I tried to cheer him up, even took him and his young wife out to dinner one night, but when I came to my office the following Monday morning he was gone. He left a note for me saying the worst had happened, and that I had taken some of the curse off those last few weeks and that he was driving back to New York to see if he couldn’t get an advance on a new play he had started. A couple of years later I saw one of his plays that the Federal Theater was doing in Los Angeles, but I’ve never seen him again. It’s queer to think how many little guys there are like that, with more ability than push, sucked in by one wave and hurled out by the next, for every Sammy Glick who slips through and over the waves like a porpoise.
After he left, I tried to think if there was anyone else in town I knew, and I suddenly remembered Henry Powell Turner, the poet, who had been a senior when I was a freshman at Wesleyan. I remembered how excited we all were at school when we heard that the book-length poem on the history of New England which he had read to the Literary Society while he was still in college had been awarded the Pulitzer Prize. I had met Henry again on his way out to Hollywood several years ago and he had told me, by way of making conversation, to be sure and look him up if I was ever out that way.
The operator told me that Mr. Turner had a confidential number, so I finally wired him at his studio and asked him to call me. I didn’t hear from him until several weeks later when I picked up the phone to hear a cultured woman’s voice say, “This is Mr. Henry Powell Turner’s secretary. Mr. and Mrs. Turner would like to have the pleasure of your company at dinner at seven-thirty this Wednesday evening.”
What I remember most about the Turner manse was that it was a five-dollar taxi ride from the Villa Espana, that you could see the Pacific Ocean from its front lawn, and that it was the largest example of the worst kind of architecture I have ever seen. Hollywood Moorish.
I had always thought of Henry Powell Turner as my ideal of what a great poet should look like. I could remember him as a student, built along heroic proportions, six feet three and over two hundred pounds, with blond curly hair and the kind of chiseled, classical good looks that always remind me of the way epic Greek poets looked—or ought to have looked. And even when I had seen Turner last, four or five years ago, he was still a romantic figure to me, erect and hearty as ever, with his wild yellow hair turning a more dignified gray at the temples.
When I saw him again this time, in that huge, cold living room, with the expensive furniture and the high ceiling, there were only a few strands left of the old youthful yellow among the thinning, straightening gray, but he was hardly more dignified because he was already well on his way toward the state of drooling intoxication which I later discovered he managed to achieve with monotonous regularity each evening.
I met his wife, a gaunt, high-strung woman, prematurely gray, with a boyish figure in low-cut red velvet. They asked me the usual polite questions during cocktails, and conversation died once or twice at dinner, though Turner and I did our best to squeeze the most out of our common interest in Wesleyan. That’s about all I remember about that dinner, except that it was served with an irritating pomp, and that Turner shattered whatever illusions I had left about him by telling one of those long dirty stories for which the only justification would be the tag line at the climax, which they never seem to reach. At the finish he laughed so loud that he finally broke into a coughing fit which he managed to soothe with loud gulps of sparkling burgundy.
When we rose from the table, his wife, ghostlike all through dinner, finally disappeared, and I found myself cooped up with him and several bottles of Bellows Scotch in his imposing study. I spent the next three or four uncomfortable hours in trying to follow him through his various stages of drunkenness. In the first, he recited some of his lyrical poetry. In the second, he mocked his own poems with dirty limericks composed extemporaneously, “which,” he laughingly informed me three or four times, “I have seen fit to create in line of my duties as Hollywood’s Poet Laureate.” In the next he reviewed his chief conquests of the current season with a glint that brought me back to the lurid tales we used to swap in our adolescence. And of course he reached the final stage full of teary nostalgia for the glories of his youth and eloquent resolutions to return to New England and his Muse, “as soon as I finish the MacDonald-Eddy script I have to do when I get back from my vacation.”
