Getting Garbo

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Getting Garbo Page 30

by Jerry Ludwig


  “Depends. How’s your story end?”

  “Funny, your pal Wellman asked me the same thing. Well, it’s Hollywood, so it has to have a happy ending. The politician skates.”

  “And the cop?”

  “He has the satisfaction of knowing he was just one card away from a royal flush.”

  • • •

  Arzy drives off and I go for the front door. As I’m opening it, I hear a gunshot. Sort of. A champagne cork lands at my feet. Here’s Jack Havoc behind the bar. With an overflowing bottle wrapped in a towel. Pouring vintage Piper Heidsieck into a pair of my hand-blown Venetian champagne flutes.

  A toast, he shouts. I propose a toast—to Donald Gentry!

  He hands me my wine, we clink glasses and sip. The champagne is icy cold and sparkling. Perfect.

  This is the new you, he says. The old you would’ve said, It’s too early to be drinking. Or, I was saving that bottle of champagne for a special occasion—

  “Which this sure as hell is!” I knock back the rest of my glass. Pour myself another. Top off Jack’s glass. “We’re celebrating. Our horse came in, along with our ship, our number and—”

  —and we won the lottery, beat the bank at Monte Carlo and drew the Get Out Of Jail Free card! We won the game, Roy!

  We sprawl on the easy chairs, across from each other. Ice bucket and wine on the coffee table. Plenty more where that came from. Grinning, almost giggling. With delight. With relief. The man who’s climbed the steps of the gallows has just been told his services will not be required today.

  “You know,” I say, “you’re the only one in the world I can really talk to about this.”

  That’s why I’m here, kid.

  At that moment I love him like the brother I never had.

  Then the phone rings.

  I pick it up. Figuring it might be a reporter. Maybe the death of Donald Gentry, burglar and murderer, is starting to leak. It’s not a reporter. It’s a familiar voice. One I didn’t expect to hear again.

  “Roy? It’s Val.”

  Val Dalton. My agent. My ex-agent. My ex-friend.

  “Hey, Val, how are ya?” Hail fellow.

  “I’m—so sad about Addie, please accept my deepest condolences. It’s horrible. I would have been at the funeral, but I was in London on business. Just got back this morning. And I heard a bulletin on the news that the police caught the man who did it. How are you?”

  “Trying to stay afloat,” I say. Wishing he was still on my team. “It’s very thoughtful of you to call.” He did the right thing, let him hang up now. Recede into my past. Where I relegated him.

  “Actually, there’s something else I want to talk to you about. It’s kind of awkward, but—I just got a phone call. From Jack Warner. He’d like to see you. At his office. Today.”

  “Probably ran out of nails for the crucifixion and wants to know where he can buy more.” Give a nervous laugh. Val quiet on his end. “What’s he want with me?”

  “He wouldn’t say. But my advice would be to go see him. What do you have to lose?”

  “You coming with me?”

  “That wouldn’t be appropriate. We don’t represent you anymore.”

  “But he called you.” Val doesn’t say anything. “Okay, I’ll get Nate Scanlon and we’ll go out to see the old bastard and—”

  “He called me because he won’t speak to Nate. Hates his guts. He wants to see you alone.”

  I think it over. I take so long that Val thinks he’s been disconnected. “Roy, you still there?”

  “Yeah. Fine. I’ll go see him. Want me to call you afterward?”

  “You don’t have to. I’m just relaying a message.”

  “Thanks, Val.” I hang up.

  Guess you still don’t have an agent, Jack Havoc says.

  • • •

  Jack L. Warner is dressed all in white, except for a black four-in-hand tie and a black carnation in the lapel of his ice cream suit. He looks like Cab Calloway about to sing “Minnie the Moocher.” He’s hunkered behind the protective barrier of his huge desk. Clutching and stroking a New York Yankees baseball bat.

  “Collectors item,” he says, although I didn’t ask. Spouting his rapid fire, semi-coherent shorthand. “World Series trophy. Old time. Signed by Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig, that whole crew. Valuable. Americana.”

  And good for close range defense. He must be remembering the last studio Christmas party when I tried to take a poke at him. They say Zanuck walks around his office swinging a polo mallet. The Colonel has a baseball bat. C’est la guerre.

