All Gone to Look for America

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All Gone to Look for America Page 33

by Peter Millar


  The Paiute Indians who inhabit the area of Arizona-Utah closest to the north rim call the Grand Canyon ‘a mountain lying down’. It is hard to think of anything better, as long as you imagine that as not just one mountain but an entire mountain range lying down. Inverted, hollowed out. I once knew a professor of topographical mathematics at Oxford who was reputed not only to be able to use equations to turn the visible world inside out but to be able to visualise it in his head. Seeing the Grand Canyon for the first time is like a glimpse inside his universe.

  There is no more three-dimensional view on earth and certainly not one that at the same time can suddenly project a more trompe l’oeil illusion of two dimensionality. It is the scale of the thing, in part, the fact that the opposite rim here is more than 10 miles away, half the width of the English Channel, and yet you can see it clearly. But there is not simply a gulf in between; it would be easier to cope with if there were. There is an entire landscape, inverted, a world of scooped-out pyramids. I had always imagined that what would strike you about the canyon was how the great buttes of uneroded rock jut up from the depths; it is not, it is the great mountains that climb downwards to the all but invisible inverted summit. You sense, you almost physically feel the process of millennial erosion, of 17 million years of slow continuous irresistible wearing away.

  The silence of course doesn’t last and by now there’s the usual roundabout of people taking photographs and being photographed and asking other people to take photographs of them with their camera – and I even join in for God’s sake – because I have to have a picture of me here, a snapshot in the mouth of infinity. But then I’m back chasing the silence, moving out and away from the mob who are, awfully but all-too-humanly, already coming to terms with it and chalking it up there with the Eiffel Tower after all. The tour guide is telling us details, dimensions, widths and breadths and so on, but none of it really seems to matter compared with just looking at the damn thing. Looking across it. At the other side, at the sides all round. You can play tricks with your own eyes: just look out ahead – don’t look down – and it’s flat. The other side is flat, perfectly flat. You are standing on a plain, a very flat plain, one of the flattest plains in North America, that just happens to have a hole the size of an entire mountain range gouged out of the middle of it.

  Just for the sake of comparison here, let’s put those other world sights in perspective: you could pick up St Paul’s Cathedral and pop it down anywhere you liked in the Grand Canyon and if you could still see it, it would look like a tiny toy. Not something you lift up with both hands: something you position between thumb and forefinger in a giant landscape. The same for the Eiffel Tower: it would look like a carpet tack. Same goes for the Empire State Building even – not quite a carpet tack perhaps but a child’s toy nonetheless, one that would barely reach a quarter of the way towards the summit and even then could get lost in the great immense meandering maze of rock formations four times its height. Even, I fear, the Great Pyramid of Giza, 4,500 years old, would be like a modern pimple next to this 17-million-year old chasm that would have looked pretty much as it does today when the pyramids were being built.

  I haven’t even mentioned the colours: the red-end spectrograph of pinks, ochres, vermilions, crimsons, that uncannily merge with the blues, the purply greys and in the distance, the far far distance, the dark green of the Colorado River itself, flowing through its handiwork. I use my camera, with an impressive enough 15-times optical zoom, to focus in on a tiny puddle of it far away. At seven-times magnification it increases to a wide river in between high cliffs, with a few odd coloured specks in it. At full stretch, fifteen times, those specks are only just identifiably multicoloured rafts with people on them, whitewatering on the greatest ride on earth. I make a mental note to do that one day. Once it was chic to take helicopter rides down the canyon: it must have been an awesome experience, but horribly defiling of this almost spiritual experience for everyone else. There were also a lot of accidents! Now only overflights are allowed, and over distant parts of the canyon. Most tourists barely graze the rim. You can walk down, but numbers are limited and without an overnight pass you have to walk straight back up and as it’s three hours down and six back up, that’s maybe not the best plan. Burros descend too, though no faster.

