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She Made Me Laugh

Page 30

by Richard Cohen


  The room filled and then spilled out into the hallway. Nick came and went, doing the necessary next-of-kin chores, never saying much. Mostly, he sat by the side of the bed, hands clasped on top of the sheets, slumped over in a defeat so total that pain itself would have been relief.

  The numbers—platelets, reds, whites, and the like—recovered a bit and then, confusingly, went their own ways, some up, some down, some no change at all. There was reason to hope, a cruel tease, then very quickly no reason to hope at all. Nora slipped away, asleep then awake, then asleep again. Friends, relatives went in and out, sometimes talking to Nora, sometimes just peering at her. The morphine drip was applied.

  * * *

  I went home and attended to Mona. It was evening, time for her medications, and that night it occurred to me that there was something urgent I needed to say to Nora. In the morning, I hurried to the hospital and sat on the bed as close to her as I could get. She was asleep. I got closer. I told her that I loved her. I had told her that before, of course, but not enough, not nearly enough. Now I said it to her and then I said it again. She opened her eyes and looked at me and said, “Who is that?”

  “Richard,” I said, dismayed that she didn’t know who I was.

  She laughed. “I know that.”

  She laughed again and so did I.

  She always made me laugh.

  Acknowledgments

  * * *

  Writing this book was both an exercise in nostalgia and discovery. I knew Nora Ephron very well indeed but memories of her kept sneaking back into my recollection through the anecdotes of others. At the same time, her many friends had their own memories of Nora—ones I shared and ones I knew nothing about. Here, with immense gratitude, are their names: Ken Auletta, Alice Arlen, Joyce Ashley, Francie Barnard, Carl Bernstein, Bo Burlingham, Patricia Bosworth, Marie Brenner, Marcia Burick, Colin Callender, Kate Capshaw, Lisa Caputo, Jennifer Carden, Ellen Chesler, Gail Collins, Barbara Cochran, Alexander Cohen, Deborah Copaken, Avery Corman, Meghan Daum, Dianne Dreyer, Peter Davis, Barry Diller, Kristin Doidge, Jim Dwyer, Lee Eisenberg, Hallie Ephron, Ann Fleuchaus, Al Franken, Roy Furman, Sandy Gallin, Ina Garten, David Geffen, Peter Goldman, Robert Gottlieb, Dan Greenburg, Lynn Grossman, Louise Grunwald, Clyde Haberman, Tom Hanks, Pete Hamill, Eddie Hayes, Arianna Huffington, Edward Kosner, Rosalind Krauss, Aaron Latham, John Leo, Lucy Le Page, Michael Levett, Christopher Lospalluto, Bryan Lourd, Mary Ann Madden, Anthony Mancini, Laurence Mark, James McCauley, Alice MacAlary, Steve Martin, Lawrence Meyer, Anne Navasky, Victor Navasky, Lynn Nesbit, Mike Nichols, Stephen Nimer, Jack O’Brien, Amy Pascal, Maurie Perl, Abigail Pogrebin, Stanley Pottinger, Sally Quinn, Frank Rich, David Remnick, Howard Rosenman, Ann Roth, Scott Rudin, Meg Ryan, J.J. Sacha, Diane Sawyer, Deborah Solomon, Robert Spitzler, Liz Smith, Martin Short, Lynn Sherr, Joel Schumacher, Sasha Spielberg, Steven Spielberg, Alessandra Stanley, Meryl Streep, Howard Stringer, Gay Talese, Rusty Unger, Amanda Urban, Mary Pat Walsh, Jane Wenner, Jann Wenner, Jim Wiatt, Rita Wilson, Margo Winkler, George Wolfe, Tom Wolfe and—out of order alphabetically—Walter Isaacson. He suggested I write this book.

  I am indebted to Alice Crites of the Washington Post’s research staff for her magical ability to find just about anything ever printed and to Emily Loose for her heroic attempt to organize my chaotic manuscript. Stuart Roberts of Simon & Schuster is not only a deft editor but repeatedly had to tutor me in the ways of the S&S computer programs and he did it always with great patience and inexplicable good nature. Along the way, I had the help of Elizabeth Gay, who handled publicity; Nicole McArdle, who did the online marketing; Ruth Lee-Mui, a designer who got it just right; Martha Schwartz, production editor; and Elisa Rivlin, who read the manuscript as both a lawyer and, it turned out, a fact-checker. I thank them all.

  Alice Mayhew was the editor of All The President’s Men, Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward’s 1974 book on their Watergate reporting. That’s when we met, and I was impressed with her editing then and I am even more impressed with it now that she has worked on two books of mine. She is a skilled editor, a steady guide through the vicissitudes of book writing, and enormously good fun. She is a gift.

