere, a strange phenomenon took place. Every female apprentice in the company became obsessed with sleeping with George Riddle. They would wait outside his room and wait their turn. George could not figure it out. One of the girls told George that the producer of the theatre had told all female apprentices that there was an actor in the company who had a reputation for "having his way with young girls." The producer ordered them to keep their distance. The apprentice girls resented this order. They were all old enough to make their own decisions. They held a meeting of their own and decided, out of spite, that they would all sleep with George Riddle. George had no idea where the producer had gotten that notion, but God bless him. One evening, as George and I were coming out of the deli next to the cast house, a bunch of local boys in their mid-twenties were hanging about. One was sitting on the hood of a car. George was always a snappy dresser and carried himself with an air of self-confidence. As we passed by, the boy sitting on the hood yelled out, "I hear that all actors are faggots." George turned and walked up to him and said, "Tell me, 138 do you think faggots hit hard?" Then POW. The guy slid off the hood of the car. I was ready to run in fear for my life. George straightened his tie and calmly walked away. George had a big influence on my life. While on tour, I even became somewhat of a clotheshorse myself. As I said, on this tour, I was, for the first time in my life, gaining a little confidence in myself as a ladies' man. On our first night in Cleveland, I spotted a rather attractive usher as I entered the theatre and went over to talk to her. I asked if she would like to go out after the show. She said, "No, and don't ask me again.” A few nights later, she showed up after the show at my dressing room. "Would you still like to go out with me?" she asked. I said, "Sure." She said, "Good, because I made reservations at a real nice place." We had supper and danced to live music. "Let's go someplace else," she said. I protested because I was having such a good time. "You'll have a much better time at the place I want to take you.” She took me to her apartment. When we got there, she began to cry. I tried to comfort her. "Why are you crying?" I asked. "Haven't you done this before?" "I'm not crying because I've never done this before, I'm crying because I do this so often.” 139 The next morning she left me in the apartment while she went to work. While looking for my shoes, I found a framed photograph under the bed. It was a photo of a friend of mine. He had been in the previous show at the Schubert in Cleveland. Of course, it was signed, "With all my love." In order to understand the next episode, we need to go back a few years in time. Back to when I lived in Detroit and was visiting New York, back to the incident with Chuck and Mary Lou. The night after Chuck brought my suitcases to Downey's. I was feeling very lonely and needed female companionship in the worst way. It was late at night and I was walking along West 49th Street. I looked in a bar window and saw this lovely lady looking right back at me. I was so young and naive that I had never even heard of "B girls.” I went in and sat at the bar. The young lady came up to me and asked if I would buy her a drink. I did. We seemed to be getting along so well that when she asked me to go to the back of the bar to a booth, it seemed like a good idea to me. She ordered champagne. 140 We were groping each other and I thought I had it made. I asked her to come to my hotel room. She took pity on me and explained that she worked at the bar. It was her job to get guys like me all excited and to buy her "champagne." It was actually ginger ale. She really did like me, but she couldn’t leave the bar. I asked for the check. "Three hundred dollars?" I asked. A bouncer appeared and gave me the impression that he would kick the living shit out of me if I didn’t pay. I paid the bill with traveler’s checks and then went out to look for a policeman. I found one on the corner and told him what happened. He told me to go back to my hotel and sleep it off. I told him that if he didn't help me, he would find himself in the midst of a lawsuit. We both returned to the bar. After a bit of discussion, the bartender offered a settlement of twenty bucks. He gave me back two hundred and eighty dollars worth of traveler's checks. So that brings us back to Cleveland. George and I were entering a bar called The Theatrical. They wouldn't let us in because George was wearing sneakers. We asked to see the manager. When the manager met us, he 141 realized that we were the most theatrical people he had had in The Theatrical in a long time. We were asked in as his guests. We met two young ladies at the bar who were from New York. We were talking and exchanging stories, and one of the ladies began to tell this story about some guy she met while she was working as a “B girl” for "Matty the Horse," a notorious Mafioso, who owned a lot of bars on 49th Street in New York. When she finished the story, I looked at her and said, "You won't believe this, but that cute but stupid guy was me." We went out for breakfast together. The Fantasticks was playing in a little town in Pennsylvania. One weeknight after the show, we went to a bar and saw two young ladies with programs from the show. We moved right in. After a few drinks, I went to the back of the bar to use the john. On the way, I saw a young woman sitting with a group at a large table. She was stunning. I just stood and stared. Then I continued to the john. On my return, she gave me a short look. I continued back to my seat. It was getting late and the young ladies that we were sitting with had to go to work in the morning. George said that he too wanted to call it a night. I noticed that the young lady I had seen at the back of the bar was now sitting across the aisle from 142 us. I told George that I was going to stay and have one more drink. George left. I approached the young lady and said, "I'm sure that you are waiting for someone, but perhaps we could have a little conversation in the meantime." She said, "I've been sitting here waiting for you to make a move. Let's get out of here." We went to her car and started at once to get hot and heavy. As it turned out, she was getting married the next weekend. This was a small town and she knew that, as an actor, I was just passing through. She wanted one last fling before settling down to a married lady routine. What a turnoff. All of my adult life, I had been going into bars trying to pick up girls, and at last, I did it, only to be overcome with moral indignation. It must sound hypocritical, but the fact that I was married didn't bother me, but the fact that she wanted to have sex with a stranger, before getting married, just didn’t sit right with me. I didn’t want any part of it. I gave her a short sermon on fidelity and asked her to take me back to my hotel. At least one moral dilemma had nothing to do with sex. During a summer package tour, we had a week off before playing Denver. Equity 143 rules specified that producers had to pay actors full Pullman train rates for transportation, regardless of how the actor traveled. Another actor in the company and I decided to see if we could find a "drive-away" from New York to Denver. It would be fun to drive across the country and we would make money while doing it. I picked up a large station wagon on Long Island that needed to be delivered to Denver. It belonged to a family that was moving there. They had two cars. They would drive their second car. They must have had a lot of stuff for the movers to take. They filled up the station wagon with a lot of their belongings. I picked up the car and then drove to the other actor's apartment on Riverside Drive. The speaker on his buzzer system didn’t work. I didn't want to leave the car unattended, but I had to run up the stairs and tell him that I was there. I ran up and ran right back down. When I got back to the car, it was surrounded by six black youths by the passenger side door. I walked slowly by. Sure enough, they were in the process of breaking in. I walked a few steps away and began to ruminate. Most of the stuff in the car was not mine. Do I risk my life to save a stranger's stuff? Before I came to a decision, one of the boys came over to me and asked, "Is this your car?" I didn't know how to answer, but ultimately I blurted out, "Yes, it's my car." All of them began to circle me, and I was beginning to tremble with fear. Then one of them 144 said, "Man, you shouldn't leave a car full of shit on the street like that." Then they all walked away. My friend came out with his suitcase and we were on our way to Denver. The theatre in Denver was called the Ilitch Gardens; it was located in an amusement park of the same name. My dressing room overlooked the part of the park with rides for small children. I wished so much that Michele could be with me. One evening after the show, I was sitting by myself at the bar in the hotel where the cast was staying. Two lovely young ladies were sitting at a table nearby and I started a conversation with them. They asked me to join them at their table. After about ten minutes of pleasant conversation, I noticed that the drummer for The Fantasticks had entered the bar. We traveled with our own musicians. I didn’t like this man. I may have been obsessed with sex, but this guy thought he was Wilt Chamberlain. To hear him tell it, he was the most potent male God ever created. Every woman on Earth lusted for his body. I was most disturbed when he came over to join us, but I tried not to show it. One of the two girls mentioned that Bobby Hackett, a famous trumpeter of the time, was playing at a nearby club. She suggested that it would be fun if we all went together to hear him play. The other girl 145 asked if she could speak with me privately. She then explained that she and her friend were lesbians and loved each other. She wanted to make it clear that nothing was going to happen between us after we left the club. I told her that it would be fine with me if we just went as friends. At the time, I couldn’t help but wonder if the girls were actually lesbians, or if this was just a clever ploy to make sure things didn’t get out of control. We enjoyed the concert and then we all went to my hotel room for a nightcap. After about fifteen minutes, the drummer and the other girl left for his hotel room. The remaining girl, the one who told me about being a lesbian, began to cry. She put her arms around me and said, "I love her. I love her so much. I can't bear this. How could she leave me for a man?" I tried to console her, but I couldn’t help but think, "Wow, this drummer guy is really good. I thought he was just a bullshit artist, but he must really be a pro at getting women into the sack." Then there was a banging on my door. It was the other girl. She was crying. She threw her arms around me and began to wail. "For the first time in my life, I met a man who I thought I could love. I wanted to be with him. I went to his room. We took off our clothes and all he wanted to do was put on my underwear." I spent the next hour hugging and consoling two broken-hearted lesbians. 146 The Fantasticks tour was broken up into three parts. The first part, The New York Cast on Tour, played small towns and colleges. Mostly one night stands. What they call a bus and truck. The set travels in the truck and the cast travels in the bus. The second was a summer tour. The third was the National Company, directed by the author, Tom Jones. It played major cities, often for several weeks at a time. By this time, many actors had been cast in the play on Sullivan Street and then moved on with their career. This was the first time that Mr. Jones directed his play and he wanted to cast the best of the best in his production. He had seen me as Bellomy on tour and told me that I was the best he had ever seen. I was very flattered to be cast in his production. On the bus and truck tour, our bus driver Richie was a bantam rooster. A black Jimmy Cagney. He was about 5'4" but was not afraid of any man on earth. George Riddle and I hung out with Richie. We were the three musketeers. While in Lexington, Kentucky, we agreed to meet in the large restaurant in the hotel where we were staying. George and I arrived first and took a table. While looking over the menu, George noticed “Lamb Fries.” “What are Lamb Fries?” George asked. The only reason I knew was because, years ago in Detroit, I was going 147 through a farmers’ market with a young lady named Kathy Carothers. Kathy and I went to high school together in Detroit, but we weren’t really friends. We met again at Wayne University and were often on the verge of becoming lovers but never made it beyond being friends. Anyway, Kathy saw a sign; that said, “Lamb Fries.” “Oh, what are those?” Kathy asked the butcher. “Well, lady,” the butcher said, “Those are a… well those… they are.. they’re… ah… balls. They are lamb nuts.” “Oh, how do you cook them?” she asked. “Let’s get Richie to order them,” George said. We did. He did. He loved them. The next morning we told him what lamb fries were. My ability to run fast came in very handy that morning. On the major National Company tour, we played for a month in Chicago. I went to a club on Rush Street and saw a jazz singer named Sheby Smart. I tried to talk to her after her set. She said, “I'm going next door to catch the last set of Buddy Rich. If you want to make a move on me, you'll need to come with me and pick up the tab.” I agreed. We went to the club next door and then had drinks with Buddy Rich after his last set. He made moves towards Sheby. When she rejected his advances, he became obnoxious and 148 insulting. Sheby said, “Can we get out of here and just go to your place?” We did. Sheby was the first and only woman I've ever been with who gave me lessons in how to make love. Do you remember the old joke about the woman giving a lecture at a girls' school concerning sexual abstinence? After a long speech she ends by saying, “Remember, ladies, an hour of pleasure is not worth a lifetime of regret. Are there any questions?” And a girl stands up and asks, “How do you make it last an hour?” One of my favorite cities on the tour turned out to be Milwaukee, Wisconsin. We arrived on our day off, and the first evening I went out to scout interesting places for after-show activity. I was walking down a street near The Pabst Theatre where we were playing and saw a little window about eight inches wide and twelve inches high. It caught my attention because I was curious as to why anyone would make a window so small. I looked into it. There were people inside eating and drinking. They looked as if they were having a good time. I thought I would check it out. One problem. I could not find a door. Not far from the small widow was a large window. Inside was a girl sitting at a desk. It looked like a business office. But I wondered why a business 149 office would be open at 10pm. This place at least had a door, so I went in. Young Lady: Can I help you? Me: How can I get into the bar next door? Young Lady: There is no bar next door. Me: But there’s a little window. You can see people inside. They seem to be having a good time. Young Lady: You must be mistaken. There is no bar next door. Me: Unless this is The Twilight Zone, there’s something going on here. Young Lady: Things are not always as they seem. Sometimes you need to know the right words to unlock the mysteries of life. Me: Are you saying that to find the answer, I must first find the question? Young Lady: You were spying into that window that isn’t there. If a spy is in the cold, what does he need? At that point, the goal of the game became clear. I smiled and then leaned over her desk and whispered, “I need a safe house.” With those words, a bookcase swung open exposing a dark corridor. The entrance was like the opening of the TV show "Get Smart." Lights flashed on and off and doorways in the darkness opened. 150 When I walked into the bar, I was met with a round of applause. Everyone in the bar had been watching on a TV monitor. I was an instant celebrity. Everyone wanted to meet me and buy me drinks. As it turns out, this was a new private club called A Safe House, (members only). They had an entrance in the rear on a different street. The door was kept locked and only opened when a member entered his password. The office in the front and the TV camera were set up in a spy mode for the amusement of the members. I was the first and only victim of the joke who won admission to the club. I had a wonderful time. I invited one of the waitresses to come and see The Fantasticks. The next morning, I was walking around, getting a feel for Milwaukee. I saw a young lady coming near me. She was in a short skirt and my eyes never really got above her waist. As we were about to pass, she said, "Wayne?" It was an acquaintance from Wayne University in Detroit. We stopped and talked. I invited her to see The Fantasticks. That night was opening night in Milwaukee. After the show, I learned that I had two women waiting for me, the waitress from "A Safe House" and my acquaintance from Wayne 151 University. I didn't know what to do. I asked George Riddle. He said, "Wait until one of them leaves. That way, you'll know which one wants you the most." I took his advice and waited. The waitress left first. I went out with the acquaintance from Wayne University. She took me to another incredible bar. It was called The Cave. I was amazed that Milwaukee had places that were so unique. This place was incredible. You walked through caves to get to different parts of the bar. There was a rock and roll room, a jazz room and a classical room. In between, there were little alcoves where a couple could be alone. My date kept asking me if I was hungry. I said no because I was having such a good time. Then it dawned on me that she might be hungry. She took me to the tallest building in Milwaukee. We went up the elevator. When we arrived, it was nothing like I expected. It turned out that she managed the most impressive restaurant in Milwaukee. The restaurant was closed for the evening. She had a full staff awaiting our arrival. It had a view overlooking Lake Michigan. She had a string quartet playing for us. As God is my witness, I am not making this up. 152 After dinner, we went to her apartment and drank cognac. I was a bit taken back when she asked me if I was still seeing Norma Fire. As it turned out, she was Norma’s pregnant roommate in San Francisco. Being in The Fantasticks was never boring, and each town we played seemed to have an element of adventure. They loved The Fantasticks in Columbus, Ohio. We played there three times. It was on the last day of our third trip there that I learned it is not where you are but who you are with that makes the difference. After the last performance, I discovered a cool jazz club. The musicians were incredible. I met a young couple who were into the arts and had a good sense of humor. We were having such a good time that when the club closed, they invited me to their home. They lived in a carriage house on a large estate. As we drank wine and listened to Charles Ives, I realized that I was late for the plane that was taking The Fantasticks to our next destination. My host offered to drive me to the airport. We stopped at my hotel to pick up my things and sped toward the airport. It was 6am and there was no traffic. We were stopped by the police, and it didn't take long for them to realize that the driver was drunk as a skunk. They cuffed him and put him in the squad car. 153 "Hey, what about me?" I shouted. I then explained my dilemma. They called on the radio for assistance. I was taken to the airport in a convoy of three police cars with their sirens blaring away. The rest of the cast of The Fantasticks was curbside as the police cars arrived. You can imagine their surprise when I got out of the police car. During the college tour of The Fantasticks, we played two nights at Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana. This was special to me, having been my birthplace. I heard a million times how we could look out our kitchen window and see the golden dome of Notre Dame. I was named after an All-American football player at Notre Dame, Wayne Milner. For years, I had a little toy football inscribed, "To little Wayne, I know that someday you will be a great running back for Notre Dame." It was signed Wayne Milner. Considering that at eighteen I weighed 130 pounds, this never seemed a likely scenario. I had spent some time in South Bend during the third grade. When my family moved from Wilmington, North Carolina to Detroit, it was the middle of the school year. My parents left my brother Les and I in South Bend with my father's parents, and my parents continued on to 154 Detroit. They needed a few months to get situated in Detroit and set up household. My stay in South Bend was awful. I can only remember two things about it. One was trying to eat fried eggs that still had runny whites. I tried to tell my grandmother that I couldn’t eat them that way, but she would just look at me and say, "Eat them!" I would eat them and then run to the bathroom and upchuck. The other memory was of old-fashioned inkwells and being smeared with ink. At school in North Carolina, we used pencils. At Measles (that was the name of the school, Measles) we used oldfashioned pens, and each desk had an inkwell to dip the pen into. Why anyone would name a school Measles is beyond my comprehension. They should have named the school "Rorschach," because every day I came home from school covered in inkblots. Playing The Fantasticks at a Catholic school reminded me of a story that had circulated about a production of The Fantasticks done at another Catholic university. I tend to believe that this story is a joke and never really happened, but it was told to me as a true story. As the story goes, a priest was watching a rehearsal of a student production of The Fantasticks. He became most upset when they got to "The Rape" song. The priest complained to the director that such language was not acceptable for a church university. The director explained that the term 155 "rape" was meant in a classic sense, meaning “abduction”, and had no sexual implications. The priest suggested changing the word rape to abduction. The director explained that the word “abduction” would not fit into the musical rhythm of the number. The song is done in the style of an Arabian chant; with the word rape being stretched over several bars of music while the pitch fluctuates up and down. "Abduction" just would not cut it. The story ends with the director and priest agreeing to replace the word "rape" with the word "snatch," apparently oblivious to the fact that "snatch" is a slang word for the vagina. The audience of college students loved it. It was in Louisville, Kentucky that I met Toshiko. She was a jazz pianist playing a small club. All the cast hung out there. For me, musically, she added a new dimension. She gave me her New York phone number. She said, "Let's get together in New York." When I returned to New York for a week off, I gave her a call and invited her to see a play. After the play, we went to a cast party. When I introduced her to one of the cast members, he said, "You're not the Toshiko, the jazz pianist?" She said she was. He said, "I've got all your records." I never knew she made a record. As it turned out, she was a jazz star with a rather large following. She was a 156 regular performer at Sweet Basil and Birdland in New York. This fan of Toshiko told us a fun story. He was one of the stars of the show we had just seen and he was also a taxi driver. He kept his taxi parked in front of the theatre so that he could finish his curtain call and then run out front and get a fare from someone in the audience. They were always somewhat astonished to discover that their taxi driver was the star of the show they had just seen. It made for a big tip. After traveling about the country for two years, my only regret was not spending more time with Michele. She was now four years old and she still did not talk. It was while Joan was on a vacation with her folks in Florida that I got the phone call that I feared the most. Joan's parents had taken Michele to see a specialist. The doctor said that the EEG read normal but he still suspected massive brain damage. He recommended that she be placed in an institution. Joan called me to say that she had discussed the matter with her parents, and she agreed with them and Michele would be placed in an institution in Florida. To me, this was like saying, "Oh well, she's defective, might as well throw her out. Better luck next time." 157 NO, NO, NO, OH GOD, NO! PLEASE! THIS IS MY CHILD! THIS IS MY LIFE! NO! I LOVE HER. GOD LOVES HER! FOR GOD'S SAKE, NO! I flew to Florida and got Michele. I took her with me on the tour. George Riddle got his girlfriend to travel with the show and act as Michele's sitter. Joan and I did not split up over this. Let there be no doubt that Joan also loved Michele very much. We just disagreed on how to best provide for her future. Traveling around the country with Michele was a lot of fun. She meant more to me now than ever before, every smile, every touch. I had always known that I was on this earth for a purpose. I had thought it was to be a leader of some kind, but now I realized that my purpose on earth was to love and care for this child. Michele was very curious, and whenever I was not holding her hand she would take off to explore. We traveled with three suitcases and a potty chair. Toilet training Michele was very important to me. In order to get from one place to another, I would move two suitcases a few steps and then run and get Michele. Then move the other suitcase and the potty chair a few steps, then run and get Michele. Crossing a street was next to impossible. I would often ask a stranger for help. When Michele became older, the question was should I take her into the men’s room or the ladies’ room? I got strange looks either way. 158 Michele was with me when The Fantasticks played a small town in New Hampshire. The theatre was next to an amusement park. It was springtime. Michele and I had a wonderful time. She loved the children's rides, especially the carousel. The woman who owned the small diner next to the theatre fell in love with Michele. She insisted on feeding her for free. She would put money in the jukebox and play music and dance with Michele. Michele loved to dance. There was a large stretch of green lawn in front of the cottage where we stayed. Michele would run and run back and forth through the grass. I had bought her a windmill and she would wave it in the air and watch it spin. One day, she was running with the windmill and she fell and it poked her in the eye. I called an ambulance and we took her to the emergency ward at the local hospital. Michele cooperated with the doctors as they tried to evaluate the damage. They said that she would need to see a specialist. We arrived by taxi at the specialist’s office. This was one of only two times in her life that she spoke. As the doctor tried to look at her eye, she stood up and shouted, "NO!" I'm sure it was painful for her, but no damage was done to her eye. The cast and the production staff were so kind and considerate, but, of course, I had to 159 leave the show. I did not want Michele to be in an institution, but I did realize that she needed special care and it could not be provided while touring about the country. When we returned to New York, I needed to find a new, larger apartment. My real estate broker wanted to show me an apartment in Park Slope, Brooklyn. It had six rooms and was rentcontrolled for $87 per month. Even then, six rooms in Park Slope would be going for about $800 per month, so I was expecting a run-down, dilapidated place. It was a beautiful building on a prime tree-lined street. The broker had a purse full of keys, but none of them seemed to fit the lock. We couldn't get in. I said, "Look, if there are six rooms in that building for $87 per month, I want them. I don't care if the ceilings have fallen down and the floors have holes in them." There was no stove or fridge, but the ceilings and floors were fine. The landlord said to me, "At this rent, I'm not going to do a thing. If the toilet clogs, you fix it." I said, "You've got a deal." The landlord was a kind old Italian man. I learned that he had cheated on rent control from the start. He had lived and raised his family in the building. When rent control was established in the early 40s, the legal rent for the apartment was set at $42 per month. When he moved his family to Long Island, he charged the 160 new tenant $87 per month. He then learned about others who had cheated and had been caught. Out of fear, he had never submitted a lease to the rent control board and had never raised the rent in all the years of rent control. All these years later, he was still charging $87 per month. As we were moving out of our old apartment in Cobble Hill, I noticed that my neighbor was moving out at the same time. He had this large sheep dog. We had never met, but I had often seen him walk his dog. As the movers were loading up the trucks, my neighbor and I spoke briefly and discovered that we had a lot in common. He was a playwright. We both expressed a sorrow that we had never gotten to know each other. When our moving truck arrived at the new Park Slope apartment, the strangest thing happened. Another moving truck pulled up behind us and started to unload. Then a car pulled up and out came a man with a large sheep dog. My old neighbor, Jim Kalett, his wife, Caroline, and dog, Olive, were moving in next door. It had to be fate. We became friends, and for a while we were business partners. So, after two years of being shuttled back and forth, Michele was about to have a home. Joan and I had moved into our new apartment. The question of Michele’s future became a moot point. We discovered that there were long waiting 161 lists at all of the state homes throughout the country. At least for now, Michele would stay with us. I cannot explain my relationship with Joan. All I wanted was to live with a woman who loved me and raise a family and yet, I did everything in my power to destroy the relationship. How can I explain it? The little head, between my legs, totally dominated the big head on my shoulders. I lost the ability to reason. One day, Joan got a call from my answering service. A young lady with whom I had an affair in Baltimore was trying to reach me. She was in New York and wanted to spend the weekend with me. Needless to say, Joan was a bit upset. When she confronted me with this newfound evidence that I had been fooling around, she was expecting to hear, "I was lonely. She means nothing to me. I'll never see her again. Please forgive me." But instead, I told her that our marriage was over and that I wanted to see this young lady. The very next day when I returned, Joan packed her bags and left. It would have made no sense for Joan to try to get custody of Michele, since she felt Michele would be better off in an institution. I cannot deny that I carry with me a sense of guilt, but the guilt stems from the fact that many of our mutual friends held Joan in contempt for 162 abandoning her daughter. I should have done more to make it clear that I was the guilty party, not Joan. She has remarried several times and has never shown a great deal of interest in her only child, but I have never doubted that she loved Michele. I believed that the pain was just more than she could bear. On the other hand, I believed that I was chosen to care for Michele. She was the reason for my existence. I had no idea what I was in for, but I was not frightened. I was on a mission of love. 163 164 Chapter 8 Everything in my life, up until now, was only a rehearsal. This was the real thing. I was a single parent. I had to be mother as well as father. Our Park Slope apartment had a small backyard. The owner of the building used to make his own wine, and the grapevines still flourished along the fence to the yard. The only way to get to the yard was through the basement, where the wine press and other wine-making gear still sat. Michele and I would go out in the yard, sit in the sun, and eat grapes. Michele loved water and I bought a little wading pool. This was the good life. We would go food shopping together. She would always carry one of the bags of groceries. We were not far from Prospect Park and we would go to the zoo. Nearby the zoo was a carousel. Michele loved the carousel. She would get excited as we neared it and she heard the calliope-style music. After riding the carousel and walking through the zoo, we would go and sit by the lake. Michele was a very special person. Being her father made me feel special too. Raising a child was a full-time job. I cooked, I cleaned, I shopped, I did the wash in the bathtub, hung it up in the kitchen, I ironed 165 Michele's pleated skirts, and I prayed. I knew it would take a miracle for Michele to have a normal life, but I believed in miracles. I wanted to get acting work, but it had to be in New York. No more traveling, no more touring. It came as a complete surprise when my old girlfriend, Mary Lou, gave me a call. She had been cast as the female lead in a play at the Old Reliable. She thought I would be perfect for the male lead and the director was interested in having me audition. My savings from The Fantasticks were getting slim. I had to make some money, but to get theatre work, I had to be seen by agents and directors, and so I auditioned and was cast in the part. The Old Reliable was a bar on the Lower East Side. The back room had a stage, seats, and a few lights. To call the plays avant-garde would be an understatement. You might call it audience participation theatre. There was no admission charge and beer was served during the performances. After a few beers, the audience would often talk back to the actors. To save on babysitting costs, we often rehearsed at my apartment. Mary Lou spent a lot of time with Michele. She was still married to Chuck, and I never saw a clue of any renewed 166 interest in me. If there was, it remained very subtle and nothing ever came of it. The play gave a new depth to the concept of theatre of the absurd. I played a sadistic priest. In the last act, there was a scene where I would take off my priestly robes and flog a poor young girl with a whip. I would be standing with my back to the audience, bare-chested. My body was to be covered with tattoos. Each night a makeup artist would paint my back and arms with tattoos. This scene was the climax of the play. It was meant to be frightening and emotionally very disturbing. On closing night, during this scene, the audience began to laugh. I had no idea what they were laughing at. The laughter grew and grew. Now keep in mind that the audience is very close. I was going crazy. Why were they laughing? It was not until after the show that I learned that the makeup artist had not drawn tattoos on my back that night. She had written, "For a good time, call Jane, 567-6912." Needless to say, this production was of no help to my career. Shortly after this play, Chuck and Mary Lou were divorced. Mary Lou returned to Detroit. She told me that she had 167 been so moved by the time she spent with Michele that she was going to return to school and become a teacher for developmentally disabled children. Another old friend from Detroit, Clifford Ammon, was stage-managing a new OffBroadway show, How to Steal an Election. This is the musical I referred to at the beginning of the book when I explained why I gave up my acting career. I was not a member of the original cast. As stage manager, Cliff had the authority to cast an understudy. He knew this would be perfect for me. Unlike a “standby,” who must attend every performance and be ready to go on, an understudy is only called to the theatre when a cast member is sick or cannot, for any reason, perform. I could earn some money and stay at home with Michele. This musical revue was based on interesting tidbits of American political chicanery. One of my favorites took place during a Florida congressional race. The night before the election, one of the candidates called a press conference to announce that he had irrevocable proof that his opponent had once been a "thespian." It worked. He won the election. I understudied all five males in the show. The show ran for several months without anyone getting sick. Then the proverbial shit hit the fan. 168 If everyone got sick at once, the performance would have to be canceled but that didn't happen. They seemed to take turns getting sick. For a long series of performances, I had to play several different roles on different nights. It was very difficult. When I had to bring Michele to the theatre and hear her cry backstage, it just tore me apart. The play closed shortly after I quit. I needed to re-evaluate my goals in life. I needed to get out of New York. Michele and I went to visit my parents in Detroit. While there, I took Michele for a walk. At this time, I had long hair and a beard. Michele's persistent urge to go in a direction other than the one I was going led to a lot of tugs and pulls as we walked along holding hands. It was summertime, and hot, so we stopped at a Dairy Queen and got ice cream cones. As we walked back, I had to keep a very close eye on Michele to make sure she did not drop her cone. As we approached my parents’ house, three police cars came out of nowhere and trapped us between their bumpers, two cars on the sidewalk and one on the front lawn of a neighbor's house. Two of the cops picked up Michele and ran with her. Two others threw me against the hood of a police car. They had guns drawn, and every time I tried to speak, they yelled "Shut up!" A neighbor who had been watching all of this from his front yard spoke with another policeman who had gone over to 169 question him. That policeman then came back toward us and yelled, “It's Okay. He's an actor from New York." The other cops looked at me and said, "Oh, you’re an actor from New York. That explains it. Someone called 911 and said that a bearded man was dragging a little girl down the street." I explained that Michele was my daughter and that she was retarded. One of the cops looked at me and said, "So you're an actor. Have you been in anything that I may have seen?" I asked him, “Have you seen any plays recently in New York?” He looked at me kind of funny, as if to say, “What the hell would I be doing in New York?” Michele and I returned to New York. I needed to find a way to make some money. I may have joked about my working in photo labs, but I am grateful to have had a profession that could be used to make a living. Like all single parents, I needed childcare. I had very little money but had a large apartment, so it made sense to hire a livein sitter. I put an ad in the Sunday N.Y. Times. I had only one response. She and Michele seemed to get along very well, so I hired her. She was a very nice young lady from a small town in Michigan. She had just arrived in New York and was very happy to get the job. I had some things that I needed to do that evening and went out for a few hours. When I 170 returned, the new sitter was sitting on the sofa in her nightgown, crying. She explained that she had phoned her father in Michigan to let him know she had gotten a job. Her father had said to her, "You're living with a man? In Brooklyn? An actor? Get your butt out of there at once." She returned the next morning to the Barbizon Home for Girls. What could I say? I knew full well how her father felt. I would have felt the same way. You may not believe this next one. It happened to me and I still don't believe it. I was going stir crazy. I had to get out. I hired a sitter for the evening and went out and tied one on. As I was walking home, at the end of the evening, four young men picked me up off the ground and put a knife to my throat. I began to laugh. They couldn't believe this. "Why are you laughing?" one asked. "I've never been mugged before," I said. "For as long as I have lived in New York, I've heard stories of people being mugged, but this is my first time." They went through all of my pockets and my wallet. Then they calmly walked away. "Hey, wait a minute," I shouted. "I'm a single parent and I've got a babysitter at home. I don't even have money to give her for carfare." 