I finally managed to escape around one in the morning, after we had topped off the evening by killing the second bottle of Scotch and singing a Wesleyan song. I must have been more upset than I realized when I left there, because by the time I reached my room and started to undress, the vision of Henry Powell Turner before and after was still with me. Only now what I had taken merely for boredom or disgust came into sharper focus as I began to be stunned by the horror and sense of mental nausea most of us feel when we’re forced into ringside seats for great personal tragedies.
So I buttoned my shirt again, put my tie back on and called a cab. For I had decided that the only way to forget the wreck of my epic poet was to make an evening of it. I asked the cab driver where a man could get a drink and a couple of laughs at an hour like this and he drove me to the Back Lot Club.
You have to stay up till two o’clock to realize what a small town Hollywood is. It goes to sleep at twelve o’clock like any decent Middle Western village. The gay nightlife you dream about there is confined to private houses and the handful of hotspots which enjoy special privileges for which they are taxed in a very special way. At least that’s the way it was when I first went out there before Judge Bowron and his reformers had won the Battle of Los Angeles and began to fumigate the City Hall.
The Back Lot was a noisy, gaudy example of what most people seem to imagine all Hollywood is after dark. But except for an occasional celebrated face, it might have been any night spot in any American city. It was a montage of hot music, drunken laughter, loud wisecracks and hostesses like lollypops in red, green and yellow wrappers. The music took the old sweet melodies and twisted them like hairpins. It was a symphony strictly from hunger, to which everybody beat their feet in a frenzy of despair, trying to forget luck that was either too good or too bad, festered ambitions or hollow success. It made me realize again how true jazz music was, how it echoed everything that was churning inside us, all the crazy longings raw and writhing.
I had a few drinks while I looked the place over, and then a few more while my angle narrowed from a full shot of the crowd, to a group shot of the ladies who floated through the semidarkness on the loose, to a close-up of one particular hostess, large, but well-proportioned inside her tight satin evening gown, with a reddish glint to her hair combed strikingly back from her face and falling gracefully to her bare shoulders, where it emphasized the creamy whiteness of her skin. I watched her hips slip up and down as she moved among the tables and it wasn’t until she lingered at one of them to chat with a little blonde co-worker that I realized who the little blonde’s escort was. Sammy Glick.
It was one of those moments when I would have greeted the devil as a long-lost brother if he had only been willing to sit down and have a drink with me. And, in the mood I was in, the redhead was something of an attraction too. It didn’t make sense, but my friends have always considered me a disgustingly normal person, and it was normal if unprincipled to get the idea that Sammy might be able to supply the kind of good time I was looking for.
Sammy had been doing a lot of drinking but he wasn’t drunk. That didn’t surprise me, for it was hard to imagine him ever letting his defenses down long enough really to lose control. As soon as he spotted me he leaped up, yelling, “Well, if it isn’t little Alsie-palsie,” and threw his arms around me. It was strange to think that Sammy probably liked me as much as he could like anybody in the world. I think that was because anybody who took life the way Sammy did, gangster, dictator or screenwriter, was doomed to be lonely, and even though Sammy knew I could read him like the top line of an optometrist’s chart, he also knew that he could relax with me bec
ause I wasn’t willing or didn’t know how to use him for a ladder the way he used me. And at moments like these when he slowed down to a trot I sensed a flash, just the tiniest sparkle of appreciation for the way he had climbed on my shoulders to leap over the wall, and a hint or two of the old respect that he felt in those early days on the Record when I was still trying to teach him not to say ain’t.
“Al,” he said, “this is one of those lost angels I was telling you about, Sally Ann Joyce.”
He put his arm possessively around the little blonde and grinned at her. She took this as her cue to laugh. She seemed too young to look so tired around the eyes.
“Honey,” he said,” I want you to meet one of the sweetest guys in the world. Al Manheim.
“And last but never least, you can see for yourself,” Sammy said, indicating the redhead, “is Billie. I don’t think I know your last name, honey.”
“Rand,” Billie said, moistening her large lips and trying to look pleased about the whole thing, “Billie Rand.”