  © SIGRID ESTRADA

  RICHARD COHEN is a nationally syndicated columnist for The Washington Post, where he has covered national politics and foreign affairs since 1976. His writing has appeared in The New Republic, The Nation, Esquire, GQ, The New York Review of Books, and many other publications.

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  ALSO BY RICHARD COHEN

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  Index

  * * *

  A note about the index: The pages referenced in this index refer to the page numbers in the print edition. Clicking on a page number will take you to the ebook location that corresponds to the beginning of that page in the print edition. For a comprehensive list of locations of any word or phrase, use your reading system’s search function.

  Ackerman, Mona, 17–19, 108, 120, 242–47, 249, 250, 273–74, 282

  Adams, Amy, 205, 271

  Adams, Franklin Pierce, 34

  Affair to Remember, An (movie), 30, 210, 271

  AFTRA (American Federation of Television and Radio Artists), 178

  Agnelli, Gianni, 137

  Agnew, Spiro T., 24, 28, 134

  Algonquin Hotel, 52

  Algonquin Round Table, 22, 29, 34–35, 68

  Allen, Woody, 164, 171

  All the President’s Men (Bernstein and Woodward), 123, 132

  All the President’s Men (movie), 25, 26, 132–34, 165

  Alsop, Joseph, 229, 230

  Altman, Robert, 164

  Amis, Martin, 275

  Angels in America (HBO), 258

  Anthony, Susan B., 35

  Arbus, Diane, 208

  Archie comics, 218

  Arendt, Hannah, 68, 231

  Arlen, Alice, 165–66, 168, 169, 190, 235, 252, 269

  Arlen, Michael, 252

  Living-Room War, 166

  Armstrong-Jones, Antony, 65

  Ashley, Joyce, 18, 278

  Associated Press, 178–79

  Auletta, Ken, 152, 182, 183, 184, 185, 279

  Austen, Jane, 256

  Bacall, Lauren “Betty,” 127–28, 252

  Lauren Bacall by Myself, 127

  Bailey, Lee, 8, 9, 12, 72, 252, 279

  Balaban, Bob, 22, 79, 201–2

  Baldwin, James, 92

  Ballard, Sara, 180

  Band of Brothers (TV), 254

  Barbarella (movie), 54

  Beatles, 65

  Beatty, Warren, 167

  Beck, Simone, 271

  Beech, Keyes, 236, 269

  Behrendt, George W., 138

  Behrendt, Olive, 138–39

  Bellow, Saul, 22, 95

  Benjamin, Richard, 122

  Benton, Robert, 164

  Bergen, Candice, A Fine Romance, 76

  Bergman, Ingrid, 111

  Berkowitz, Bernard, 121–22

  Berlin, Irving, 211, 213

  Bernard, Francie, 121

  Bernard, Walter, 198

  Bernstein, Carl, 20–21, 252

  and “Attachment A to Marital Separation Agreement,” 155, 156

  breakup with Nora, 146–49, 150–54, 155, 172, 207

  as celebrity, 151, 230

  and dinner parties, 126–27, 229

  and Heartburn, 155–57, 171–72, 173

  and Margaret, 144, 146


  marriage to Nora, 122–24, 126

  meeting Nora, 153–54

  and movies, 132–33

  and music, 144–45

  traveling with, 138, 139, 141, 142

  at Washington Post, ix, 20, 21, 25, 26, 90, 156

  and Watergate, 21, 25, 26, 90

  Bernstein, Jacob (son), xi, 251

  documentary about Nora by, 36

  and Nora and Carl’s breakup, 149, 150, 156–57, 158, 162

  and Nora and Nick’s marriage, 175, 207

  and Nora’s illness and death, 117, 279, 280

  Nora’s pregnancy with, 7, 125–26

  Bernstein, Max (son), xi, 251

  birth of, 151, 155–56

  and Nora and Carl’s breakup, 149, 150, 156–57, 158, 162

  and Nora and Nick’s marriage, 175, 207

  and Nora’s illness and death, 279, 280

  Bernstein, Sylvia, 123

  Bewitched (movie), 6, 118, 216–19, 220

  Bewitched (TV), 216–18

  Big (movie), 190

  Birds, The (movie), 63

  Blackglama, 228

  Blinder, Abe, 98

  Block, Herbert “Herblock,” 60

  Bogart, Humphrey, 254

  Boies, David and Mary, 76–77

  Bonfire of the Vanities, The (movie), 199

  Boston Globe, 24

  Bosworth, Patricia, 36–37

  Boy from Oz, The (musical), 240

  Bradlee, Benjamin C.:

  and Quinn, 128–29

  socializing, 146–47, 184, 252

  and Washington Post, 21, 51, 53, 134, 135

  Brahms, Johannes, Academic Festival Overture, 16

  Brammer, Billy Lee, The Gay Place, 13

  Brando, Marlon, 110, 111

  Brantley, Ben, 233

  Brenner, Marie, 153–54, 264

  Breslin, Jimmy, 237, 262

  Breyer, Stephen G., 47

  Brickman, Marshall, 164

  Bridge, Fred, 9

  Bridge Kitchenware, 8–9

  Bridges of Madison County, The (movie), 201

  Brill Building, New York, 13

  Brokaw, Meredith, 77

  Brokaw, Tom, 77, 277

  Broun, Heywood, 34

  Brown, David, 23, 99

  Brown, Helen Gurley, 23, 87–88, 99–100

  Brown, Richard A., 185–86

  Buck, Pearl, 228

  Buckley, William F., Jr., Overdrive, 106

  Bundy, McGeorge, 55–56

  Burick, Marcia, 39–40, 101

  Burlingham, Bo, 97–99

  Burnham, David, 164

  Burton, Richard, 63

  Burton, Sybil, 63–64

  Caddell, Patrick, 83

  Cagney, James, xi, 191

  Callahan, James, 143–44

  Callender, Colin, 239, 257, 281

  Capshaw, Kate, 12, 236

  Captain Newman, M.D. (movie), 36

  Caputo, Lisa, 12

  Carden, Jennifer, 43, 45–46, 49

  Carnelia, Craig, 233

  Carroll, Diahann, 221

  Carson, Johnny, 22, 67

  Carter, Graydon, 275

  Carter, Jimmy, 83

  Carter, Rosalynn, 128

  Casablanca (movie), 35, 193

  Casino (movie), 181–82

  Catch-22 (movie), 112, 115, 122, 201–2

  Cavett, Dick, 116, 119, 227–28

  CBS Morning News (TV), 128, 129–30

  Charlie Rose (TV), 222

  Cheever, John, 191

  Chekhov, Anton, 135

  Cher, 166

  Cherry, Sheldon, 7

  Chicago Daily News, 236

  Chicago Sun-Times, 173, 189

  Child, Julia, 272

  Mastering the Art of French Cooking, 271

  Child, Paul, 271, 272

  Chisholm, Shirley, 93–94

  Chopra, Deepak, 244

  Christmas, 211–13, 251

  Christopher, Jordan, 63–64

  Claiborne, Craig, 9

  Clark, Mae, 191

  Clinton, Bill, 73

  Clooney, George, 236, 239

  Cohen, Pearl, 249, 250

  Cohn, Sam, 163–64, 165–67, 168, 189, 198, 215–16

  Collins, Gail, 263

  Collins, Wilkie, The Moonstone, 13

  Congress for Cultural Freedom, 228

  Cooper Union, New York, 274–76

  Corman, Avery, 118–19, 120, 189

  Corman, Judy, 52, 118–20, 219, 252

  Cosmopolitan, 23, 87, 100

  Couples, 21

  Craig, Daniel, 239

  Creative Artists Agency, 215

  Cronyn, Hume, 13

  Crum, Bartley, 37

  Crystal, Billy, 188, 190, 192, 193

  Cuisinart food processor, 9

  Culkin, Macaulay, 164

  David and Lisa (movie), 70

  Davis, Al, 58

  Davis, Geena, 221–22

  Day, Doris, xi, 64

  Death of a Salesman (drama), 273

  Dee, Sandra, 158

  Deitl, Bo, 278

  Democratic National Committee, 21, 26, 90

  Democratic National Convention (1972), 93

  De Niro, Robert, 167

  Diaz, Linda, 14, 15

  Didion, Joan, 70

  Dietrich, Marlene, 222

  Diller, Barry, 82, 91–92

  Disney, Walt, 209

  Dispatch News Service, 132

  Doc (movie), 70

  Doctorow, E. L., 164

  Dos Passos, John, 92

  Douglas, Helen Gahagan, 26

  Douglas, Kirk, 64

  Dreyfuss, Richard, 167

  Dudar, Helen, The Attentive Eye, 66

  Dunaway, Faye, 70

  Dunham, Lena, 4

  Dunne, John Gregory, 70

  Durante, Jimmy, 210

  Dutton, Fred and Nancy, 144

  Dwyer, Jim, 262

  Eastwood, Clint, 201

  Ebert, Roger, 173, 189

  Eisenberg, Lee, 88

  Eisenhower, Dwight D., 26, 35

  Eisenstein, Rabbi Ira, 69

  Elaine’s, New York, 52, 182

  Elliott, Osborn, 50, 54

  Englander, Nathan, 3–4

  Ephron, Amy (sister), 185, 212, 279

  Ephron, Delia (sister), 85

  childhood of, 31, 38

  and Nora’s illness and death, 248, 279, 280

  socializing, 185, 212

  as writing partner, xi, 189, 198, 214, 215, 217, 218, 248

  Ephron, Hallie (sister), 105, 212, 279

  Ephron, Henry (father):