171 One of them returned and handed me ten bucks. I swear to God. When I got home, my shirt felt wet. I looked in the mirror and blood was trickling down my neck. It was just a scratch, but my whole body began to shake. In truth, I had some money put away at home. I paid the sitter and called a car service to take her home. It was becoming obvious that I needed a live-in sitter. This time, I put an ad in The Village Voice. It stated that I was a single male parent. I received hundreds of responses. The biggest problem was that anyone looking for a job of this nature, for very little pay but free room and board, was more than likely destitute. I couldn’t expect much in the way of references. I wasn't looking for an experienced nanny, just someone warm, kind and understanding, someone who loved children. My rent was only $87 per month. I could work for a few hours each day and still make ends meet. I just needed someone to be with Michele those few hours. I held dozens of interviews. I hired someone. I don't remember whom. Over the next few years they came and went on a routine basis. Every time Michele got attached to someone, she 172 was gone. To this day, Michele only trusts men; women are always suspect. For about a month, I kept getting phone calls from a heavy breather. Michele's live-in sitter at the time was quite attractive, and the calls started coming shortly after she began to work for me, so I assumed the calls were for her. I had no way to know. The person never spoke, they only breathed. One night the phone rang and it was the breather. Instead of hanging up as I usually did, I said, "You sick fucking bastard, what the fuck is the matter with you? Do you have nothing better to do than make phone calls and masturbate? Why don't you buy a gun and blow your head off?" Then I thought about what I had said and continued with, "I'm sorry, I shouldn't speak to you in that manner. You are sick and you need help. I had no right to curse at you." I began to talk about how I believed in God and how I believed that God loves us and has blessed each of us with life. It was as if I was in the pulpit giving a sermon on redemption. This went on for a long time. When I finally paused to catch my breath, a voice responded. It was a female voice. It was the voice of a very troubled woman. She said that she had met me, but to this day I do not know who she was. She said that she wanted to speak to me because she had seen me with Michele and knew that I was a kind and loving person, but each time I answered the 173 phone, she was frightened and didn't know what to say. We talked for hours. I told her that I did not want to know who she was, but that she could call me anytime when she felt that she couldn't cope with life. Over the next few months, she called several times, and then I never heard from her again. It felt good, being of help to someone, but in truth I needed some help myself. Having faith is all well and good, but I needed to do something, and I didn't know what. No one really knew what was wrong with Michele. Some said autism, some said brain damage, some said schizophrenia, but most just said “retarded.” At the time, there were two major schools of thought in the treatment of retarded children. The Domain-Delacado theory, known as creeping and crawling, physically took the children and forced them to crawl. People would hold them down while others would move their arms and legs in a crawling movement. I think the idea was that the child must have missed something in early development. By returning to the crawling movement, the child could discover whatever it had missed. It sounds far-fetched, but the good thing about it was that it gave you something to do. You could even ask caring neighbors and friends to help. It's so frustrating wanting to do 174 something to help when there is nothing you can do. The drawback to this technique was that music was forbidden. I have no idea why, but children on this regimen were not allowed to hear music. The other technique that was popular (I don't remember its name,) was a form of music therapy. So here I am, a parent of a retarded child, I want desperately to help my child, and I have one group telling me never to allow the child to listen to music and another group telling me to smother the child in music day and night. Michele loved music. I was not about to deprive her of one of the few things in life that she enjoyed. While on tour with The Fantasticks, Michele loved the piano player that toured with us. She would grab his arm and pull him toward the piano and push him on to the piano stool. While he played, Michele was enraptured. I bought her a rather sophisticated toy piano. It sat in her room for weeks but she would not touch it. Then one day, she walked up to it, put her finger out and hit the keys. Dum, Dum, Da, Dum. The first notes of “Beethoven's Fifth.” I know that it was just a coincidence, but I 175 couldn’t help but to wonder and hope. Perhaps, in truth, she was a genius? Michele also liked to swing. I anchored a swing to the ceiling of her room. She would swing for hours. She enjoyed tearing paper. She would take newspaper and tear it in long strips. She would then fold each strip in a fan fold. The Sunday Times, when torn and folded in this manner, could reach the depth of about eighteen inches in my living room. She also folded paper from magazines in a strange manner. It was like origami. When completed, she would pull on two ends of the paper and the center would flap up and down. She would then stick out her tongue and the center of the paper would flap on and off of her tongue. She would do this for hours on end. She seemed to know that newsprint would get soggy and only did this with coated magazine stock. Because Michele did not speak, many doctors referred to her as autistic. One evening, watching TV, I saw my old friend Ed Flanders, the actor whose wife gave birth on the same day Michele was born. He was the lead in a popular hospital drama, “Saint Elsewhere.” He played a single parent of an autistic child. I had often 176 wanted to contact him and tell him about Michele, but I never did. He has since passed away. One of the psychiatrists who saw Michele told me that he would give me any diagnosis I wanted. I should find a "school" that had an opening. If the facility took autistic children, he would give a diagnosis of autism. If they took brain-injured children then he would diagnose brain injury, etc. He said there was no known treatment for these children, so it didn't really matter what the diagnosis was. One of Michele's sitters believed that she was the new Annie Sullivan. She worked with Michele endlessly. She was not hired for this purpose but she was getting such good results I was not about to interfere. Within a few months, Michele was doing puzzles and building with blocks. She could even tie her shoelaces. When Michele stopped responding in a positive way, the sitter started getting physically abusive, spanking and hitting her. I tried to get the sitter to stop, but she seemed to resent my interference. I had to let her go. She had become so obsessed with Michele that I began to fear she was having a homosexual relationship with her. 177 I took Michele to another psychiatrist for an evaluation and told him of Michele's newfound skills. His desk was covered with children’s toys. He had the classic box with a round peg for the round hole, triangle peg for the triangle hole, etc., puzzles, and other toys requiring a level of skill. He tried to get Michele to perform with these toys. Michele tried to put the square peg into the round hole and put the puzzle pieces in all the wrong places. He explained to me that sometimes parents want something to be true so badly that we believe it to be true even when it isn't. As we were leaving his office, Michele broke away from me. She went back to the doctor's desk and put each puzzle together, and the pegs in their corresponding holes, zip zap. She then looked at the doctor as if to say, "How's that, smart-ass?" She then turned and walked out. The doctor looked at me. I smiled and then we left. We went to see another doctor who specialized in vitamin therapy. He prescribed massive doses of vitamins, like sixty or seventy pills per day. To get Michele to take them, I would put them in a thick plastic bag, pound them with a hammer, then mix them into a paste 178 with orange juice. I would then hold Michele's nose. When she opened her mouth to breathe, I would shove the spoon in and cover her mouth so that she could not spit it out. After a month of this "therapy," I called to make a new appointment with the doctor. We would have to wait six months for an appointment. I decided this doctor was a quack. I discontinued the therapy. At that time, there was no financial aid to speak of in New York State. The Greenberg Law provided about $1000 towards a fee of about $8000 per year for a private "school." A man from the Brooklyn Board of Education came to see me. He had a form that he wanted me to sign. He explained that because Michele was not educable, I would need to sign this form to prevent my arrest as the result of her truancy. I was outraged because I felt it was the city’s obligation to provide her with some kind of education, regardless of her abilities. Arrest me, I said, please. That would give me a chance to get some attention so that I might find some help for Michele. I would not consider sending Michele away to a residential school. I wanted to be with her every day, but I knew that she had to have some kind of schooling. There had to be some 179 kind of private school for children like Michele. I spent hours on the phone. I wrote letters. I was once told to buy a pair of handcuffs and then go to the Association for the Help of Retarded Children and handcuff myself to a radiator pipe. That wasn't necessary. I discovered that there were private "schools" that would take Michele if I paid them enough money. It would mean full-time in the photo lab and less time with Michele, but I was learning that Michele needed help that I could not give her. These "day schools" ended up being nothing more than very expensive babysitters. Michele went to so many "schools" that I could not keep track of them. It always ended with a note explaining that Michele did not fit properly into the school program. One of my great fears was that for some reason, I would not be there when the school bus arrived that brought Michele home each day. I had read of a case where a bus driver had let out a retarded child in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, and the child wandered off and drowned in the bay. Once I was returning from Manhattan by subway and the train was delayed. I got off at the next stop and I ran several miles to reach home. My heart was pounding. I made it on time and, of course, the bus was late. 180 I did send Michele away to a summer camp for “exceptional children.” Before we left for the camp, I got a call from a young woman who also had a child going to the camp. They needed a ride. She was quite attractive and I considered asking her out on a date, but before I said anything, she mentioned that the only way for her to survive would be to find a filthy rich man. That left me out. She had just taken a job as a waitress at an exclusive men's club that catered to the elite. The next time I saw her was at the end of the summer, when the children were being picked up. She arrived in a chauffeur-driven Rolls Royce. She looked at me and I smiled. I still believed in God, but was beginning to wonder if God believed in me. I could see that there were so many people in need, so many who were sick, hungry, and in pain. It seemed so selfish of me to pray, over and over again, for a miracle for Michele. My director friend from Detroit, Cliff, called and asked me to do a children's show on the weekends. I said I didn't act anymore, not since that experience with Michele in How to Steal an Election. He pointed out that it was only on weekends and all performances were at the 92nd Street Y in Manhattan. I wouldn't have to work in a photo lab anymore. I could actually spend more time with Michele. The play was 181 Solomon and Ashemedai. I played Ashemedai, the devil. My old friend Mallory was the costumer. Remember, when I first came to New York I cared for her son Dennis. Of course I asked how he was doing. She told me that he was living with her sister in California. I cannot help but wonder how life has treated him. As soon as rehearsals began, I noticed this girl in the cast. I couldn't take my eyes off her. She was much younger than I, but I thought it couldn't hurt to ask her out. That was the beginning of a new chapter in my life. 182 Chapter 9 Why would a young, beautiful, intelligent, creative girl be interested in me? A plain-looking man with no visible means of support? A single parent of a retarded child? I knew at once that she was someone special. She laughed at all my jokes. Lyn Walsh. A native New Yorker. She was a dancer who also played a few small parts. I was the lead, the star of the show. Early in rehearsal, it became apparent that a conflict of styles was about to develop. I never considered myself a “method” actor, but I don’t like to have a preconceived concept about the role I’m playing. I rehearse. I look, listen and study. It’s like putting together the pieces of a puzzle when you don’t have a picture of what the puzzle looks like. When the character emerges, I’m as surprised as anyone. From the very first rehearsal, the rest of the cast members were acting and singing their hearts out. The director knew how I worked, but the producer was talking about replacing me. Lyn Walsh was one of the few cast members who seemed to understand what I was doing. She urged everyone to give me a chance. Once the pieces started to come together, everyone changed their tune. By opening day, the cast would stand in the wings 183 and watch me perform. Lyn would smile and say, "I told you so." On my way home after a rehearsal, I noticed Lyn standing at a bus stop. I went over and talked to her. I asked her out for dinner. She accepted. We had a wonderful time, but I never made any moves on her. I wasn’t really sure if she had any interest in me in that way. I hadn’t even tried to kiss her after our second date. On the third date, we were out with the play's director and his wife. The evening was coming to an end and we were sitting in the director's car. He said, “Where to?” and I leaned over toward Lyn and asked, “Do you want to go home or to my place?” Without missing a beat, she said "Your place." As we entered my Brooklyn apartment at about 2am, my daughter was wandering around making her grunts and groans, and the live-in babysitter was deep asleep. Michele did not speak, but she was very vocal. She made a lot of sounds. She had a sense of humor and would often laugh, although I usually had no idea what she was laughing at. Michele being awake somewhat diminished my ardor. I put her back to bed, but feared that her presence would be a big turnoff for Lyn. 184 I mentioned beautiful, intelligent, and creative. How about straightforward and honest? Lyn went directly to the phone and called home. She was living at home with her parents. Expecting, "The car had a flat tire," and/or, "I'm staying with a girlfriend," I was surprised to hear, "You remember Wayne. I'm spending the night with him. Sorry to call so late, but I didn't want you to be worried." By this time, all of the passion of the moment had passed. The lust of a first encounter seemed to be replaced with the tenderness and warmth of a longstanding relationship. It was nice. No fireworks, but nice. As with most good relationships, it got better and better as time went on. That morning, when we woke up, I discovered that the babysitter, my camera and my money were all gone. Of all the unusual people that I had hired as sitters, this one had to be the most bizarre. As usual, I had placed an ad in The Village Voice. And as usual, I had a large response. Appointments had been set up over the weekend. That Friday night I had a party. It was an all-night affair and the next morning I made Spanish omelets. We were all sitting in the living room having breakfast. The apartment was on 185 the first floor, and the blinds were pulled up so that we all had a view of the street out front. When a large car came to a screeching halt out front, we all looked out to see what was going on. A man got out of the car, went to the rear, and opened up the trunk. He then took out two suitcases and threw them on the sidewalk. Then he went to the passenger side of the car, opened the door and pulled out a young lady. He then got into the driver's seat, slammed the door and took off. We all watched as the young lady picked up her suitcases and climbed the steps of my stoop. The doorbell rang. I went to the door. She looked like Leslie Caron in a scene from the film Lili. In a very soft voice with a heavy French accent she said, "I am Frederica. I am here in response to your ad. If you do not hire me, I will have no choice but to sleep on the sidewalk in front of your house." I asked her in and made her an omelet. I'm a softy. I hired her. She was very warm and considerate and got along very well with Michele. It was several weeks before I discovered her dark side. She had a classic split personality. One day I was speaking to her and 186 she turned and said, "Don't give me any of your shit. This is not Frederica you are speaking to, this is Rose, and Rose doesn't take any shit." Rose knew all about Frederica but Frederica did not know that Rose existed. Rose was a real bitch. It was, of course, Rose who stole my camera and money. She called me and said that I shouldn’t be angry with Frederica because she didn’t even know that Rose robbed me. So that morning, Lyn, Michele and I had breakfast. I think Lyn was impressed with my ability in the kitchen, the cooking part, not the dish washing and cleaning part. Lyn did the dishes and cleaned the kitchen. Lyn was very warm and loving toward Michele. Lyn and I went out often, and each time she stayed over at my apartment. She would play with Michele. They seemed to get along very well. Lyn hadn’t moved in, but she was soon spending more time at my place than at her home. When she invited her folks over to have dinner with us, I got the idea that this could be a long-lasting relationship. At the end of the evening, Lyn's mother asked her, "Are you coming back home with us or are you staying here?" She stayed. 187 Twenty-eight years later, her mother told me that Lyn was not very good at expressing feelings of love but she knew that evening that her daughter was very much in love with me. I ended up not only loving Lyn, but also loving her parents and her siblings. Love. It's a word that came easily to me, but not to Lyn. I said, "I love you" over and over again, but I never got a response. Not even "Me too." The first, and maybe the only, time she said "I love you" was after our first big fight. It really wasn't a fight. I had a large collection of Playboy magazines and I was thumbing through them and pointing out the girls that I found attractive. How I could have been so stupid is now beyond my understanding. Lyn began to yell and scream at me, calling me names, and then she just sat there and cried. I said I was sorry. "You must know that I love you," I said. "I tell you over and over again. You have never said that you love me." She looked at me and yelled, "Of course I love you," and then she threw all of my Playboy magazines in the trash can. I was offered a job directing a summer musical theatre in Flint, Michigan. The Flint Musical Theatre operated with a resident company but brought in a "star" for each 188 production. I thought Lyn would enjoy dancing in the company. Working together would be fun as well as financially rewarding. She didn't want to come with me. I was hurt and confused. The choreographer of our children's show had asked her to dance in a Yiddish show he was directing in Israel. It was like an old time vaudeville show but all in Yiddish. She's not Jewish. I didn't understand why she didn't want to spend the summer with me. One of her best friends was living in Israel and Lyn obviously just wanted an excuse to visit. I wrote her every day but never got a response until the end of the summer. "If you love me, send $200." I loved her and so I sent $200. Later, she told me she sent the same letter to everyone she knew. It was a very difficult summer. Doing eight full-scale musicals in eight weeks is, at best, very difficult, but this was worse than usual. There was a lot of animosity within the company and I did not get along very well with one of the producers. As it turned out, he was a close friend of my first wife, Joan, and it was she who had recommended me to him for the directing job. I cast my friend George Riddle for the season. He, Michele, my live-in sitter, and I all lived in a farmhouse I had rented for the 189 summer. The new sitter was from a good home on Long Island, a very nice, intelligent girl of eighteen. This would be her very first trip away from home, and she was looking forward to a bit of adventure in Michigan. The new sitter, Mary, flew to Detroit with Michele and I, a few weeks before the season started. My mother picked us up at the airport. We were going to stay with my folks in Livonia, a suburb of Detroit, before going on to Flint. On the ride from the airport to my parents’ house, Mary, the sitter, looked so disappointed. We were driving along a main road with its share of McDonald's and Burger Kings, and Mary kept groaning "Oh no, oh no." I asked her what was wrong and she said, "This looks just like Long Island." While visiting my folks in Livonia, I noticed in the newspaper that Raymond Burr was starring in a play at the Northland Playhouse, a summer star-system theatre in Detroit. Its producer was Kenneth Schwartz, who was also the original producer of the Vanguard Playhouse, the one who used his thumb to squish me on his desk. My parents both loved Raymond Burr, and so I called Kenny to see if we could get tickets. He not only gave us "comps," but just before the play began, he came out on stage and introduced my parents and I to the audience. "Ladies and gentlemen, we are honored to have in the house this evening one of Detroit's best known and 190 loved theatrical producers and directors, the former director of World Stage and the producer of the Vanguard Playhouse. He will be directing this summer at the Flint Musical Theatre. Wayne Martens is here with his parents, and if they would not mind standing up, I would like to join you in giving them a round of applause." He then invited my parents and I to come backstage after the show and meet Raymond Burr. My parents were very pleased and very proud of me. It felt good. My sister Margaret and her husband had just bought a new car, so they gave me their old Pontiac convertible to use. After a week with my folks, Mary, Michele and I drove up to Flint and met George there. When we all moved into the farmhouse, I warned George that if he screwed around with my babysitter, I would kill him. It didn't do any good. She got pregnant. My friendship with George was never the same after that. We opened with Annie get Your Gun, starring Rosemary Prinz, the soap opera star. She was a big draw. For A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, I cast Michael Dunn, who was well-known for his work in the film Ship of Fools. Michael played Psuedolus, which was played on Broadway by 191 Zero Mostel, who was a very large man. I went the opposite direction and cast a dwarf. Michael and I had gone to high school together. He was so much fun to work with. He had hoped that this role would open up a new world for him. It's so difficult for any actor to find good parts. How many parts are written for a dwarf? He died the following year. In Damn Yankees, George played the Devil. He put his circus training to good use. He played the part while riding a unicycle. As the season went on, I just wanted it to be over so that I could return to New York. I had no social life that summer, nor did I seek any. It was so frustrating not being able to spend more time with Michele. We rehearsed during the day and performed in the evening. The actors got one day off, but a director needs to work seven days a week. At the end of the season, Mary, Michele and I returned to New York in my sister's old convertible. While in Michigan, Mary had gotten a cat named Aries. The car had no rear window, and the cat insisted on riding on the outside of the car on the rear fender, at sixty miles per hour. Every car that would pass us would pull next to us and yell, "There's a cat sitting on your fender!" We would yell back, "Thank you," and 192 continue on our way. By the time we reached New York, the cat was fine, but the car was coughing and spitting up blood. It died in the middle of a major intersection in Manhattan. I got out and called a tow truck and bought sodas and chips. We all just sat there eating and drinking with the top down in the middle of the intersection until the tow truck arrived. Then we took a taxi to Brooklyn. That fall, Lyn returned from Israel and I went to the airport to meet her. I had bought another old clunker. Her parents were there as well. I had no idea who Lyn would go back with. After checking in with Customs, everyone hugged her and then her mother asked right out, "Are you going home with Wayne or with us?" Lyn said, "Wayne." My heart jumped into my mouth. As we drove back to Brooklyn, she was all over me. I was determined to make her so ecstatic that she would never leave me again. We were taking our clothes off as we entered the apartment. It was the middle of the day and Mary and Michele were both there, but we didn't care. This was passion. This was what life is all about. “The bells rang, the mountains shook." Instead of, "I love you and will never leave you," Lyn said, "Oh, I have to run. I'm going upstate to spend a week with my grandmother." As she left, she said, "I'll be back next Tuesday. I'll move in if you don’t mind." 193 Lyn moved in with me. Life was good. She seemed to care for Michele. She helped me with phone calls and letters while I was searching for help for Michele. We went together to visit the infamous State Institution, Willowbrook. The children were behind bars, mostly naked, and they used hoses to wash the shit and piss down the drain. For this, there was a fiveyear waiting list. You could move up on the list by enrolling in the hepatitis program. This meant that your child would be injected with hepatitis. "Why not?" the doctor asked. "They're going to get it anyway." They could then experiment to find a cure. We went into a building for older "clients." A young, well-endowed woman came running up to me. She was stark naked. She kept trying to pull my pants down. The attendant looked at me and said, "Some places try to hide what goes on. We don't even try." This could not be real. I had to block it from my mind. I knew that my daughter would get better. I loved God and I loved my daughter. That love would keep her out of a place like Willowbrook. 194 Life was great. Lyn and I made love and watched W.C. Fields movies on late-night TV. I had never had a relationship like this. It was perfect. Lyn was perfect. One day, I got a phone call from Lyn's mother. She wanted to meet with me in private. We set up a meeting at Lyn's father's office. He was a dermatologist. "It is obvious to us," Lyn's mother began, "that Lyn is very much in love with you, and we are certain that you feel the same about her. Lyn is very special to us and you must understand that we only want the best for her. This relationship is not in her best interest. You seem to have some kind of Svengali hold on her, and she is unable to see how this relationship could ruin her life. Please, let her go." "Mrs. Walsh," I said, " I love Lyn more than you can imagine. I will do anything to make her happy. Asking me to let her go is asking me to put a gun to my head. I can't do it. I want to marry Lyn and raise a family. I promise that you'll not regret it. I'll make you proud of me." Dr. Walsh asked if he could speak to me privately. We went into an examination room. 195 He said, "Please don't be angry with Lyn's mother. You, more than anyone, can understand how much she loves Lyn. Lyn is very headstrong. She was born while I was away in the Marines during the war and is very used to getting her own way. If you and Lyn do get married, I can only say, God bless you and good luck." During all of this conversation, there was one thing that all of us failed to realize. Lyn had no intention of marrying me, or anyone else for that matter. Lyn was a free spirit. One evening, we decided to go to the movies. It was a double feature, Mash and Patton. We had been told by friends that Mash was very funny, and George C. Scott, my friend from Detroit, played the lead in Patton. This was sure to be a fun evening. Mash was on first. I thought it was a riot. Soon, however, I noticed that Lyn was not laughing. Far from it, she was muttering, things like, "fucking sexist bastards." Suddenly, she got up and walked out. I chased after her, but she would not speak to me. Once outside she said, "If you find that shit funny, there is no way that you and I can live together." "But it is funny," I said. "The fact that I laugh at it doesn't mean that I agree with its sexist connotations." We went home. Years later, I got to watch Patton on TV. Mash became Lyn's favorite TV show. 196 Lyn had pretty much put her dance career on hold. While living with me, she had appeared in a few concerts at Dance Theatre Workshop, but had not entertained the notion of going on tour, not until she was offered a national tour with Israel 22, a celebration tour of Israel's twenty-second anniversary. She was offered a good role with good pay, and it played major cities throughout the country. I was happy for her, but I knew I was going to get mighty lonely without her. The money from directing in Flint was running short, and I couldn’t bear the thought of working in another darkroom. If I had to work in a darkroom, it should be my own. I borrowed an enlarger from a neighbor and set up a darkroom in a large walk-in closet. If I could get clients, I could make a living at home. I could spend more time with both Lyn and Michele. Lyn had an interest in photography. My idea was to set her up to do children portraits in the living room studio and I would do the processing and printing. I would also go after other photographers and clients who needed the services of a custom lab. I called my brother Les and borrowed $500, which I probably never paid back. I built fiberglass sinks in the closet and a workbench for the enlarger. I purchased secondhand trays, the kind that busboys use in 197 restaurants. I made safe lights out of the large fruit and vegetable cans that are used by restaurants. I found a photo studio that had closed up and slipped the super of the building $20 to let me take a lot of equipment that had been left behind. By the time Lyn returned, the apartment was a mess of light stands, tripods, trays and dryers. Our apartment had high ceilings and so to help accommodate all of this gear, I built a loft bed. Lyn didn’t get excited about the idea of doing portraits, but she really enjoyed learning about darkroom work. This was the Vietnam era. We would go to the demonstrations and, while everyone was handing out anti-war flyers, we would hand out flyers for our custom photo lab to all the photographers. It worked. We actually got customers. Prints were washed in the bathtub. There was one problem. If the landlord found out that we were running a business there, he could legally kick us out. He wanted to sell the building but couldn't because of the low rents. If he had a vacancy it would increase the value of the building. I went to the hardware store and got four mailbox labels. Box one, Box two, Box three, Box four. We lived on the first floor and had the first mailbox, so the photo business was named "BOX ONE PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICE." All 198 it said on the mailbox was “Box One.” Ten years later, Box One Photographic Service had 5000 square feet in midtown Manhattan with sixteen employees. My mother had come to visit us in New York. She had flown in, but we were all going to drive back to Detroit in the old Peugeot I had purchased for $75. Whenever you decide to make a long trip in a car you purchased for $75, you know you are going on an adventure. None of us had ever seen Niagara Falls, so we decided to take the Canadian route to Detroit. About fifty miles west of Albany, we were about to enter the NY Thruway. There was an extra long line at the tollgate. They were conducting auto safety checks on every car going on the thruway. All I could say was “Oh shit.” I knew my old car would never pass the test. We all cheered when the inspector said, “You’re fine. Go on your way.” Our joy soon dissipated when about one mile past the gate, we had a blowout. The car shook so hard I thought it would fall apart. I got it over to the side of the road and put on the spare tire. 199 We arrived at the falls and got a motel room. My mother took care of Michele while Lyn and I went for a walk by the falls. It was beautiful. The sun was setting. A cool misty breeze was blowing in our faces. I took Lyn in my arms and said, "I love you. Will you marry me?" She said "No." "Please," I begged. "No." That was the end of the conversation. Needless to say, the car broke down a few more times. The fun part was when the windshield wipers broke during a rainstorm. Somehow, we eventually made it to Detroit. While in Detroit, we went to visit my sister who had just given birth to her first son. Lyn and I were standing above the baby's crib and Lyn was commenting on how adorable he was. I had to try again. "Don't you want one?" I asked. "No!" Well, I tried. We left the car in Detroit and flew back to New York. Lyn was a cat lover. I was a dog man. Lyn picked up a black cat from a friend. It was the same day that Mayor Gibson was elected as the first black mayor of Newark, New Jersey, so we named the cat Gibson. 