Tuesday, May 17, 2016

Hirschfeld in The New York Times
© Al Hirschfeld Foundation


The Birds of Killingworth
(“I’ll make love to the Man in the Moon”)


1

  For Daisy Belmore, Automat chicken pot pie is like Pheasant under glass at the St. Regis as she  spoons it on to a white, warm, porcelain plate (no plastic at the Automat!), gathering peas and carrots, bits of crust and chicken with fork held in left hand, knife in the right, European style, savoring. “Such lovely veg-e-ta-bles.”
  November, 1950. David Woehrle is introducing me to her at the West 54th-at-Broadway Automat. She’s sitting between us, perhaps to protect her from imaginary autograph hounds. Daisy at 76 has had a long career in the theatre, films, and radio, but isn’t well-known. Some notoriety will come to her in February when she appears at the Martin Beck Theatre as the witch in the new Tennessee Williams play, “The Rose Tattoo.” No longer may she identify herself as “the most known unknown in the theatre.”
  Daisy, hair colored apricot, eyes blue as a June sky considers me. Shall I get the part, will she welcome me to her world as fellow actor, or send me off to the cheap seats in the balcony?
  “What happened to your hair?” David asks.
  “I’ve had it colored apricot, and Tennessee loves it!” her voice, young, petulant. She’s a large woman, well shaped bones suggesting control, but a certain tremor in her voice reveals vulnerability. “If you know anything about the theatre, David,” between savoring forks-full of lovely veg-e-ta-bles, “you would know this color will catch the lights and transform it to gray.”
  “I hope so,” David says, “but anyway, I guess apricot might be okay for a witch’s hair.”
Stray-ga,” she corrects, dropping several lumps of sugar and a dollop of cream into her coffee. “That’s Italian for witch and you should know under pink gels, my hair will appear gray.” I want to ask, How do you know they will be pink? but think better of it.
Making the most of the Automat’s mundane setting, she performs eloquently, lofty and formidable to the last detail, chicken pot pie followed by rice pudding (“Nothing like my recipe,” she complains); the two-course meal lacking only critical notices and applause. Daisy is “in and of”  the theatre once more.
She invites me to study with her. “Why don’t you come along with David the next time for Shakespeare? Have you studied Shakespeare? You’re not one of the mumblers, are you?”
  “I don’t think so.”
  “Have you learned to pro-ject (rolling the “r”) so you can be understood in the balcony?”
  “It’s not a problem, I don’t think.”
  “Well, dear, I’m sure you’ll do very nicely.”
  The Shakespeare project is delayed until Daisy returns from out-of-town tryouts, opening on December 29 at the Erlanger Theatre in Chicago. She writes us, “My dears, they’re laughing at everything!” But “The Rose Tattoo” for  me transcends comedy, one of the most joyous, heart warming odes to the human spirit of all Tennessee William’s plays.
  The play opens in New York February 3, 1951. Daisy as the strega clatters about chasing a goat and making a nuisance of herself in Act I, but later in one magical moment, totally at rest, she hooks me with her wizardry standing perfectly still listening at the window of Serafina’s house.

