Tommy peered at me bleakly. “That what he’s paying you?”
“It is,” I replied. “And, believe me, if I’d known it was coming out of your—”
“Oh, hey, hey,” Marty cautioned me, with a raised hand. “Don’t you feel responsible, Hoagy. Not your doing. It’s her salary that’s killing us.”
“Katrina,” said Tommy distastefully. “He’s paying her thirty grand a week this season to be his coexec producer. Christ, she was Leo’s runner last season, making three hundred a week. Now she gets to sit in on writers’ meetings. She even gets to speak.”
“I hate, hate, hate this scene,” squeaked Annabelle. It was a drop-dead imitation. Her eye even drifted. “Where’s the irony, guys, comedically speaking?”
“The woman,” said Marty, “has Lyle’s ear.”
“In addition to various other parts of his disgustingly gross anatomy,” added Tommy.
“The woman,” said Marty, “knows very little about comedy.”
“The woman,” snapped Tommy, “is a stupid, nasty twat and we all hate her stupid, nasty fucking guts.”
No one disagreed. Tommy’s designated role, it appeared, was to give voice to what the others were too afraid to say out loud. It was a role he seemed to savor as much as he did his sourness.
“You notice that rock on her finger? The show paid for it—twenty grand easy. She wanted a john for her office—the show paid for it. Hey, if it’s for us, no way. Nickels and dimes. He even charges us for our long-distance calls. But if it’s for him and his bim, the money’s there. Would you believe the show paid for all his coke last season? It was right there in the budget, under car and driver. Hell, the show pays for half a dozen extras every week who don’t even exist. He pockets their wages himself. He must pull in thirty grand a week under the table.”
“And then he pockets the table,” Annabelle chimed in. “Him and Leo. I’m, like, one time last season our art director, Randy, needed to build a set, last minute, and discovered there was no money left for it in that week’s budget—even though he hadn’t even built one set! I’m, like, so he went out to the prop warehouse in New Jersey to see what he could beg and borrow and, guess what, he discovers an antique dining table and chairs being loaded onto a truck headed for Leo’s place in the Berkshires. Leo sells the stuff up there to dealers and then splits the proceeds with Lyle. They’re thick as thieves, those two.”
“That’s why Lyle insists on personally supervising the entire production,” Tommy explained. “If there were a lot of lawyers and business affairs people around he’d never get away with all the shit he pulls. Or he’d have to cut them in on it. That’s also why he insists on doing the show here instead of in L.A. God and Jazzy Jeff are three thousand miles away. And with Marjorie he can play human bulldozer.”
The office door suddenly burst open. And there stood the human bulldozer, filling the doorway shoulder to shoulder in his unbleached caftan. He wasn’t kidding about taking precautions against germs in the studio. Over his mouth and nose he wore a surgical mask, on his hands latex gloves. He looked like he was on his way to the O.R. to take out somebody’s spleen. The man was boiling. His face, what little of it showed, was a deep shade of crimson. His eyes were high beams of intense light, the whites huge. They looked like a pair of poached eggs. He slammed the door shut behind him, shaking the whole office. Papers flew from the desks. “Your agent is scum!” he raged at The Boys. “Your agent is filth. Your agent is—!”
“Why do you say that, Lyle?” Marty asked him calmly. “Because he’s trying to hold you to a deal you already agreed to?”
“Human pollution!” Lyle roared on. “That’s what he is—human pollution! He’s everything that’s wrong with the television business! I won’t speak to him again! I won’t let him destroy my show! I won’t … !” He trailed off, chest heaving. He’d noticed me there. “Hiya, pal,” he said pleasantly. Total mood change. He may have even been smiling—hard to tell with the mask. “Getting settled in?”
“In a manner of speaking.”
“Good, good. Knew you’d fit right in. We’re all family here.” He glanced around the office. “Where’s Bobby?”
“Not here yet,” replied Annabelle, cowering. The man clearly terrified her.
He turned back to The Boys, who were glaring at him. He softened. “Now, guys, you gotta be reasonable. That’s all I’m asking. Agents, they make it about money. They make it about threats. He even said you guys were gonna walk out on me. Christ, if you did that I’d die. I need you. We’re not about money. We’re about doing what we love doing, with people we care about. What do we need agents for, huh? Let’s us settle this thing between ourselves, like family, okay? Whattaya say?”