  On the rough red face of an escarpment jutting out to my right I focus in on a small party, ant-like in perspective, with one burro, making their way down a line scraped across the face of the precipitous rock. This, the guide has told us, is Bright Angel Trail. Almost all the tracks used today are those used for millennia by the Native Americans. The eastern edge of the canyon is a Navajo reservation, to our west are reservations of the Havasupai and Hualapai tribes, while the Paiute are to the north on the border with Utah. It is over there that I glimpse the looming, building bulkhead of a storm brewing. I scan the skies and just in the distance, out above the emptiness, there’s a dark shape wheeling that might, just might be a California condor, a Thunderbird. What is certain is the darkening grey brooding as it spreads and settles beyond the utterly flat line that separates the sky from the bowels of the earth: the plain is so flat that you simply cannot see beyond the canyon, the rim is the horizon in every direction. Just as it is invisible until you reach it, standing on the edge it consumes the world in every direction. Except behind, which is back to the bus. And the train. And civilisation.

  The thunder claps in the distance as we board the train but rain fails to overtake us on the two-hour journey back. Katie tries to get a party atmosphere going, more hindered than helped by the horseback ‘Great Train Robbery’ and the pistol-toting bandits: ‘We’ll take anything except husbands and children.’ But with a couple of her cocktails inside – I recommend she stock up on Grand Canyon beer next time – by the time we grind back into Williams we’re even laughing out loud at her jokes: ‘What do you call a two-legged cow? Lean beef. What do you call a cow sitting down? Ground beef.’

  Which reminds me I have just time for a last meal: an almost perfect steak fajita from a little Mexican restaurant near the tracks, rare chargrilled beef served with an eye-wateringly lime and chilli spiced salsa that is the most delicious I have ever eaten. With just the slightest suspicion I may come to regret it.

  It’s raining now as I pick up my rucksack from the hotel. And dark, which means it must be time for me to go. There’s a white van out front and two men standing beside it, waiting to take me to an abandoned clearing in the middle of the forest.

  GRAND CANYON TO LOS ANGELES

  TRAIN: Southwest Chief

  FREQUENCY: 1 a day

  DEPART WILLIAMS JUNCTION, ARIZONA: 9:33 p.m.

  via

  Kingman, AZ

  Needles, California

  Barstow, CA

  Victorville, CA

  San Bernardino, CA

  Riverside, CA

  Fullerton, CA

  ARRIVE LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA: 8:15 a.m.

  DURATION: 11 hours, 42 minutes

  DISTANCE: 1,167 miles

  18

  Angels and Demons

  I HAD BEEN WARNED off Los Angeles. By just about everybody who had ever been there. Including myself. That may seem odd for a city variously dubbed Tinseltown, the Dream Factory, the Street of Stars. But all those refer of course to one particular part of Los Angeles: Hollywood. And even then they mean the product, not the place. That was one of the worst bits, friends had told me.

  I got warnings that were little short of horror stories: ‘Don’t stay in a motel in Hollywood or the door’ll get broken in and you’ll get robbed or raped or both’; ‘Don’t go out at night on foot or you’ll get mugged’; ‘And stay clear of downtown, people get shot.’ And anyhow there was unanimous agreement that actually Los Angeles didn’t have a downtown. Not as such.

  What it had instead, glimpsed vaguely through the smog when landing at the airport, was a motley cluster of skyscrapers grouped together for dubious effect, towering out of a neglected urban waste
land amid a vast sprawling jungle of single-storey clapboard houses inhabited by gun-toting poor people. What you did on arrival in LA, I was told, was grab a car and head for the hills: Beverley that is, if you had an invitation, otherwise out beyond to sedate suburban Simi Valley or up the coast to Malibu and other millionaires’ playgrounds. I could hardly argue otherwise. My own single previous experience had been on a journalistic job a dozen years ago, covering the aftermath of riots, and when I took a wrong turning in my hire car the cityscape metamorphosed without warning from shacks to dark streets of old department stores transformed into seedy bargain warehouses, crowded by resentful-looking people.

  Los Angeles didn’t even have a name, not properly. Just LA: the first city to be known by its initials, like PJ Proby or PJ O’Rourke or JFK, who of course also became an airport. Angelinos are probably the only people outside New York who also refer to their airport almost exclusively by its international call sign: LAX. Even though it has no reference to anyone famous and to the uninitiated looks like an abbreviation for a bowel purge or a Jewish form of smoked salmon.