  death of, 37, 152

  drinking, 32, 48, 269–70

  in Hollywood, 29–31, 35–36, 157, 226

  in New York, 33–34

  philandering, 36, 39

  and Phoebe’s death, 37

  and Red Scare, 226

  Take Her, She’s Mine, 44, 158

  violence of, 37

  We Thought We Could Do Anything, 30–31, 36

  as writer, 29–31, 35, 43, 44

  Ephron, Nora:

  on aging, 220–24, 278

  as author, see Ephron, Nora, writings of

  author’s introduction to, ix, 27–28

  and Carl, see Bernstein, Carl

  childhood of, 30, 31–32, 39

  and Dan, see Greenburg, Dan

  death of, 19, 77, 117, 208, 247, 251, 280

  dinner parties of, 69–70, 71–74, 78–80, 115, 126–27, 141, 185, 211–13, 232, 265

  as director, 6–7, 10, 166, 168–69, 173, 190, 196–201, 202, 210, 214–19, 270; see also specific movies

  dying, 1–4, 11–12, 14, 17–19, 116–17, 224, 241, 242–47, 248–52, 256–57, 263–64, 265, 266, 273–82

  as editor, 135, 136

  family background of, 38–39

  and friendship, 81, 111, 118, 229, 263

  and Jewishness, 105–8

  memorial service for, 180, 275, 279–81

  and motherhood, xi, 149, 152, 157, 161–62, 207;
see also Bernstein, Jacob; Bernstein, Max

  and music, 267–68, 270

  and Nick, see Pileggi, Nicholas

  and paradoxes, 267–72

  productivity of, 14–15

  reputation of, 99

  rise to fame, 22, 90, 220–21

  roles of, 10–11

  as salonnière, 68, 69–70, 71, 78–79, 105, 127

  talent of, 66, 69

  toughness of, 83–86, 159

  traveling with, 137–42

  at Wellesley, 42–49, 158, 231

  and womanhood, 5–8, 11

  Ephron, Nora, writings of:

  “A Few Words About Breasts,” 7, 89–91, 94–96, 130, 158, 223

  and now . . . Here’s Johnny!, 67

  author’s voice in, 22, 63

  “Baby,” 7–8

  blogs for Huffington Post, 16, 241

  bylines, 65–66

  clip jobs, 64–65

  “Crabs,” 158–59

  “Eating and Sleeping with Arthur Frommer,” 62

  feature stories, 66

  “Helen Gurley Brown Only Wants to Help,” 100

  Higgins and Beech, 207, 235–36, 254–55, 269

  I Feel Bad About My Neck, 118, 220–24

  Imaginary Friends, 68, 207, 210, 226, 232–34, 239, 258

  I Remember Nothing, 31, 246, 251–52, 256

  and the lede, 15–16

  “The Legend,” 33

  Lost in Austen, 241, 256, 266

  Love, Loss, and What I Wore, 207, 239

  Lucky Guy, 47, 207, 218, 237–41, 253–59, 262, 266, 273, 281

  “The Mink Coat,” 43, 44

  “mouseburger” story, 88

  “Mush,” 89, 99

  op-ed columns, 16

  at the Post, 62–67

  process in, 15–17

  “Reunion,” 101

  “Revision and Life: Take It from the Top Again,” 15

  screenplays, see specific movies

  Scribble, Scribble, 153

  venues for, 17

  Wallflower at the Orgy, 22, 23, 27, 91

  “Where Bookmen Meet to Eat,” 150

  “Women in Israel: The Myth of Liberation,” 103–4, 106–8

  Ephron, Phoebe (mother):

  career of, x, 33, 36, 43

  and children, 31–33

  death and dying of, x, 32, 36, 37

  as drinker, x, 3, 31, 32, 33, 37–39, 269–70

  family background of, 38–39, 177

  in Hollywood, 29, 30–31, 35–36, 157–58, 226

  Howie, 36–37

  letters to Nora, 43–44

 

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