  “I’m not a total schmuck, you know,” he says. Is he reading my mind?

  “Talk about TV, they forget, who introduced sound? Snickering at me, all over town, fuckers at Variety, printed my internal memo, ‘Please note that NO television sets can be used as props or allowed to be seen on screen in any Warner Brothers motion picture.’ Radios, record players, harmonicas and ukuleles, okay, but no TV, not in the living room, not in the bedroom, not in the den, not in the crapper, not nowhere. TV sets are verboten and if anybody disobeys, I make it clear I’ll can their ass—”

  It’s a motor mouth monologue. Can’t get a word in. And I don’t know what the point of any of it is.

  “—and why do I do this? Ask yourself? Like to make myself into a laughingstock?” The Colonel thumps the Yankees bat down on the desk. “No, it’s because I’m in a fuckin’ war! Damn tube, stealing my customers, sitting home on their asses, guzzling beer and watching Lucy, nice girl, never made a dime for us in the movies, and do I think I can win this war? I DO NOT! Holding action. Delaying tactic. I know that. Fight ’em ’til you can co-opt ’em. On my terms. And sure enough, one day, here’s Leonard Goldenson, ABC-TV, he says, ‘Colonel, how would your studio like to make shows for us?’ And I tell him, ‘Well, not really, but if the price is right and you can guarantee me enough of ’em, then maybe we can talk.’ Convince him, if I do this, doing him a favor. Giving him that slick Warner Bros. kind of movie-making for his crummy little tube—”

  The Colonel rises and comes around the desk. Giving the bat a few test swats. If he comes near me, I’m going to bash him with the big metal ashtray next to me. But he moves to the window overlooking the studio street.

  “Actually, ABC, saving my life. Enormous factory here in Burbank. Standstill. Nobody using it. Fuckin’ directors, wanna shoot movies only on location, location, LOCATION!” Sounding like a real estate broker. “England, France, Italy, Timbuktu. Anywhere but Stage 28. Empty sound stages. I’m losing money. Hand over fist. But—”

  He positions himself in front of the window. Like Casey at the plate. Wiggles his ass. Waits for the invisible pitch—and knocks it out of the park. Doffs a make believe cap to the crowd. Triumphant.

  “But now I got TV to pay the bills! Made the first deal, made the best deal. Give ’em Maverick, Sugarfoot, 77 Sunset Strip, Cheyenne, Hawaiian Eye, Jack Havoc. Now it’s okay by me to see a TV set in one of our movies, ’cuz it’ll be showing a Warner Brothers TV show.”

  He pauses. Gleams his full denture smile at me. Waiting for a round of applause. Maybe he’s totally lost it.

  “Well, Colonel, that was—damn shrewd of you.”

  “Bet your ass. I’m a survivor, Roy. Are you?”

  Now he asks? Sonuvabitch blackballed me. Left me sliced and diced in the gutter.

  “Are you a survivor?” the Colonel repeats.

  “Remains to be seen,” I say.

  “That’s what they say at funerals.” He guffaws like he got off a Milton Berle one-liner. Leans the bat against the wall. “C’mon, kid, gotta go to lunch. That’s not an offer. Walk me to the commissary. Eating with Gromyko, the Russki asshole from the U.N. Like to give him a boot in his gazongas, but I’m gonna buy him a sirloin steak and take him on a tour of the lot. Gotta peddle our movies and TV shows in Russia, to
o, even if they are fuckin’ Commies.”

  We’re strolling along the campus-style path between the executive buildings. Down the street between bustling sound stages. A surreal scene that everyone on the lot takes for granted. Cowboys, Indians, dance hall girls, tethered horses, horseshit, an obese teamster snoring in the back of a buckboard, a black-suited agent pitching a young actor-wrangler who’s practicing his lassoing on him. As we pass, each and every one of them take notice of Jack L. Warner—and me. He ignores them all. The plantation owner doesn’t have to fraternize with the slaves.