200 A dear friend of mine from The Fantasticks called and told me I owed him a favor, and he was calling to collect. He had taken in a cat from a friend, as a favor, and his cats were trying to kill it. He wanted me to take his friend's cat. "But I don't like cats and I already have one," I said. "You owe me," he said. When I went to pick up the cat, it was so frightened that it couldn't stop shaking. Her name was Blanche. When I took her home, she seemed to sense that I had saved her life. She followed me around like a dog. She would come when she was called. She would even sit on command. Actually, I had never had a dog that would do that. Blanche and Gibson made many babies, and the apartment was soon overrun with cats. The cats were not alone. Lyn became pregnant. I was ecstatic. As they say, I was overjoyed. I wanted to get married. She wanted an abortion. Lyn moved back home with her parents. By this time, her folks had moved out of their Manhattan apartment and were living in Rowayton, Connecticut. We talked every day on the phone. I begged. I pleaded. Everything I ever wanted was about to slip off the edge of my fingertips. We 201 agreed to meet at a bar in Manhattan called The Triple Inn. The bar was well known for its Christmas decorations. They put them up one year and never took them down. We met and we talked. I promised her that if she married me, I would make her the happiest woman in the world. Lyn agreed to marry me but with conditions. She wanted Michele out of the house. This came as a complete surprise to me; Lyn had always shown affection for Michele. To me, her demand was like Sophie's Choice. I had to choose between my daughter, whom I loved so very much, and my unborn child. I could not make that choice. I needed to stall for time. I offered a compromise. If, after a year, she still wanted Michele out of the house, I would put her in a residential facility. Lyn agreed. Oh yeah, one minor detail. I would need to get a divorce. I had taken Joan to court to get legal custody and I was awarded child support. Joan had little or no income and rarely paid it, but at the time it was an important legal decision because there were not many cases of men receiving child support. 202 I filed for divorce. It went to trial. Joan's lawyers wanted to end the child support. They lost, but she still didn't pay. Years later, I was in an elevator in an office building and this man looked at me and said, "I know you, don't I?" "I don't believe so," I responded. He said, "You're the guy who mopped the courtroom floor with me in that divorce case." He then got off the elevator. That gave my ego a little boost. Lyn and I were getting married in Connecticut, which required a one-week wait for a marriage license, but the judge took one look at Lyn and said, "I think we can waive the one-week requirement." The wedding took place in her parents’ home in Connecticut. Lyn's sister's dog would not stop barking. Lyn had requested that the minister not use the standard language in the ceremony. "I don't want any of that love, honor and obey crap in the ceremony," she told him. We were married August 18, 1971, and our son Matthew Wayne Martens was born September 4, 1971. We had time to spare. The birth was Lamaze. Lyn was in labor for only two hours. It's so strange and wonderful. Your wife is screaming in pain and you, the man, just stand there and gawk. I enjoyed every minute of it. 203 Matthew seemed to know from the start that it was important to exhibit his mental capabilities. He walked at 10 months and talked at 14 months. He seemed to be saying, "Look at how smart I am." He still does that to this day. My mother came to help us out. I thought life was beautiful. Lyn loved my mother and the feeling was mutual. But as soon as my mother left, Lyn left. She took Matthew and went back to her parents’ in Connecticut. There was no warning, no discussion; she just left. She called from Connecticut and told me that she could not raise Matthew in the same house with Michele. I knew about postpartum blues. If I'd had a brain in my head, I would have given her some time and just waited patiently. But no, I felt that our agreement made at The Triple Inn had been broken. I drove up to Connecticut, got Matthew, and put him in the car. Lyn would have put up one hell of a fight, but she didn’t want to involve her parents, and so she meekly submitted and we drove back to Brooklyn. Lyn is not the type to forgive and forget. She has never forgiven me. In the song "My Way," Frank Sinatra sings that he has too few regrets to mention. I cannot say the same. This was just the first of 204 many such conflicts. I ended up regretting every one of them. Lyn must not have hated me all that much. Within a blink of an eye, six months after Matthew was born, she was pregnant again. This time the labor was about 15 minutes. Shannon Lyn Martens was born December 6, 1972 in the hallway on the way to the delivery room. I saw her pop out like grease through a goose. I moved Box One out of the apartment and into Manhattan. A photographer whom I had met had moved out of his loft to work in Japan. I moved Box One into his space. His name was W. Eugene Smith. I had no idea that he was considered one of the greatest photographers of all time. He had a book of photographs published that were all pictures taken out of the loft window on Sixth Avenue. The space was dirty. Plaster was falling down from the ceiling and graffiti was on every wall, but the rent was only $150 per month. Gene carried a magic marker in his pocket, and whenever he had an idea, which was often, he wrote it down on the wall, on the desk, the file cabinet, whatever was handy. His work in Japan was an exposé on industrial mercury poisoning. Goons beat the shit out of him and he was left nearly blind. He continued taking pictures using 205 a little auto focus Olympus camera. On his return to the U.S., he came by to say hello and to reminisce about the old times in the loft. Apparently, it had quite a history. According to an article in a 1999 issue of Double Take Magazine, the space was a gathering place for jazz greats, including Miles Davis, Charles Mingus, Thelonius Monk and Dizzy Gillespie. An August 2001 article in The New York Times said, “There always seemed to be many pretty young women present, and ample bourbon and marijuana. It was a spot where Salvador Dali, Norman Mailer or Willem de Kooning might show up.” I had no money to pay for any help, so I contacted The Village Voice and told them that I was forming a free photo workshop. The Voice ran a blurb about the workshop and I got a large response. The idea was that I would teach in exchange for work. It worked out better than I could have dreamed. I was a good teacher, and they were a wonderful group of students. We cleaned and painted the loft and built darkrooms. Each member could then, of course, use the darkrooms. It was an arrangement that worked out well for everyone. One workshop member was a vice president of the Bell Telephone Company. He was in charge of corporate installations, so he 206 traveled throughout the city. He became Box One's messenger. Even after all the work was done the place still looked like a wreck and we were reluctant to have clients see it. All work was done by pick-up and delivery. Our competition had the run-of-the-mill messenger types picking up work; we had a distinguished gentleman of forty-five in a suit and tie. He would say in a slight English accent, "Good afternoon. It is my understanding that you have some work to be processed by Box One Photographic Service." Clients were very impressed. After about a year, business was going well and Box One had regular full-time employees, so the workshop was disbanded. Most of the members kept in contact and many went into photography as a profession. There was one young black man of about eighteen; I had not seen him for a long time. Then one day, he appeared at Box One with a story that was unbelievable. He had decided to put his new photographic skills to the test by traveling through Europe. He ended up stranded with no money in a small town in Italy. While he was sleeping on a bench at the local bus station, a young woman walked in and began a conversation with him in English. He told her his tale of woe and she said that she was going to visit 207 her uncle. He had a very large place. "Why don't you come and stay with us?" she asked. "I'll pay for your ticket." Thinking that it had to be better than sleeping in the bus station, he agreed. When the bus arrived at their stop, the young lady made a phone call and a limousine soon picked them up. When the limo arrived at its destination, there was an elderly gentleman who gave the young lady a big hug. The young lady then said, "John, I would like for you to meet my uncle, Enzo Ferrari." He stayed as Ferrari's guest for over a month. If it were not for the photographs, I would not have believed it. He had pictures of himself and Ferrari at the breakfast table, in the swimming pool, pictures of them together all over the place including, of course, a picture of him and Ferrari, in a Ferrari. The miracle that I had been waiting for never came. The year was up, and Michele had not improved. I was still hoping and praying. I think I was beginning to realize that Michele would never be able to care for herself. I was praying that Lyn would change her mind about living with Michele. Never once did Michele show any sign of aggression or hostility toward Matthew or Shannon. I never understood Lyn's insistence that Michele move out of our home. 208 Michele was such a beautiful child. Her face seemed to radiate with purity and innocence. I had previously put her name on the waiting list for Suffolk State. To do so, I had to use a fake address. Suffolk State did not accept children from Brooklyn. Brooklyn children went to Willowbrook. I had visited Suffolk State and they had shown me quaint little cottages and pretty little schoolrooms. A social worker who knew of my situation had pulled every string imaginable to get Michele accepted there. The day came. Michele and I drove out to Huntington, Long Island. My heart felt like it was the size of a watermelon. It was difficult to breathe. I refused to cry. Why would I cry if I believed that this was the best thing for her? When we arrived, a doctor took Michele to be "processed." I was then shown around the institution. What I was shown had little resemblance to the quaint little cottages that I had seen on my previous tour. Again there were iron bars. The smell of feces was overwhelming. I was shown the evaluation room. This is where Michele would stay for her first thirty days of evaluation. It was a cage. I was then handed the form to sign to give my permission to inject Michele with hepatitis. 209 My watermelon heart broke. I ran and I screamed. My daughter was not going to live here. I would wander the streets with her and be homeless before I would leave her at this place. They told me that I was making a big mistake. The waiting list was so long. They had given me special consideration for her to be accepted. I called Lyn. “I love you,” I said. “I love Matthew. I love Shannon. But I can't do it. I can't leave Michele here. Please let me come home with her. Please.” Over the years since then, Lyn and I have had many arguments and many fights. I have been accused of every sin known to man, but Lyn has never found fault with me for bringing Michele back from Suffolk State. For that, I am eternally grateful. After the pain subsided, outrage took control. I called the Attorney General of New York State. The treatment at these "state schools" was criminal, and no one but the rich could afford to send a retarded child to a private school. He said, "I should not be telling you this, but my advice is to sue New York State." I said, "If I could afford to sue New York State, I wouldn't need to sue, because I could afford to send my child to a private school." He told me to 210 contact The Legal Aid Society. I did. We sued. We won. The state laws were then changed to provide education for all children. Legal aid did all the work, but I still take pride in the fact that Michele and I were part of it. The interesting thing is that after the laws were changed and the state had to pay the tuition, the rates of $8,000 to $10,000 per year all went up to $30,000 or more per year. The people who ran the summer camp that Michele had attended also ran a year-round boarding school. I enrolled Michele. The school ran on a regular school schedule with all the same vacation times. The school was located in Liberty, New York, about 100 miles from New York City. Without a doubt, I would need a new car. Our old Chevy was more than falling apart. One night a neighbor was banging on our window. "Your car is on fire!" he kept yelling. It was right in front of the apartment, so if it blew up it would take our apartment with it. I had never used a fire extinguisher before, but I always kept one handy. It seemed like it took an hour to read the instructions, but to my amazement, it did the job. I will never know if the fire was spontaneous or if some kids were just looking for a little excitement, but there was no doubt that I needed another car. 211 I answered a used car ad in the paper. The car belonged to a little old school teacher who only drove the car to school and back. When I saw the car, it was nighttime and it was raining, but this was not at a used car lot. The owner really was a little old school teacher. She wouldn't lie to me. I bought it. My mother came from Detroit. She knew that this would be difficult for me, so she wanted to come along with us to the school. The car, of course, broke down. It threw a rod. For the next several years, whenever I went to visit Michele, I could see my old car on the side of a junkyard outside of Liberty, New York. Fortunately, we were close and someone from the school came and picked us up. I want to describe my feelings, but I can't. I don't know if it's a blank or if I just cannot describe it. I think it was like a biblical character about to sacrifice his child to prove his love for God. If I did not leave Michele, I would lose Matthew and Shannon and Lyn. The school was nothing much. Most of the children were housed in trailers. The staff seemed very nice, but I really don’t think that I wanted to know too much about them. There was nothing that I could do if I didn't like them. I felt that I had no choice but to leave Michele there. It must have been similar to 212 having an operation before anesthesia was invented. It's got to hurt like all hell, but when it is over, you try not to think about it. Michele seemed to be comfortable there, but of course, she had no idea that I was going to leave her there. My mother and I returned to New York by bus. There was not much conversation. She knew I was in pain. In order to visit Michele, I would once again need a car. Hall Overton, the man in the loft on the floor above Box One, had recently passed away. He was a gentle giant of a man. I had been told that he was a musician and taught music at Juilliard. Later, I learned that he had helped to make the loft a historical center for jazz in New York. I first met him when I started the Box One workshop. I needed chairs and went up to see if he had any that I could borrow. I knocked on his door and introduced myself as his new neighbor. He asked me in. He was teaching one of his pupils at the time and so he introduced me. "Wayne, I would like you to meet Stan Getz." Getz was one of the country's most famous jazz saxophonists and, needless to say, I was very impressed to learn that my neighbor was his music teacher. I never saw Stan Getz again, but my new neighbor and I became friends. We were both O positive blood types and when he was being operated on, I donated blood. Strange, I do not recall what the operation was for, but Hall 213 passed away shortly after surgery. I met his wife at the funeral. Out of the blue, she said, "Wayne, I think Hall would have liked for you to have his car." I gladly accepted. It was a blue Sunbeam. We called it "Sunny." It served us well for many years. Whenever I visited Michele, I rented a motel room for the weekend. Michele never liked the motel rooms. She wanted to go home, but she liked getting away from the school. We would mostly drive around. Michele loved to drive fast and put her hand out the window and play with the wind. Going home after these visits was always painful. This pain was offset by my love for Matthew and Shannon. I thought we had a good life in Park Slope. The kids were such a joy to be with. There was a lot of laughter and so much fun. There were a number of neat neighborhood bars in Park Slope. Now and then, I would stop off after work for a drink. One night at the Camperdown Elm, I was sitting at the bar and a man leaned over and said, "Now don't get excited or do anything stupid, but if you look over your left shoulder, you'll notice that Jackie Kennedy is here." I looked, and sure enough, there was columnist Pete Hamill, who lived down the street, sitting with Jackie Kennedy. At the time, everyone ignored them or politely said good 214 evening, but as soon as they left, everyone in the joint went crazy. Everyone went home and announced, "You'll never believe who I saw at the bar tonight." Jim Kalett, my neighbor with the big sheep dog, had an interest in photography. Not much knowledge but a lot of interest. He began to work with me at Box One and his mind was like a sponge. He learned as fast as I could teach. He had good contacts and he brought in some topnotch clients. We became partners. It was not a good match. I'm impulsive and act on a whim, and I'm overbearing. Jim is thoughtful and likes to take his time in making decisions. We shared the problem of nervousness, but Jim took it to a new level. He would start the day pacing. "There's no work. What are we going to do? We can't survive without any work." Back and forth, back and forth. Then a big job would come in. Without missing a step, the pacing would continue. "How can we get all this work done? We can't do this by Friday. What are we going to do?" Box One was a black and white lab. I wanted to invest in the more expensive equipment to do color, but Jim was not interested. He realized that the partnership was destroying our friendship and he wanted out. We not only 215 remained close friends, but Jim became a client of Box One. Jim, as it turned out, made a wise choice. The equipment that I bought didn't work. It was a new system for color processing. The theory may have looked good on paper but its performance was disastrous. It was repaired and replaced and then repaired and replaced again. It never worked. I had built up a reputation based on reliability and superior quality. The toilet seat was up and my reputation was going down. The finance company could not care less if the equipment worked or not. They wanted their money. For ten years I would be paying for something that did not work. This was before the "Lemon Laws." I called lawyer after lawyer. The only recourse was bankruptcy. The business was a sole proprietorship and so it had to be personal bankruptcy. I was allowed to keep my "tools of trade," and so I was able to continue the business. I had to pay the court $500 to buy back the name Box One. We would continue on our saga of rags to almost riches. 216 Chapter 10 Bankrupt! It was as if I had a scarlet "B" on my chest. It created a lot of stress, and it took a heavy toll on Lyn. She had given up her career as a dancer so that she could marry me and raise our children. I had assured her that we would be happy and prosperous, but my positive thinking had obviously lost some credibility. One night, after coming out of the bathroom, Lyn calmly stated, "I just took a whole bottle of Valium." I called a neighbor to watch the children and took her to the hospital to have her stomach pumped. Why would she do this? Through it all, Lyn still seemed to enjoy the time we spent together. She loved our children. She still laughed at my jokes. I helped around the house as much as I could. I often shopped and cooked but that did not change the basic fact that she no longer had control of her life. Lyn had become what she dreaded most, a housewife. Lyn was a dancer. She needed to return to her world. Dancers need to take class. That’s the terminology. Dancers do not go to a class, they take class. Box One had lost its staff. It's 217 difficult to keep people when you can't pay them. So Lyn and I worked out a deal. She would work at Box One doing customer service and also take dance classes. We made arrangements with a woman who took in children in the neighborhood. In the morning, Lyn would take the children to the sitter and then take the train into Manhattan and work until about 2pm, and then take class. After class, it was back to Brooklyn, pick up the kids, cook, clean, you know, the same old routine. During the bankruptcy, the fate of Box One was uncertain and I answered an ad I saw in The New York Times for a photo instructor. I thought it would be for a YMCA or adult education. It turned out to be the New York Institute of Technology in Old Westbury. I got the job. I was not familiar with Long Island and couldn’t believe that an area so close to New York City could be so beautiful. The fine arts building was an old French chateau that had been brought to America brick by brick and reassembled. The problem was that the section used for photography must have been the dungeon. It was dark and damp. There was a large machine dangling from the ceiling and I wondered, "Why don't they turn on the dehumidifier?" Then I looked closer. It was a 218 humidifier. That's probably why the previous teacher left. I can hear him now. "I ordered a DEhumidifier, DEhumidifier.” I love learning and so I was a natural at teaching. Learning is such an enjoyable experience, and teaching is a natural extension of learning. You may think that you know everything about a subject but when you teach it, your students force you to continue learning. When the college learned that I had a background in the theatre, I was asked to teach a film technique class. Then "scene design" was added to my schedule. As a member of the Actors' Equity Association, I was able to get free tickets to many Broadway shows. I would get tickets for my class (there were only six students) and then we would discuss how the sets related to the needs of the play. They took the class as artists or designers but I taught them how to evaluate a play in terms of dramatic content. The emphasis was on the needs of the play more than décor. "Film Technique" was a required course for art majors, and yet no one in the department seemed to know what the class consisted of. The previous teacher had quit and left the country. On the first day of class, I discussed this dilemma with the class. I gave them an assignment of coming up with ideas of what to do with the four hours per week that we would be spending 219 together. We then voted on the various ideas submitted. It was a film technique class so we decided to make a film using the school’s 16mm Bolex. We wrote, directed and filmed a clay animation movie. There was no school budget for this project, so we all pitched in to provide the financing. I was overwhelmed by the imagination and creativity of the class. I provided the photographic knowledge, but everything else was a communal effort. I think we almost had a brilliant film, but we ran out of time and money and it was never completed. One cold, wet evening in the fall, I dropped my keys in the parking lot. The area was covered with leaves and my keys were somewhere on the ground. As I was on hands and knees looking for the keys, a gentleman in a suit and tie asked me what I was doing. After I told him, he got on his hands and knees and helped me look. As we looked, he asked me many questions about the school. I answered them truthfully. He found my keys. When I thanked him, he introduced himself. He was the president of the school. As Box One grew, it became more and more difficult to take time off for teaching. In many respects, I regret giving it up, but I'm proud to say that I eventually paid off all of the debts from the bankruptcy. We had a very good, talented staff, but they spent too much time doing 220 work that did not require skill. We needed a flunky, a gofer. I put an ad in The Village Voice; "FLUNKY NEEDED." The response was overwhelming. Everyone who read the ad was certain that they qualified. We had to photograph each applicant to remember who was who. That Saturday, I was working alone. When I came out of the darkroom, a young lady was sitting in the reception area. "Who are you and how did you get in?" I asked. "My name is Capri; I'm here for the job," she said. "I sweettalked the Super to get in." The first line of her resume certainly got my attention: "Current: Dancer at the Pink Pussycat." She just didn't seem the type. I found out later that she worked under the name "Saint Capri" because she would not do a lot of the things most of the Pink Pussycat dancers did. I can tell you that this girl was one of the smartest people I have ever met. Her mind never took a break. She was a learning machine. Within two years, she was running the lab. She was Indonesian, born in Washington, D.C. while her father was the Ambassador to the U.S. for Indonesia. She was raised in France while her father was Ambassador to France. When it became apparent that the Indonesian 221 dictator, Sukarno, was about to be overthrown, her family returned to Indonesia just long enough to load up six DC-10s with gold bricks and head for Mexico. Of course, I have no idea if that is true, but that is what I was told. She did not want her parents' money. She was going to make it on her own. Her boyfriend was from Colombia. I think his father was a general in the Colombian Army. The boyfriend was a musician who had his own rock band, called "The Four Skins." After Box One moved to a larger location down the street, we had a party every Friday night. It started out with the staff and a few friends, but grew into a social event. Capri's boyfriend's band would play. The studio became a dance floor and hundreds of people would show up. Channel Seven "Eyewitness News" even sent a crew out to film one of our parties. I had no idea as to why these parties were so popular. Lyn told me that coke flowed freely at the parties. I couldn't believe it. I asked her how she knew and she told me it was offered to her on numerous occasions. I asked why it was never offered to me, and Lyn said that everyone was afraid that if I found out, that would be the end of the parties. It was. 222 I would never try any kind of drugs because of my experience with cigarettes. I see young people on the street smoking and I just want to go up to them and pull the cigarettes out of their mouths and yell, "Please, do not do this!" I first started smoking at the age of twelve. Some friends of mine had formed a club called "the pack-a-day club." To belong, you not only had to smoke a pack a day, you had to steal the pack. One day, a friend's mother was out at the store and I was smoking in her living room. I had not noticed when her car pulled into the drive. I had no time to put out the cigarette. I put it in my pocket. His mother waited as long as she could before saying, "Wayne, you better put that cigarette out; I think your pants are on fire." My father always said that if he caught me smoking, he would break my arms and legs. In high school, I quit. It wasn't difficult because I had never inhaled. Why would anyone want to suck smoke into his or her lungs? At Alma College, I attended a party at a frat house. They called it a "Smoker." The cigarette manufacturers gave out free cigarettes. I didn't plan to smoke any but I took home three cartons. Why not? They were free. This time I 223 inhaled. I was hooked within a week and have been trying to quit ever since. I would love to sue, but no lawyer would take the case because I do not want any money, I just want to quit. Put me on an island for a month, an island with booze and women but no cigarettes. Every night, for over forty years, I have sworn to God that I will never smoke another cigarette. Box One's new location was formerly "The New York Institute of Photography." When I turned twelve years old, my father gave me a correspondence course from this school as my birthday present. The school had moved out and Box One had leased the third floor of its building. My new office had been the school president's office. I only wish that my father had lived to see this. He would have been proud. The last few years of my father's life were very difficult. He had been in poor health for a long time. He had lost his restaurant and went from job to job. He could not make ends meet. When my mother had to get a job, he was humiliated. He became mean and bitter. I was not around for most of this; I was off in New York. My brothers and sister told me that he became impossible to live with after I left 224 for New York. He was verbally abusive. My father, like myself, had always been a dreamer. Even though he had never graduated from high school, he never doubted his potential. He felt that greatness was inside him. He followed his dreams, but was only met by failure and frustration. As a family, we were always well fed and clothed and had a nice roof over our heads, but he began to see himself as a failure. To me, that is so sad. I know that he was a good man. He loved his family so much. When his health began to fail and my mother went to work, it was humiliating for him. He was in a lot of pain for a long time. The last time I saw him, I had Michele with me. The hospital would not allow her in his room. He was pushed in a wheelchair to the lobby of the hospital. He could hardly speak. Michele sat on his lap and gave him a big hug. He liked that. I do not know if an autopsy was done, but I was told that he died of a blood clot in his lung. It was during this time, after my father's death, that my mother was able to spend a lot of time visiting with us in New York. She took in a young man as a boarder to fill up some of the empty space in the family house and to provide a 225 little extra income. He would care for my mother's dog Bobo when she visited me. After the dog died, Mom decided to sell the house and move into a small apartment. On the day of the sale, I got the call from my sisterin-law Jan. "Mom's in the hospital. She had a heart attack. She'll be fine, but I just wanted to let you know." Outside of the arthritis in her fingers, Mom was in very good health, but she died later that day. As a child, I was in such a hurry to grow up. By the age of six I referred to my parents as Mother and Father, but as an adult I always remember them as Mommy and Daddy. Lyn never knew my father, but was very close to my mother. We all went to the funeral in Detroit. I feel very close to my siblings but it seems the only times we are together are weddings, funerals, and an occasional Christmas. We live so far apart. Lyn never liked living in Brooklyn. She's a Manhattan person, but the rents were so high and I did not feel that Manhattan was the best place to raise a family, especially a family with three children. Lyn was pregnant again. 