“We say no, Lyle,” Marty replied, quietly but firmly. “We are not going to negotiate our contract with you. That’s why we have an agent. You’ll have to go through him.”
“I refuse!” Lyle bellowed. “I won’t talk to him! I won’t! I’ll fire you if it comes to that! You hear me?! I’ll fire you!”
“You can’t fire us, Lyle,” Tommy said scornfully.
“I can, too!” screamed Lyle. “I don’t need you hacks! I’ve never needed you!”
“You can’t fire us!” Tommy repeated.
“We quit!” screamed Marty.
“Bullshit!” yelled Lyle. “You don’t have the nerve!”
The Boys sat there in tight-lipped silence a moment.
“All right, we’ll listen,” Marty allowed grimly. “But we’re saying nothing, and we’re agreeing to nothing.”
“Totally cool,” said Lyle. “That’s all I ask.”
Annabelle made for the door. Lulu and I joined her. I did not slam it behind me.
Outside, all was quiet. Everyone in the production office was staring at us, examining our faces for a clue as to what was going on in there. Particularly the occupants of the two desks in the alcove outside of Lyle and Katrina’s offices. Naomi Leight, Annabelle’s designated babe-in-waiting, sat at one, sneaky eyes gleaming. At the other sat a woman in her fifties with close-cropped silver hair and olive bags under her eyes. She got up and came charging right at me, clutching a handful of papers. She was a bunched fist of a woman, in a gray gymnasium T-shirt and fatigue pants. She had a pair of glasses on a chain around her neck. Stuck behind her right ear was a Sherman, one of those dark brown cigarettes that come in the red box.
“Stewart Stafford Hoag,” she boomed in a deep, authoritative voice. “Do you wish to get paid at any time in the near future?”
“It would be nice,” I replied.
Somehow, she seemed to be looking down her nose at me, even though I had a solid ten inches on her. I guess it was her manner, something of a cross between a women’s prison guard and David Frye doing Bill Buckley. She moistened her thin, dry lips. “Then would you like to sign your payroll forms?” she demanded.
“By all means.”
We went to my office. Lulu was already there, curled up under my desk.
“I’m Leo Crimp, your line producer,” she announced gruffly. “You got a question, you come to me. You got a complaint about the P.A.’s, you come to me. You got a problem with Lyle, you don’t come to me—but you will anyway.”
I sat at my desk. “I was expecting a man—from the name.”
“Leo’s short for Leona,” she growled impatiently. “But if by that you mean you were expecting somebody with balls, you got somebody with balls.”
“I’ll remember that.”
“No problem if you don’t. I’ll remind you.”
Leo laid the payroll forms out on my desk and offered me her Bic pen. I used my gold-nibbed Waterman. I’ve found that true luxury is found in the little things, not the big ones. Especially when you can no longer afford the big ones. When I was done Leo snatched the forms back from me. She tried to take my Waterman, too, but I was too fast for her.
“You’ve joined the Writers’ Guild, correct?” she asked.
“Correct.”
r /> “Good. Remember—they’re the only protection you got”
“From what?”
“Not what,” she snapped. “Who. Lyle, naturally. From when he tries to fuck you out of the credits on any episodes you write. Don’t let him get away with any of it. Fight him. Because it’s residuals money out of your own pocket, and because he’s full of shit. He doesn’t write the show—you do.”
This from Lyle’s own partner in crime. There wasn’t a lot of warmth around this place. In that sense it was like the house I grew up in.
Leo took the Sherman out from behind her ear and stuck it in her mouth. She didn’t light it. Smoking was prohibited in the production offices. “Just telling it like it is,” she explained brusquely. “I admire writers, but most of you are babes in the woods when it comes to money and what people will do to get it.”
“Thank you, Leo. I appreciate the advice.”
“You know good from evil?” she demanded, removing the unlit cigarette from her mouth.
I tugged at my ear. “Does anyone?”
“Watch out for Katrina,” she said vehemently. “She’s the worst kind of evil.”