Daisy Belmore, the Strega
eavesdropping at Serafina’s window

  Serafina, (Maureen Stapleton), is demanding the young sailor, Jack (Don Murray) drop to his knees in front of the Madonna and swear he will “respect the innocence of her daughter and the daughter of her dead husband, Rosario delle Rose.
  The Strega creeps into the yard listening as Serafina conducts a lengthy challenge to the young sailor. Daisy comes to rest, not moving a muscle, centered in the moment, quietly listening. Her intense stillness draws me forward, spellbound. I shall remember the moment always.
  On my first visit to Daisy’s sixteenth floor apartment at the Wellington (painfully near Kitty O’Brien’s”), the wiry, not so tall elevator operator eyes me suspiciously “You’re visiting—who?”
  “Daisy Belmore.”
  “Did you phone from downstairs? Is she expecting you? “
  “Yes.”
  “It’s all ladies on this floor, so we have to be careful,” as if he were the only one in the hotel privy to this information. He slides the elevator to a halt. Escaping into the hallway, I find Daisy’s room. David greets me and I’m welcomed by the shrill whistle of a tea kettle.
  “You’re announced—by a tea kettle,” David says.
  Red hair flying, Julia Cross puffs on a cigarette, coughing through smoke. “Hello, dahling.”
  The small, well-organized room has bed against one wall under a high window, chest of drawers against another wall; fragile TV tables on spindle legs, a couple of straight-backed chairs, one large overstuffed recliner, hot plate in a corner, upon which the tea kettle sputters. The window above the bed looks out on windows not more than fifteen feet away in another wing of the Wellington. This, Daisy’s home for the rest of her life.
  Holding a fat rose-hued teapot in both hands, Daisy moves over to the hot plate. “Bring the pot to the kettle, not the kettle to the pot!” she sings.
  Cough-cough from Julia. “Daisy is telling us a Rose Tattoo story.”
  Taking center stage, Daisy pours hot water into the teapot. “This actress my dear, her timing was thoroughly out of joint in rehearsal. She’s rushing her one big line and will lose her laugh. I have to yank her aside and tell her how to do it! She’s the schoolteacher, you see, and has come to fetch Serafina’s daughter to her graduation and is being chased by this gaggle of women all prattling away in Italian. She  stops them with Please ladies! You know I don’t  speak Italian!—well, my dears, that’s her line, but she just rattles it off, taking no pause. I tell her she’ll never get her laugh that way. She  must pause and wait a moment for their complete silence—Please, ladies! – pause, and then, You  know I don’t speak Italian!
  Daisy glances around the room, waiting approval. Julia inhales a wad of smoke, David stares in silence. Me? I laugh. I get it, but Daisy doesn’t seem to notice.
  “Well, don’t you see?” now peevish. “She must take the pause to get her laugh. Please, ladies!—long pause—and then, You know I don’t speak Italian!
  Julia says, “Daisy dear, didn’t the director mind your interfering?”
  “Certainly not! Danny Mann has given me cart blank. He knows my long experience in the theatre. Don’t you understand? Her timing is off!”
  Julia laughs through coughing fits. Daisy pursing lips. “What’s so funny, Julia?”
  “Daisy dear, it’s carte blanche, not cart blank. It’s French.”
  “Oh bother!” Pout lingering, she pours the tea. “Julia, you’ve been smoking too much.”
  “I know, Daisy dear, but it’s so hard to quit.”
  “You too, David. Clear speaking demands breath control!”
  “Tallulah Bankhead smokes like a locomotive,” David says, “and you can sure hear her in the balcony.”
“  Oh never mind!” Daisy now the scolded child. “If you want to sound like Tallulah with her whiskey vocal chords, go right ahead!” blue eyes glancing toward me, at last recognizing my presence. “Did you bring your Shakespeare?”
  “Well, no, I—”
  “We’re reading the balcony scene from Romeo and Juliet,” she says sternly, “and it’s much too late for me to exude an extra copy!”
  Julia laughs again, coughing through tears. “It’s ex-hume, Daisy dear—not ex-ude.”
  “He can borrow my copy,” David interrupts. “I know the lines.”
  “Let’s get on with it!” Daisy says, passing a tin of biscuits. “Are you prepared, Julia?”
  “Yes, dear, I’m prepared, as soon as I ex-ude a copy of the play from my bag so that I can ex-hume my lines.”
  Daisy lifts her chin a notch, scowling, settling into the recliner. David begins, “But soft—”
  “Wait for us, dear,” Daisy says.
  “I’ve got the first line.”
  “Yes, but—are you ready, Julia?”
  “Yes, I’m ready.”
  David continues, “But soft, what light through yonder window breaks. It is the east and Juliet is the sun. Arise fair sun—“
  “No! No, David, more passion! He’s in love with a lovely young maiden. He pines for her. Now then—once more.”
I’m assigned apparently to audience only. The balcony scene continues, Julia, coughing through, “Oh swear not by the moon, the inconstant moon—” stopping suddenly to light another cigarette. “Daisy, why don’t you read Juliet? You do it so beautifully.”
  Daisy glows, no coaxing required. “Well, all right, my dears. . .” settling into the recliner. “Oh Romeo, Romeo, wherefore art thou Romeo . . .” transforming herself into a young girl, vibrant, clear intonation, singing the words, blue eyes shining. Unforgettable.
  Even before she’s left for the Chicago tryouts, and before the Automat introduction, David has become her dependable escort—dinners at the Wellington, gatherings of theatre people. She’s furious when he announces he can’t take New York anymore and might just go back to California—to Hollywood. Daisy says, “I nearly died out there!”
  She began her movie career in 1917 at the age of forty-three. Sometime in the 1920s she married Sam Waxman and lived with him in Australia. They had two children, one boy, one girl. (The marriage is never mentioned in her biographies.) By 1930 she was divorced and living in a trailer in Hollywood.
  “Garbo called me Nana,” she tells us, appearing (uncredited) as the flower shop owner at the beginning of “Camille,” bringing a large bouquet of camellias out to Garbo waiting in the carriage. Their paths must’ve have crossed frequently on the MGM lot.
  For Famous Players at Paramount in 1917 she played “an evil witch” (was this an omen?), and a beautiful woman who transforms seven brothers into swans in “The Seven Swans” staring Richard Barthelmess and Marguerite Clark. In 1930, as Darmour in the radio comedy “Dizzy Dates,” with Tempe Pigot (who was in the Pilgrimage Play in 1948). In the 1931 Bela Lugosi “Dracula” Daisy played “woman in the English coach”—uncredited.
  Her brother Lionel Belmore had a much longer career in Hollywood, playing the Burgomaster in “Frankenstein,” and a list of credits, and uncredited, in films reaching back to 1914. He would retire in 1945 to the Actor’s Home in Woodland Hills after appearing in his last film, “I Was a Criminal.”
  Daisy is on stage in 1910 in the “original musical” Our Miss Gibbs, followed by four plays to 1919, seven plays and two musicals in the 1920s, seven plays in the 1930s, a revival of “Love for Love” in 1940 (it ran only five days).  In 1944, her last appearance, six years before “The Rose Tattoo,” is in “Last Stop,” running for less than three weeks. Indeed she had become “the most known, unknown in the theatre.”