  “Buried a couple of my brothers,” he says out of nowhere. “Decided then, only other funeral I’m going to is my own. Period. Might not even go to that one.” Bigger guffaw. “Too damn depressing. Makes you think about what you don’t want to think about. But take my wife, hey, I sound like Henny Youngman, ‘Take my wife, please.’ Anyway, my wife, she goes to funerals, better manners than me. She was at Addie’s funeral, and she came back and told me about you giving this eulogy, that what you call it? Better than Georgie Jessel, she said. That’s all she could talk about. You made her cry, so now she won’t stop noodging me, so that’s why I hadda see you.”

  “I don’t really underst—” I manage to squeeze in before the Colonel is off again.

  “I grew up in New York. Lemme tell you, I was the toughest, meanest momser in the borough of Manhattan. Play by my own rules. Fair fight is any fight I win. Except I never kicked a man when he was down. Oh, maybe if he was a wiseass and asking for it, but you know what I mean.”

  “Not yet,” I say.

  “We had a beef, you and me, we squared off, took our best shots, hey, I won. Kicked you halfway to Canarsie. You’re dead meat on the West Coast. Can we agree on that?”

  I could hit him. But I’m curious where this is going. “Okay, we can agree on that.”

  “So, just to get my wife off my back, so she won’t keep noodging, I’m declaring a whaddayacallit, an armistice. You lost your wife, you’re handling it like a man, I respect that. So. Helping hand. Christian thing to do. Even though I’m Jewish. Maybe we’ll fight again some other time. But this time, it’s over. You wanna make movies, go make movies.”

  “Nobody will hire me.”

  “Go ask ’em again. Maybe they changed their minds.” We’re in front of the commissary. Near the private entrance to the Blue Room. “Give you something else to think about, kiddo. You can walk away clean. Today. But the sets are still standing on Stage 11. You give me two more years as Jack Havoc and right now I’ll double your salary, quadruple it next year. Cash bonuses up front when we go to syndication, for all episodes produced. During hiatus you can make a movie wherever you want, for Zanuck, for Goldwyn, watch out for that cocksucker Harry Cohn, and listen, no loanout fee, you keep all the money. Maybe I’ll even have a movie you want to do. Match best offer you get.” His grin outshines Doug Sr. “Only proviso is, either way, don’t go around town telling people I did something nice. I got a reputation to protect.”

  He struts off to break bread with Andrei Gromyko. But he calls back to me. “Hey, forgot to say. Cops killed that asshole burglar! Mazel Tov!”

  • • •

  Blessed is the Colonel, Jack Havoc says. He taketh away and now he hath given back.

  We’re on Stage 11. The main Jack Havoc sound stage. Stage 12 next door is for the “swing” sets, the temporary sets built for a particular episode, then dismantled and carted away. But Stage 11 contains the permanent standing sets for the show. Permanent, of course, being a relative term. If your TV ratings dipped, the sets and the show and you could be gone overnight.

  When we enter, the only light on Stage 11 is from a security stanchion on the floor near the entrance. I go to the electric panel, as familiar to me as the fuse box in my own house, and throw the lever, turning on the house lights. Still gloomy. No one here except Jack Havoc and me. But everything looks the same. My mobile dressing room. With my name still on the door in the center of the big gold star. I have a momentary scary thought.

  “Hey, how’s everybody in town going to know I’m not blackballed anymore? The Colonel’s gotta make some phone calls to—”

  He fixed all that just by walking down the studio street with you. In public. Word will be all over town. You are officially back among the living.

  Jack Havoc strides forward with that pouter-pigeon shoulders-back-follow-your-chest walk I developed for him. Surveying his territory. The standing sets for the show are Jack Havoc’s New York penthouse apartment, the lobby of his East Side building, and the elegant interior of his favorite saloon. It’s only been a couple of weeks since I was here, but the sets seem smaller. Like going back to high school and the desks have shrunk.

  Jack Havoc feels completely at home.

  He reclines comfortably on the Italian suede sofa in the living room of the penthouse apartment. Legs crossed, arms outstretched on the top of the sofa like he’s embracing the entire room. Then he strolls onto the balcony. Looks off as if the backdrop is real and he’s actually gazing at the lights of the city. He wanders over to the café society saloon set. Perches on his favorite barstool, the one on the far end, back to the wall. Where he can see everything and everybody.