“Rand,” Sammy laughed, “the name is familiar, but I can’t quite place the body. But I bet you can guess where I’d like to place it.”
Sammy led the laughter, which they joined automatically. I pushed Billie’s chair in for her and as she looked up over her shoulder to smile into my face she didn’t seem to mind my staring down her dress.
“What are you trying to do, Al,” Sammy said, “give us an imitation of a tourist at the edge of Grand Canyon?”
Sally Ann and Billie giggled dutifully again, though I wasn’t sure whether they thought it was that funny or not. We drank a couple more rounds, while Sammy told the girls what pals we had been in New York, and it was funny to see how he could carry himself away with his own salesmanship. By the time he was through he made it sound as if the only reason I had come to Hollywood was to be near him.
“Maybe you boys want to be alone,” Billie said, knowing that was always good for a laugh.
It was, but of course Sammy managed to top it.
“Don’t give up, girls,” he said. “Haven’t you heard we’re ambisextrous?”
The last time the waiter set our drinks up again he told us the bar was closing in ten minutes.
Sammy pushed the table away rudely. “Let’s get out of this hellhole,” he said. “You’re all coming up to my apartment.” He took one girl under each arm, calling to the boss on the way out: “Don’t worry about your girls, Pop—I’ll see that they get to bed early.”
The boss gave a fake laugh and tried to make his voice sound as friendly as possible, “Glad you came in, Mr. Glick. Come back again.”
I was feeling pretty woozy from all that liquor and the smoke, but I remember wondering as I hit the open air how many people in this world would tell Sammy they were glad he had come—in that same tone of voice.
Sammy’s apartment was in the fashionable Colonial House just off the Sunset Strip. The names of the tenants underneath the mail boxes at the entrance read like a list of Hollywood’s most eligible bachelors.
Sammy’s place was one of the smallest in the building and even that must have been way beyond his means for those early days, but he wrote off only part of the expense to shelter, the rest to prestige.
The apartment was furnished with an elegance that didn’t seem to fit Sammy, at least not yet, with a bedroom that opened off a long living room with a fireplace at one end. Sammy brought out Courvoisier. I wondered where he picked up all those little tricks, and then Billie and I started playing records and doing a little slow dancing, while Sammy and Sally Ann took over the big couch.
As we danced, hardly moving together, I heard the sound and silence of held kisses, several shrill, half-giggled Sammy, don’ts! and then Sammy started giving her the business about putting her in the movies. It was hardly more than kidding, and Sally Ann knew it, but you could tell from the way she kidded back how much that meant to her. It was all so naked that I wished I were drunker or not there. It was no secret to anybody that she was working out on him and he was working out on her, each one wanting something and not quite admitting it. Some people call that the Hollywood tug of war, though that concept is a little narrow. Hollywood may be one of its most blatant battlegrounds, but it is really a world war, undeclared.
There was a long silence while we made a gesture at dancing and then Sammy and Sally Ann started for the bedroom with their arms around each other. They could have slipped out with us only half-noticing them, but Sammy could no more do things by halves than J. P. Morgan could run for president on the Communist ticket.
“If anybody asks for me,” he cracked at the door, “tell them I’m tied up in a conference.”
Billie started to laugh, but it was just force of habit, and I didn’t crack a smile, so he must have thought he wasn’t being funny enough and tried again.
“Well, be good, Al,” he said, “and if you can’t be good, be careful, and if you can’t be careful, see that it gets a good agent.”
Then we were left alone and I suddenly felt very lousy. Maybe I’m a Puritan, but there has to be somewhere you draw the line and this was always it for me. I have always been one of those who held that whatever sex may have been to our primitive ancestors, it has become an experience for us that at least deserves the same privacy we give to taking a bath. Sinking to the couch with Billie, I remembered a similar revulsion years ago when I walked into a college fraternity the morning after an all-night house party and found half a dozen drunken cards cheering and egging on a preoccupied couple on the living-room sofa.