  In April 1951 we’re gone, no special farewells. We didn’t keep  in touch, and would learn on  our return in 1952, Daisy, beginning the national tour with “The Rose Tattoo” in Buffalo, suffered a heart attack. She recovered, but no longer robust, just, in her words, “A bag of bones.” Forced to leave the show, she had returned to her sixteenth floor room at the Wellington. But this was not the end of  our friendship.

Old Aqueduct Trail

The Birds of Killingworth
(“I’ll make love to the Man in the Moon”)

2

  Our light-and-dark two-toned green 1947 Chevy four-door sedan brought us cross country to Yonkers in March, 1952. Yes, David and I (jointly) owned an automobile, thanks to Alice, my sister, and hubbie, Leno LaBianca, who made the down payment—monthly payoff, our responsibility—one of the highlights of that not-so-memorable year in Southern California. The Chevy was to become home away from home for Daisy and daughter Ruth on many excursions northward up-the-Hudson to Lake Champlain, across the Lake to Burlington Vermont down through the state—Labor Day weekend on Cape Cod. The Chevy also becomes coach for new-found buddies, Beatrice Swann and husband Gus Coan, to and from their home in Connecticut.
  In 1951 we are back in California. Mark Buchoz, now going for his master’s degree in Speech and Drama at U.S.C., has found us a bungalow in a court near the campus in a quiet residential neighborhood with blooming magnolia trees fronting most houses—as well as a growing number of TV antennas sprouting on their rooftops. We deplored (oh, weren’t we the wise ones) increasing numbers of families glued to tiny black and white screens watching Milton Berle and other live offerings mostly originating in New York. Movie attendance was dropping  fast.
  Don Olson, still living with Mark, is building a stone fireplace in their living room. We pal around with them from time to time, trips to Laguna Beach in Mickey Feay’s Ford convertible in what we considered our “escape” to less restricted Orange County. Yes, at the time L.A. county was more repressive, and Laguna Beach had gay bars free from harassment. This wouldn’t endure, unfortunately.
  Bill Curtis and Anne O’Neil reenter my life. Anne, David, and I are cast in S.N. Berman’s “Biography.” The director, whose name fortunately I would forget upon returning to New York, we suspect is a Scientologist or member of a similarly manipulative cult. He seemed to delight picking David’s brain, especially when the cast gathered at our bungalow. Perhaps he was trying to break us up—whatever, and it really bugged David.
  Curtis now and then comes to rehearsals with Anne, but he’s  pursuing his own career. I’ve got the plum role of Richard Kurt, young rebel who believes he’ll never grow old. “I’ll be dead before I’m thirty!” David, with German accent, plays Melchior Feydak; Anne, Slade Kinnecott. All characters revolve around the star (director’s girlfriend whose name I can’t remember) as Marion Froude, an artist, the play set in her New York studio. Our performances are in the Hollywood Athletic Club which many years later will become a smart, Hollywood disco in front of which the young River Phoenix will o.d. and die.
  Other events that year, working as shipping manager for the California Electric Services, Inc. on Alvarado Boulevard, David part of the “crew” along with a couple of lesbians.
  Once more, David has got the travel bug. Ronnie Leach, a lanky dark-haired Australian (sexuality questionable) and another girl from the Pakistan Mission to the United Nations in New York are on a road trip, and urge David to return—his job at the Mission still open, and a spot for me as well. “Diplomatic Courier to the U.N.” sounds glamorous, and the pay is good, a little over $250 a month. Ronnie has a friend at the U.N. who has a sublet in her apartment building in Yonkers—we can drive her to the U.N. in the morning on our way to the Mission. A new adventure beneath my beloved Manhattan Towers is about to begin.
  Expecting to be free from winter storms, we take the southern route east from Los Angeles. I’m at the wheel all the way, and wouldn’t you know, although we can’t get much more south than Tucson, Arizona, we’re surprised leaving Tucson in darkness (it’s four a.m.) we drive headlong into a blinding snow storm on mountain roads outside the city. Driving in the dark with snow swirling on the windshield for the first time, is harrowing, to say the least.
  This will be the last of bad weather. We explore bat caves near Carlsbad, New Mexico, drive from El Paso, Texas, north through Oklahoma, Missouri and into Tennessee where smooth, black-topped roads with white and yellow markings welcome us in the darkness—the best roads since leaving California.