  Coming in by train, from the clean air of the desert and the natural splendours of the Grand Canyon, does not give much more grounds for optimism: I pull my head from under a colourful Indian blanket – or sort of Indian blanket: ‘made of acrylic, sir, top quality’ – picked up from a Navajo woman selling stuff on Albuquerque platform when we stopped for a cigarette break the evening before – and all I can see is the same nondescript clutch of skyscrapers loitering with intent in an unruly group under a smoggy sky. In the foreground, beyond the tracks and sidings, stand cold storage warehouses and loft conversion companies.

  And then we pull into Union Station – they do lack originality with the names, but I suppose the railroad built the union – and everything changed. All of a sudden I was no longer dreading a world in monochrome shades of smog inhabited by rejects from the cast of Blade Runner. Instead, I had stepped straight off the train and onto the set for The Long Goodbye. In colour. Technicolor, come to that. Los Angeles station is on a par with any of the great termini of the world, yet completely unlike any other. It feels as if I have just stepped into the baronial dining hall of some Mexican-inspired plutocrat’s mansion: great red-brown wooden beams soar to make a ceiling, from which art deco chandeliers hang over a patterned floor in ochre and white marble. Sets of squared-off art deco leather armchairs sit in formal groups where passengers lounge with newspapers if they’re not leaning at the smart little bar where a great arch links through into the next chamber of the mansion. I half expect to see Humphrey Bogart buying Lauren Bacall a drink, while Peter Lorre lurks behind an LA Times. I haven’t my iPod plugged in but if I had it’d be playing Al Stewart, singing about a morning from a Bogart movie in a country where they turn back time. LA?

  Then I walk out into the sunshine, with those trademark soaring California palms reaching on their spindly-looking mile-high trunks for a sky that is all of a sudden improbably blue. I turn to look back, across a sea of pink and orange azaleas at a station that, with its gabled frontage, ribbed red tiles and tall clock tower, resembles nothing so much as an over-scale replica of a whitewashed church in some Mexican pueblo. Maybe that defended by the Magnificent Seven. All of a sudden I’m suffused with a sense of deep, tranquil well-being, and then I realise why: I can breathe again. Back down to sea level, the warm air with just a hint of the coast in it – and, God knows, maybe the traffic fumes my system recognises – has worked an irrigational miracle with my nasal membranes. I haul out my trusty pocket handkerchief and for the first time in what seems like months successfully blow my nose. Never had I thought I’d be so glad to see snot.

  With air finally circulating through my sinuses, I feel more than up to finding my motel in Hollywood. Yes, I know, there’s the robbery and rape and mad axe men to put up with, but I’m in LA for heaven’s sake, how can I not stay in Hollywood? Happily also, there is public transport – an underground even – that gets there. And what’s more it’s clean and works, which is not something I had been relying on. I still remember Dionne Warwick singing about LA being a great big freeway where you had to put a hundred down to buy a car, before you could hope they’d make you a star. These days maybe they do it if you travel by metro. Get off at Hollywood and Vine and the station’s as good as anything at Universal Studios (really!), with mock palm trees supporting a domed roof of thousands of reels of film and ancient movie cameras on pedestals at the top of every escalator. Lights, camera, all that’s missing is the action.

  That’s upstairs, above Hollywood and Highlands. At Mann’s Chinese Theatre. I haven’t even dumped my bag yet – I didn’t take the advice and am staying in a cheap hotel in Hollywood, I mean, really, where else? – and already on the pavement I’m swamped by stars of stage and screen. There’s Batman, right there: the Dark Knight himself next to that fat bloke in shorts, the great cape flowing to the ground and the harsh rigid bat silhouette of the mask. Except, I’m sure last time I saw the caped crusader he wasn’t wearing four-inch platform soles. It would make some of those athletic stunts a bit tricky. It does make him tower over the girls though. And the fat bloke in shorts.

  And then there’s Spiderman too, good ol’ Spidey, crouched low in that trademark arachnid pose. Except that he must be wearing his second suit today – the one made of rayon instead of Lycra – which is a pity because that saggy arse with the clearly visible lines of his Y-fronts underneath really does dent the image a bit. Still never mind at least he’ll deal with that nasty-looking bloke with the skull-face and red hands who just might be Darth Maul, but then you shouldn’t really ask me, old Darth and I haven’t hung out together for years. And then there’s the bloke with the tri-cornered hat, the sash round his waist and the dodgy line in earrings. I wonder if he’s looking for Johnny Depp. He certainly doesn’t look like him.

