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Ordinary Joe

Page 2

by Jon Teckman


  Bennett coughed loudly, inviting me to make the introductions. ‘I’m sorry,’ I said. ‘This is Joseph Bennett, the new Head of Entertainment and Media at Askett Brown. Joseph, this is Len Palmer, Buddy Guttenburg’s Executive Assistant, and Diana Lee who works with Len. These two guys are Buddy’s eyes and ears. Between them they—’

  ‘Hi, guys. How’re you doing?’ Bennett cut in. ‘I guess West’s already given you the low-down on his new boss.’ He emphasised the word ‘boss’ like a plantation owner addressing his slaves. ‘I was a bit miffed when they told me I was moving to film. Thought it might be a bit of a backwater if I’m honest with you. But, you know what, I’m starting to think it could actually be pretty cool.’ He looked around the room loftily, like an owl perched high in a tree’s upper branches, then nudged Len, spilling some of his champagne. ‘A lot better-looking crumpet here than out on the rigs, I can tell you, Les! Only one kind of woman tends to go into the oil business and they’re the ones who aren’t much interested in men, if you know what I mean!’ He gave a short blast of his dreadful braying laugh, like a donkey that’s seen a cow sit on a thistle. ‘But seriously, I’m really looking forward to working with your Mr Goldberg and the other top guys at the office. Bring you a little of the old Bennett magic. Do you know, when I was in oil, I achieved 300 per cent growth in net billings in four years? Three hundred per cent! I mean, I know this is a completely different ball game but it’s got to be a damn sight easier than oil. There, you’re lucky if every fifth or sixth project makes you any money.’

  Had Bennett paused for breath, any one of us could have pointed out to him the similarities between making movies and drilling for oil. In both businesses you have to throw truckloads of money into highly risky ventures without knowing if you’ll see any return at all. Every film is, in effect, a prototype – the exploration of a virgin field. Film-makers try to mitigate their risk by reusing elements that have been successful in the past– top stars, top directors, proven storylines. That’s why they make so many sequels.

  Diana had developed models and spreadsheets that could help translate Buddy’s more instinctive approach to film-making into something closer to a science. They couldn’t guarantee the success of a film any more than a man with a geological survey map and a big drill could guarantee striking oil. But they could ensure that the studio maximised its returns if it did strike screen gold. She could have told Bennett all this, if he’d stopped talking long enough to let her. And if he hadn’t already written her off as the secretary’s secretary.

  ‘So you’re both assistants, are you? That must be fun! Are you invited to a lot of these parties or is this a special treat? I think it’s great that companies on this side of The Pond have such an open policy on who they’ll employ as secretaries. At our place, we mainly get pretty young things like you, Diana. It might be a laugh if we had a few blokes as well, don’t you think, West?’

  ‘Actually, we’re not—’ Di began, but Bennett wasn’t looking for answers.

  ‘That’s not to say I don’t like having the pretty ones around, mind you. I’m not saying I’d like some old poofter sitting on the edge of my desk taking dictation, or firtling around under it looking for a bonus, if you catch my drift! But it would be a bit different, wouldn’t it, West? Blokes as PAs? Might even be an opportunity for you!’ He let out another rattle of his machine-gun guffaw, entirely oblivious to the fact that, as usual, he was laughing alone.

  Di flashed Len a glance that could only be interpreted as asking the silent question: ‘Who is this jerk?’ Len passed the look onto me as if it were the parcel in a child’s party game. I could only shrug apologetically. When a waiter penguined past with a bottle of champagne, I stopped him and invited my three companions to replenish their glasses. This caused Bennett to pause long enough to allow Len to spot an imaginary acquaintance somewhere over my left shoulder. ‘Oh, Di, look – there’s um … Frank and, er … someone else we know. Shall we go and say hello?’

  Diana needed no second invitation. Waiting only to flash me a sympathetic smile, she prepared her escape. Bennett looked confused for a second but then remembered his professional training. ‘It’s been lovely to meet you both,’ he said, pouring out the charm he usually kept buried under thick layers of crassness like his beloved oil beneath the strata of the earth. ‘Do keep in touch.’ He handed them each a pristine new business card as if it were a communion wafer blessed by the Holy Father himself. ‘And here’s one for you too, Mr West,’ he said with a barely suppressed snarl as he stuffed the sliver of stiff white paper into the breast pocket of my dinner jacket. ‘Joseph Bennett, Head of Entertainment and Media Division. Try not to forget it!’

  As soon as I could, I made my own excuses and put as much distance between myself and Bennett as was physically possible without actually leaving the party. I found myself walking past the VIP area, roped off to provide a sanctuary inside which the top talent could enjoy their evening unmolested by the rest of the guests.