  Final destination—Yonkers to an apartment building on the Hudson River, below the hills which separate us from Yonkers’ central city—a large, ground floor apartment on Warburton Avenue. Soon I will become a real New York driver, taking us down F.D.R. drive every weekday morning in the rush hour, surviving traffic on Second and First Avenues, maneuvering through an army of big rigs, dropping Eleanor off at the U.N., north to  the Mission at 12 East 65th Street. Fortunately, parking on the street is not as draconian as it will become years later.
  As “Diplomatic Couriers” we do not have briefcases handcuffed to our wrists, or carry weapons. This is the period when Pakistan and India are fighting over  the Kashmir now occupied by Pakistan, a Muslim nation. (They are to this day, 2016). The Indian mission and Consulate is behind us on East 64th  Street.
  Colonel Chatari, large, black-mustachioed villain right out of “Lives of the Bengal Lancers,” blustering, arrogant, runs the mission. Naz Usef, chewing beetle nut, teaches me a few words of Urdu. David tells the story of Chatari once throwing a batch of files on the floor in front of him and yelling, “Pick them up!”  David had other tales about the Pakistanis, once trying to explain to a new arrival he’d escorted from Idylwild to his hotel room how to flush the toilet—to which the man replied, “I can’t do that, it will splash all over me!”
  On weekends we discover a jungle of green foliage on a pathway at the bottom of the hills above Warburton Avenue, and learn it’s the Old Croton Aqueduct Trail, overgrown with crab grass and fox tail in the summer, wild growing maples and gray birch and flowering dogwood and copper beech trees. David, clinging to his love of the outdoors, can’t get enough of it. On our first hike, we stumble on a grand stone staircase disappearing into wild bushes above us, weeds spreading out from the steps, reaching upward to Untermeyer Park, and later, above, on Broadway in Yonkers,  a hundred-room stone villa.
  The villa was built in 1840 by John T. Waring, a hat manufacturer in Yonkers, who called it “Greystone.” In  1879 it was bought by Samuel J. Tilden who’d amassed a large fortune from practicing corporate law and had been elected governor of New York in 1874 after he broke up corrupt Tammany Hall and Boss Tweed, swindler of seventy-five to  two hundred million dollars from New York City from 1865-1871.
  Democrat Tilden ran for President in 1876 against Republican Rutherford B. Hayes, and actually won—but because of an electoral dispute his victory was compromised away. In 1879, twenty years after Tilden’s death, Samuel Untermeyer bought Greystone, and by 1899 had created its gardens as one of the best in the area. We found only remnants of a bulldozed estate—a columned gazebo on top of a raised small mountain; an impressive walled in garden area abutting the St. John Riverside Hospital; fourteen Corinthian columns in a circle (no roof), with a view of the Palisades. Today, the Estate has been  completely restored.
  Not a drop of snow has fallen in New York or Yonkers. April comes, then May, and David can’t wait to drive up the Hudson. By the first week in May, sudden bursts of color resplendent in emerald green woodlands, dogwood trees laced among magnolia and white mulberry trees, red oaks and Japanese maples—towns and pathways with magical names, Briar Cliff Manor, Hastings-on-the Hudson, Tarrytown, and legendary Old Sleepy Hollow Road where once road the Headless Horseman. Our beer drinking becomes the stuff of legends when we discover a bar overlooking the Hudson, becoming addicted to Löwenbräu in ice cold glasses.
  Our of nowhere, Jack Conway hooks up with David at the U.N., and so one summer day finds David in Jack’s convertible, top down, on their way to our Yonkers apartment, while I trail close behind in the Chevy. Needless to say, I’m a bit squeamish with the reemergence of this old love (and it will not be the first time Jack Conway will appear out of the blue). Jack is pleasant enough, but David more than once in the midst of an argument has suddenly crooned, “Black, black is the color of  my true love’s hair.” I suspect, looking back, Jack and David did have an “illicit” rendezvous at some time during these years in New York, but alas, I’ll never know.)
  Resignation from the Pakistan Mission comes swiftly. We’re anxious to get back into the theatre. Colonel Chatari declares, “You Americans think about nothing but money!  What are you going to do when you leave here?” The theatre! The theatre! We are called by the muse.
  So, it’s back to the East 34th Street labyrinth—this time in a room graced with a small window over the street allowing a glimpse of morning sun. We live on over-easy eggs cooked on a hot plate—toast and orange juice, the morning fare. I begin to write short  stories, but nothing comes of it.
A younger Daisy Belmore, Nurse (left at desk) in “Scarlet Pages”