  God, I missed this place, he says.

  “Yeah. Lots of memories. Most of ’em bad.”

  But not all. Good times, too.

  “Remind me.”

  C’mon, you enjoyed being the main man.

  “That was an illusion. I was a hired hand.”

  Not anymore. You heard the Colonel. Comin’ back a winner. What you want you got.

  “If I come back.”

  If? What’re you talking about? Why wouldn’t you?

  “I don’t know. Feels like going backwards. Was that what this was all about? Just a negotiating ploy to get a raise?”

  You’re not thinking straight, Roy. The Colonel needs you and now he knows it. He’s offering you the bird in the hand plus the two in the bush. Get filthy rich out of TV and be a movie star, too.

  “Well, feels like once I’m out—stay out. Move on. Keep my options open. If John Huston asks me to go to Africa with him, I don’t want to have to say, ‘You gotta wait, Johnny, I can’t go until my hiatus.’ I want to be able to say ‘Yes.’”

  But what about me?

  That’s a puzzler. “What about—who?”

  Me. Jack Havoc. Being back here on the lot, I just realized. If you walk away from Warners, I don’t exist. No more Jack Havoc. I’m over. I’m dead.

  “Now who’s talking crazy? You’ll be with me wherever I go.”

  But I won’t be me. I’m just asking you, Roy—think it over before you decide. Sure, the Colonel pissed you off. But now he’ll give you free rein. Want to get rid of Viola, and Killer Lomax too? Just wave a pinkie and they’re gone.

  “Yeah, I guess. But—”

  Okay, okay, just think about it, huh? We got a lot to think about.

  “Meaning what?”

  Now it’s his turn to look puzzled. C’mon, pal, you know what’s left on the agenda.

  “Been a busy day. Suppose you tell me.”

  Little Reva.

  “Don’t start that again. Everything’s copacetic now. The cops are happy, the Colonel’s happy. So why do we have to—”

  That’s why. Because we have to.

  “Marshak said it’s over.”

  He said he was one card away from a royal flush. Reva’s that card. As long as she can sing her little song about your comings and goings at the movies during the time Addie was cashing out—

  “She wouldn’t. I mean, who’d even believe her anymore when—”

  With that fuckin’ locket to verify the story? Marshak would eat it up.

  “They’re having a press conference. That officially closes the book!”

  There’s no statute of limitati
ons on murder.

  I hear him. I don’t like it. But I hear him.

  She’s got to go, he says.

  “She’s got to go,” I say.

  32

  Reva

  They ought to give me a medal for sitting in this hot ticket booth all day long since the noon show. Of course, I’ve got an electric fan on the floor. Basically it just stirs the hot air around, but I’ve rigged up my own version of an air conditioner. I filled two empty jumbo popcorn boxes from the concession stand with ice and put them on the floor with the fan blowing across them. Every little bit helps.

  I’m wearing my best outfit today because I went to apply for a job as a mailroom messenger at Twentieth Century Fox. That’s usually a guy’s job, so I didn’t want to wear a skirt, and my usual dungarees seemed too informal, so that left the wool slacks that fit me like a dream, but they’re still wool.

  Hey, I think maybe I got the job. Fingers crossed. Wouldn’t that be cool? Being on a movie lot every day and getting paid for it.

  Our theater started playing a new double feature today. Picnic and The Proud and Profane. The posters both look the same. Bill Holden with his shirt off standing over Kim Novak in one and Deborah Kerr in the other like he’s about to jump their bones. Business was good for the early shows. Everybody likes Bill Holden. Particularly with his shirt off.

  I’m supposed to finish my shift at five, but Connie, my relief, calls in with an emergency. She has to take her mom to the hospital for a gallstone. She finally shows up at eight, but I can use the overtime, and I run into a piece of luck. Norm, one of the off-duty ushers, drops by to pick up his check, and he offers me a ride home. We walk to his VW bug, and I have the sense that someone’s watching, you know, hair on the back of your neck rising, but I’ve felt like that a lot since that detective came here asking questions I didn’t want to answer.

 

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