226 Christopher William Martens was born May 13, 1976. The plan was to use a midwife, but Chris required an emergency Caesarean. I was not allowed in the operating room and felt that I missed out on something very important. Lyn's previous deliveries were comparatively easy. The Cesarean operation was painful and left a scar. Come hell or high water, Lyn was determined that Christopher would be the last of our children. A few weeks after Lyn and Christopher came home from the hospital, Michele was home on a vacation. We were all going someplace, I don't remember where, so I went to get the car. It had a dead battery. I took the battery out of the car and took it to a nearby station. This all took less than an hour, but when I returned home to explain what had happened, no one was there except Michele. I went out to find Lyn and the children. I was getting frantic. When I found Lyn, she was almost catatonic. She was wandering about the street. She was in shock. Matthew and Shannon were both crying, but Christopher was not making a sound. Lyn had gotten pissed off that I was taking so long and had gone out to look for me. Michele had been acting strange and crying. She did not want to leave the children alone with Michele. She was 227 carrying Christopher in her arms. Lyn was wearing those God-awful platform shoes that were popular at the time. She had tripped and fallen and Christopher landed head first on the sidewalk. I ran into the street and stopped a car. "Please take my wife and baby to the hospital!" I yelled. He did. Christopher had a fractured skull. He was in the hospital for two weeks. Lyn and I took turns spending the night with him, holding his tiny hand. Lyn blamed me for the accident. It was my fault because I should not have left her and the children alone with Michele. She withdrew from me. One night, when I returned from Box One, Lyn was unusually quiet. "I don't know if I should tell you," she said. "Tell me what?" I asked. "Matthew," she said. "What about Matthew?" I asked. "I let Matthew go upstairs to watch a movie at Howard's," she said. Howard was a young man in his late twenties or early thirties. He had been our upstairs neighbor for a long time and had often been our babysitter. "So what happened at Howard's?" I asked. "I think 228 he molested Matthew." "He what?" "I think Howard molested Matthew." "Why do you think that?" "Matthew said that Howard showed him pictures of men with giant penises. He tried to put Matthew's penis in his mouth." I cannot think of many situations in which murder is justified, but sometimes I think that I should have gone upstairs and killed Howard. I would have been let out of prison a long time ago, but no, I knew that murder was a sin. I called the police. Two police officers arrived and Lyn told them what had happened. They wanted to talk to Matthew alone. After a few minutes with Matthew, they dashed upstairs. When Howard responded to the banging on the door, they kicked him down the stairs. As they dragged him to the car, Howard kept screaming, "Lyn, how can you let them do this to me?" There was a court hearing to determine if there was enough evidence for Howard to stand trial. About ten minutes before our case was scheduled to go before the judge, a man came up to me and said that he was the prosecutor. "What happened here?" he asked. Before we could tell him what happened, he was called away. A few moments later someone else came up and said, "I'm going to be handling this case. Tell 229 me what happened." Before we finished telling him, he was called away. The clerk announced our case. As we walked toward the bench, a third person came up and said, "Can you tell me what happened? Never mind, I'll figure it out." The defendant got a high-priced lawyer and our son got a prosecutor who did not even know what the charge was. After I testified, the judge had me escorted out of the courtroom. He did not want my presence to influence Matthew's testimony. Through the little round window in the door, I could see Matthew sitting on the judge's bench. I wanted so much to hear what he was saying. I tried later to get a transcript of the hearing, but it cost $500 and I could not afford it. When I was escorted back into the court, the judge asked to speak with me in his chambers. He said, "I have no doubt that your son is telling the truth. No doubt at all. But, he’s only five years old and New York law does not allow the testimony of a child under twelve years old. Without Matthew's testimony, there is no case. I have no choice but to dismiss the charges." I am pleased to say that the law restricting testimony of children younger than twelve has since been changed. 230 What could we do? How could we live next to the man who had molested our child? First we looked in Connecticut so we could be near Lyn's folks but everything was so expensive and I was planning to return to teaching at NYIT in the fall. There is no easy way to get from Connecticut to Long Island. Perhaps we should look for a place to live on the Island? Much to my surprise, Lyn seemed to like that idea. We got a copy of The Penny Saver, a magazine of classified ads for Long Island. After a few phone calls, we all piled in the car and were off to explore. We drove as far as Northport and then worked our way west, looking at every house or apartment that we could find. At the end of the day, in East Norwich, we found an adorable little Cape Cod for only $600 per month. This would be a big leap from our $87 per month in Brooklyn, but it was cheap compared to everything else we had seen. We signed a one-year lease with an option for a second year. Reality was setting in. 231 232 Chapter 11 The lease on our new home on Long Island did not begin until the fall. Lyn and the children spent the summer with my sister Margaret, in Detroit. While Lyn and the children were in Michigan, I packed up and made arrangements to move. Needless to say, my landlord was ecstatic. Without legal rent control leases, the building was next to worthless. He had offered it to me for $45,000. With a vacancy, especially on the first floor, he could sell the building to a family to use as their primary residence. To show his gratitude, he gave me a check for $700. I have no idea how much he got for the sale of the building, but in 2000, I saw a notice in The New York Times real estate section that listed sample sales in the city. My old apartment was listed. It sold as a condo for $500,000. Not the building, just my old apartment. I packed up everything we owned in cardboard boxes and then drove to Detroit and visited for two weeks before coming back with my family. Everything was timed perfectly. We would drive back on the new Route 80 which would knock off several hours from the Pennsylvania Turnpike route. We would spend 233 the night on the eastern end of Pennsylvania, arrive in Brooklyn in time to meet the movers at 10am, then off to Long Island. I know it's hard to believe, but everything went off without a hitch. Well, almost. This is so embarrassing that it's hard to talk about. We lived in Brooklyn. I don't want to imply that everyone in Brooklyn has roaches, but I would like to point out that it is not unusual for a household in Brooklyn to have roaches. Anyway, we had roaches. Not real bad, but we had them. I had no idea that roaches love corrugated cardboard boxes. The little grooves not only make a perfect home, but the glue provides food. You've heard of roach motels, but my stacks and stacks of boxes left untouched for two weeks in the heat of August were more like Co-op City in the Bronx. Forget Co-op City, this was more like Miami Beach in the wintertime. There were millions of them and we had no choice but to bring them to our new home on the island. Fortunately, a friend told me how to use boric acid. It doesn’t kill them. They just pack up and leave. It worked and we never saw a roach again. I became a commuter. It was bad enough getting up in time to catch the 7:33am train, but half of the time there would be no seats. The real fun part of the move came when I had to teach Lyn how to drive. She's a native New Yorker. She never had any reason to drive before moving to 234 the Island. We could not afford two cars, so in addition to needing to drive any place she needed to go, she would also have to take me to and from the train station. The kids loved living on the island and that made both me and Lyn very happy. Matthew and Shannon got involved in the PAL (Police Athletic League) track team. They had quarter-mile races (the 440) for children five year old and under. Shannon's first race was an eye opener. About fifty little kids running. At the gun, one kid took off like that proverbial bat out of hell. By the halfway point, she was twenty feet ahead of the others. "By God, it's Shannon. Lyn, it's Shannon." She gave out about forty feet from the finish line. She just stopped and rested and then walked across the line. She was last, but that first 400 yards was unbelievable. For a while, I think Shannon was the fastest sprinter on Long Island in her age group. Matthew was our long-distance man. His crowning glory was winning the twelve years and under category at the Manhasset five-mile. An adult friend of mine was in the race. He told me that he thought he was doing well until this little kid zipped past him. Years later, in his early 235 twenties, Matthew Marathon. ran the Long Island If you are a parent, you probably know the feeling I am about to describe. If not, I'm sure you have heard about it. It's when your child is missing, and you pray to God they’re all right, because if they are all right, you’re going to kill them. I got back to Long Island from work one evening and Lyn was a nervous wreck. Matthew was missing. Shannon told us this story about how she and Matthew and a friend of theirs had spent the afternoon with Rich Little, the impersonator. He was staying at Burt Bacharach's Inn, which was right behind us. I called there. "No, Rich Little is not staying here," I was told. Shannon said, "But I was in his room." Shannon and I went over there, and she showed me how to sneak in through the back door. She took me to the room. I knocked on the door. A woman answered. She said that it was indeed Rich Little's room and confirmed that Shannon and Matthew had spent a good part of the day with Mr. Little. Mr. Little had gone into the city for the evening. I told her that my son was missing and she called the hotel management. They explained that celebrities 236 often stayed there but they did not want people to know about it. They offered a limo and chauffeur to go out looking for Matthew. We all started driving around looking for him. The chauffeur asked if he might have gone to the St. Rocco festival down by the beach. I was certain that Matthew would not go there on his own, but decided we should check it out. About two blocks from the festival, I saw Matthew and his friend walking their bikes along the side the road. He's eight years old, it's midnight on a school night, and he's six miles from home. That is justification to murder your child, is it not? Rich Little had nothing to do with Matthew's little escapade. He had met Matthew and Shannon in the local deli and enjoyed their company. They went to his room and played games together and he entertained them. Down the road from us was a large dance club called The Rum Runner. Lyn and I would sometimes hang out there. I was never much of a dancer, but guys were always asking Lyn to dance. It pissed me off a little, but she enjoyed it. She also enjoyed the fact that it was not just dancing that the guys were interested in. 237 One of my new employees was from California and did not know a soul in New York. Lyn and I asked him out to Long Island for a weekend. We went to The Rum Runner. Vince kept looking at all the girls, but he never made a move. So I told him to pick out the best-looking girl in the club. He looked them all over and then pointed. I went over to the girl and said, "My friend just came in from California. I asked him to pick out the most beautiful girl in the club and he picked you. Would you like to meet him?" She said "Really? He picked me? Which one is he? Point him out." I did. She said, "Oh, he's cute. Yes, I would like to meet him." We didn't see Vince for the rest of the weekend. Vince's father had been married several times and had many children. One of Vince's older brothers was forty years older than Vince. One day, while Vince was in his late teens, his father sat him down for a talk. "At your age, you probably think that the female ass is the most important thing in life," his father said. "But when you get to be my age, you will realize that it's not the most important thing. It's the only thing." Our little rental house was behind a mansion on four acres. Lyn became close friends with Elizabeth, the woman who lived there. Elizabeth had just read a new book, Open 238 Marriage. She wanted to experiment with this concept of screwing people other than your spouse and then sitting down and talking about it. The problem was that Elizabeth was not exactly a raving beauty. She would do things like call a plumber and say that something was leaking and she needed emergency service. When the plumber arrived she would be wearing a see through nightgown. When her husband would come home from his law office, she would then "share" her experience. Her husband was a very conservative Wall Street lawyer. He felt uncomfortable when he was not in a suit and tie. She begged him to have an affair. She told him it would be so much fun. They could fuck different people and then tell each other about it. Otto just wasn't interested. That is until one night when we all met at a party. We had mutual friends who lived in a large old house in Woodbury, on Long Island. The founder of The New York Times had built the house and left it to his daughter who was married to our friend, Howard. When they were divorced, all Howard wanted was that house. He remarried a girl twenty-five years younger than him. They had no money and the place was deteriorating at a rapid pace. They had a giant refrigerator that was always full of beer. People just came by and 239 made themselves at home. They were creative, intelligent people, and a joy to be with. At any rate, one night they threw a big party, the kind of party where people jumped into the pool with their clothes on, or were just thrown into the pool. Otto, the Wall Street lawyer, was a big Dolly Parton fan. At the party, he met this zaftig young lady who changed his attitude about life. He had no interest, however, in sharing this experience with his wife. Otto quit his job, experimented with coke, and ultimately became a country and western disk jockey in Nashville, Tennessee. So much for "Open Marriage." Lyn and I didn’t get out to socialize very often and we had gotten into the habit of having a vodka tonic, or two, in the evening. We usually drank Smirnoff vodka. One day, to save a little money, Lyn bought a bottle of Popov Vodka. I tasted it and thought it was awful. I made some comment about buying cheap vodka and put the bottle into an out-of-the-way cabinet. Then one evening, we were watching the show 60 Minutes on TV. They had been running a series on how many different brands of food and beverages were made by the same company and packaged with different labels. There was a clip that showed the machine that bottled Smirnoff vodka. 240 The same liquid was poured into bottles that were labeled Smirnoff, Smirnoff Silver, and Popov. I immediately went and got out the bottle of Popov and made a vodka tonic. Gee, it tasted so much better. One of the reasons for bringing up this story is that it directly relates to the name we gave our new cat. One of our new neighbors was involved with the advertising business and he worked on the Smirnoff ad campaign. They had rented a large field near our new home, to shoot a print ad for Smirnoff. The ad showed a group of young adults having a lot of fun trying to get a little kitten out of a tree. The ad read, "Social climbing Smirnoff style." They had purchased the cat at a Manhattan pet store and when the shoot was over, they didn't know what to do with it. Our neighbor gave it to us. We named it "Popov." Whenever we told people the story of how we got the cat, they would look at us and ask, "If the ad was for Smirnoff, why do you call the cat Popov?" I would say that it was an inside joke. Back at Box One, we had a new employee. He had been a famous graffiti artist called "Chris 217." There was a movie made about him called "Turk 182." Chris was determined to turn around his life and show the world that he could be a productive citizen. 241 I had saved a supply cabinet that had belonged to W. Eugene Smith. Gene had written puns all over it. My favorite was, "The piteous patter of little feat." The cabinet was something that I cherished. One morning I came in a little late, and the cabinet had been scrubbed clean. Chris 217 had been forced by the police to clean up a lot of his own graffiti and he thought he was doing a good deed by cleaning up someone else's. To me, it was as if Picasso had painted a mural on my wall and the house painter painted over it. One evening after work I did some shopping. On the commute back home, I fell asleep and missed my stop. When I woke up, I was in Huntington, the last stop. The train was empty and my new clothes were gone. This must never happen again. The only way to deal with this was to move to Huntington, the end of the line. Besides, our landlady in East Norwich was crazy. Shortly after we moved into the house, the cesspool backed up and the floors were flooded with toilet water. I didn't even know what a cesspool was. When I called her, she not only said that she would not pay to have the cesspool drained, but that she would sue me for damages done to her hardwood floors. She said, "Why should I fix it? It's your shit." 242 Lyn and I started to look in Huntington. I decided that we would buy instead of rent. I had no money, but that had never stopped me before. The bankruptcy could be a problem but it was worth a shot. We found a beautiful four-bedroom home on a half-acre plot with an inground pool. The owners were desperate. This was a time of high interest rates and mortgages were difficult to get. They had sold their house and bought another, but their buyers could not get a mortgage and now they were making payments on both houses. I told the real estate agent that I had no money, but that I knew that I could get a mortgage through my credit union. My membership in Actors' Equity was about to pay off. The big problem was the down payment. I would need $20,000. If the owners would loan me part of the down payment as an under-the-table second mortgage, I would ask my brother for the rest. In those days, the banks did not ask where you got the down payment money. When Lyn and I returned home, the phone was ringing. The owners had accepted my offer. Now, all I had to do was get the mortgage. I went to the Credit Union. For a mortgage, the entire board had to meet, and the decision had to be unanimous. 243 This is not just a credit union; this is a credit union for actors. Actors are at the very bottom of the financial scale. It is the job of this credit union to give credit to people that no bank in the world would lend to. That was my reasoning, and all the board members but one agreed with it. No deal. Then I heard about Greenpoint Savings Bank. They had just started what they called a "no income verification loan." It was designed for self-employed people such as myself. It had a higher interest rate. Greenpoint came to the conclusion that interest rates were going to drop and real estate values were going to soar. They felt that this new loan would not only provide higher interest rates, but even if the mortgage went into default, they would make money on the foreclosures. I got a mortgage. I was a homeowner. My crazy landlady refused to give back our security deposit. I sued. We had a meeting with a judge to try to arrange a pre-trial settlement. When the landlady arrived the judge said, "Betty, it's so good to see you. How's Frank? How are the children?" I asked, "Isn't the judge supposed to disqualify himself in this situation?" He said no. This was not a trial. We were going to reach a settlement. “Here's the 244 settlement,” he said. “Betty, you pay this guy half of what he wants. You, accept half and we can all go home.” I needed the money, so I said, "I'll take half if I get it now. I don't want to wait." Betty wrote a check and we all went home. Betty stopped payment on the check. I sued again. This time it almost went to trial. Fate had it that while waiting in the courtroom, I was sitting next to the lawyer who was representing my landlady. He was thumbing through his file and I saw photos of damage that was done before I moved into the house. I leaned over and said to the lawyer, "If you are planning to use those photographs in this case, I would like to spare you some humiliation. My field is photography and I can offer a chemical analysis that will prove that those photos were printed before I moved into the house." He got up and walked over to talk to Betty. They talked for a long time and he seemed to be getting angry. He then came back with a check for the full amount. He assured me that it would not bounce this time. 245 246 Chapter 12 The train from Huntington left a little earlier, but I always got a seat and the train was usually waiting. I didn't have to stand on a freezing platform. There was, however, one problem. Matthew and Shannon had grown very attached to their PAL track team. Huntington, a much larger township, didn’t have a track team. When I suggested to Lyn that we form our own track team, she thought I was nuts. I sat down at the typewriter and wrote a press release about a children's track team being organized in Huntington and sent it to the Long Island newspaper, Newsday. We needed to set up a meeting place, and once again I turned to the church. The local Presbyterian church offered its facilities for an organizational meeting. Newsday printed the press release and about eighty people showed up at the church for the meeting, including parents and members of other racing associations that wanted to help. We formed a team and called it "The Huntington Flash." Box One donated T-shirts and I wanted the name to have some relationship to photography. We had sixteen members ranging from six to twelve years old. Lyn became the team manager; she organized and communicated. We participated in events held all over Long Island. We did this to make our kids happy, but made a lot of other 247 kids happy in the process. Within a few years, the team became so popular that it was dominating Lyn's free time. She wanted out and we turned the team over to the local YMCA. While Lyn was running the track team, I was traveling back and forth between New York and Huntington. People who commute every day on the same train, in the same car, often develop close relationships, especially in the bar car. To this day, some of my closest friends are people who I met on the train. What makes this interesting is that they were all ultraconservatives. I was their token liberal. On the first of each month there was a mad scramble to get monthly commuter tickets. In order to ease the congestion, the railroad put in automated machines to dispense monthly tickets billed to credit cards. The first time I used one, I had difficulty finding the slot where the ticket came out. When I figured it out and went to take out my ticket, there were eight other tickets in addition to mine. The name on all the other tickets was the same, a Chinese name. I could just picture the frustration of this man, probably late for a train, trying over and over again to get a ticket out of the machine and then dashing to the train without a ticket. To add salt to the wound, he was billed $1120 on his charge card. I called information and his number was 248 listed, but he spoke no English. I called the Chinese consulate, but they were of no help. I called a train buddy who was a buyer in the Orient. He managed to get the tickets back to the owner and he was able to get a refund on the extra tickets. The train’s bar car often had entertainment. One rider did Al Jolson imitations. It turned out that he was a singing waiter. Another man, in a green suit, would stand up and shout, "Ladies and gentlemen, it's show time." He would then proceed to tell jokes and sing songs. I always wondered: Did he wear the same suit every day or did he have a closet filled with green suits? As citizens of the United States, we are proud of our capitalist system. The fact that the majority of us don’t have any capital with which to participate is often overshadowed by the fact that, as overwhelming as the odds may be, there is a chance that a poor working slob can beat the system and become rich. Box One seemed to be on such a path. It started with no money and no clients. The odds did indeed seem to be overwhelming. I recall reading a story in the business section of The New York Times about two young men who invented the folding baby stroller. In the article, the young entrepreneurs made reference to starting their business without 249 any money, only about three hundred thousand dollars. I thought to myself, "These guys have no concept of what having no money means." My favorite on this subject was an interview in Playboy Magazine with John Paul Getty. He said that he started with no money. He took the measly sixteen million he inherited from his father and turned it into a fortune. Box One never had a salesperson. We grew from word of mouth. We placed flyers and posters on trees and lampposts. At this time, we had a number of clients in the field of dance, including Dance Magazine, The Joffrey Ballet and the Twyla Tharp Company. Dance photography is very difficult because of the extreme differences between highlights and shadows that result from the spotlights that are often placed on the dancers. The placement of the feet and hands of a dancer was critical, but would often be lost in the shadows. I had concocted a special developing formula, which would keep detail in the shadows. This helped Box One gain a great deal of popularity in the world of dance. This popularity came to an abrupt halt when a false story of a Box One screw-up circulated throughout New York. One of the leading dance photographers in New York, who will remain nameless, called me after he received his film back from 250 processing at Box One. He explained that this recent shoot was of a once-in-a-lifetime dance concert and was incredibly important. The problem was that he fucked it up royally. He said that this could be the end of his career, and then he said, "Please forgive me, but I am going to tell my client that Box One fucked up the film in the processing." What could I say? That I would tell everyone the truth and ruin his career? Box One was growing at a rapid pace. We would survive. We did lose at least one client as the result of a screw-up. I had been trying for years to get American Airlines as a client. Once a month I would write a note or make a phone call to Bob Takas, the AA head photographer. Much to my surprise, one day he called me and said, "Let's have lunch." At lunch, he explained that he was losing confidence in the lab he had been using. He said, "I don't know when it will happen, but sometime in the future I'll give you a try." It was several months later that he called. I was in Detroit for my mother's funeral. The lab manager called me and said, "We got a call from Bob Takas at American Airlines. He sent ten negatives and wants 8x10 prints delivered to the Americana Hotel by 2pm." I said, "Make sure that they are beautiful prints and keep me posted." The lab manager called back a few hours later with the devastating news. The job 251 was done on time and delivered to a suite at the Americana. A press conference was in progress. As our messenger entered the room, Mr. Takas said, "The photographs have just arrived. I'll pass out a set of them to each of you." He then opened the envelope and the egg began to drip down his face. On his order, he had written, "10 negs, 10 8x10 @." He had wanted ten prints each of the ten photos. One set for each member of the press at the conference. We had only printed one of each. He was very angry. We never did a job for American Airlines again. We had made an inroad in the publishing field. While still in Brooklyn, an art director from Lebhar-Friedman had seen one of our posters on a tree. He tried us out of convenience. He lived down the street. But soon, we were doing all the work for Lebhar-Friedman, as well as Ziff-Davis and Harcourt, Brace, Javonavitch, two other publishing giants. I received a letter from the editor of Popular Photography Magazine. He was interested in our services and wanted more info on me and the lab. I sent him a long, detailed letter. He sent it back to me with blue pencil marks all over it pointing out all the misspelled words. Some things never change. Box One worked with Popular Photography for many years. Many of their staff went back to the days of my youth when I read 252 the magazine religiously. It was wonderful to work with people whom I admired so much. Box One also did a lot of jobbing work. Work that other labs didn’t want or considered unprofitable, they sent to Box One. Duggal and Stewart, two of the city's larger custom labs, were steady clients. One day I received a job from Stewart for a black and white negative and print to be made of a 4x5 color transparency. The client was CTW, the Children's Television Workshop. The photo was of the cast of Sesame Street. I thought this strange because CTW was one of our better clients. Why would they be sending work to Stewart Labs? I showed the job to Capri and she said that we had been doing a lot of conversion negs from Stewart Labs with Sesame Street characters in the photos. I called our contact at CTW and asked why she had been sending conversion negs to Stewart. I pointed out that Stewart charged $15 per conversion neg and Box One only charged $8. She explained that she had sent a transparency to Box One and one to Stewart, and that Stewart's neg was vastly superior. I asked her if both labs were sent the same transparency. She said, "no." "That explains it," I said. "You were comparing apples and oranges." I then told her that Box One did all of Stewart's conversion negs, so the sample that she sent to Stewart, which she thought was so superior, was actually done by Box One. She 253 was a bit stunned, but from that time on, Box One got all of CTW's work. Another client that sent us work through Stewart was Madison Square Garden. Stewart's lab was way uptown and Madison Square Garden was less than a block away from Box One. One day, Ramón Stewart, the owner, called me and said, “It's a pain in the ass to send a messenger downtown to Madison Square Garden to pick up work, and then bring it all the way uptown to Stewart only to send it back downtown to Box One. Then you return it uptown, only to have us put the work in a Stewart envelope and send it back downtown to Madison Square Garden. Why don't we give you a bunch of Stewart envelopes and then your messenger can pick up the work and say he’s from Stewart? You can put the finished work in a Stewart envelope and return it to the Garden.” That made sense to me, so I said OK. This worked out fine for a long time, but Capri apparently, on more than one occasion, sent the work to MSG in a Box One envelope. One day, I was buzzed on the intercom in my office. "There's a George Kalinsky here to see you." George was the head photographer for Madison Square Garden. I went to the door, introduced myself and asked him in. He said that he was a bit confused. He had been sending work 254 to Stewart Labs, but it often came back in Box One envelopes. Was Box One doing the work? I told him yes. He said, “I've looked over your price list and your prices are quite a bit lower than Stewart's.” I said, “Yes they are.” He said, “Is there any reason why I can't just send the work directly to you?” He was very surprised when I said there was a reason. I explained that Box One did a lot of work for other labs and we would not continue to get that work if other labs feared that we would try to steal their clients. George was disappointed but understood the ethics of the situation. Fortunately for George, but unfortunately for Box One, Stewart Labs went belly up, owing Box One a lot of money. Madison Square Garden became another of Box One's longtime clients. There are many things in life that I don’t understand. I don’t understand why anyone would buy a Gucci bag or a Rolex watch. For a long time, retailers in New York were selling "Gucci toilet paper" for $10 per roll. It had a big "G" on each square. It was taken off the market when it was discovered that it was counterfeit. Counterfeit toilet paper? Another thing that I don’t understand is the success of the other large lab Box One did jobbing work for, Duggal Color Projects. At Box One I had always tried to keep the prices competitive. I naively thought a lower price would be an inducement to new clients. 255 Baldev Duggal, the founder and owner of Duggal, the most successful lab in New York history, had just the opposite approach. If the service is not selling, raise the price. I don't know why Mr. Duggal went into the photo lab business. Most people go into a business because they feel that they have a talent and or knowledge of the service to be performed. Mr. Duggal, to the best of my knowledge, had no understanding of the photographic process at all. I refer to him as Mr. Duggal because he was insulted if anyone refered to him by his first name. Even his brother called him Mr. Duggal. Box One did all of Duggal's black and white work. We would charge him $6 for a process and proof of a roll of film and he would mark it up to $16 for his clients. I do believe that the quality of work done by Box One helped Duggal establish its reputation for quality, and yet, when Box One raised its price from $6 to $8, our clients yelled and screamed while Duggal's clients stood in line to pay $16. Duggal's mark-up averaged about 150 percent over Box One's prices and yet Mr. Duggal was always demanding lower prices from Box One. It was a glorious day when I could afford to tell Duggal to find another lab to do his work. The goal of doing business, however, is to make money and one cannot help but respect a man who was as successful as Mr. Duggal. 256 Box One opened a second location. It was located near Duggal. I called it Box One Two. I put an ad in the trade magazine, Photo District News. The ad had a picture of a girl in boxing trunks, wearing boxing gloves, with a towel around her neck which covered her breasts. The caption read, "Box One delivers the One-Two Punch." It went on to compare Box One's prices with Duggal's. Mr. Duggal called me. He was very angry. You must understand that unlike the typical hard-driving businessman, this man was very laid-back. His office didn’t even have a desk, let alone a file cabinet. There was not a paper or a pen. You had the feeling that he sat in his office and meditated. So, for him to be angry was rare. He told me that he was highly offended to have his name on the same page as a nearly naked woman. He asked me to not run the ad again. I thought that he was seriously offended, and I promised not to run the ad again. Duggal had never previously advertised in the Photo District News, but the next month he had fourteen full pages of advertising. He has had the back cover of the magazine ever since and many of the ads have featured naked women. I think I should have gotten a sales commission from the Photo District News. Box One, previously a sole proprietorship, was incorporated in 1979. Many 257 lawyers and accountants advise new small business owners to incorporate, but I never agreed with that concept. The advantage of being incorporated is to avoid personal responsibility for the debts of the company. Unfortunately, this advantage is negated because financial institutions never issue credit to new corporations without personal guarantees. To me, it only makes sense to incorporate after the business is making more money than is needed by the owner for personal income. One of the first problems that I encountered after being incorporated was collecting bad debts. Photographers are notorious deadbeats. All aspects of the photography business are very competitive and a lab will often extend credit under dubious circumstances. When I had to resort to litigation to collect bad debts, I would save a lot of money by doing it "pro se," without an attorney. Once, after returning from the courthouse, I received a call from another lab. One of my clients had used me for a credit reference and the other lab was calling to verify this client’s credit history. It was the very same client from whom I had just received a $3000 judgment for non-payment. This guy had just lost to me in court and yet, he uses me as a credit reference. I rolled on the floor laughing. 