The Birds of Killingworth
(“I’ll make love to the Man in the Moon”)

3

  Employment agency add in The New York Times: ”Mimeograph Operator.” (Hey! I can do that!) Taking a quick look at my résumé, an elegantly coiffured woman sends me off to the American Broadcasting Company at West Sixty-sixth Street and Columbus Avenue, where a youngish, sandy hair blond guy, comfortably seated behind a desk, glances over it. “You can take the mimeo job if you want it, but something else has opened up here. We need a copy boy in the newsroom for the eleven o’clock television news broadcast. Are you interested?”
  Am I! only a meager fifty dollars a week but sounds a helluva lot more fun than running a mimeograph machine. Eight hour shift, four in the afternoon to midnight, shorter hours on holidays—the news demands work on holidays.
  David has found a night job at NAPA, National Auto Parts Association, buried in a warehouse near the Hudson River shipping auto parts around the country. We can leave forever the grim prison-like complex on East 34th Street and move to a studio apartment on East 83rd in “Germantown” for seventy-five dollars a month. Like most eastside apartments, it’s small, kitchen and separate bathroom; however, a sunny outlook from a couple of south-facing windows on the back overlooking a school yard.
  David loves living in Germantown, perhaps because we begin to spend more Saturday nights than we should at the Brahause on East 86th Street, singing with the locals at the bar, Du, du, liegst mir in herzen and other Teutonic songs. Vien, Vien, es du allein . . .
Outings with Daisy begin in earnest. She even makes her way via express subway to the 86th Street stop and I drag her to a matinee of George Pal’s “The War of the Worlds” at the local Eighty-sixth Street Loews. “Oh, my dear!” she cries as we leave the theatre, “It was so loud!”
  Occasionally on Saturday afternoons finds us with Daisy at her daughter Ruth’s apartment in Rego Park; Ruth’s husband, a proud, boisterous Puerto Rican, Alonzo Garcia. Ruth, herself a blustery large boned woman like her mother, with red hair, commands an explosive sense of humor too often directed at her mother. Her favored shtick, mimicking Midwesterners – “I mean ta tal you!” She has been in and around theatre most of her life and harbors a deep resentment of homosexual men, even though she has several friends who are—practically of all Daisy’s male friends are gay.
  Her relationship with Daisy was painful to watch—making fun of her whenever the vulnerable Daisy gave her the chance. David and I would bear the brunt of her manipulations in years to come. It’s likely Ruth resented her mother for marrying the Australian, Sam Waxman, who was Jewish. (Neither Ruth nor Daisy see much of Daisy’s son.) Ruth tells anti-Semitic jokes and is virulently anti-Catholic, and has taken up Christian Science feverishly.
  Years later when I was leaving Los Angeles for New York with Frank Dunand, she assumed Frank, Cuban born, was Catholic and urged me to go back to David, even though Frank, influenced by his friendship with Mary Adams, had taken up Christian Science, while David had become a brother in a Capuchin monastery!
  In 1957, Ruth divorced Alonzo and married an accountant, Leonard Lindsay whom she’d met working at an insurance company in New York. Leonard, short, pudgy, was a bland, soft-spoken man. Ruth once accused David of trying to hit on him. Out of the blue during one of our frequent “separations,” she said, “You homosexuals are all  alike!”
  Ruth was full of pain, born of her resentment of her mother. Daisy, no doubt, hadn’t been the greatest, most attentive mother in the world. Daisy’s son also had little or nothing to do with her—I can’t even remember his name; hearing only from Daisy the time her son and Ruth made an attempt to get her to move from the Wellington Hotel into an “old ladies home” somewhere on Long Island. Daisy fought back. “You may be assured I will not stir from this room until they carry me out in a basket!”
  There were awkward and disturbing moments at that Rego Park apartment, once Daisy asking for money as a school girl asks for an allowance, Ruth reluctantly pealing off a few twenty dollar bills, almost throwing them at her. We watched a lot of television as Alonzo, Lord of the Manor, lounged in a recliner, joining Ruth in finding fault with just about everything, recalling Ruth responding to a commercial for underarm deodorant.
  Job Interviewer, “Don’t be half-safe, we cannot afford to hire people who offend.” Ruth shouting at the TV, “Don’t  be half-safe, use it under both arms!” followed by a loud guffaw.
  David’s friendship with co-worker, Gus Coan is developing, but Daisy still gets most of our attention on weekends. Christmas, 1952, finds me at the wheel of the veteran 1947 two-tone dark and light green Chevy, driving Daisy and David all through the night on a five hundred, uninterrupted, harrowing journey over snow-covered roads to David’s home in Columbus, Ohio. Periodically at the wheel, I would drop off to near-deep sleep.
  Amazing how peaceful one feels drifting into slumber-land behind the wheel of a speeding vehicle accompanied by “hypnological  hallucinations,” a  term I would learn several years later when working for the Ohio Department of  Highway Safety. No danger of falling off, however, for, fortunately, during bone-chilling moments early in the  morning attempting to get past groaning semi-trucks slipping and sliding in front of us up steep icy hills on two-lane highways. It’s a wonder we ever get to Columbus alive.