  ‘Hey, Joey,’ I heard someone call from inside the rope, ‘over here.’ Turning, I saw Buddy Guttenberg beckoning to me to join him at his table. With the casual flick of one eyebrow, he alerted the bouncers to let me through, and with the other he indicated an empty chair next to him and invited me to sit down. I didn’t realise until I pulled back the chair that sitting with Buddy were Arch Wingate, his partner, the multi-Oscar-winning actress Melinda Curtis, and the two people I had recently watched feigning fornication: Jack Reynolds and, peering shyly out of the shadows, the impeccable Olivia Finch.

  ‘Arch, you remember Joey West,’ Buddy said, brooking no argument as to whether or not that bold statement was correct. ‘I brought him over to Queens last year to watch you burning my money on all those unnecessary fucking pick-up shots. Joey, you remember Arch, of course, and this is Melinda Curtis who I don’t believe you’ve met.’ Judging by his expression, Arch Wingate was pretty sure he’d never clapped eyes on me before either. He managed a disinterested half-smile while his wife raised a limp hand in unconscious impersonation of a royal wave, then returned to haranguing a waiter who had put a little too little ice in her mineral water. She looked thoroughly miserable. It was bad enough having to turn up to these events to support her own movies – sheer hell for a film she wasn’t even in. Undaunted by their lukewarm reaction, Buddy clapped one of his enormous paws on my shoulder and continued: ‘And I’m sure you remember our wonderful stars Jack and Olivia. Guys, this is Joe, my pal from London.’ Jack Reynolds looked right through me with dead eyes as if my very existence was an affront to his celebrity. Olivia, though, looked up and smiled in my direction.

  ‘Hi, Joe,’ she said before returning to inspecting her nails, an operation which seemed to require all her attention.

  I blushed and told the table I was pleased to meet it. Buddy laughed at my shyness but did his best to make me feel part of the group, keeping my glass filled and pitching me time and again as the man who had got the film made – repeated references which did not go down well with the auteur Arch Wingate. ‘Hey, Joe,’ Buddy said, when the conversation lulled, ‘why don’t you tell the guys about that Irish tax deal you did? I love this story. I tell you, this guy is a fucking genius!’

  ‘It really wasn’t that complicated,’ I began modestly. ‘All I did was tap into a bit of the tax write-off money that’s sloshing around over there, leveraged it up by linking it into a corporation tax offset, and then underpinned it against their enhanced capital allowances to maximise the cash flow impact and net bottom line benefit …’

  Jack Reynolds couldn’t contain himself. ‘Jesus Christ, Buddy, where did you find this guy? Fuck’s sake, if I wanted to be bored shitless, I’d have stayed home and watched one of Olivia’s old movies on cable.’

  I felt myself reddening to the very tips of my ears. To my even greater embarrassment, while Buddy laughed heartily at my discomfort, Olivia Finch sprang to my rescue. ‘Leave him alone, Jack,’ she insisted, before fixing me with her ang
elic gaze. ‘You must be so clever to do all that stuff. I am just so dumb with numbers. I bet I’m getting ripped off from here to Christmas with all my money stuff.’

  ‘Not just numbers, sweetheart,’ Reynolds mumbled, grabbing a half-empty bottle of champagne and struggling to his feet. ‘Not just fucking numbers.’

  ‘Oh, go screw yourself,’ Olivia shouted after him as he lurched off towards the dance floor. ‘Asshole!’ She turned to me, the anger instantly drained from her face, one expression replaced by another like the swapping of masks. ‘Hey, Mr Money Man, why don’t you shift over here so we can talk properly. I bet it’s real exciting dealing with all that high finance, isn’t it?’

  I did as I was told, then sat there dumbly, wondering whether my next comment should be about European tax harmonisation or her film.

  ‘I loved the movie, Ms Finch,’ I told her, an exaggeration that teetered close to being a lie, ‘and,’ steering closer to the truth, ‘you were sensational.’

  ‘Oh, do you really think so?’ she said, playing down her acting talents which were almost on a par with her beauty. ‘Thank you so much. And please, call me Olivia.’

  The waiter returned with another bottle of champagne and refilled the glasses of everyone at the table. ‘So, tell me,’ Olivia continued after taking a small, delicate sip from her glass, ‘what did you really think of the movie? It kinda sucks, doesn’t it? Go on, you can be honest with me, English.’

  ‘No, I wouldn’t say that,’ I replied as evenly as I could. ‘OK, I’ll admit, it’s not the best film I’ve ever seen but it’s far from the worst.’

  ‘So what is the best film you’ve ever seen? You must have seen hundreds in your time.’

  ‘Oh, you know,’ I said, ‘I like a lot of the old classics. Stuff from before you were born. From before I was born, even.’

  ‘Like what?’ she persisted. ‘Go on, try me. I might not be quite as dumb as I look.’

  ‘No, I didn’t mean that,’ I replied, a little too quickly. ‘I’m just trying to think of something that you might have seen as well. They made some great films in the nineties, you know.’

  Olivia shifted to a more upright, more rigid, position. ‘Just answer the goddamn question, English – what is your favourite movie?’ She spelled the words out slowly as if talking to a child. Or an idiot.