258 As a corporation, I could no longer sue without hiring an attorney. Considering that most New York lawyers would not give you the time of day for less than $2000, this made the collection of debts under $2000 nearly impossible. As the president of the corporation, I sold Box One's delinquent accounts receivable to Wayne Martens, the individual. That way I, as an individual, could sue Box One's clients who failed to pay their bills. The Civil Court of the City of New York refused to accept the transfer of these accounts into my personal name and so I sued the Civil Court of the City of New York. Truth is indeed stranger than fiction. I won. A huge debt that I never collected was from one of the many bogus "modeling agencies" in the New York area. These companies place ads in newspapers for models. When people answer the ad, they are told they have a great potential for success in the modeling industry, but first they need a portfolio. They are then conned into signing a contract for a modeling portfolio. The photos are done on an assembly line basis. Take a picture, change the outfit, take another picture, change the outfit, smile, look sad, show attitude, pay $500, and never hear from the agency again. One of these questionable agencies promised Box One thousands of dollars of print work. It sounded too good to turn down. All work 259 was to be C.O.D. The first order was paid by credit card. The second order was paid by credit card. The third order was humongous. A complete portfolio of 11x14 prints for about 300 aspiring models. The day this large job was completed was the same day that I was notified by the credit card company that the modeling agency owner claimed the signature on his charges was forged. When an employee tried to pick up the new work, I refused to give them the work without cash payment. When notified of my cash only decision, the owner insisted that there must be a mistake, but the work was never picked up. Months later, I read an article in the paper about this agency and how it had scammed a lot of unsuspecting prospective models. I called the newspaper and told the reporter of my experience with the agency. I said that I had about 3000 photographic prints of these young people who had paid the agency for portfolios and never got them. I offered to give the photos to the models free of charge. The pictures were of no value to me and giving them to the models made a lot of people happy. I, on the other hand, was not very happy. I needed a little fun in my life. Our home in Huntington was near the Sound and I decided to buy a boat. The whole family went to a dealer in Port Jefferson and looked at some speedboats. On the way back, we all discussed the pros and 260 cons and decided to buy a little "bow rider." When I called the salesman, he told me that for the next week he would be at a boat show in Hicksville. Hicksville was much closer to us than Port Jefferson. He suggested that we come out to the show and sign the contracts for the boat. That was a big mistake. Matthew, Shannon and I went to the show. We wanted to look around before going to sign the papers. The kids ran off on their own. I was walking around and I saw this cabin cruiser. It was beautiful. I went aboard. Wow. It slept six. It had a galley and head. I went up to the salesman and said, "I'd like to buy that boat." He looked at me and said, "Yeah, sure," and walked away. I tried again, and again he ignored me. So I went to another salesman and we drew up a contract. The first salesman couldn't believe it. "I thought you were joking," he said. I went and found Matthew and Shannon and showed them the boat. They loved it, but they also could not believe that I bought it. If you know anyone who has owned a boat, you know the old saying that the happiest two days in a boat owner's life are the day he bought his boat and the day he sold his boat. How true. How true. 261 Lyn's father's health was beginning to deteriorate. His long daily commute from Connecticut was getting more and more difficult. The Walshs decided to return to New York City. They found a small one-bedroom apartment on the upper west side. They both loved New York so much; I never really understood why they moved to Connecticut in the first place. Lyn's younger sister, Claire, left her husband, John. He hit her and she said, "One strike and you're out." It took a lot of guts but she knew that she couldn’t live with a man who would even think of hitting his wife. Claire and John had been very close to Lyn and me. John was not a bad man. He was a classic case of someone taught from childhood to reach for the stars. When he discovered that there was no way he could come close to reaching his goals, his ego was crushed; he couldn’t deal with the failure. They had been living in New Haven, Connecticut with their two children. Elizabeth was just a baby. She and Claire moved in with her folks in their new, small, Manhattan apartment. Her son Gabriel was close to Matthew’s age. He moved in with my family on Long Island. Gabe was the most polite young man I have ever known. When served a food he didn’t recognize or didn’t want to try, he would pretend to taste it and then say, "Oh, this is good. 262 I really like it. I just don't care for any right now." Unfortunately, Dr. Walsh’s health continued to deteriorate. He had always worked so hard and put in such long hours. I could never understand how or why the family had no savings or reserve of any kind. He had a private practice as a dermatologist and was on staff at several hospitals and clinics but, if he was unable to work, there was no way they could afford to stay in New York City. Mom Walsh had an aunt who was once wealthy, Aunt Marion. She had fallen on hard times but owned a large old house in Genoa, New York, just far enough away from Ithaca to have missed out on the real estate boom that was going on in the area. The house was empty and so the Walshs moved in, along with Claire and her children. Shortly after the Walshs moved to Genoa, Michele's school in Liberty closed. She was transferred to The Upstate School for Children in Oneonta, New York. It was a lovely building and the staff seemed well-qualified. They even had an indoor swimming pool. Michele would have her own room. On the surface, this place was head and shoulders above the Beaumont School in Liberty. 263 Michele had been at the new school about two months when we decided to go visit Lyn's folks in Genoa. Michele's school was only about 60 miles from Genoa, so I planned to go and see her. As soon as Michele saw me, she ran to me and began pulling at me. She wanted to go home. I couldn't take her home. What could I do? There was a big rainstorm. We couldn't even go outside. She began to scream and pull out her hair. She started to bang her head against the wall. Two big men came out of nowhere and grabbed her and pulled her out of the room. I returned in the rain to Lyn's folks' home. I was not crying. I was screaming. I could not bear the pain. When I returned, I went directly to bed. Lyn never even came up to see me or ask what had happened. Each time that I went to Oneonta, it got worse. Each time Michele and I went for a drive, she hoped that we were going home. When we would return, the same two bruisers, who had dragged her out of the room before, would come out and pry Michele's fingers loose from whatever she had grabbed on to, and carry her kicking and screaming back to the school. She had no hair left and had to wear a helmet to protect her head. Her face was contorted and disfigured. I found out later that 264 they were giving her massive amounts of Thorazine, the same drug they use to calm horses. As often as I could, I would bring Matthew and/or Shannon with me on these trips to visit Michele. Their company helped ease the pain. Mom and Dad Walsh were not doing well in Genoa. This house had been in the family for ages but no one took care of it; it was falling apart. There were massive holes in the roof. Upstate winters can be brutal and Claire felt that the folks could not survive a second winter in that house. Claire had a good job in the area and wanted to stay, but she asked me if there was anything I could do to help the folks. No one else in the family had any money and so it was up to me to do something. Greenpoint Savings Bank had been right. Real estate prices on Long Island had soared. In the few years that we owned our house it had more than doubled in value. My under-the-table second mortgage had been paid off so I took a new second mortgage and used the money for the down payment on a lovely little house in Centerport. Adorable may be a better choice of words. It was a very old two-bedroom house on a property that was split into three levels. The previous owner was an architect. He had completely rebuilt the house. 265 We all knew that the Walshs would not accept anything that hinted of charity. I came up with this idea: I would say that I had bought the house as an investment. It was important to have someone live in it that I could trust to protect my investment. It's doubtful that they believed that, but they moved in. The rent was to be $300 per month. The mortgage payments were $800 for the new house and $400 per month on the second mortgage on my house that I used for the down payment. It doesn't take a genius to figure out that I didn’t do this for financial gain. To make matters worse, I never collected the $300 per month rent. I thought that they were not paying it and I was not about to say anything. As it turned out, Lyn's mother had given the money to Lyn each and every month. Lyn kept it and never said a word to me about it. When I found this out, I set up a savings account for each of the kids and asked Mrs. Walsh to deposit $100 a month into each account. That worked out very well. A few years later, Aunt Marion passed away. She was a fascinating woman. She had owned a large farm equipment company in upstate New York that had fallen on hard times. She still had an estate of modest size. Lyn's mother was the sole benefactor but, much to my surprise, I was named as the executor. Aunt Marion trusted that, as a businessman, I would 266 make sensible investments and see to it that the estate grew rather than dissipated. Lyn's brother Bill was a working actor and singer. He had worked in Cats on Broadway. He had married into a family of considerable wealth. His wife was a bit domineering and did not trust my investment abilities. It was true that I had never invested in anything in my life with the exception of my own business and two houses. Laura, Bill's wife, brought in a financial advisor. She had no authority to do so, but Lyn's mother thought it was a good idea. Everyone in the family wanted their mother to be able to do anything she wanted with the money. This really put me on the spot. The only reason Aunt Marion named me as the executor was to prevent Lyn's mother from having control of the money. If I did my job as executor, I would offend everyone in the family. "Just let my mother do whatever she wants with the money," Lyn told me. Well, a financial advisor was helping her. It couldn't be all that bad. I had wanted to put the money in real estate. The advisor said, "No. Real estate has peaked. It can only go down." So I stepped aside and let the advisor call the shots. During the next two years, Long Island real estate values doubled and the financial planner’s investments depreciated by 25 percent. 267 My business was doing well, but our overhead was so high that we had no money. At this point I was paying over $6000 per month for the business' rent and three mortgages. Instead of receiving a rental income from the Centerport property, I had lost about $30,000 in potential income by providing Lyn's parents with a place to live. I needed money to invest in new equipment for Box One. I had a chance to buy a brand new Royal Print Processor for less than half price. This was a black and white paper processor. We had one, but it was getting old. A new one would cost $24,000. This one was still in its original crate for $10,000. I asked Lyn's mother for a loan of $10,000 at an interest rate of 12 percent, with a mortgage on the house they were living in as collateral. She said, "No." This stunned me. How could she say no after all I had done for her? I was not asking that she pay back any of the $30,000 that I had spent on her behalf. I was asking for a secured loan with interest. I asked that she reconsider. She did, and reluctantly loaned me the $10,000, but she told all of her children, including my wife, that even though she loaned me the money, she really didn’t want to do it. So everyone in the family, including my wife, was suspicious now of my motives. 268 I continued to rent the house to Mom and Dad Walsh at a substantially lower than market rate rental and I was paying them a good interest on their loan to me. Yet, I seemed to be the bad guy? Go figure. Unfortunately, the Walshs were very isolated on Long Island. They had no friends and Lyn and I were working most of the time. Dr. Walsh’s health had continued to decline and Mrs. Walsh decided to move to Ithaca. There was a nursing home in Ithaca that would take Dr. Walsh as a residential patient on his veteran's pension. Mrs. Walsh grew up in the Ithaca area and still had friends there. She decided to liquidate her inheritance and give the money to her children. I advised against this, but once again all her children said, "For Christ's sake, let her do what she wants." Dr. Walsh could not receive the government assistance they needed because their financial holdings were too large. That was the motivation for giving the money to the children. I tried desperately to point out that home ownership would not be included in the government's calculations. She could liquidate her assets and invest in a house or condo. This way she would get the government assistance for 269 the nursing home and have no rent to pay, only real estate taxes, which are low in that area. She would have the investment in her home as security, and the value of the home would almost certainly increase as time went by. She would always have the option, in an emergency, of getting a home equity loan. No one wanted to hear it. I was told to mind my own business. That really hurt. I only wanted what I thought would be best for Lyn's parents. All of this must have been a massive error in communication. I considered the Walsh family to be my own family. I loved and respected them all. They were good, intelligent, creative people. I don't believe, to this day, that anyone in the family realizes that I spent and ultimately lost a lot of money on their behalf. I don’t understand why they were so outraged by my request for the loan and understand even less why they seemed to resent my financial advice. When the estate was liquidated and given to the children, the $10,000 second mortgage on the Centerport house was transferred to Lyn's name and given to her as part of her inheritance. This really pissed her off. To Lyn, anything that I earned was "family" money; anything that she earned was "her" money. This money was from her mother, and so it was "her" money, and she 270 did not want her money tied up in a mortgage. Lyn didn’t have much understanding of financial matters, but she was certain that I had done something to prevent her from getting all of her inheritance. She was out for revenge and she knew how to hurt me. She no longer laughed at my jokes. 271 272 Chapter 13 It was 1978. Small computers were just coming on to the market. Radio Shack and Texas Instruments both offered computers for under $500. I knew nothing about computers but was interested in getting one for the business. I discussed this with a computer programmer friend from the train. He said, "No, they are way too small. They're just toys." He knew of a new, more sophisticated, small computer made by Ohio Scientific. It cost about $3,000, but would save the business a lot of time and aggravation. His experience was all on main frames. He recognized that small computers were going to be a hot item. He wanted to get experience on one. He said that if I bought it, he would write all the software I needed. I didn't know what software was, but it sounded like a good idea. After being on a waiting list for three months, my friend called me and said, "I've canceled the order at Ohio Scientific. Radio Shack has a new computer called the Model II. It's head and shoulders above everything else on the market." "Radio Shack?" I asked. "I thought you said they were toys." "Trust me," he said. Now I was on the waiting list at Radio Shack. By the time the computer arrived, my 273 friend had divorced his wife, quit his job and moved to New Jersey. I had put $3600 into a computer that I had no idea what to do with. I still didn’t know what software was, but was told that there would not be any available for the Model II for at least a year. I decided to take a self-taught crash course in computer science. The first thing I learned was that my computer was worthless without a disk storage system and a printer; another $7000. This was big bucks. I would have to learn how to make this computer work for me, or die trying. I studied "Basic." X=X+1, For Z = 1 to EOF(2), If, Then, Else. I've always been awful at math, but once I realized that computers run on logic, not math, I had it made. Computers are dumb. They only know what the programmer teaches them; they only do as they are told. Now I knew what software was. Software was the master. Software told the computer what to do, how to do it, and when to do it. I began writing my own software. My accounting package was finished four months before Radio Shack's version came onto the market. I liked mine a lot better. Both The New York Post and the trade magazine Photographic Processing wrote articles 274 on my "Do it yourself" software. The article in The Post had a photo of me, my computer, and two lovely young ladies in bathing suits. The New York Post always had a marked propensity toward bathing beauties. I would continue writing and upgrading my software for almost twenty years. I sold my software to a company called Symplex. They specialized in equipment for custom labs. My software was called "Data /Lab." There was a big photo convention in Miami, Florida, put on by the Photographic Marketing Association, the PMA show. Symplex paid me to present my software at the show. The whole family went. We stopped in Orlando at Disney World. When we all got to the motel in Miami, the first thing the kids did was jump in the pool. The following day, Shannon and Christopher both came down with the measles. The motel manager had a fit over Shan and Chris being in the pool and asked us to move to another motel. They drained and cleaned the pool. This was an omen of what was to come at the convention. My software ran on the Radio Shack Model II. Radio Shack had agreed to supply me with computers and the equipment 275 that I needed. The computers did not arrive until the last day of the show and then it turned out they had not sent the necessary cables. I spent a lot of time at the show looking at other exhibits. To close the convention, there was a big party. Lyn and I got a babysitter and went to it. Lyn likes to go off on her own at parties. When she returned, she had made three friends. She introduced them to me: A man and his wife, and another man with a thick German accent. You could see the look of disappointment on the German man's face when she introduced me as her husband. We all left the party and continued drinking at a Miami bar. We had not talked shop and I had no idea who they were or what they did. Toward the end of the evening, one of them asked me, "Did you see anything at the show that you wanted to buy?" I said that I would love to get an Ektachrome processor for my lab, but they were all way out of my price range. It was then that I learned that the German man was one of Germany's foremost photographic equipment manufacturers. The other man was his U.S. distributor. He said that they needed to break into the New York market. They would loan Box One a processor if we would let them use it as a demo in New York. What seemed to be a total waste for "Data/Lab" turned into a good deal for Box One. 276 When the hard drive was invented, I bought two of them. They weighed about 45 pounds each and held a whopping eight megs of data. Box One upgraded its computers to Tandy Model 6000s. These operated on Unix and were the first small computers that could be networked. I had to rewrite all of my software. By far, Box One had the most sophisticated computer system of any photo lab in the country. Tandy stopped making the Model 6000, and as new hardware came on the market, none of it was compatible. I had no choice but to switch to the IBM PC clones, which required all of my software to be rewritten again. By this time, I was sick of learning new systems and new ways of programming. I knew that it would be a neverending process; I would always need to learn a new system and rewrite my programs. I decided to use the last version of my programs even after my computers were considered to be antiques. Today, when I need a program, I buy it, just like everyone else. I studied computers only to learn how to get the computer to do what I wanted it to do. I have no doubt that, if I had taken a class in computer science, I would have flunked it or dropped out. 277 There was an article in The New York Times about an old friend of mine from Detroit. If you haven't noticed, most of my old friends are from Detroit. The article said that he was doing very well and living in New York. I decided to look him up. I had to do a bit of research, but I got his office number and gave him a call. His secretary was very nice. I explained to her that I was an old friend from Detroit. She said, "I'm sure that Ivan would love to talk to you, but he's in kind of a jam right now and I really don't think that he's going to be able to call you back." The next day the headlines read: "Ivan Boesky Indicted for Fraud." She was right; he didn't call me back. For readers who are too young to remember Ivan Boesky, he was arrested, found guilty of insider trading, and sentenced to three and one half years in prison and fined $100 Million. Ivan went to Wayne University and had done a bit of acting. He was the manager of his parents’ bar, The Brass Rail, the longest bar in Michigan. It was around the corner from The Vanguard Playhouse, and I used to hang out there. Ivan showed me his file on rich young women. He was determined to marry someone filthy rich. He even offered to get me in on the action by fixing me up with some of his rejects. He kept a file on every rich girl in the Northeast. 278 It contained financial data, personal interests, family tree, things like that. Maybe I should have listened to him. The Brass Rail was a bar and restaurant upstairs and a strip joint downstairs. At that time almost every bar in Detroit had a strip show. One night while sitting at a booth, I saw a young woman walking down the aisle. This is why I mentioned that The Brass Rail had the longest bar in Michigan. I got to take a good look as she was coming my way. I was all prepared to turn my head so that I could watch her as she passed by, but she stopped in front of me and I found myself staring at her on an eye-to-crotch level. "Are you Wayne?" she asked. "Yes," I said. "Hi, I'm Bambi. Ivan thought that you and I had a lot in common, and thought that maybe you would like to take me out after my show." I don't care what anyone says. Ivan Boesky will always be a great humanitarian in my book. One night, at a different bar, in a different life, I was crying in my beer. I was at the Canterbury Ales in Huntington, Long Island. I was feeling sorry for myself because Michele needed me so much and there was nothing I could do. A man sitting next to me inquired about my sadness. I told him about Michele. He said that he knew someone who could help. I had heard that 279 one so many times. He asked for my phone number, but I was certain that nothing would come of it. Michele had become so self-destructive that she had to be transferred to another school. This one was in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. Soon Michele would be twenty-one and state financial aid would end. What would I do? The courts had forced most of the state institutions to close, and placement had to be found for all of the institutions' “clients”. There was no place for them to go. The state was financing small homes and group home living for the handicapped, but local residents were burning them down as fast as they could be built. No one wanted “retarded” people in their neighborhoods. Six years after my night of self-pity at the Canterbury Ales, I received a phone call. "You don't know me," he said, "but years ago I made a promise to a friend of mine. I promised him that I would find a good place for your daughter, Michele. I have the funds to open a group home in Manorville, New York on Long Island. All the openings but one must be filled from the state institutions. I saved that one spot for Michele." The man on the phone was Walter Stockton. He headed an organization called Independent Group Home Living, IGHL. I had 280 never heard of him or IGHL. He made reference to a friend of his. I don’t remember his name, but he was a psychology professor at the University of Long Island, C.W. Post. This professor had called Stockton six years previously and told him of my dilemma. He referred to me as a friend; he did not mention that we had only met once, at a bar. Stockton was moved by my story and remembered it all those years later. This was a lifetime placement in a beautiful home in the woods not far from where I lived. Michele could come home for weekends. The law required Michele to be interviewed before formal acceptance to the school. I drove up to Pittsfield and picked her up. At the interview, one of the teachers dropped a piece of paper on the floor. I was proud of Michele when she got up from her chair, picked up the paper and returned it to the teacher. It's such a small thing, but it reinforced my feelings that Michele was not an idiot; there was some reason why she was the way she was. There was a wonderful human being inside her that, for some unknown reason, could not get out. The bottom line is that after twenty years of writing and calling and pleading for help, it finally came as the result of getting drunk and sharing my tears with a stranger at the bar. 281 Lynne was not overjoyed at the prospect of Michele coming home more often. Lyn was now spelling her name Lynne. I do not know if there was really any significance in the change of the spelling of her name. I checked her birth certificate and it read Lynn. For some reason, I felt that this change symbolized the end of our relationship. Maybe Lyn loved me but Lynne did not. By this time, I had told her that I loved her so many times that the words had taken on a new meaning. My love for her seemed to represent all that was wrong in her life. She hated to hear those words. Lynne was, by now, well known on the Island as a dance teacher. She had her own friends and her own life. She returned to school and received her bachelor's degree at C.W. Post. She loved our children and was an excellent mother, but she saw me as the enemy. She began to tell me to find someone else. "Don't make me feel guilty for not loving you," she would tell me. "Go out and have an affair; just don't tell me about it." She even talked about "fixing me up" with someone. It's one thing to feel lonely because you are alone. It's something else to feel lonely because the person you love, who is in the same room, refuses to acknowledge your existence. 282 I am reminded of a poem that I read while at Alma College. I do not know the author, but part of it read, "I find my loneliness selling itself the image of you, sitting there, in an empty chair, sipping from an empty glass, and I begin to hate a little the man and woman who make a plaything of a bed." But for me, the chair is not empty. She is sitting there, she is sipping from the glass, she is lying in my bed, but I am alone. Lynne and I began to fight over everything. Our biggest fights were over napkins. She bought those little toy napkins that are used at children's parties. I wanted a napkin that you could open up and put on your lap. How could two intelligent people allow their lives to be destroyed over napkins? I would buy full-sized dinner napkins and she would throw them out. Our second most common argument was about garbage. I didn’t like to mix wet garbage with dry garbage. Raccoons or dogs or something would get into our trash every night and spread it all over the driveway. I would save old milk containers for wet garbage. Anything wet and gooey could be scraped into milk containers and they wouldn't drip. This would cut down on the odor emanating from the trash. Milk cartons on the kitchen counters drove Lynne up the wall. 283 After each fight, we would then argue over what the fight was about. "You said…..," "I didn’t say that, I said……," "No, you said…." I bought a tape recorder so that we could record each fight and, when needed, go to the instant re-play. This ended all fighting and created an eerie silence. Once the recorder would go on, Lynne would not say a word. One evening, I returned home from Box One and found the tapes in shreds. The recorder had been smashed with a hammer. We had one hell of a good fight over that. I spent more and more time at work. I had opened a new business at the same location as Box One. It was called Picture Yourself. It was my own invention. I took electronic strobe lights and designed the circuitry so that many different studio lighting effects could be controlled by a knob on a switch box. I rebuilt a Nikon camera so that it could fire off of a remote control. It was placed behind a piece of 60/40 glass. This glass had been developed by the CIA and was used for spying. The result was that an actor or model or even a businessman, needing a headshot, could sit in the privacy of the Picture Yourself booth, see themselves in the 60/40 mirror, adjust the lighting to their taste, turn on a little music and take their own pictures. This was nothing like the booths where you put in a quarter and get a snap shot. This was a professional studio headshot. 284 Picture Yourself was heavily advertised in the theatrical trade magazines, and before I knew it, I was meeting beautiful women by the dozens. I had been doing some "test shoots" with models, but that was one or two a month. Women loved Picture Yourself because they could see themselves in the mirror and know exactly how each shot was going to look. They all fell in love with their photographer... themselves. They stood in line for it. I hadn't taken any time off from work in a long time. I needed to have some time to myself. I decided to take a vacation, a cruise to Bermuda. Lynne thought that it would be selfish of me not to take the kids. The cruise ship offered a "bring a friend for 1/2 price" deal and my kids wanted their friends next door to come. Our neighbors’ mother decided that if her kids were going, then she would go. OK, I would take Lynne, our kids, the neighbors and their kids on a cruise to Bermuda. I shared a room with the kids, and Lynne shared a room with our neighbors. I didn't understand it. I don't know how it happened, but here I was, on the way to Bermuda, with no hope of sleeping with my wife or anyone else. Everyone had a wonderful time. Everyone but me. So was this marriage over or what? 285 Business was good. Lynne and I decided that we would separate without separating. Lynne loved the city so much: the people, the nightlife, the theatre and the dance. We would buy an apartment in the city. We could use it as a family when we all went into the city, or we could use it to get away from each other. We would alternate living in the city. Near this time, I met two young ladies from St. Lucia. Alison Lord needed headshots of her son, Donny. She thought that he had star potential. Her sister, Sandra, was a "personal manager" for theatrical talent, and wrote a column for Show Business, a New York theatrical trade magazine. She and her sister thought Picture Yourself was an innovative concept. Sandra wanted to write an article on it. Would I give some time for an interview? Sandra and I went out for dinner. She was taking notes. This was going to be a good interview. It would make an interesting article for her column, and the article would help the business. How we got from Picture Yourself to, "My wife doesn't love me," I do not know. Then it was, "My boyfriend doesn't appreciate me," 286 etc, etc. The next thing I knew, it was two o'clock in the morning. I decided to stay over in the city. That was the one night that I stayed in the city without letting Lynne know. It would not have been so bad except it was our 16th anniversary. We had not celebrated an anniversary for a long time, so I was surprised when she made such a big deal out of it. "Come and get your shit or I'll throw everything you own in the street, you fucking bastard." That was in the morning. I had to work all day. I was a nervous wreck. I planned to go home that evening and load the car with stuff and return to the city. I didn't want to do it, but I guessed that she was right. It was over. I loved her so much, but it was over. I made a point of not riding in the bar car that night. Things were bad enough; I didn’t want to do or say anything to make it worse. When I got home, I stood outside the door for a long time. I didn't want this to happen, but it did. What could I do? I went in. Lynne came to the door and threw her arms around me. We went upstairs and made love. I wish that I had 287 dropped dead that night. I would have died a happy man. What happened? Why did it happen? I don't know. Did the thought of living without me stir up dormant emotions? For several months I lived in Utopia. The Lord sisters and I became very close friends. Sandra encouraged me to go back into the theatre. She wanted to be my manager. I hired Alison Lord to work at Box One. Sandra and her boyfriend went out on double dates with Lynne and me. For about two months "God was in his heaven and all was right with the world." But then Sandra and her boyfriend split up and the Lords moved to California. I had hoped this would help cement my relationship with Lynne. It had the opposite effect. Lynne again became distant. Lynne referred to those few wonderful months as our renaissance. How true. How sad that it ended. I assume it was my fault. Everything seemed to be my fault. She went to see a lawyer and discussed divorce, but nothing ever came of it. I thought of divorce, but feared it. It was my own lack of selfcontrol that frightened me. I feared that without Lynne, I would become a drunken degenerate. As the marvelous song from England during World War I says, "I don't want to join the Army. I 288 don't want to go to war. I just want to live in London and fornicate my bloomin' life away." Life went on. Box One had a new manager, Alex Vadell. He had started out as a printer but made it clear from the start that he was management material. Capri felt threatened. Remember, Capri was first hired as a flunky. She worked her way up to become manager. She demanded a huge raise. When she didn't get it, she took a management position with Color Wheel, one of our competitors. Years later, I heard a story from Color Wheel about Capri. They were working on a presentation for Revlon or one of the other large cosmetic companies. Capri kept rejecting the prints. She had been named account rep for this client and she only wanted the best. Photo printers always assume that management knows nothing about printing. The printer involved with this job tried to explain to Capri why it was impossible to get what she wanted in this particular print. Without saying a word, she walked in the darkroom and zip, wham... she produced the print she wanted. The technician was in awe. From then on she was treated with the utmost respect. 