  But then the real celebrities outside Mann’s are the ones beneath your feet: the hand and footprints of movie stars down the years, persuaded to dip their appendages in wet cement by Sid Gruman who founded this preposterous mock-Chinese pagoda cinema in 1927. Look down and there’s Bogey’s shoe prints with the hands next to them – remarkably long spindly fingers – and the scrawl: Sid, may you never die, till I kill you. The tough man even bent over with his hands in cement. There’s Gregory Peck’s, John Wayne’s, Maurice Chevalier’s, a tiny set belonging to Shirley Temple and Mae West’s – though no sign that he tried to get her to lie down to leave a more tangible impression. One star was more obliging. Not only did Roy Rogers leave both hand and footprints but he dropped his gun there too. And even Trigger planted a couple of hoofs.

  But will these marks in the concrete be the only way anyone will remember Freddie Bartholomew? Or Constance Talmadse? Or Norman Shearer? I apologise to their fan clubs but I’ve never heard of any of them. Nor, I have to admit, of a vast number of the more than 2,000 ‘stars’ commemorated with physical stars set into the pavement along Hollywood Boulevard. I can’t help feeling maybe Hollywood lost its way when it first allowed celebrities from other walks of life to intrude. Jim Morrison and the Doors have their place in music, but a star on the Hollywood pavement? And what about the Harlem Globetrotters? All of them? Or was it just one season? And who were Frank Morgan, Eugene Palette and Norris Stoloff. The Ozymandias syndrome of the twentieth century. In multiple.

  It’s only clear just how much effort has been put into reviving the fortunes of the Hollywood area – as opposed to the movie industry, most of which is located miles away today – as I walk further down Hollywood Boulevard itself. By now I’ve dumped my bag at the motel on North Highland Avenue, checking the doors carefully for axe marks or other signs of breaking and entering (there weren’t any!), and negotiated the honking, parping traffic and the inevitable hustling bums by the roadside, back down to the main drag.

  There is a moving borderline somewhere along Hollywood Boulevard where tacky turns into tatty. Hollywood and Highlands is the hub of the re
storation project, with a new smart semi-open-air shopping-centre development and a view of the Hollywood sign – it’s forbidden to get anywhere within reach of the great absurd piece of sentimentally-hyped hubris, and has been ever since unemployed actress Peggy Entwistle earned her own little claim to dubious immortality by fatally leaping off the top of the h. The metal letters are 50 feet high, and have a claim to fame other than what most people imagine: the world’s most famous and protected estate agent’s hoarding, which is what they were built as back in 1923.

  But Hollywood glamour seems a long way away already by the time my footsteps carry me beyond the Hollywood and Vine metro. Long gone are such tourist traps as the ubiquitous Ripley’s Believe It or Not, the Waxwork Museum, even Frederick’s of Hollywood Lingerie Museum, famed in particular for displaying bustiers worn by Madonna and a few of Cher’s old bras. In their place are cut-price electronics stores, Levi retailers, fancy-dress sellers and a few tawdry porn shops. Anything vaguely reminiscent of the glitter has long faded by the time I reach Pantages, the ‘grande dame’ of Tinseltown, an extravagant completely over-the-top early art deco palace, opened in 1929 as Hollywood’s superlative cinema. Its fame soared until its glory days from 1949 to 1959 when it was the home of the Oscar ceremony. Following that, like so much of the city, it suffered gradual, later serious neglect to become shabby and embarrassing. Only now, after a major job of root-and-branch restoration has it come back to its former glory as a theatre for Broadway musicals. But you only have to stand in the entrance lobby and stare up at its gilt cornices, elaborate star-shaped ceiling centrepiece, emblazoned with gold, silver and pink like the palace of the Emperor Ming in some Flash Gordon fantasy to get a feel for the escapist magic that summed up the original Hollywood dream. But by now even the stars on the pavement are getting few and far between and it’s been at least 100 yards since I recognised a name.

 

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