  Daisy scores a hit with Florence, David’s mother, and Dad, David Sr., and with older sister Emmeline husband, Norman Link, himself a real charmer. Emmeline is fun loving and full of zest, fascinated by her. Daisy entrances the two children, Jeffery and Michael. We didn’t know at the time how many times Daisy had “toured the provinces,” but she was in her element in Ohio, becoming “the British Actress on Tour,” her speech more and more British as Christmas approached, rolling her “r’s”, helping Florence in the kitchen, preparing endless pots of tea; and fascinated by the simplest things, telling Florence, “My dear, you must use your special chinaware every day, not only for special occasions!” taking beautifully painted china cups out of a glassed-in cabinet.
  In 1952 ABC “Eleven O’clock Television News” was lodged on the first floor in a large, windowless room on Sixty-seventh Street. No anchors appeared. It was essentially a slide show with male staff announcers in voice overs telling the day’s events. Even Milton Cross, famed host for Saturday afternoon broadcasts of the Metropolitan Opera, did a stint occasionally, proclaiming the nightly news in familiar, sonorous, upward inflected tones as if introducing a performance of Carmen, or Tosca, or describing gowns worn by the divas during curtain calls in front of the Met’s illustrious gold curtain. In our broadcasts,  “And now the news to-night!”
  Mary Laing, young and comfortably tall, sandy hair and taciturn, “not given to much talk,” perennially dressed in simple gray skirt and flowered blouse, writes the copy and puts the show together with my assistance which includes mounting slides messengered in from all over town and ripping sheets off from the teletypes spitting out news from all over the world—Associated Press (AP), United Press (UP), International News Service (INS) “wires,” and weather reports.
  Mary and I hit it off from the start. Her quiet, “no bullshit” manner and wry sense of humor disarms me. A few weeks into the job, she says, “Why not call yourself editorial assistant? Sounds better on a résumé than copy boy.” No wonder we got along. This woman’s got class. So, “Editorial  Assistant” I become.
  Strange, exotic and disarming people with a variety of political outlooks wander in out of the newsroom. Mary’s boyfriend is a young, dark-haired, rather hefty Philip Scheffler, cameraman at CBS (then, and for another four decades)—both of them extreme left liberals. Another liberal, Pauline Frederick, red head, taller than Mary and a bit less feminine, whose beat is the United Nations, is frequent late night visitor, her two white toy poodles leashed at her feet. She seems quite fond of Mary, but by all  appearances, not aggressively so.
  Other frequent visitors: Taylor Grant whose “Headline Edition” is broadcast on ABC radio. Another “member” of our liberal gathering is young Jules Bergman, science reporter who will have that title for many years on ABC Television, becoming well-known for his repots on NASA’s space program and the moon landing.
  Close-knit group we are (I’m in heaven)—like minds resisting the emergence of McCarthyism and the approaching 1952 presidential election between Adlai Stevenson—with holes in his shoes and blasting the Republicans “who got dragged and screaming into the Twentieth Century!” opposed by Dwight David Eisenhower, heroic and dearly loved by most everyone. Eisenhower’s running mate is Richard Nixon. We watch, appalled, to his  “Checkers” speech in the newsroom, an answer to his taking the bribe for his home, ending with “And now they even want to take my little dog, “Checkers.” Later comes Senator McCarthy’s “pumpkin” speech which launches his accusations of “communists in the State Department. Mary is frustrated and flabbergasted, marring her usually quiet voice. “Is the American public really going to swallow this crap?”
  On election night I work in a huge sound stage, running popular vote totals from the teletype to the anchor, John Daly, recently recruited from CBS to head ABC News. At CBS, he’s won fame hosting the long-running, “What’s My Line?”  For some reason the popular vote tally I hand him is behind totals chalked on the huge black board in this day before computers. After several hours, Daly finally throws his hands up in despair, calling down to me from on high, forced smile laced with arrogance, “Look, chief, can’t you get this to me sooner?” Can’t blame him for not wanting to be embarrassed on television in front of a nationwide audience, but his attitude certainly lacks grace. In another few months, when he takes over as Vice President in charge of news, my dislike for him intensifies—for good reason.
  Prior to the election, a gang of ultra-conservative men and women—a robust, fifty-or-so Irishman named Ryan who reeks of cheap after-shave and traces of bourbon—brings in his hand-picked production crew, and assistant, a woman with kinky red hair and taut face whose name I fortunately can’t remember, to  put together and produce a first for television—a one-hour news program. Our easy-going, humanistic sanctuary has been invaded by the Philistines! It’s uncertain viewers will stay with an hour broadcast. Mary Laing hopes they will not.
  The show is flagrantly right wing, in spite of Mary’s attempts at unbiased writing. The commentator’s have no intention of sticking to the script. We continue our eleven o’clock stint, welcoming those late night hours after the McCarthyites have fled when both of us have time to think and dream of other things—I, sketching out a floor plan for the ideal theatre, modeled after an ancient Greek amphitheatre; Mary and Pauline huddled in quiet conversation with Phil until departing for late night supper and drinks at Healy’s—the local hangout.
  As to my theatre design—Walter Kerr in the Times, sings the praises of a new theatre in Canada designed just as mine, breaking down the proscenium arch, extending the stage out into a surrounding audience, a design which will soon invade New York—particularly in the 1960s when Lincoln Center is built.
Daisy Belmore