289 Alex Vadell was also a master. Soon clients didn’t even know who I was. It used to be that with any problem you would hear, "Let me speak to Wayne." Now it was, "Let me speak to Alex." With Alex doing so much of the work, I had a little more free time. This would give me a chance to re-establish ties with my siblings. We all felt close to each other, but rarely called and never wrote. My brother Randy is the only one in the family who has lived a somewhat normal life. He has had a storybook life. He married his high school sweetheart and they continue to live happily ever after. They have two children and two grandchildren. The most frightening event in Randy's life was when he was born. It took a week for the doctors to realize that he was born without a complete esophagus. He almost died of starvation. He was a small baby and the operation must have been very difficult. As a middle-aged man, he had another operation, and the doctors discovered that as a result of his operation as a baby, nothing inside him was in the right place. My sister Margaret was now living with her two boys in Houston, Texas. She left Detroit after she found out that her husband, also her 290 high school sweetheart, was living a double life. He had a second home and was living with another woman. My brother Les had been helping Margaret a lot. Every time she and I spoke on the phone, I asked her if she wanted to move to New York and work at Box One. She always said no. This last time, she said yes. The people who were renting the Centerport house were scheduled to move out the next month. Their lease was up, and I told them that my sister would be moving in, so I could not renew their lease. Margaret drove from Houston with her two dogs and one cat. Her two boys were staying with their father for the summer in Detroit. There was only one problem: my tenant refused to move out. He looked me in the eye and said, "I'm not going to move out and I'm not going to pay any rent. You can kiss my ass." Someone who knew New York real estate law must have advised him. He was right. It took me six months to get him out on a court order. When I asked the judge about the back rent, the judge said, "Which do you want? To get him out or to receive the back rent?" "Can't I get both?” I asked. "No." During those six months, Margaret lived in our dining room. Her cats and ours just 291 ignored each other, but the dogs never stopped fighting. It got a bit cramped when her boys returned from Detroit and started school. At Box One, Margaret did the payroll and filing, and helped with customer service. She and Alex hit it off very well. Margaret became close friends with Alex's wife and son. One of the first things I told Margaret about being in New York City was to watch out for bicycles, especially bicycles going the wrong way on one-way streets. She was hit by a biker the very first time she went to cross a street by herself. Margaret suffered from a rare blood disease. It had taken years to diagnose. Only a few doctors seemed even to be aware of this disease, let alone know how to treat it. Margaret didn't like New York, but she loved Long Island. She made friends and the kids were doing well in school. One Sunday while I was out on the boat, a big yacht went cruising by. A voice yelled out, "Wayne!" I looked up and it was Margaret. I had lived on Long Island for years and didn't know a soul with the exception of my train buddies. My sister Margaret had become a 292 community leader within a year. She was active in a local church and became very close to the minister. Her boys, Brian and Jamie, were doing well in school. Her blood disease seemed to be in remission. Margaret thanked me for bringing her to the Island. She told me that she had told her boys, "You better enjoy living here in Centerport because this is as close to heaven as you can get." 293 294 Chapter 14 The theatre, I wanted to make one more effort to succeed in the theatre. I had raised my family and fulfilled my obligations. I needed to do something for myself. More than that, my children had grown up not knowing me. They didn’t know who I was. That man who got up in the morning, went to work and came home drunk half of the time, that was not me. I was an actor, a bohemian, a creative genius. My children had never even met the real me. I never kept keepsakes or souvenirs, and there was not even a scrapbook of my past that they could look at. The producers of The Fantasticks tour had put together a book of clippings and showbills from the tour. The inscription from the producer read, "Wayne, you are the best Bellomy (Girl’s Father) I've ever seen. Enough said." My children would sometimes look through it. They could not identify this man in the book as their father. This was a fictional character created by their father who made up wild stories and exaggerated tales which he repeated over and over to his children. When I started doing The Fantasticks, I thought that it was the beginning of a path to stardom. Instead, it was the end of a path, a dead 295 end. I always had Michele as an excuse. Maybe, just maybe, something would have come of my career if I had not ended it to care for Michele. Did I have any regrets about ending my career to care for Michele? No. None. I only wish that somehow I could have been a better father for her. I cannot help but believe that she would have gotten better if I had been a better father. Bringing Michele home for weekends had become more and more difficult, and I brought her home less and less frequently. At night she would smear feces all over herself, and in the process would often smear it on the walls and floors. In an effort to stop this activity, I purchased a sewing machine so I could design pajamas that zipped up the back so that if she did it in her pants, she wouldn’t be able to get easy access to smear it. I would then sleep on the floor by her door so that if she got up at night to go to the bathroom, I would be there to unzip her. She was so strong that she just ripped the pajamas apart. Michele loved the water. She loved taking baths. I determined that she smeared the feces so she could have a bath in the middle of the night. 296 One night, I couldn't take it anymore. I had always tried to be loving and understanding, but this night I yelled at her. I told her if she did it again, I would not be able to bring her home again. It never happened again. Did she understand what I was telling her? I don't know. Sometimes I believe that Michele understands every word I say, and other times I don't believe she understands a word. Maybe it was the fact that I yelled at her, or perhaps she understood when she saw me cry. I don't know. I want so much to be able to understand life. It seems to be a crapshoot. All those millions of sperm and only one makes it to the egg. If it had been a different sperm, would I be someone else? Would I not exist at all? How can anyone imagine a world without oneself? I just don’t know. Once, when I first came to New York, one of my co-lab workers and I were having a philosophical discussion. I turned on an enlarger and adjusted it so that it projected a small ring of light on the baseboard. This circle of light, I explained, is our knowledge. The ring of darkness around it is our ignorance. Then I raised the enlarger. "Notice that, as I raise the enlarger and the circle of our knowledge becomes larger, you 297 become more aware of the extent of darkness surrounding the light. As your knowledge increases, you become more aware of your ignorance." Every Christian who claims to have any understanding of who or what God is seems to have a few quotes from the Bible to back them up. I make no such claims but I do have some favorite quotes. “I have come that you might have life and have it more abundantly,” is one of them. Whenever you give a gift to someone, it is hoped that the recipient will enjoy it. If God's gift to man is life, does it not seem reasonable to think God would like his gift to be enjoyed? So why does church doctrine so often stress the concept of living with pain and suffering so that we can enjoy ourselves after death? In the 15th chapter of Luke, Jesus tells three parables about being lost. A lost sheep, a lost coin and a lost son. In each parable there is rejoicing when the lost is found. But before we can truly find ourselves do we not need to first recognize that we are lost? Jesus did not give us answers, he only asked us questions. He wrote in the sand, knowing that the wind and water would wipe away the text. Perhaps he was saying that each of us needed to search for our own answers. I’m still 298 searching. Is the theatre a religion? Stanislavsky said, "Acting is believing." So if I were going to return to the theatre, how would I start? Where would I start? I had difficulty in getting auditions when I started out. Why would it be any easier now? Perhaps I should try voice-overs again. I had once made a tape of commercials showing a range of voices and characters and had it sent out to all the agents. I never got a response. I did do one voiceover for Mary Quant, the British cosmetics firm. I was assisting a photo shoot for Mary Quant at the Box One studio and the director said to me, "I love your voice. Would you do the voice-over on our new commercial?" That was fun, but it didn’t lead to anything else. No, if I were to stand a chance of succeeding, I would once again have to be a producer. Without a doubt, Beckett's Waiting for Godot is my favorite play. As Clive Barnes wrote, it is a true masterpiece. Why not produce it OffBroadway and star myself as Estragon (aka Gogo)? It baffles me that Godot is so often referred to as an experimental play. The joy of Godot is its simplicity and lighthearted comedy. I once did a special preview performance of Godot for a boys' reform school in North Carolina. They 299 had no difficulty in figuring out the play. They laughed and laughed, but by the end, they knew that this play was about them. They were all waiting to get out of "jail." We wait to be born, we wait for the bus, we wait to get out of school, we wait for dinner, we wait for things to begin, we wait for things to end, then one day there is nothing left to wait for and we wait to die. After death, we wait for the unknown. "We are born astride a grave." Think about that. "The gravedigger lingeringly puts on the forceps." The gravedigger is the obstetrician. We experience a flash of light, a journey from the womb to the tomb. "We have time to grow old." When done properly, Godot makes you laugh and laugh, and then scares the shit out of you. This is good theatre. I did some research and discovered that a man named Jack Garfein held the rights for Godot. I wrote him a letter. He was living in Paris, but often came to New York where he ran The Actors and Directors Lab, as well as The Harold Clurman Theatre. He called me and we met at Sardi's for lunch. He told me that Lincoln Center wanted to do Godot with Steve Martin and Robin Williams. They had offered him a lot of money for the rights. 300 Garfein asked a lot of questions about my background in the theatre. He seemed to be impressed. Jack told me that, living in Paris, it had become very difficult for him to continue running The Harold Clurman Theatre. Would I consider taking over the operation? This Off-Broadway theatre company was founded by Paul Newman, Joanne Woodward, and Roger L. Stevens. The Harold Clurman Theatre had won many Obie and Drama Desk Awards. Would I be interested in taking over the management? My mind said, "You bet,” but I just said, “Let me think about it." I did some research on Jack Garfein. He is an incredible man. Everyone I spoke with referred to Jack as a crook, but they did so in a kind, loving way. Albert Poland, one of the producers of The Fantasticks on tour, had been on the board of The Harold Clurman Theatre, so I called him. "Don't ask me about Jack Garfein," he said. "I love the man. I don’t wish to say anything bad about him. On the other hand, I don't want to say anything good about him either. So just don't ask." 301 From what I could gather, at the beginning of World War II, at the age of twelve, Jack had been placed in a Nazi concentration camp. He survived, and was liberated by the U.S. Army. He had a good career as a director of film and theatre, but seems to have been best known for being married to the actress Carol Baker. In order to understand the status of The Harold Clurman Theatre, it would help to understand the contract between New York City and what was (and is) known as "Theatre Row." In the early sixties, a man by the name of J.I. Rodale was a food faddist, a very wealthy food faddist. He believed that we were all killing ourselves by ingesting salt and sugar. Today, most nutritionists would agree with him, but at the time, he was considered a nut. He wrote, produced and directed plays about the evils of poor nutrition. His financial losses as a result of these Off-Broadway productions were staggering. He and a man named Maidman bought a lot of property on 42nd Street, west of Ninth Avenue, and built their own theatres, thinking this would cut production costs. I never saw any of these productions but they were usually thought of as a joke. How interesting can a play be when its plot revolves around how much sugar you eat? 302 Rodale died of a heart attack in 1971 while being interviewed on the Dick Cavett Show. When he appeared to fall asleep, Cavett quipped, "Are we boring you, Mr. Rodale?" The episode was never broadcast. Ironically, Rodale had bragged a day earlier that he would "live to 100 unless I'm run down by some sugar-crazed taxi driver." He was 72 at the time. After Rodale stopped producing plays in the area, the theatres became strip joints and whorehouses. There was a lot of clamor to clean up the area. In 1977, Bess Myerson and Ed Koch had this idea: they would encourage theatre groups to relocate in the area by offering cheap rents. To offset the problem that all of these buildings were going to be torn down, they offered the theatre groups "new theatres," to be included in the new buildings that were to be constructed on the site, at the same low rents. To accomplish this goal, New York City formed the UDC/Theatre Row Redevelopment Corporation; it was administered by The FortySecond Street Local Development Corporation. From here out, I'll call it "The Corp." The rents were indeed low, but the "theatres" were not even raw space, they were 303 garbage dumps that still had used condoms stuck to the floors. And the new theatre tenants had to finance their own renovations. But there was that carrot on a stick: new theatres in new buildings built by The Corp. Theatre Row was born. Theatres and restaurants sprang up all along the block. All of this land belonged to New York City, with the exception of one building that belonged to a company called Washington Beef. The managers of Playwrights Horizons, a production company on the block before Theatre Row existed, bought the building. I don’t know if this was just a fluke or if Playwrights Horizons' managers were all geniuses. Either way, it was a brilliant move. By owning the one piece of land not owned by the city, they could now have considerable influence on The Corp. Playwright's Horizon's land was in the center of the block. In order to proceed with any plans for construction, the city would have to deal with them. Jack Garfein rented a large space on Theatre Row. He had The Actors and Directors Lab and The Harold Clurman Theatre, and then he took over the lease belonging to the Black Theatre Alliance and renamed it The Samuel Beckett Theatre. 304 Theatre Row was a big success for the city, but the theatre groups themselves were experiencing many problems. Producing OffBroadway is very expensive and almost all of the plays lose money. The building boom in the city had come to a halt, and prospects of a new development on the block looked dim. There was no longer the need for new construction because Theatre Row had turned this slum into a beautiful, thriving area. The managers of these theatres were faced with a dilemma. They could continue to produce plays and lose money (most had already lost every cent they could lay their hands on), or rent the theatres out to other producers and make a profit. It was in the best interest of The Corp to get the theatre producers out of Theatre Row. For each theatre company evicted, there would be one less theatre that needed to be constructed in the new development. Also, in the interim, for every tenant The Corp could get out, they could raise the rent for a new tenant. A theatre group that paid $500 per month in rent to The Corp could sublet the space for up to $8,000 a month. After the first few years, most of the theatres were being sublet at a huge profit. The Corp decided that to sublet was in violation of the lease. They were trying to evict virtually all of the 305 Theatre Row tenants. As of July 1986, that was Lion Theatre, Intar, Nat Horn, South Street, The Harold Clurman, The Samuel Beckett, Douglas Fairbanks and the John Houseman. Especially targeted were Jack Garfein and The Harold Clurman Theatre. Garfein was living like a king in Paris off of the rental income he was receiving from The Harold Clurman Theatre and The Samuel Beckett Theatre. If he were evicted he would be without an income. If Wayne Martens took over The Harold Clurman Theatre and produced plays, Garfein would no longer be subletting and could not be evicted. It would seem that such an arrangement would fill my needs as well as Jack’s. I discussed all of this with my family, and everyone said "Go for it." I called Jack and told him I was flying to Paris so that we could discuss the matter further. Lynne had lived in Paris in her late teens. She was not about to let me go without her. We rented an apartment through a bed and breakfast agency. It was on the left bank, just a block from Notre Dame. Jack and I negotiated over several lunches. He took us to a number of "in" places. I had an advantage over Jack. I had 306 learned that he had cooked the books. All assets were posted to the accounts for The Actors and Directors' Lab. All the liabilities went to The Harold Clurman Theatre. Jack needed to get someone to pay off the theatre's liabilities and to produce plays so that he could continue to receive an income. Don't get me wrong. Jack knew and loved good theatre, and he was very close to Harold Clurman and his wife, Stella Adler. He did not want schlock work done at The Harold Clurman Theatre. I was certain that if I could get control of the theatre without spending a lot of money, I could turn it into a profitable enterprise and establish myself as a director and ultimately as an actor. In the evenings, Lynne and I were on our own. One night, we went to a jazz club. We met the owner and were invited to his private booth. All the drinks were on the house. The owner was there with his girlfriend. They both spoke English. We were having a great time, but every now and then, the owner and Lynne would speak in French. I couldn’t understand a word. After we left, I asked Lynne what she and the owner were talking about. She said that he had an apartment in the building. He wanted to create a diversion to distract me so that he and his girlfriend could have a "menage a trois" with Lynne. She admitted that it was very tempting. I could only think, "How French." 307 Lynne and I had a wonderful time in Paris, but it was after this trip that our relationship came to a total stop. I believe that returning to Paris and having such a good time only reinforced her feeling of having lost her life, her dreams, her adventures, and her romances. They were all gone, and it was all my fault. I was the bastard who got her pregnant. She loved the children so much, but it was now impossible to ever return to the life that she once had. She would never know what life could have been. Garfein flew to New York to finalize our deal. He called a board meeting. I was named to the Board of Directors and then elected Chairman of the Board. Then Garfein and the others all resigned from the board so that I could select my own directors. Part of the deal was that I would produce Judgement by Barry Collins. John Russell Brown of The National Theatre of London was set to direct. Judgement is a one-character play based on a true story about Russian soldiers who were held as prisoners during World War II. The Germans retreated and left the Russian prisoners in a dungeon to starve to death. They resorted to cannibalism to survive. The play's only character 308 is the one survivor who is asking to be judged for his conduct. It was a very well-written and provocative play, but not something to create boffo box office. I was now the only authority for The Harold Clurman Theatre, but the theatre building had been rented out to Perfect Crime on a run-of-the-show contract. Perfect Crime was a hit. Judgement was being produced under the aegis of The Harold Clurman Theatre, but was performing at The Samuel Beckett Theatre. If that's a little confusing, it's because you need to make the distinction between a theatre as a production group or company and a theatre as a building with seats and a stage. While Judgement was in rehearsal, I got a phone call from a woman named Jean Sullivan. She was head of The South Street Theatre, but was also the secretary of Theatre Row Inc., the group set up by Bess Myerson and Ed Koch to govern Theatre Row. I was told that I had just been elected president. Wow, great. Of course the first thing I learned was that Theatre Row Inc. had no authority at all. It was at my first meeting that I learned how The Corp was trying to kick us all out. 309 By the end of the first week of Judgement, all the original investment had been lost and I put up closing notices. This was a last ditch effort. If I failed, I knew I would never again be involved with the theatre. I needed money. I couldn't risk spending time trying to raise it. As I've mentioned, Long Island real estate had increased by over 100% in the past few years. I took a second mortgage out on the Centerport house. In order to do this, I had to pay off the existing second mortgage for $10,000, which had been given to Lynne by her mother. This reopened an old argument. Was this Lynne's money or family money? As a compromise, I suggested that the money be put in a CD and held for the kids’ college expenses. When Matthew was about to enter college, I inquired about the CD. Lynne’s only response was, "What CD?" I announced the first season of plays under my management of The Harold Clurman Theatre. We would open with (what else?) Ulysses in Nighttown. The second production would be The Fifth Column, Ernest Hemingway’s only play. It 310 was originally directed on Broadway by Harold Clurman. I hit a snag getting the rights to The Fifth Column. I called George Bobrinskoy, the lawyer who handled Hemingway's estate; he said, “NO WAY.” There was a feud going on in the family and no one could agree on who owned the rights to the play. I then wrote to him with a proposition. The letterhead for The Harold Clurman Theatre listed its founders. I proposed that the play be produced royalty-free. If everyone in the family agreed that the play should be done, it would not matter who owned the rights. That matter could be settled later. Bobrinskoy called me and said, "Paul Newman? Joanne Woodward? Roger Stevens? I didn't realize that your theatre had such good credentials. I spoke with everyone in the family and they all agree. Do the play." The third production was to be Tobacco Road by Erskine Caldwell. When I started Box One, I used a workshop to get free labor. I used the same technique at The Harold Clurman Theatre. The HCT workshop had one hundred volunteers. In 311 return, they got the use of the theatre for meetings and would be given the theatre rent-free for their own production. The workshop was set up as an independent entity and elected its own officers. They ran the show, so to speak. Casting began for Ulysses. I would direct. Meanwhile, back at Box One, there was a minor snag: Box One was being audited by the IRS. That was OK. We had nothing to hide. My accountant would represent me at a cost of $250 per day. A nightmare of gigantic proportions was about to begin. It was a strip search: every item, every receipt, every general ledger entry. The audit ended up taking over a year. Needless to say, I could not afford to have my accountant continue to represent me. "Fred" from the IRS would come in at 8:30am and stay all day. He got to know every employee. “Good morning, Alex,” “Good morning. Fred,” “Good morning, Richard,” “Good morning, Fred,” etc, etc. Sometimes he would bring in coffee and donuts for the staff. He didn't trust computers. He would write down every figure in that tiny handwriting 312 that only accountants can master. Then he would add them up by hand, over and over again. He loved his work so much that he would not leave at night. One night after telling him I was leaving and that he would be locked in, I left. I locked the door. It could not be opened without a key. I went out and had a drink and when I came back he was still sitting there, “6 + 5 = 11, carry the one.” I cleared out the studio so that we could rehearse at Box One. That way I could run back and forth between Fred and rehearsal. "I need to see the receipts for the chemicals that you purchased May 12, 1985." “Fred, I'm in rehearsal. I can't get them right now.” "Fine, if rehearsal is so important, try to rehearse in jail." The actor I cast as Bloom, Steven Coats, was brilliant. If this production were a hit, it would make him a star. I knew this. He knew this. His fate was in my hands. He could see that I was distracted by this audit and it frightened him, rightfully so. The situation became even more complicated when I got a call from the Huntington Hospital. My sister Margaret’s blood 313 disorder was out of remission. She had been admitted to the hospital for tests and observation. She was being transferred to the critical care unit at Sloan Kettering. Someone needed to be there to check her in and pay the ambulance drivers. Pay the ambulance drivers? I swear to God that's what they told me. My sister was in critical condition and they wanted to make sure that someone was there to pay cash to the ambulance drivers. I guess they feared that if she died, they wouldn’t get paid. Reason, at this point, would say cancel the show. But this was an Off-Broadway production under the auspices of the unions. There were contracts that could not be broken. "The show must go on" is not an old saying; it's a union demand. I got a call from our press agent saying that John Simon of New York Magazine couldn’t make it on opening night. He wanted to come that night. "But this is our first rehearsal on stage with props and costumes," I said. "I urge you to let him come," the press agent said. I told him, “If Simon comes tonight, He must agree to state in anything he writes that he saw a rehearsal, not a performance. He must not pretend he was at a performance and write a review." 314 I didn’t want Simon to be alone in the theatre during the rehearsal. I called Actors' Equity and asked them to post a notice that union members were invited to this evening's rehearsal. That may have been a mistake. Unemployed actors do not make for a good audience. Having never met or even seen John Simon before, I hesitate to say that he was inebriated. He may always seem that way. About twenty-five members of AEA showed up to augment Mr. Simon's presence. I went up on stage and made an announcement that this was only a rehearsal, not a performance, and it was our very first rehearsal with props and costumes. I then sat down and waited for the house lights to dim. The lights dimmed a little and then stopped. It seems there were theatre "work lights" on and no one knew how to turn them off. It took a few minutes to find the switch for the work lights. I went back on stage and explained what happened. I ended by saying, "I hope you enjoy the show." A loud, clear voice answered back, "It stinks so far." I really don't know if that voice was Simon's, but after reading his review, I assume it was. It implied that he was present on opening night. He ripped the production apart. 315 During the rehearsal, most of the audience sat quietly, but one man was rolling on the floor with laughter. My press agent came up to me and said, "We've got to get that man out of the theatre or find a way to keep him from laughing." "Joe," I said, "It's supposed to be funny. He's the only one who's getting it." Joe said to me, "But it's James Joyce. How could it be funny?" Opening night went well. Lynne and the kids were there. Lynne's mother was there. Margaret was still in the hospital. My brother Les was almost there. He left a message at the box office that he had been called back to Detroit on an emergency. I knew that the play could have been so much better, but I still thought that it stood a chance of winning some awards. After the opening, the actual reviews came out, and they were kind. No raves, but kind. Burgess Meredith had directed a production years earlier with Zero Mostel. The production took so much of Joyce's text literally that I had found the production void of imagination. Valerie Bettis had provided marvelous choreography, but I failed to see what all those dancers leaping about the stage had to do with the play. Zero Mostel was very funny as Bloom, totally wrong for the part, but his sense of comedy was extraordinary. 316 We ran for twelve weeks. A respectable run, but certainly not a hit. I had been certain that the play would receive good reviews. My biggest fear was that the academic world would rip my interpretation apart. After receiving mediocre reviews, it was a joy to receive a letter from a Joyce scholar at Yale University. In part, the letter read: "Last night a couple of us from the faculty who have taught Joyce's work celebrated his birthday by attending your production, and we loved it. We had along a couple of people who'd never read any Joyce at all, and they loved it. I find this unanimity to be satisfactory proof that there are some New York reviewers with their heads too far up their snotty butts to credit an outstanding production. I assure you that your work will have sent me back to Ulysses with newly-opened eyes, so that my teaching will in the future reflect a good deal of what I saw last night. For that, I am very grateful." "I don't know that you need such a message to know you've done something great, but if it's appropriate please pass on the great thanks of our little party to the cast. We all felt that applause was nowhere near adequate as 317 response, and we walked up Eighth Avenue each recalling different wonderful moments. I'll remember the production for a long time." Wow. He will never know how good his letter made me feel. I was counting on the income from Ulysses to finance The Fifth Column. There was no money left. The "season" was over. I made arrangements with another theatre company to accept The Harold Clurman Theatre "season tickets." That eased the guilt. The Harold Clurman Theatre Workshop put on its production of Schnitzler's La Ronde. The theatre company did not close, but we did lose the lease on our theatre. Periodically, we produced dramatic readings and a few Off-Off-Broadway showcases, but never another major full Equity production. The motivation for all this was my desire to return to the theatre as an actor and yet I had not played a single part. Not one. Why didn't I choose a play that had a starring role for me? I could have had my fifteen minutes of fame. To rub salt in my wound, shortly after Ulysses closed, I got a notice from The Actors' Equity Pension and Welfare Department. One of the benefits of being a union actor is medical insurance. I was informed that my insurance was 318 canceled. In an effort to cut costs, they had altered the eligibility requirements and because I had gone so many years without working, I was two weeks of work short. I no longer qualified. I would also no longer be eligible for a pension. If I had cast myself in a small roll in Ulysses, or even hired myself as an assistant stage manager, I wouldn’t have lost my medical insurance and I would now be receiving a pension. Sometimes things just don't work out right. As of this moment, new theatres are under construction on Theatre Row. The Harold Clurman Theatre and The Samuel Beckett Theatre are being renovated, but The Corp will lease them to new tenants at market rates. To the best of my knowledge, not one of the original contracts for Theatre Row was honored. All of the people who, at their own expense, cleared out the slum and built a beautiful, vibrant neighborhood on West 42nd Street, were kicked out on their butts. As president of Theatre Row, I tried to find an attorney to represent the Theatre Row tenants pro bono, but perhaps I was just too tired. No one seemed to care. There have been no outcries in the press, no rallies, no demonstrations, just the quiet death of an important episode in American theatre. I am very curious to see what name The Corp places on the marquee of the renovated 319 space. Do they understand the fact that they have no legal right to call it The Harold Clurman Theatre? As I said before, there are theatres and theatre companies. If I rented The Helen Hayes Theatre to put on a production, it would still be The Helen Hayes Theatre after my show closed. But if Playwrights Horizons, a production company, moved to a new location, I would not have the right to rent out their old space and call it Playwrights Horizons. The Harold Clurman Theatre is the name of a non-profit production company that once leased space on 42nd Street. It is no longer at its previous location. The current legal address for The Harold Clurman Theatre may be in my imagination. 