“And which kind is that?”
“She’s a user.”
“Aren’t we all?”
“Steer clear of her, Stewart Hoag,” Leo Crimp warned. “I mean it.”
I thanked her for this bit of advice as well. I was getting real curious about what had gone on between the tough producer and her former runner. She stood there twirling her Sherman around in her fingers.
“Ever smoke that thing?” I asked her.
She stuck it back behind her ear. “Only in the ladies’ room.”
“Sounds a little like high school here.”
She considered this. “No, it’s more like a four-car pileup. Horrifying, yet at the same time so fascinating you can’t tear your eyes away from it. Welcome to my place, Stewart Hoag,” she said. And then she went barging out.
My phone rang. It was Annabelle.
“All clear, Hoagy,” she reported. “Their door’s open and I’m, like, Lyle’s safely back in his own cage.”
“Did they quit?”
She let out a shriek. “No way! The three of them go through this every season. He chisels them out of what he promised them, they threaten to walk, then they back down and take whatever he gives them. It’s an opening day ritual of theirs.”
“Like throwing out the first ball at Yankee Stadium?”
“I’m, like, they’re total wusses, in case you haven’t figured it out. Wait, hang on—” She covered the phone a second before she said, “C’mon, they’re calling for you.”
Lulu stayed behind this time. The better to focus on her morning nap.
Tommy and Marty were calmly reading over the script. Annabelle was seated on the sofa.
“Ah, there you are, Hoagy,” said Marty, smiling pleasantly. “Where were we?”
“As I recall, you two were in the middle of changing careers.”
Marty shrugged his shoulders. “That’s just Lyle being Lyle,” he said with mild resignation.
Tommy slumped in his chair, fuming. “I hate that man,” he said savagely. “I really do. I fantasize about him dying in painful, horrible ways. It’s how I get to sleep at night, instead of taking Sominex.”
Marty said, “We’ve got an assignment for you, Hoagy.”
“Feelings,” I said. “Nothing more than feelings.”
“We’re not happy with how Deirdre’s new beau turned out in this draft. He’s a total yutz.”
Tommy: “Straight out of a Grecian Formula commercial.”
Marty: “We ought to know—we made him up.”
“To Lyle’s exact specifications,” pointed out Annabelle, in their defense.
“Yutzy’s how Lyle wants him,” Marty acknowledged. “Even the guy’s name—Rob Roy Fruitwell. Is that a yutzy name or what? See, Lyle’s being … Lyle about this. He hates the whole idea. Because it wasn’t his. Because it’s being forced on him by God. And because—”
“He’s scared shitless,” Tommy said bluntly. “He figures God’s master plan is to phase him out. Deirdre gets involved with Rob. Deirdre marries Rob. Zap, you’ve got yourself a solid franchise than can function fine without the Chubster. End result: God gets what he really wants, which is The Uncle Chubby Show back on the air, and Lyle Hudnut off the air. And out.”
“Him and Katrina both,” added Marty. “Which would also make the studio very happy. They’d save close to half a million an episode on their combined salaries.”
“Is this just Lyle’s paranoia?” I asked. “Or is it actually the network’s plan?”
“We don’t know,” Tommy replied quickly.
Marty weighed his response more carefully. “It could be,” he allowed. “Lyle’s a loose cannon. And he’s controversial. God hates controversy. Pickets make him crazy.”
“And who would run the show?” I asked.
The Boys made eye contact with each other.
“That’s strictly idle speculation at this point,” Marty replied evasively.
“Bullshit,” Tommy snapped. “We would. Muck and Meyer. Sure we would. Which would make us very happy, too. We’d be able to digest our food again.”
“I can’t remember what that’s like,” confessed Marty.
“I’m, like, it could be a totally excellent show,” gushed Annabelle, egging them on.
“It could be cute,” Marty admitted guardedly.
“And good for The Munchkins, too,” she added. “We can let them have their own stories for a change. They can grow up as characters.”
And she, I mused, could grow up as a writer—into a baby producer. “And who would direct?”
“Amber,” Annabelle suggested. “She’s ready.”
“But it’s strictly idle speculation at this point,” Marty insisted. “Like I said.”