“What are you thinking about, honey?” Billie stage-whispered, though she could never be the quiet, seductive type. She and this whole set-up were about as subtle as Wallace Beery’s acting.
I wasn’t exactly surprised to find that Sammy approached the most elemental emotion in life with all the sensitivity of a slaughterhouse worker slitting a steer’s throat, but somehow that last crack at the bedroom door had sliced too close to the bone, and it wasn’t very pretty. With one razor-edge phrase he had cut me down to his level, and it was going to take me some time to rise again.
But one thing you had to say for Billie, she was very kind in her way and always patient.
I felt as if I had just closed my eyes when a sense of motion in the room opened them again. Through sticky eyes with the eyeballs burning holes in the lids, my host slowly came into focus, dressed for the day and apparently on his way out. As I sat up and started to rub some of the sleep out of my eyes, I could see that Sammy was all washed and shaved and looking irritatingly fresh. My face felt like an old shoe that had been left out all night in the rain, shrunk and stiff in some parts, swollen and mushy in others. But Sammy’s face looked fresh from the laundry.
I looked around at the half-empty glasses, the cigarette butts and the other desolate remains, and asked, yawning, “What time is it?”
“Eight-thirty,” Sammy said.
“Eight-thirty?” My stomach went roller-coasting down. “What the hell you doing up at eight-thirty?”
“I have a date for breakfast,” Sammy said.
“Not …” I began.
“No,” Sammy said. “That was last night. This is business.”
Then I realized only Sammy and I were left.
“Where are the girls?” I said. “In the other …?”
“I got them out of here around five,” Sammy said. “While you were passed out. I don’t like to see them when I get up. They get in my hair.”
“But eight-thirty!” I mumbled. “What’s doing at the studio at eight-thirty?”
“I’m picking up a friend for breakfast before I check in,” Sammy said. “As a matter of fact you know him. Julie Blumberg.”
“Blumberg,” I muttered. “Oh—Julian …?”
“He’s been trying to write some originals,” Sammy said, “so I thought I ought to help the poor kid out and take a look at them.”
I was too groggy to see anything wrong with that picture so I just let it pass
. Sammy advised me to call the studio and say I was sick and then climb into his bed for the rest of the day. He was being kind, but even in my condition I could sense the way he was gloating over his superior powers of recuperation. He made me think of some horrible grinning robot.
“You did all right for yourself,” he said. “I’ll buzz you next week and we’ll do a repeat.”
Then he looked at his watch, saw he was late, cursed his dawdling and was off on a run.
So there I was, spending the day, of all places, in Sammy Glick’s bed. When I woke again around four I had a bad taste in my mouth and a worse one in my mind and all I thought about was getting out of there as quickly as possible.
I went straight from Sammy’s to a Turkish bath, where I abandoned myself to steam and sweat and where I had nothing to do for hours but stare at the ceiling and dwell upon the discovery that Sammy Glick at work was hardly more terrifying than Sammy Glick at play.
CHAPTER 4
I suppose it’s too bad that people can’t be a little more consistent. But if they were, maybe they would stop being people. They might become characters in epic tragedies or Hollywood movies. Most of our characters on the screen are sandwich men for different moral attitudes. We will have the young man who stands for Honest Government and Public Service while his brother is a low-down Wallower in Wine, Women and Corruption. In the last reel the good brother has to be killed off so the bad brother can be regenerated. Regenerated. That is one of Hollywood’s favorite words. This may be heresy, but I have yet to meet anybody who ever got himself Regenerated. I don’t see any one-hundred-percent-pure heroes running around loose either. All people seem to do is the best they can to get along and have a good time; and if that means keeping what they’ve got, they’re liable to become fascists; and if it means trying to get what they need and don’t have, there’s a good chance of their learning the Internationale.
What Makes Sammy Run? Page 7