320 Chapter 15 Between the IRS audit and my absence, Box One was in bad shape. The outcome of the audit from the IRS' point of view was nil. Outside of disclaiming my exemptions for the boat and the condo, they came up with nothing. A large corporation can purchase a fleet of boats and claim that they are used for business, but if a small corporation that is owned by one person tries to deduct expenses for a boat, the IRS laughs in your face. When they wanted to see the condo, which I had claimed as office space, I had to run out and buy a desk. It was to no avail. The damage that a one-year audit did, in terms of time taken away from Box One and the theatre, was devastating. But Box One would survive, largely due to the efforts of Alex Vadell. Alex, however, had no appreciation for the theatre. He could not grasp why I would risk a successful business in order to put on a play. He never even came to see it. One of Box One's longtime employees had moved to Milan, Italy. Milan had become a world center for fashion photography, and he wanted to give it a try. I saw an ad in the paper from Eastern Airlines with ridiculously low fares to Europe. You had to book six months in advance, and surely Box One would be back on its feet in 321 six months. How could I turn down a fare of $150 round trip? So I booked for Milan. Again, this would have been impossible were it not for Alex. The day I was scheduled to leave, Alex called in sick. Alex was never sick. It had me worried. Should I cancel? There were no refunds, but it was only $150. Alex went into the hospital for some tests. Alex said go, the staff said go, and so I went. I called everyone from the airport. I just wasn't sure that I was doing the right thing. After being reassured that everything would be fine without me, I got on the plane to Milan. My luggage, of course, went to Rome. From the airport, I took a bus to the city and then a taxi to my friend's apartment. He lived with two young ladies. It was early morning and he was at work, at a photo lab. I just wandered around for the rest of the day. That evening, my friend and I and one of his roommates went out for dinner. The next day, I was again alone while the others were at work. They worked at the same place. His other roommate was out of the country. I decided that I would shop and make dinner that evening. Remember, I love to cook. 322 I went into a supermarket and found everything I needed. At the checkout, I just held up a wad of money and the girl took out what was needed. When I got back to the apartment, I realized that we had no onions. I went to a little market and picked up one onion. I couldn’t understand a word the old lady in the market said. I had the feeling that even if I spoke Italian, I still wouldn’t understand a word she said. I held out some money and she took it. I was expecting some change. She grabbed on to me and would not let go. I held up some more money. She took it but still wouldn’t let go. When I got back to the apartment, I sat down with pen and paper and figured out that I had just spent $15 for one onion. After dinner I called Box One. My worst fears had come true. Alex had colon cancer. I had to return at once. The next flight was the next afternoon, but it was fully booked. I would have to go to the airport and get on a standby list. I left early the next morning. I arrived at the standby window at about 7:30am. As it turned out, the window would not open until 1pm. I made myself comfortable and sat at what would become the head of the line. When the clerk arrived I was still the only one in line. She had not set up yet, and so she took my name and flight info and wrote it on a piece of paper. I then 323 went to get something to eat. When it was boarding time, all the prospective standbys were put together in a group. By now there were about fifteen of us. But of course I knew that I was the first in line. "So and so," they announced. Someone got up and got their ticket. "Mr. and Mrs. So and so." I thought that maybe they didn't announce standbys in order of appearance. "And the last standby available, So and so." "Uh, excuse me, but why wasn't I called?" "It's first come first serve." was the response. "But, uh, I was first." "No you were tenth" was the response. "I was in line at 7:30am," I said. "More than five hours before anyone else was in line." The attendant went in the back and spoke with the young lady who had made up the list. He came back and said, "I'm sorry, but there does appear to have been a mistake. But yours was a heavily discounted ticket and it was decided that you should have to wait until tomorrow." "A close relative of mine in New York is dying. If I do not make that flight I may never see him again. I will sue you. I will sue you in the morning, sue you in the evening and sue you in the afternoon. Do you get my meaning?” I yelled. I flew first class on Alitalia. They operated on Alex, and the doctors felt that it went well. They thought they had 324 gotten all the cancer. After a long period of chemo, Alex seemed fine. He bought a house near mine in Huntington. His wife Jan and son Justin seemed to enjoy living on the Island. Box One began to recover financially and all seemed well with the world. It lasted about two years. Alex went for regular checkups but, as it turned out, the doctors were not looking in the right places. By the time the new cancer was discovered it was too late. Alex enjoyed his work. He wanted to maintain his regular routine. He worked on the day he died, at 36 years old. Without Alex, I couldn't cope. I let the business deteriorate. My sister Margaret had become very close to Alex and his family. She could not take going into work each morning knowing that he was not there. Her boys had graduated from high school and she decided to move back to Detroit. Matthew and Shannon had also graduated from high school, and after a year of traveling about Europe, they were off to college. My son Christopher, however, was having a difficult time at high school. Throughout his schooling he had been classified as a slow learner. He had fallen in with a bunch of bad kids. He wanted to disassociate himself but couldn't do it. 325 Lynne and I didn’t fully appreciate Christopher's dilemma until we came home to find our house vandalized, with holes in the plaster and broken windows. Chris’ friends did it while they were alone in the house. When we asked why he didn't stop them, he said, "They would have beat me up. Besides, they are the only friends I've got." I went to a meeting at his high school to discuss this problem. While talking about my hopes for Christopher's future, I mentioned something about college, and one of his teachers interrupted and said, "You shouldn't think in terms of Christopher going to college. Perhaps he would qualify for a trade school." Well, that pissed me off. I knew Christopher was exceptionally smart. The teachers were so set in their ways of what to do and how to do it, that they couldn't see it. Lynne was planning to leave me. She was going to get an apartment in Northport. She had heard that the Northport school district was more into the arts and less into sports. She felt that Christopher would do better in the Northport schools. Before my meeting with the Harborfields High School, I thought that Lynne was nuts. Harborfields had one of the best ratings in the country. But after hearing this shit about a trade school, I changed my mind. 326 Lynne and I stayed together. I stayed with her because I loved her. She stayed with me because she needed me to pay the rent. We sold our house in Huntington and rented a house in Northport. I was deep in debt by this time and we needed the money from the sale of the house. Our house in Centerport had been rented out to an executive with the investment banking firm Lehman Brothers. No one could have anticipated the effect the new school had on Christopher. Within one year, he was on the honor roll. He was popular. He was a lead actor with the school’s theatre troupe. He had a girlfriend. I found out that my new tenant in Centerport loved boats. I invited him out. One day we were working on the boat together, putting in a new starter. I had a lot of pain in my shoulders. I mentioned that I needed an operation but didn’t have medical insurance. He asked what kind of work I did. I told him about Box One. "Do you do slides?" he asked. "Of course we do slides," I told him. I didn't know he was referring to computer-generated slides. Box One did slides. You put slide film in your camera and take pictures. Then Box One develops it and puts each frame into those little cardboard or plastic mounts. 327 "My department at Lehman Brothers spends about $50,000 per month on slides," he said. "I could probably send the work your way." My life was about to be altered in a major way. When I discovered that the slides he was referring to were computer-generated, I explained that the slides he used were a little different from the ones we did at Box One. Box One would need to invest in some new equipment to be able to service Lehman Brothers. He said, that was fine. We should just let him know when we were ready to go. I knew nothing of what I was about to get into. I started to call around to find out what I would need. First of all I would need what was called a film recorder. I could get one made by Polaroid for about $15,000. That was a lot of money, but I was going to be doing about $50,0000 per month, so it was no big deal. Now let's figure this out. Lehman needed about 300 slides per day. This $15,000 film recorder did one every ten minutes. That's six per hour. On a twenty-four hour shift, we could produce 144 slides per day. Back to the drawing board. What kind of film recorder is being used by their current vendor? A Management Graphics 328 Solitaire. How much does one cost? $140,000. Hmmm. I sold my house for $167,000 and thought I had a good deal. I had about $60,000 left from the sale but I had planned to use that on debts. That would make a down payment, but I would be broke again. What if this thing didn’t work out? There must be a better way. I found a film recorder that I thought would do the job for about $30,000. I paid cash. This film recorder would not work, however, off of any of my computers. Mine are PC-based and Lehman's slides are Mac-based. I would need the biggest, fastest Mac on the market, about $3,800. OK, I'm ready to go. Wait. Wait a minute. You need what? No, we don't have a glass mounter. OK, we'll get a glass mounter. I found one for $6,000. The slides are what? They are not perfectly centered in the mounts? We need a what? Oh, a pin-registered glass mounter. Oh. OK, $12,000. But you can't use a pin-registered mounter without a pin-registered camera on the film recorder. That's another $6,000. OK. We're ready to go. Did you mention what? That we need to be open twenty-four hours per day, seven days a week? No. No, you didn't mention that. OK. We'll have to hire and train some more help. A lot more help. 329 Make sure our film recorder can do what? EPS? What's EPS? Encapsulated Post Script? I'll have to find out. I'll get back to you. No, our film recorder did not do EPS. We would need to spend another $35,000 for one that could do EPS. And then, the EPS recorder could not work off of the Mac. We needed a program in the Mac that would convert the files to a PC format and then shoot the slides off a highpowered PC... in other words, another $10,000. OK, we are rockin' and rollin'. Then comes the phone call. "Wayne, we want you to do Cibachrome." Cibachrome is a form of photographic print that is made directly from slide film. I really didn't want to do Cibachrome. It's difficult and expensive. So I told them no. "You don't seem to understand, Wayne. If you want to do the slides, you have to do the Cibachromes." I got the message. I started pricing Ciba processors. For the volume we would need, they started at $150,000. But at last, I got lucky. I found a used machine. They were asking $30,000, but I knew this was a white elephant. There was no market for it and it would take a large crew to disassemble and move it out. We were talking 100 square feet of tanks, rollers, gears, and pumps. The owner had to sell or pay to have it thrown out, but I could not play 330 a waiting game. I offered $5,000. He accepted. It took another $6,000 to disassemble, move and then re-install the processor, but Box One was now doing Cibachromes. Because the prints were made from a constant digital source, all exposures were constant. Once the correct exposure and color balance was set for the first print all the rest would be the same. This turned out to be easier than printing money. One evening while making Cibas, I was really feeling good. Slides were making money. Cibas were making money. I was really excited. Too excited. I felt pains in my chest. I lay down, but it didn’t seem to help. My staff called an ambulance. The emergency room at the hospital was a mad house. Screaming and moaning people were all over the place. They were packed. I was given an EKG as soon as I arrived, but then I was just left there for hours. I was feeling better. I got up to see if I could get any info. I was told that the EKG was normal, but the doctor wanted to examine me. I waited another hour and then decided to leave. It was probably indigestion. A doctor stopped me. He poked around and asked me some questions. The next thing I knew I was in the intensive care unit. They ran a lot of tests. I was told that it was not only a heart attack, but also, that it was not my first. My heart was badly scarred. That meant that at least a few of the 331 other times when I thought that I was having a heart attack, I really was. Once, while living in Oyster Bay, I felt chest pains while at home. Lynne called an ambulance and I was taken to Syosset Hospital. I was being hooked up to the EKG when word came of a massive auto pile-up on the Long Island Expressway, many dead and many injured. Everyone ran out of the room. They had a real emergency to deal with. I waited about half an hour and then took off those gooey gizmos on my chest. I got dressed, walked out and took a taxi home. I was fine. Now, I'm thinking, it really was a heart attack. This time I was in the hospital about two weeks. Many of my friends came to visit, but Lynne only came by once for a short visit. At least I had gone two weeks without a cigarette. 332 Chapter 16 Box One was now open 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Investment banking is global and Lehman Brothers would often send in work by modem at four o'clock in the morning and want it done and delivered by eight o'clock the same morning. Once a job was late due to a technical problem on their end. They called and explained that the job had to be in Tokyo the next day. They wanted to know if we could deliver it. I said we would if they paid for the plane ticket, but a Lehman employee took it instead. There was a little penthouse on top of the building, just one small room and a bathroom. After picking up the phone in the middle of the night and hearing, "They want blah, blah, blah, and I don't know how to do it. Please come and help," I rented the penthouse. It was kind of neat. The 5,000 square foot roof was my terrace. Lynne wanted me out anyway, so this was perfect. Or so I thought. My night man wanted to quit and I was not about to work 24 hours per day. I would need to find a replacement. My friend and former employee had returned from Italy and needed a job. I could train him on the computer and when 333 there was no slide work, he could do conventional photographic printing. He had his own photo studio in New York but was not making ends meet. He assured me that he would be able to work all night. It worked out well for a few weeks, and then at 8am, I got a call from Lehman Brothers. A job that consisted of 50 slides was delivered with half of the slides missing. I ran downstairs in my bathrobe. I checked the computer and sure enough it indicated that half of the slides had not been shot. I finished the job and apologized to Lehman. By now, the daytime staff had arrived and was going to work. Our black and white technician came to me and said, "The Royal Print Processor is jammed." Oh shit, that’s all I needed. I went into the darkroom and began to disassemble the unit. It was jammed with prints. Not Box One prints; these were obviously prints from my friend’s studio. He had fucked up a Box One job because he was busy doing his own work at my expense. If he had not been such a good friend, he would have been fired at once. I told him that using my paper to do personal prints while he was being paid to do work for Box One constituted theft. I would not tolerate it. But even worse, he had sent out a job to our largest client without even looking at it to see if it was done properly. If anything like this ever happened again, he would be fired. 334 This would not be a story worth telling unless he did it again. When he was fired, he said, "Fine, now I can collect unemployment." I told him that he could not collect unemployment because he was not being laid off, he was being fired for cause, and I would have to replace him. He, of course, applied anyway. When I contested the decision by the Department of Labor to give him unemployment, I was told that his using the copy machine for personal use was not cause for termination. I sent a long letter explaining the difference between using a copy machine and making custom 11x14 photographic prints. My friend yes, I still think of him as my friend collected unemployment for nearly a year before the Department of Labor conducted a review. During the review, they discovered that he was running his own photo business while collecting unemployment. He was accused of fraud and had to return all of his unemployment compensation and was given a hefty fine. This man, whom I loved as a son, now hated me and considered me the personification of evil. I hope you can understand why I have not used his name. The loneliness of living away from my family took its toll. I began to realize that I had my priorities all mixed up. People change. Lynne had changed; I had changed. Did that mean that 335 the marriage was over? Kaput? I hoped not. To this day, my children all believe that they would have been better off if Lynne and I had divorced. They may be right. I have no way of knowing what could have been. Shannon once told me, "I love you and I love Mom, but I hate the two of you together." But I believed that our children would be better off if Lynne and I stayed together. I believed that then and I believe that now. Right or wrong, you have to do what you think is right. I made Lynne an offer she couldn’t refuse. We would sell the Centerport house and buy a large co-op in Manhattan. Our condo on East 34th Street was much too small for the family to live in and it had been leased out. Christopher was going to go to the School of Visual Arts, and Shannon was a dance major at NYU. So Manhattan would work out very well. Besides, Manhattan is the only place where Lyn, or Lynne, has ever wanted to live. Matthew was graduating from SUNY Plattsburgh, so he could also live with us. Needless to say, Lynne loved the idea. An interesting note about Shannon going to NYU: Shannon had been a dance major at SUNY Purchase, but she wanted to transfer to NYU. The problem was that she needed to 336 audition to get in and the auditions were over. She was heartbroken. I noticed in a brochure from NYU that the Chair of the Dance Department was a lady by the name of Kay Cummings. I quickly called a friend who had been in The Fantasticks with me. "Mike, the Kay Cummings that is head of Dance at NYU isn't the same Kay Cummings who played my daughter, is it?" "It sure is," he responded. I called Kay, and Lynne and I met with her. Shannon was accepted into the NYU dance program without an audition. My whole family was apartment hunting in Manhattan but it was Matthew who found the apartment that we eventually bought, 1800 square feet in the West Village, but near Soho. It was zoned for "live-work." We would be able to move Box One into the space. The big problem was the house in Centerport. As soon as we told the tenant, the executive at Lehman Brothers, that we wanted to sell, he moved out. An empty house on Long Island is a scary thing. As soon as the high school kids find out about it, it becomes a party house. It's hard to show when it's covered in beer bottles and riddled with holes in the walls. I felt so much pressure to sell fast that we sold for a fraction of what we had hoped to get. At the closing of our new co-op in the village, I had to use credit card checks to cover the closing costs. 337 As large as this new apartment was, it was still way too small to accommodate a lifetime of stuff. From four bedrooms, a garage, and a full basement to a Manhattan apartment is a tight squeeze. Add to this the 5000 square feet from Box One, and you've got 8000 square feet being squeezed into 1800 square feet. It didn't fit. The new tenant in Box One's old space was also a photo lab. I left them the large processors as well as many cameras, strobes, enlargers, computers, tools and parts. Our main slide client was still Lehman Brothers. They went through a total shake-up of their staff. Everyone was fired, including my tenant, who had gotten me the work in the first place. The new management sent out requests for proposals to all of my competitors. They were looking for faster service for less money. Lehman decided to stop using Cibachromes. They wanted to use "Fierys" instead. This process resulted in a much lower quality but at a much lower price. The cost of the equipment to do Fierys was way out of our price range. Box One would continue to make the slides for Lehman but no longer made Cibachromes. This was good news because, even though Cibas were making money, the processor was way too large to fit in our new apartment. By downsizing 338 Box One and moving it to the apartment, Box One could eliminate its $4500 per month rental expense and cut the staff from sixteen to six without greatly reducing our monthly gross. We would still have a color and black and white darkroom, but the overwhelming amount of work was computer slides. When making computer slides, the computer did most of the work. Hit two keys on the computer and then wait half an hour. Then hit another key and wait for the computer to do its job. Living and working at the same place worked out well. I could punch a few keys, then go up and have a beer and watch the news. Then go down, hit a few more keys, then go back upstairs and eat dinner. Speaking of dinner, Matthew and Shannon were now both vegetarians. When Lynne became a vegetarian, she stopped cooking for me. I would cook for her, but she would wait until I went to bed before she would eat it. She would not sit at the same table with me except when we were eating out. After moving to Manhattan, I maintained close relationships with many of my train friends. Our new apartment was near the subway line that went to the Long Island Railroad Station, and my train buddies would stop off to say hello. 339 We, of course, would then go to the nearest bar and have a few for old times’ sake. My relationship with one of my train friends, Michael DiMartini, seemed particularly incongruous. He was a young man in his early thirties, always immaculately dressed and so conservative that he considered The New York Times propaganda for the communist party. He was shy and quiet but had a good sense of humor. He had a mind like a steel trap; he retained everything he ever saw or heard, a quality that must have come in handy in his law practice. We disagreed on everything, but that made for good conversation. It's no fun talking to someone who agrees with everything you say. I knew that he was about to be married. I was pleased that he invited me to the wedding, but when he asked me to participate in the ceremony, I was overjoyed. He knew that I was once an actor, and he knew that I had studied for the ministry. He asked me to read a passage from the Bible: the "hope, faith, love" sequence written by the apostle Paul. At the wedding, Michael seemed calm and relaxed but I was a nervous wreck. I am not sure if it was because it had been so long since I had been in front of an "audience," or if it was because it had been so long since I had even been in a church, let alone spoken from the altar, but I fear that my 340 performance may have been a little overly dramatic. The wedding was held in Manhattan, but the reception was on Long Island. All of the train gang was there and we had a wonderful time. It's strange. I think of myself as the only person in my family who is "religious." Lynne was brought up as a Protestant, but claims to be a firm non-believer. She did, however, want the children to go to church, just as she had. I did not object, but I did not encourage it either. I wanted the children to be free to have their own moment of truth. None of them share many of my beliefs, but each of them, in their own way, is religious. I know that they search for an understanding of life. We all share a love of mankind and a desire for all living things to be treated in a moral and just manner. None of my children were baptized. This was not a result of negligence. This was part of my religious beliefs. As I saw it, Jesus came to be baptized by John the Baptist. Upon realizing who Jesus was, he said something to the effect of, "I baptize with water," but Jesus would baptize with the Holy Spirit, not in a public ceremony but a private revelation of the personal relationship that God has with each and every one of us. To have your children baptized with water would 341 seem to me to show a lack of faith. I trust that the Holy Spirit of God will baptize my children. I seem to interpret everything that I read in the Bible in a manner that is the opposite of accepted practice. I have no doubt that my children will have a greater faith and understanding of God than I have ever known. While at Alma College, I considered becoming a vegetarian. It does seem barbaric to kill innocent animals and then eat them. Human beings have this incredible ability to rationalize. My decision to eat meat is rooted in what the church calls "communion." There seems to be a debate as to whether the Last Supper was or was not a "Seder," a celebration of Passover. If it were a Seder, it is not likely that the Jews, during Passover, would have given Jesus a trial and turned him over to the Romans. That would put a fly in the ointment of the entire Easter story. But regardless, Jesus and the disciples were having "supper" at the Last Supper. Most of our Judeo-Christian culture knows the story, the bread and the wine. “This is my blood, this is my body. Do this in remembrance of me." What were they doing? They were eating and drinking. In my mind, I see Jesus pointing out to the disciples that life exists as the result of 342 sacrifice. For us to live, we must eat. For us to eat, living things must die. They are sacrificed so that we may live. He was setting them up for the realization that he was about to be sacrificed. "Do this in remembrance of me." When you eat and drink, remember me, remember that Jesus also made a sacrifice so that we could live. Every time you eat or drink, take a moment and remember. This idea is very different from the wafer and grape juice used at a communion in a church. It still bothers me that animals are killed to provide us with meat, but this concept of sacrifice eases my conscience whenever I dig into a Porterhouse steak. I mentioned this line of reasoning to my son Matthew and he responded, "Hey Dad, whatever works for you. But I don't think you can compare Christ giving his life for humanity to millions of cattle hung up at the slaughterhouse for no reason other than man’s appetite." My family enjoyed living in Manhattan. Life was good and we prospered, but the new relationship with Lynne that I had hoped for never developed. As she became more independent she also became more remote. We slept in the same king-size bed, but never touched. Lynne would stay up at night later and 343 later in hope that I would be asleep when she came to bed. It was now more difficult than ever to bring Michele home. She no longer had a bedroom, but even more important, we no longer had her bed. Michele liked to sleep in her own bed. The one common denominator throughout all of our moves to new locations was her bed. We were not able to move it with us to Manhattan. The one time that I brought her home to Houston Street was when everyone in the family was going to be away for the weekend. I picked her up on Long Island and we stopped, as we always did, at 7-Eleven, and picked up soda and Oreo cookies. She always loved Oreo cookies. Once, when she and I lived together, we went shopping and I picked up a box of Hydrox cookies and put them in the cart. She took them out and returned them to their place on the shelf. She then found the Oreos and put them in our cart. So I knew to always get Oreos. When Michele and I arrived at our Manhattan apartment she made herself at home, but when it got to be bedtime, I had a problem. The bed in Matthew's room was similar to her bed, and I didn’t anticipate a problem, but I could not get Michele to go into the room. There was something, I don't know what, that frightened her. On her own, she checked out the other rooms, but walked out when she saw that her bed was not there. She ended up spending the 344 night sitting up in the living room. I pulled out the sofa bed around 4am, but she wouldn’t get into it. She stayed up all night. When I took her back to Long Island, it hurt even more than usual to say good-bye. My sister Margaret, now back in Detroit, was again in the hospital. She needed a bone marrow transplant. I was the only one in the family who matched. I flew into Detroit several times for tests. At the final visit before the transplant, I was given a prescription for a drug to be injected every day up until the transplant. It was needed to increase some kind of platelets in my blood. I sat with the needle in my hand for half an hour. I couldn't stick it in my arm. Lynne wouldn't try. I had to go to the hospital and pay to have it done. The hospital in Detroit decided that I was not healthy enough to use the conventional transfer operation. They tried a new experimental technique. It seemed to work. Margaret lived for another two years. She was with her son Jamie and her grandchildren when she passed away. She was happy. Her minister friend from Northport, Long Island gave the eulogy. She was 53. Lynne came with me to the funeral. 345 I couldn’t help but think how sad it was that my brothers and sister and I had spent so little of our adult lives together. And now we would never all be together again, unless, of course, there is indeed a heaven. It made me think of my brothers who I never met. My mother had given birth to triplets when I was five or six years old, Don, Dan, and Dean. They all died after a few days in the hospital. Would I meet them for the first time in heaven? Would Margaret be with them now? It’s a concept that’s difficult for an intelligent person to grasp. It would be so comforting to believe so. Of hope, faith and love (charity), I have a lot of hope and love. It's the faith part that is getting a little weak. It was now 1998. Box One had been doing slides for Lehman Brothers for over six years. Suddenly the volume of work began to decline drastically. Slide shows were being replaced by electronic presentations. In other words, instead of going into a conference room and setting up a slide projector, the conference rooms were equipped with computer monitors. The slides were no longer needed. Everyone could watch the presentation on a monitor. This marked the beginning of the end. My health was deteriorating at a rapid pace. I could not quit smoking. Emphysema was becoming 346 advanced. Diabetes was becoming uncontrollable. The pain in my legs and feet made it nearly impossible to walk. The fear of another heart attack was ever present. I began to investigate the possibility of retirement. During our three and a half years in the Village, New York City rentals had gone through the roof. I was told by a rental agent that we could get a rent of $4,700 per month for our coop. Our mortgage and maintenance costs were $3,400 per month. That would mean that we could make a profit of $1,300 per month by renting out the co-op. I was 63 at the time. I could qualify for Social Security at the lower rate. The weird thing about Social Security is that you are limited as to how much income you can earn if you work while on Social Security, but you can make as much as you want from "unearned income." So, if a poor person retires, he is allowed to work and earn say $700 per month; if he exceeds that amount, he loses his Social Security. If a rich person retires, there is no limit as to how much he or she can earn from stocks and bonds and real estate investments. So I would be able to retire and get $900 per month from Social Security. Added to this would be an income of $1,300 per month 347 from the rental of the co-op, and I could work part-time and earn another $700 per month. By this time, Matthew and Shannon had moved out of the house. Shannon was living with her boyfriend in San Francisco. Matthew had moved in with his girlfriend on Long Island. Chris had transferred from The School of Visual Arts to SUNY Purchase in Westchester County, so he was gone most of the year. Lynne and I could move into the little condo we had been renting out. I could retire. Lynne didn’t like this idea one bit, but fuck it. Everyone has what I call a fuck it level. I had reached mine. I needed to have some fun. For nearly forty years I had wanted to return to San Francisco and if I retired, I would be able to go. It was now or never. I sold the little business Box One had left and I filled out the Social Security forms. Christopher and I flew out for a long weekend in San Francisco. We arrived late at night and slept in a motel near the airport. The next morning, as the taxi entered the city, I knew that I would spend the weekend with tears in my eyes. We had a two-room suite at the Tuscan Inn on Fisherman's Wharf. Shannon and her boyfriend, Jeff, would drive down from Marin County, where they were living, and spend the weekend with us. We went to see the house on 348 Grant Avenue where I had stayed rent-free for several months. Outside of a fresh coat of paint, it looked just as I had left it. The free apartment on Green Street, however, was gone. The building violations must have caused its demise. We went into the Coffee Gallery, where World Stage had put on improvisational theatre. The stage was gone, but otherwise it still looked the same. We all walked down Grant Avenue, past the City Lights Bookstore, to Vesuvio, one of the main hangouts of the “Beat” generation. Vesuvio's was so much smaller than I remembered it. I used to make food money in Vesuvio by arm wrestling. As I've said, I was a very skinny, nerdy-looking guy. One of the actors at World Stage would act as my shill. He would go up to patrons at the bar and say, “See that nerdy-looking guy over there? He's stinking drunk and thinks that he can out arm wrestle anyone in the joint.” Like so many of us skinny, wiry guys, I was pretty strong, but the key was to psyche out the opponent. I rarely won by pulling the other guy's arm down. When he was pushing with all of his might, I would say things like, “You can start any time you’re ready,” I was good at lighting a cigarette with one hand. When I lit up while they were pushing like all hell, they would usually quit. I lost a few when the other guy put 349 my arm down so fast that I had no time to try my tricks. La Bodega was a flamenco bar and restaurant that had been across the street from Vesuvio. It had since moved to a new location. They once served Coors on tap with a large slab of Gouda cheese and hunk of hard bread for a dollar. When it was served, the waiter would thrust a sharp knife into the wooden table so it would go “twang.” Flamenco guitarists played every evening. It was here that I once came close to killing a man. This was before World Stage had opened, when I was dating Norma Fire. After dining out, Norma and I had stopped off at Mr. Otis, my favorite hangout, for a drink. Norma's roommate had left San Francisco and Norma was staying with her brother down the peninsula. The last train left at midnight, so she had to leave soon. Norma and I had been joined by a few friends, and in the group was a Flamenco guitarist who played at La Bodega. He said that he lived near where Norma was going. She could stay as late as she wanted because he could drive her home. We all stayed into the wee hours. When it was time to go, I walked with Norma to the guitarist's car. She gave me a long, long kiss as we said goodnight and then they drove off. 350 The next morning, I got a call from Norma. This fucking bastard took her to his place. When she refused his advances, he kicked her out of the car. It was what we used to call, “My way or the highway.” She had to call her brother to come and get her. I went every night for a week to La Bodega, but the guitarist never showed up. He didn't work there anymore. Good thing. I would have taken that knife that went “twang” and stuck it in his throat. That's pretty tough talk coming from a wimp. In truth, I'm just the opposite of Teddy Roosevelt. I speak loudly but never carry any sticks. After visiting Vesuvio, we did it. We went to see the old, new, World Stage. It was a restaurant now, but there it was. It hadn't been a dream. I just stood and looked. I tried to find The Purple Onion and The Hungry Eye. I didn't know if they had closed or if I just couldn't find them. It was while in line outside The Purple Onion that I had met Dick Clark. He was standing in line ahead of me. We were both going to see a new comedienne, Phyllis Diller. I still remember Diller’s best line, “My 'Living Bra' died.” 351 Shannon and Jeff told me about a show that had been running in San Francisco for years called Beach Blanket Babylon. They wanted to see it, but it was all sold out. I called the theatre and they remembered World Stage. We got four press tickets for Saturday night. It was nothing like anything I would have done, but it was a lot of fun. The next day, Jeff took us for a ride to Mill Valley and then along the coastline. I had never had a car in San Francisco, so I never did much sightseeing. It was spectacular. Chris and I returned to New York with smiles on our faces. I was ready for the next adventure into the unknown... retirement. 