Or was it? The pieces were all in place. Something for everyone. Except for Lyle, of course. Was this real? Had they been approached by the network? Or were they simply dreaming of what it would be like to get out from under the man’s thumb?
“What we need from you, Hoagy,” said Marty, “is a way to make Rob more likeable that won’t freak Lyle out. We can’t get a thing by him.”
“If you can do that,” said Tommy, “I’ll kiss you on the mouth.”
“That’s not a good line,” Marty told him.
“You’re right—it needs work,” he admitted, turning to me. “I’ll get back to you.”
“Do you know Chad?” Marty asked me.
“I don’t believe we’ve met.”
“Well, watch out for him. The man’s a major suck-up.”
“He may even lick your face,” added Tommy, with great distaste.
“All the actors lobby us for good material,” Annabelle explained. “It’s kind of an occupational drag thing.”
There was a faint tapping at the door. A scrawny nebish in his late twenties stuck his head in. “Morning,” he said, bashfully.
“Come in, darling!” Annabelle sang out warmly. “I’m like, did Naomi … ?”
“Just needed a k-kicking,” he stammered, blinking furiously. “Feeder was jammed. I-I miss anything?”
“Strictly a minor eruption,” reported Marty. “A three point two on the Lyle wig-o-meter.”
“Bring us any brisket sandwiches, Bobby?” needled Tommy, brightening. Although I’m sure an electrocardiogram would still have classified him as comatose.
“Be nice, Tommy!” Annabelle ordered, with motherly protectiveness. “Now, Bobby, dear, come meet Hoagy.”
Bobby Ackerman came over to me with his hand stuck out. He had a head of soft, curly blond hair and an innocent, almost angelic face. He looked like a lamb—a really intense lamb. The kid was tightly wrapped. Typical writer in that regard—timid on the outside, simmering on the inside. Most of us are shy egomaniacs, myself excluded. I have never been shy. Bobby wasn’t overly tidy. His blue oxford button-down was frayed at
the neck, his gray twill trousers stained and wrinkled, his Rockports scuffed. He needed a shave. He needed a haircut. He needed to stop blinking.
“It’s an honor to m-meet you,” he said to me. Actually, he didn’t so much stammer as he did speak in choked, overheated bursts. “I really admire y-you.”
“You won’t once you get to know me better.” I casually laid my hand on the sofa to air dry. His had been wet as a fresh caught flounder.
“But you do novels,” he said, blinking at me incessantly. “That takes such g-guts. You’re on your own. N-No other writers. No director. No actors. You do it all. J-Just you.”
“There is a down side,” I cautioned.
“W-Which is what?”
“There’s no one else to blame. Just you.”
“Now that must be weird,” said Marty. “Life without Lyle to blame for everything.”
“Now that must be nice,” quipped Tommy.
“Have a seat, Bobster,” said Marty. “We were just about to give Hoagy The Three Rules.”
“Which Three Rules are those?” I asked.
“D-Don’t listen to this shit, Hoagy,” Bobby warned, with great urgency. “This isn’t your kind of d-deal at all. I mean it. You’re m-much too fine a—”
“Feel free not to have a seat, Bobby,” Tommy snarled.
“F-Fine,” Bobby retorted angrily. “I’ll be in my office.” And he split.
Annabelle watched him go, sadly.
“Don’t mind Bobby,” Marty said to me. “He’s still living under the illusion that he’s going to be the next Arthur Miller.”
“Or the next Bea Arthur,” added Tommy. “Now then, Hoagy, you’ll want to write these down. Got a pen, pencil, quill?”
“I’ll remember them.”
“Rule Number One,” Marty intoned grandly. “There are no new gags—only new setups.”
“Don’t ever be afraid of a joke just because you’ve heard it before,” explained Tommy. “If it works once, it’ll work again.”
Marty said, “Here’s a joke I heard the other day: Guy gives a Jewish blind man a piece of matzo, and the blind man runs his fingers over it and he says, ‘Who wrote this shit?’ Cute joke, right? I heard the exact same joke fifteen years ago—exact same joke—only it was Stevie Wonder and a cheese grater.”
The Boy Who Never Grew Up Page 44