The Birds of Killingworth
(“I’ll make love to the Man in the Moon”)

4

  In March, 1953, the eleven o’clock news is discontinued, so it’s off to the mimeograph room—not a bad job. Every Friday night Milton Cross picks up his mimeographed script for the Metropolitan Opera’s Saturday matinee broadcast. Even in casual conversation he sounds like his describing a curtain call at the Met: “And now, thank you veddy much! for delivery of these pages to me on time and with such perfection!”
  Half-hour ABC Television is launched a month later, with Taylor Grant as anchor, still continuing his long-running radio show, “Headline Edition.” With the radio and TV shows back-to-back, he needs an editorial assistant and remembers me from the late night gatherings with Mary Laing and the libs. I’ll get forty bucks a week paid out of his own pocket—a “glamour job” it’s true, but who cares? I’ll be at the heart of ABC network news.
  Taylor’s good looks qualify him for television, large brown eyes, soft brown hair; resonant voice; although the writers chide him (behind his back) for pronouncing “Old Gold” (the radio show’s sponsor) “Ode Gode.” Actually “anchor” is the wrong term since there’s no “team” for segments such as “entertainment” or “weather.”
  So here I find myself in the newsroom, two writers at the side of me—both men, young, and cynical, with plenty about which to be cynical as the news in 1953 is about one crisis after another—the United States attempting to wind down the Korean war—if not end it altogether; appeals from Julius and Ethel Rosenberg supporters to save them from the electric chair for giving atomic bomb secrets to Russia, and their final executions after Eisenhower refuses a stay; burgeoning black lists of supposed commies in the government, theatre and Hollywood; a cold war with Russia getting colder, blatant racism sweeping through southern states.
  My tasks primarily are for Taylor’s radio “Headline Edition,” lining up remotes from correspondents, sent to us on tape, mostly from Washington, D.C. For the television broadcast, writing cue boards with a thick black pen for commercials touting the show’s sponsor, Levi’s oven-baked rye bread.
  Taylor’s worst moment on TV is courtesy of Frank Lloyd Wright, renowned architect.  Taylor could’ve strangled the producers for lining up this crotchety old man. For every question Taylor asks, Wright fires back with a question of his own, never favoring Taylor with an answer.  The interview is a disaster, but somehow we survive.
  One of the writers—actually, the only guy I remember—is around thirty years old and balding. He’s fathered a large family, pointing out to me that his baldness is “a sign of virility,” as he glares at my full head of hair; then shrugging an apology, “It’s really all in the genes,” he says.
  Both writers are right out of “Front Page,” reporters with crusty veneers hiding their feelings, referring to both tragedies and up-beat events when they cluster the wire services,  as “good news days.” Like those zany reporters in “Front Page,” authentically portrayed in the film, “His Girl Friday,” beneath their acidic attitudes beats lingering sentimentality. One thing both have in common, along with every one else in the newsroom, is the fervent dislike of the ultra-conservative legions running rampant n the land.
  John Daly, whose politics are unknown, as newly appointed “News Director” appears in the newsroom, and seems not to give a hoot whether he’s liked or not. My own experience with him on election night, has not endeared him to me. Then on the phone one day, he loses it, screaming at his auto mechanic who’s been late getting the job done on his car. “Well, goddammit, if you want to get paid you’d better get it finished this afternoon!” and slams down  the receiver. We sit in shocked silence as he storms out.
  But  nothing can stop  John Daly; he’s on the ascendant—well known from “What’s  My Line,” is he not? It’s inevitable—he will take over ABC’s Evening News. Taylor is out, and it’s back to the mimeograph room.