352 Chapter 17 The lease was up on the rental of my studio condo and I notified the tenant that I would not renew it, I was moving in. I told my real estate agent to find a prospective tenant for the co-op, we were moving out. The agent put an ad for an open house in The Sunday N.Y. Times but, to my surprise, no one showed up. No one. Zip. Someone did call her office though, and requested to see the apartment that Tuesday. Two young men showed up. The ad had read "live-work." That’s what they were looking for. They wanted to open a holistic medicine practice. Would that be okay? As far as I knew that was okay. I was running a photo lab in the building and people on the next floor were running a massage and yoga business. They took one look around and said they wanted it. They placed a deposit with the real estate broker. We needed to negotiate the fine points of the lease before it could be turned over to the co-op board for approval. All of the negotiations were done with just one of the two men. His name was Danny. I never saw the second young man again. He offered $4,500, $200 less than I was asking. I said that would be OK if they accepted the apartment AS IS. No painting, no floor refinishing. I also 353 mentioned that I did not have room in our new apartment for most of our furniture. If they wanted the leftover furniture, they could have it. If not, I would give it to the Salvation Army. These negotiations went on for two months. He wanted the lease in his corporate name. I told him that a corporate lease would not be acceptable. He wanted this, and then he wanted that. He kept bringing people over to look at the apartment; he must have seen the place a dozen times. During this time, I thought it strange that no one else was ever shown the apartment. Even after a deposit is made, it is standard procedure to continue showing the apartment and to even accept backup offers. As it turned out, my real estate agent had been fired from her job. She pulled our records out of the office files. If anyone else rented the apartment, she would not get her commission. Both Danny and his partner signed leases. The starting date was January 1, 1999. The leases, financial data and references were all turned over to the co-op board for approval. When the board approved the tenants, I assumed it had done so with full knowledge of the holistic medicine. 354 Danny, the real estate agent and I all met at the apartment for a final walk through. The other tenant did not show up. Danny said they didn’t know what pieces of my old furniture they would keep. He said, “Don't throw anything out. If we can't use it, we can always throw it out.” It seemed as if we were all ready for a smooth transition. I closed Box One. Lynne and I moved into the condo. She was not happy about it but she had no other place to go. Several days had gone by after the movein date for the co-op and I hadn’t heard a word. I stopped by to see how they were doing and was surprised to find that no one had moved in. When I got back home, I called Danny. He said that he had been sick and had not even been in the apartment. A couple of weeks later, Danny called and talked to Lynne. He yelled and screamed. “This place is a filthy pigsty,” he said. “I'm not moving in until the place is painted and the floors are sanded and refinished, and all your old furniture is thrown out. And I'm not paying any rent either.” Lynne and the kids had worked so hard cleaning that apartment. They scrubbed the 355 floors, cleaned the bathrooms and the kitchen, and washed the windows. How could he say that the place was a pigsty? I went over to check it out. There was one spot between a sofa and end table that had been missed. Otherwise the place was immaculate. What was this guy up to? We set up a meeting at the apartment to see if this matter could be resolved. Danny told me that he was bringing his attorney (his sister), so I invited my real estate agent. I also asked the chairman of the co-op board to be present. As the rest of us walked through the apartment, Danny and Jim, the chairman, were talking. Suddenly we all heard screams. "You lied to me!" we all heard Jim yell. We all ran to the room where the argument was coming from. “You told me that you were in construction and that all you needed was a desk, a phone and a fax. You didn’t say a word about a holistic medical center,” Jim yelled. “I am in construction,” Danny yelled back. “If you wanted to know about the holistic medicine, you should have interviewed my partner. He's the one into holistic medicine.” Jim turned to me and said, “I'm sorry, Wayne, but I'm going to call an emergency board 356 meeting and we will void the board's approval. You don't want this lying bastard as a tenant.” Great. I've closed my business and moved out, and now I don't have a tenant in the co-op. It could take months to find a new one. The tenant in our studio condo moved out so that Lynne and I could move in. So it's costing me $5,000 per month for mortgage and maintenance fees on the two properties, and my only income is $900 per month from Social Security. Retirement is off to a wonderful start. Danny had paid the real estate company $20,500. The first month's rent, two months security, and the rest for the commission fee. He demanded a full refund. I told him he had better help find a new tenant because I was going to charge him rent until a new lease was signed. He sued me. I was going to represent myself. God knows I’ve done it before, but when Danny’s lawyer spoke with me, he tried to scare me. He used some of my own techniques and implied that he was looking forward to making me look like a stupid asshole. As it turned out, this attitude turned out to be a mistake on his part. He frightened me into looking for my own attorney. At first, I couldn’t find one. I left messages with several attorneys but they never called me back. I came to the conclusion that they were not 357 interested because there was not opportunity for them to make any money. much I wrote a letter and sent it to six lawyers. It described the situation but then stated, “I will come into your office and give you $250 cash, no receipt required. You will spend one half an hour with me and answer my questions in regards to the law pertaining to this case. All six lawyers responded. I selected one and made an appointment. He asked me if I wanted to get any money for damages or if I just wanted the lawsuit to go away. I said I just wanted it to go away. He told me that for the $250 he would draft the response and send it on his stationery. He would attempt to scare off the other lawyer. He made it clear that if the scare tactic didn’t work, he would not represent me in court. This was a oneshot deal. His response stated that because it was a live-work lease, commercial rent laws applied. He countersued for $108,000 for rent due for the duration of the lease and sued for $2,500,000 in damages. I sure got my $250 worth. Danny withdrew the lawsuit and I never heard from him again. I wish I could have seen the look on his lawyer's face when he got that response. This was my second bad experience with renters. I decided to sell the co-op instead of 358 renting it. We would lose some income but we made a nice profit on the sale. Lynne had become certified as an instructor in the exercise regimen called Pilates and was beginning to earn a nice living. I was beginning to think that she had adjusted to life in the condo, but a few months later, she split. Her brother Bill had remarried and bought a co-op apartment in Washington Heights, but he was once again on the road, this time with Phantom of the Opera. Lynne moved in with her brother’s new wife, Sue. At the time, I thought that this was a good thing. After a few months living away from me, Lynne would realize how lucky she was to have someone like me to love her and care for her. She would soon be back and we would, once again, be happy together. In order to prevent the loneliness from turning into madness, I decided to resurrect The Harold Clurman Theatre Workshop. My little condo was at 34th Street and Third Ave. There were thirty-four restaurants within a two-block radius. I did a little research to find out which ones had separate party rooms. Then, I investigated to find out which of these restaurants were doing well and which ones were “hungry.” I found a beautiful restaurant at 33rd and Third Avenue named Bellew. It had a large party room in the basement that was decorated with covers 359 from old Theatre Magazines from the thirties and forties. It was perfect. I asked to see the owner. I then explained that I was the Artistic Director of The Harold Clurman Theatre and we had lost our lease. I was looking for a space to do showcase productions of new plays. It would not cost him a cent and I could guarantee thirty people or more an evening for dinner and drinks. He just looked at me and said, “When do you want to start?” I put a casting notice in the trade paper Back Stage, and much to my surprise, for a nonpaying job doing showcase productions, I received about 4,000 pictures and resumes. Without even reading the resumés, I narrowed them down by selecting only actors who lived within an easy commute to 33rd Street and Third Avenue and who had e-mail addresses. I knew this was going to require a lot of communication and I didn’t want to be tied up on the phone or spend a lot of money on mailings. The important thing to keep in mind is that we did not charge for the performances, and these were really full performances but without a lot of sets or costumes. The money was made by selling dinner and drinks... not during performance, but before and after the shows. By not charging admission, we sidestepped many issues of union contracts and royalties. 360 This was all going very well until one evening when we arrived at the restaurant to find it closed and padlocked by the IRS. I quickly contacted the son of Richie Brew, who managed his father's famous restaurant on 34th Street, Brews, and he said, “I can’t do it on a regular basis, but if it would help, you can perform here this evening.” I felt like Orson Welles directing our audience to the new location. Unfortunately, the owner of Bellew did not survive the pressure of the IRS. He died of a heart attack and the restaurant was closed. We finished our scheduled shows at The Lambs Club, but that was the end of The Harold Clurman Theatre Workshop. 361 362 Chapter 18 Lynne never came crawling back. She never came back at all. The Fantasticks closed. After forty years, it just closed. I cried. I feared it was an omen. In the distance, I could hear the swan singing. I’ve had a few laughs and my share of tears; it's been one hell of a ride. I may go tomorrow or I could last another twenty years. Either way, I intend to go with a smile on my face. I once saw myself as someone who would alter the course of history. As it turns out, I would be very happy to be remembered as a good father and a loving husband. Shannon had broken up with Jeff and she returned to New York City and lived in the village for a while before moving to Burlington, Vermont. There, she met the love of her life and, like her mother, got married just in time. Wow, I was a grandfather. Jami Lashua was born January 28, 2002. I bought a house for them, with the understanding that I could live there rent-free for the rest of my life. After graduation from Purchase College, Chris had no place to go, and so he moved in with us. Matthew, who had been getting his masters degree in library science, was laid off from his job at the Queens Library. They 363 laid off twenty-five percent of the work force, so Matt will be moving in with us very soon. I’m going to be living with all of our children and our only grandchild. If neither Lynne nor Lyn comes back to join the family, I give up. I know it’s schmaltzy, but not a day goes by that I don’t hope to hear her say, "I love you." If my life had been a play and I had written the script, I would be on my deathbed and as I shuffled off this mortal coil, Lyn would be holding my hand. "Of course, I love you," she would say. "I have always loved you." Mussorgsky's "Great Gate of Kiev" from Pictures at an Exhibition would be playing in the background. The music would swell. Not a dry eye in the house. I can't explain it, I can't tell you why. Lyn lived with me for nearly three years before we were married and for the next thirty years we shared the same bed. During that time she was pregnant six times. No, I do not approve of abortion and I swear that I will never have one, but being a mother is obviously an important part of life and only the woman has the right to make that decision. I fully support a woman's right to choose. This is in truth “the right to life.” Have you ever noticed how the people who consider abortion to be murder are the same ones 364 who support capital punishment and always seem ready to go to war? Yes, there is a lot that I do not understand. How Lynne could not love me is just one of them. Now it's true that she did not want to get married in the first place and she did not want children. But, nevertheless, she loves her three children so very much. How could she not love me, their father? It is also true that I promised to make her the happiest woman on earth. It sure looks as if I failed to come through on that one. But a more important question is why do I still love her? How could I love someone who seems to enjoy causing me pain? Then I think of my first wife, Joan. She loved me and I treated her like shit. I do not know why but I do know that it was the result of a shortcoming in me, not Joan. In many ways, Lyn is just giving me a taste of my own medicine. Lyn, or now Lynne, has moved to Burlington, Vermont. She comes to my house every week to do her laundry. She does not speak to me unless it is absolutely necessary. In her mind, she is coming to her daughter's house, not mine. I do not want to go into her sex life. I do not know if she has one or not and I do not want to know. I have not been intimate with a woman for over fifteen years. Not even a kiss. I get very lonely. 365 But as much as I love Lyn, my children are the joy of my life. They fill me with pride. I haven't seen Michele for several years now. I often think about having her move to Vermont so that I could be with her, but I fear that such a move would be more for my sake than hers. I always felt a sense of awe and humility that God chose me to be Michele's father. She was never a burden, only a blessing. It may be best for Michele not to see me again. I don't know. I only wish my tears could bring her happiness. If only I could hear her say, "Dada." At this point (it is Friday, May 16, 2003) my life will go on, but I am bringing this book to a close. I am waiting to go to the Essex Community Theatre where my son Christopher is performing one of the leading roles in I Hate Hamlet. I have also been cast in a play. Actors' Equity, the performers union, gave me permission to work in a non-union production in Stowe, Vermont. I will play the Girl’s Father in the Stowe Community Theatre Guild's production of The Fantasticks. This is the longest running show in theatre history and it has been performed all over the country and the world. Can you imagine the look on the director's face when I came to the auditions and handed him a note from Tom Jones, the author of the play, saying that he considered me to be the best girl's 366 father in the history of the show? He did, however, still make me audition for the part. Is this my swan song or just another beginning? I have no idea. I came into this world knowing nothing and I shall leave it knowing nothing. But I have so many memories of the days when I knew it all. The End November, 2005 Michele was found dead on the floor of her bedroom. 42 years old. Cause of death unknown. God had faith that I would care for her and protect her. I let both God and my daughter down in a big way. I will never spend another night without tears running down my cheek. On the bright side, I have a granddaughter, Emma Lyn Lashua. She and my grandson Jami bring me so very much joy. I am again reminded of a book I nearly finished, Kahlil Gibran's little book, A Tear and a Smile. We need them both, don't we? But somehow, the tears are always a little bit more precious. Keep going...There's more to come. 367 More Memories When I told Barry LaVine that I believed in reincarnation and flying saucers, he thought I was crazy. When I met Judy Lieberman at a party, I thought that she was the most beautiful girl in the world. She wouldn't give me the time of day, but after she played opposite me in Strindberg's Miss Julie, she said that she would love me forever. It was too late. By then, I was in love with Mary Lou. The time Mary Lou cut her finger and bled into the creamed tuna, it was very tasty. Knowing that Martin and Diane Shaker are still my friends. Strapping a fifteen-inch woofer to my chest so that I could feel Beethoven. My dog Tippie and my horse Happy. Matthew in his Jolly Jumper. Connie Martin in the fourth grade. Holding Katy Manthos in my arms and her telling me that she loved someone else, my roommate at Alma, Bob Fritz. But she added that she knew I would someday be a "great man." My brother's deep voice saying, "Good morning. Welcome to Music '`Til Dawn." Throwing a party at Studio 54. Christina Crawford's cat that only walked backwards. Seeing a documentary about Iwo Jima and discovering that my friend, Richard Ramos, was not only there during World War II, but was a hero. He had told me, but I just didn’t believe him. He was only 14 at the time and was awarded the Congressional Medal of 368 Honor. Listening to “Musetta's Waltz” from La Bohème, Berlioz's “Symphony Fantastique,” “Brahms 1st,” “Tchaikovsky's 5th and 6th,” Cesar Frank's “Symphony in D Minor,” Dave Brubeck and Paul Desmond, Jeri Southern, Stan Kenton, and The Four Freshmen. The New Music Society, which played every Monday night at World Stage. Yuseff Lateef, Thad and Elvin Jones, Kenny Burrell. The raven that landed on my head while I was hanging up laundry in Flint, Michigan. Talking to Sir John Gielgud on the telephone. Being broke and finding a twenty on the sidewalk. Betsy and Elliot, my first two computers. Bob and Doris Camposa. Fred Eberstadt. Mike Heffernan. Richard and Amy Hutchings. The greatest dentist in the world, Randy Kay. Woody King, Jr. Jackie Mason taking his own photos at Picture Yourself. Christopher in A Christmas Carol. My mother holding Matthew in her arms. David Little-Smith and his wife, Roxanna. Marco and Joyce. Trying to get the nerve to talk to Beverly Shoemaker on the bus to Redford High School. Taking my kids to The Monkees convention in Philadelphia. Developing my first roll of film. My father cooking his famous Bar-B-Que. Kahlil Gibran's The Prophet: "Even as love crowns you, so shall it crucify you." Namath and the Jets winning the Super Bowl. The Sun Parlor Playhouse. My friends at Alma College: Bob Woods, Tom Scholl, Bob Fritch, Gary Hahn, Eddie Stoltz, Bud and 369 Alice Davies. Cliff Ammon telling me, before going on stage without any rehearsal, "Piece of cake." Jim Becker building a TV station in his garage. Carolyn Edwards, the first girl I kissed. Being hypnotized to quit smoking. Douglas Kahn, my best friend when I was five years old. Walking Randy and Margaret to the Holcomb Grade School. Phil Gaberman playing "My Funny Valentine." Lorette Yore, singing at my "Detroit Actors" party in 1983― the voice of an angel. Years later, when she was married, I stood in for her deceased father, Leonard, and gave her away. I loved her father very much and it gave me great pride to march down the aisle with his daughter on my arm. Henrietta Hermelin, a great actress, whom I could easily have loved if she had only let me. Being on stage with Yvonne Doolittle in The Crucible, and saying, "Life, woman, life is God's most precious gift. No cause, however glorious, justifies the taking of it." Shannon's purple hair. Our dog Snuffy― he was, indeed, my best friend. Christopher's smile. My work in Heaven Can Wait, The Cave Dwellers, The Great God Brown, Children of Darkness, Bus Stop, Gideon, The Teahouse of the August Moon, Candida, The Bald Soprano, Jack, The Waltz of the Toreadors, The Time of Your Life, You Never Can Tell, The Enchanted, Ondine, Miss Julie, A Shot in the Dark, A Taste of Honey, The Vegetable, The Physicist, Look Homeward 370 Angel, The Little Foxes, You Can't Take It With You, The Miracle Worker, Shadow and the Rock, The Epidemic, Awake and Sing, The Curious Savage, A View From a Bridge, The Glass Menagerie, The End of the Beginning, Bedtime Story, Roots, The Immoralist, Invitation to a March, The Beautiful People, My Heart is in the Highlands, The Harmfulness of Tobacco, The Best Man, Tobacco Road, The Marriage Go Round, The Twentieth Century, The Crucible, Under The Yum Yum Tree, Waiting for Godot, End Game, On A Clear Day, Annie Get Your Gun, The King and I, Brigadoon, How To Succeed at Business, Once Upon a Mattress, The Boyfriend, The Streets of New York, Guys and Dolls, Connecticut Yankee, Carousel, A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To The Forum, Damn Yankees, Earnest in Love, Plain and Fancy, and, of course, The Fantasticks. It's not over yet? Over the many years that I wrote and re-wrote this book, many short stories were included that ended up excluded. So I have put a few of them here at the end. A few more tidbits... just a few more interesting little episodes in my curious life. 371 High School Romance I hope I didn't give the impression that I never dated during high school. One of my most memorable dates was one I had for a school dance. It was with a girl I had met at my church. She was beautiful and intelligent. In addition to documenting my lack of sophistication, this story will also illustrate the extent of the differences between then and now, at least when it comes to sexual awareness. At this dance I saw a girl: it was love at first sight. I kept looking at her and she kept looking at me. I went up to her date and asked to speak with him. As I had hoped, he found my date attractive and so we decided to trade dates. Neither of the girls seemed to object to the idea of a trade. Later that night, my new date and I began kissing and making out in the car. When I French kissed her, she began to scream and hit me. After she calmed down, she explained to me that her mother had told her that a man putting his tongue in a girl's mouth was how babies were made. Carolyn Edwards became my first girlfriend. Our song was the theme from Moulin Rouge by Percy Faith. The first lyric is, “When ever we kiss, I worry and wonder.” 372 The Dance of Bees One of Alma College's science professors had worked on the Manhattan Project. He was the one who sent the letter to Einstein. Aside from his part-time teaching, he was retired. He had a bee farm near the school. Dr. Harold Potter taught a class in bee communication. It was intended to be for students who may have had difficulty with Science courses. If, however, you have ever had difficulty with a foreign language course, then you know that the teacher soon conducts the class in the foreign language and if you don't know enough of the language, you have no idea as to what is going on in the class. Thats what happened to me when I took a course in French. Much to my surprise, I passed it with a “C.” My professor must have confused me with another student. I knew that I never understood a word of what was going on and so I took French I again…. and again…. but I never passed again. So if I could not learn to speak French, what chance did I have to learn "Bee?" After four weeks, the class was conducted in bee talk. As we entered the classroom, the assignment would be written on the black board, showing the vibrations of a bee's bottom that had just entered the hive. We were to read the bee dance and then follow the bee's instructions. The instructions on the blackboard generally pointed the way to a food source. The class was required 373 to evaluate the speed and angle of the vibrations, and then go out and find the food. If even one student had known what he was doing, everyone would have followed him, but no one did. We would each aim our arm at the sun to determine the angle, and then wander around the campus until class was over. No one ever found the food. Dr. Potter, bless him, couldn't flunk everyone. We all got “C”s. Swan Lake The son of a close friend of my mother raised parakeets. They all could talk. It would appear at times that they were actually carrying on conversations. My parakeet, Mikey, never learned to talk, but wow, could he sing. This was before stereo but hi-fi was very much in vogue. I had a powerful amp and a Stevens 15 inch coaxial speaker. I had a very wide range of musical taste but there is no doubt that Mikey’s favorite was Swan Lake by Tchaikovsky. Whenever I played it, he would sing along. One day, I went outside to our backyard and I suddenly realized that Mikey was on my shoulder. I didn’t panic. I walked very slowly to the back door to the house. I slowly walked up the steps and opened the door but, just as I was stepping inside, Mikey flew off. He flew to a 374 branch of a tree in our backyard. We could see each other and I kept asking him to come down. Eventually he flew off. I searched all over the neighborhood. By evening, I was in a panic. Then I had a brilliant idea. I set up my hi-fi system in our yard. Needless to say, I put my LP of Swan Lake on the turntable. At full blast, Swan Lake could be heard for miles. Within a few minuets, Mikey was in a tree above the hi-fi singing away. It was getting late and my parents told me that the neighbors were beginning to complain. To this day, I cannot listen to Swan Lake without thinking about the night that I introduced classical ballet to a blue-collar neighborhood in Detroit, Michigan. Quick Study? At Wayne University Theatre in 1956, each student had to direct a student production to pass the directing class. A friend of mine was a senior and he could not graduate without directing a play. He called me at World Stage and begged me to play the lead in Swan Song by Chekhov. This is a one-act play about an old actor who retires from the theatre. After his final performance, the cast throws a party for him in the theatre. He gets drunk and falls asleep in the dressing room. Everyone goes home and leaves him there alone. 375 I told my friend that it was a part that I would love to play but I had no time to do it. He said, "It won't take long, it has to be done this Friday afternoon." "But this is Wednesday," I said. He said "So, you can rehearse tomorrow and do it on Friday. Please! You're the only actor who could possibly do it." I reluctantly said yes. I knew that I would not be able to learn the whole play by Friday, but I would have a good grasp of it and keep a script nearby offstage. I cannot explain how or why it is. I cannot spell and I have difficulty reading. If I call information to get a phone number, I cannot remember the number long enough to dial it. Yet I can read a script a few times and pretty much know it, not word by word, but idea by idea. So now it is Friday and it is show time. My makeup is done and I am ready to go. The first moments go smoothly. The old actor wakes up and finds himself alone in the theatre. He begins to reminisce about his career; the plays he has done, the women he has loved. But soon I draw a blank. No problem, I'll walk off stage and look at the script. Oh yeah, a little problem. I don’t have my glasses on. I never perform with my glasses on, but I can't read without them. No problem, I mutter something about leaving my glasses in the dressing room and went to get them. 376 Then came the real problem. This was the 1950s. The Xerox machine has not yet been invented. There were only two ways to print out copies of a script. One was called Mimeograph, which was very difficult, and the other was called Spirit Duplicator. This was easier but the type was always blue. The only light on and off stage was blue. The type was invisible in blue light. I could not see a thing. I could not read a thing. What could I do? As I said, the whole play was about an actor reminiscing about his life and experiences, so I began to substitute my personal experiences for the characters. Most of the audience consisted of theatre students. They instantly recognized the stories I was telling. Many of them had taken an active part in these stories. They rolled on the floor with laughter. The teacher thought the director did this intentionally and he got an A for direction class. I do hope that Chekhov will forgive me. Ah, sweet mystery… For many years after leaving San Francisco, I received letters from the actor who played Bloom in Ulysses. One day, I received a letter from a friend, Gary Maxwell, who was in 377 Paris with The Paper Bag Players. He told me about meeting a young lady in Paris at a bar. He mentioned to her that he had worked at World Stage in Detroit. She said, "Oh, then you must know Wayne Martens. I worked with him at World Stage in San Francisco." She went on to say that she had been madly in love with me. This came as a shock to me because, outside of my one fling, my love life in San Francisco was not much better than it had been in Detroit. My friend, Gary, could not remember the name of the girl he met in Paris. I was so curious as to whom it might be and I wrote my friend who had played Bloom, and asked if he had any idea who the girl might be. He never answered and he never wrote to me again. I later learned the young lady in question was his wife. Marijuana In the sixties, after trying for nearly ten years to quit smoking cigarettes, I was not about to try marijuana even though everyone else I knew was smoking it. I did expect it to eventually be legalized and I was ready to make a fortune off of it. I planned to form a company called “Bird” that would sell marijuana cigarettes. The slogan would be, “GET TWO STONED WITH ONE BIRD!” 378 Burglary in Brooklyn After the birth of Matthew, my mother was visiting to help with the baby. She slept in the bedroom and Lyn and I slept in the living room on the Castro. One night, very late, I woke up hearing the sound of a window opening. We lived on the first floor and the window was about four feet off ground level. Sure enough, a man was shimmying through the open window. I picked up a large, heavy, cut glass vase and slid along the wall to the window. He was balanced on the ledge with his feet off the ground. He had not seen or heard me. I didn’t want to make any noise that would wake up my mother. I lifted the vase over the man’s head and softly asked, "May I help you?" He looked up and in the same whispering tone said, "No thank you. I must have the wrong apartment." He slid down and went on his way. Four Flat Tires When we moved to Huntington, Long Island, there was one big problem: no parking space at the train station. All the spaces were filled up by 5am. My train left at 7:30am. I would park as near to the station as possible, on a residential street, and walk to the station. Understandably, the local residents were not 379 happy about their streets being filled up with commuters’ cars. It was not unusual to return from work and find a nasty note on the windshield. One evening, after working very late, I found my car with a broken window, broken antenna and four flat tires. As strange as it may sound, the broken window was a common occurrence. It was later determined that a local auto glass company was paying a gang of teens to go about the area smashing car windows. But four flat tires? I took a taxi home. The next morning I called a garage and asked how I could deal with four flat tires. The mechanic asked me if the tires were slashed or if the air had been let out. As far as I knew, the air had been let out. He asked, “Do you have a bicycle pump?” I thought he was crazy. A bicycle pump for an automobile? It worked like a charm. I didn’t even break into a sweat. Ever since, I have wondered why a bicycle pump is not standard equipment in a car trunk. After pumping up my tires, I drove up and down the block where I had been parked, yelling out the window, “Twenty bucks to anyone who can tell me who vandalized my car.” On about the third trip, a little black girl came running up to my car. She gave me the name and address of the girl who did it. That’s 380 right, the girl who did it. I handed over the twenty and the little girl went running back into her house. I drove up to the address given to me, walked up to the front door and rang the bell, several times. No one was home. As I was traveling that block one more time, on my way home, a woman was standing in the middle of the road waving at me. I stopped. It was the little black girl’s mother. “Mister, we are the only black family in this neighborhood. If word gets out that my daughter is a snitch, our lives will be ruined forever. Please take your money back.” I told the mother that I understood her dilemma and promised not to go after the culprit. On the other hand, her daughter had provided the information I was seeking, and I felt that she should keep the money. The mother reached in through the window and gently touched my face. “You are a good, kind man,” she said. “Thank you.” Suddenly, all of my anger was gone. Just one more short one..... 381 Heresy Forty-five years after my calling to the ministry, I discovered that my religious beliefs had a name. Lynne and I had gone to a small party, and after a few drinks I began to sermonize. It soon developed into an oldfashioned bull session like many of us had in college. Lynne was bored and wanted to go home. On the way back, she said that she was embarrassed because I made an ass of myself. A few days after the party, a package arrived at our apartment. One of the party guests had sent a book. It was "The Kingdom of God is Within You" by Leo Tolstoy. I had no idea that Tolstoy was such a great religious thinker. Apparently, this book had a great deal of influence on Mahatma Gandhi. I'm certain that I skipped a few pages but I almost read the whole book. For the first time, I realized that I am not alone; I belong to a group, a group that wants to discover the truth about life and our personal relationship with God. I am a heretic. 382