5

  When Taylor Grant hired me in April, 1953, he suggested I first take a week’s unpaid vacation so he can get himself organized for his first stint as TV news anchor. Gus Coan, David’s fellow night hawk at NAPA and wife Beatrice Dwan invite us to spend the week on their thirty-five acres of undeveloped land, north of Guildford, Connecticut close to the Hammonasset River.
  Beatrice is ultra-elegant, tall and serene, Boston Irish, fashion sketch artist for the big department store, her full page ads appearing in the Sunday New York Times. We will spend many weekends with them at their weekend getaway, a small house in Guilford, just east of New Haven. So David and I venture into the wilds of Killingworth to rough it in a wooden shack—no electricity, no kitchen, no plumbing, just like Thoreau!—David is in Seventh Heaven, and so am I.
  On weekends at their Guilford home, and sometimes in the woods, Beatrice and I, the dreamers, perform great legends in realms otherworldly: Beatrice is Irish Queen wandering along the ramparts of her castle; I, the Troubadour below, strumming a mandolin—David and Gus looking on stoically, as we down boiler makers (beer with shots of Irish whiskey), getting euphorically drunk.
  Beatrice disdains those American Irish who know nothing of their ancestry; of Niam and his White Steed, Trelawney of the Wells, Deidre’s Sorrow. In the city, she and Gus lived on Park Avenue for as long as I knew them, at several addresses—north of Grand Central, below Fifty-ninth Street, in one of the large residential apartment buildings, in courtyard entries with fountains, before office towers rose above Park Avenue north of Grand Central (and below the enduring, grand homes north of Fifty-ninth). When I returned to New York in 1963, Beatrice and Gus still resided on Park Avenue—but the less fashionable and commercial Park Avenue South, below Grand Central. Unlike their earlier tiny apartment with set-in kitchen, their Park Avenue apartment is quite spacious, in a large, modern building.
  On one of our outings with them, they introduce us to Esther Pinch (yes, I swear, that was her name), small, wiry and spry in her eighties, living in a quaint stone house in the woods near Guilford. Esther, deliciously straight-forward, one might say a miniature Kitty O’Brien, is more sophisticated than Kitty. This is some sixty years ago, and I’ve never forgotten her—not every detail of that visit perhaps, but most certainly one of her jokes.
  “In a church the pastor makes it a habit to forgive all sins, as long as they are confessed publicly. A woman stands to confess to the large, approving congregation  she’s committed adultery. Suddenly another woman in a back pew leaps to her feet (I wonder if it might have been Esther Pinch herself and this is a true story), shouting out,  Well I don’t forgive her! Since I joined  this church it’s nothing but fuck and forgive! fuck and forgive!”
  Our one-week life in the woods manifests my childhood longings, roughing it with a guy (and now a lover!), the birds of Killingworth scattered in the woods, calling to one another, one shrill single-note whistle, answered back with a three-note whistle with a dying fall. In bed with the setting sun in a candlelit shack, rising with the sun in the  morning.
  David indeed is worthwhile companion to revel in such wonders of nature, as in many of our tours in New York—spring erupting along the Hudson and in Central Park the first week of May, pink tulip trees exploding blossoms behind the Metropolitan Museum, exploring Hudson River valley, autumn drives down country roads bordered by trees bristling vermillion and gold. Sleepy Hollow, the tree in Tarrytown where traitor Captain André was hung.
  Visits to the Wellington and trips with Daisy are difficult to pin point in time, but they were many and certainly memorable. Daisy, happy when we passed an Esso gas station—frequent stops necessary because she was taking  diuretics. Daisy: “Esso has the cleanest rest rooms” and after a stop, returning to the car, thanking us with, “For this relief, much thanks, that’s  from Shakespeare, my dears—Hamlet.”
  Occasionally I would visit her alone in her room, and  learned she wasn’t too  happy with my associating with David—“He dominates you too much,” she would say, “he’s keeping you from following your career—are you making rounds?”
  On one occasion, inviting me alone to a “chicken and  wine” dinner in her room—the chicken boiled with veg-et-ta-bles on a hot plate; wine from a large bottle of burgundy Gallo with a screw top. Once I challenged her when she accused me of lacking a clear identity of who I was. She rose to  her  feet and banged her fist on  the fragile TV table exclaiming, “Who do you think created Daisy Belmore? I created Daisy Belmore!”
  On a walk in and around Seventh Avenue one day, we ran into  Danny Mann, director of “The Rose Tattoo.” (She did not introduce me.) She asked him, “Do you have anything for me, Danny?” He took her hand and with pained expression, said, “I’m sorry Daisy, nothing. These are hard times in the theatre.”
  But Daisy never quit. She sailed  forth often from the  lobby of the Wellington sometimes with me on her arm, picture hat framing her eager face on her way to the “offices” and would say, “Look at all these lumps sitting around in the lobby staring into space!”
  July Fourth weekend, 1952, finds us with Daisy and her daughter, Ruth, traveling north to take us all the way to Lake Champlain. We run into a traffic jam on the throughway, cars stalled at the side of the road because, as Ruth explains, “vapor lock.” Daisy, as if riding in a golden chariot, regales us along the way with stories, wit and disconnected phrases never explained: “Oh my dear, it’s as hot as Africa!” Not even Ruth could tell us when her mother had been in Africa. Her biogs don’t mention Africa. And then, as we struggle through the traffic jam Daisy begins to sing:

  I’ll make love to the man in the moon,
  I’m going to marry him soon,
  and behind some dark cloud,
  where no one is allowed,
  I’ll make love to the man in the moon.

  Ruth laughs loud and long, but soon we are singing with Daisy, I’ll make  love  to the man  in the moon, I’m going to marry him soon . . .
We tour Fort Ticonderoga, Au Sable Canyons, then overnight at a small hotel on the shore of Lake Champlain. Next day finds us on a car ferry sailing to Burlington, Vermont, in awe of the solid jade green hills covered with maple trees.

6

  Taylor Grant gets me an audition—well, perhaps not an “audition,” rather cutting a record for a news broadcast I’d written. Alas, it turned out to be doleful—sonorous, funereal, descrying the impossibility of having our way with the North Koreans in gaining a cease-fire; no longer a “Second World War” situation when we bombed the hell out of the enemy and played to win. Now we couldn’t cross the Yalu River and drive the Chinese communists out of North Korea, or drop an A-bomb to have our way.
  “I wish you’d shown me your material before we cut the record,” Taylor said, advising me to get work at a station in a small town and work my way back to New York. But damned if I would. I had a strong foothold in New York, and here I would stay.
  Such determination kept me going, running off scripts in the mimeograph room. David gets work as ticket seller behind a cage in the center of Grand Central Station.  Then suddenly, the New York adventure is subverted. It is required for his job that David get a “Police Card” and he fails. He’d been arrested in Bryant Park in a sting operation and spent a night in the tombs—this before I’d met him. He says he can’t take New York anymore and we’ve got to go back to California.
  Should I not have said, “Go ahead, I’m staying here.” But the commitment to him is strong and how can I make it alone in the big city without him? Hoping to turn the sudden shock of departure into something worthwhile, I decide to return to U.C.L.A. to finish degree work—maybe even continue on to graduate school.
This is the last we will see of Daisy Belmore—a painful farewell on Seventh Avenue, Daisy standing at the curb, waving goodbye as we head for the Holland Tunnel.
February, 1954, I’m at U.C.L.A. “back-tracking,” as Wally Boyle accuses me with painfully obvious sarcasm, “into academic theatre.”

Next – Buckeyes (1954-1957) memoir preceding “Socko Sixties”

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