  ‘OK, then, if you must know, it’s Sullivan’s Travels. It’s an old—’

  ‘Preston Sturges movie!’ Olivia almost screamed, ‘Joel McCrea and Veronica Lake. Oh God, I love that film! It didn’t do as well at the box office as Paramount hoped but that might possibly have been because they released it right about the time of Pearl Harbor! I guess that’s what’s known in the business as bad timing! And I absolutely adore Veronica Lake. When I was a kid, I grew my hair real long and tried to get it to flick like hers, you know? Sturges made some great movies, didn’t he? The Great McGinty, The Lady Eve. But you hardly ever hear about him these days, do you? These kids today coming out of UCLA and NYU think cinema began with Quentin Tarantino. They don’t know anything about Sturges or Hawks or Frank Capra. And that’s just the Americans. Try talking to them about Fellini or Pasolini and they’ll think you’re trying to sell them a foreign car.’

  ‘Better not mention Ford, then,’ I said with a smile. Olivia looked at me blankly before she got the joke and laughed with far more gusto than my witticism deserved.

  ‘Yeah, you’re right there, Joe. John Ford would definitely be off their radar.’ Olivia paused for a moment and took another sip of her drink. A broad grin spread slowly across her face as if she’d just had a really naughty notion. ‘Do you know who my real all-time favourite actress is? The one I would have loved to have been? Go on, have a guess, Joe. You’ll never guess.’

  I had no idea. A few minutes earlier I’d have gone for a banker like Marilyn Monroe or perhaps Elizabeth Taylor, but Olivia’s knowledge and enthusiasm had floored me. ‘Tell me. Who?’

  ‘Hedy Lamarr!’ Olivia announced, then looked at me, her eyes alive with anticipation, eager to gauge my reaction as if she had just revealed the ultimate secret to the meaning of life. ‘She had it all. She was beautiful. She was a really talented actress and she was so clever. She actually invented the gizmo that makes wi-fi work – did you know that? Isn’t that amazing? When this is all over, I would love to be remembered for something more than having a great body and being able to read out lines that someone else has written for me.’

  ‘How do you know all this?’ I asked, without fully thinking through the implications of my question.

  ‘What?’ Olivia blazed back. Her moods, I was discovering, could change like traffic lights at a busy junction. ‘You think I can’t appreciate great movies because they’re in black and white? I was born poor English, not stupid! But I’m one of the download generation. When I was a kid, my dad got hold of a knocked-off laptop and I used to carry it around with me wherever I went, like it was my favourite doll. Any chance I got to hook up to the Internet, I’d see what movies I could find. There wasn’t much point watching Die Hard or Mission Impossible or big-budget wham-bam shit like that because the connections were so bad you couldn’t see what the hell was going on. So I’d watch all the old classics. At least then I could hear what the actors were saying even if I couldn’t see what they were doing. I could probably give you the whole of The Apartment or All About Eve by heart.’

  Before she had a chance to deliver on this promise, we were distracted by a commotion and the staggering figure of Jack Reynolds hoving back into view, pursued by one of the doormen who was controlling access to the VIP enclosure.

  ‘Come on, Olly, we’re going,’ he slurred, grabbing Olivia by the arm and attempting to pull her from her seat.

  ‘Get your hands off of me, you ape!’ Olivia snapped back, digging her fingers into her co-star’s hand.

  ‘Hey, hey! Come on, guys,’ said Buddy rising quickly from his seat at the other end of the table and hurrying to get the situation under control. ‘It is kind of late, Olivia. Perhaps you should be going.’

  ‘I’ll go when I’m ready,’ she replied, staring directly at me for support. ‘And, as it happens, I’m ready now. It’s been lovely talking with you, English. We must do this again some time.’ She rose and air-kissed everyone at the table, her scent lingering in the space she vacated like a jet’s vapour trail, then wafted off into the bright party lights, followed closely by Jack Reynolds. I’d met a few stars in my time but never before been so close for so long to such insouciant, commanding elegance. I felt completely intoxicated by the experience. That and the four or five glasses of champagne I’d already consumed.

  My head was starting to spin and I knew I’d overdone it but, what the hell! The drink was free, I was celebrating a successful trip and I’d had to babysit Bennett all week. And I was suddenly feeling very alone in the busiest city on the planet. It was almost one o’clock which made it six back home in London. Natasha would, without knowing it, be enjoying her last few moments of sleep. Soon she would receive our standard early-morning call – assaulted by a hyperactive three–year-old who greeted the dawn of each new day as if it had to be the best one ever. I missed them – even the rude awakenings – and was glad I’d be seeing them again soon. It was time to go back to the hotel.

  I should have looked for Bennett to see whether he was ready to leave too. It would have saved a lot of trouble if we’d stuck together – would have saved his life, now I come to think about it. Frankly, though, I reasoned at the time, he was a grown man and could find his own way back to the hotel. I tottered to the exit, slightly unsteady on my feet but not so drunk that I couldn’t hail myself a cab.

  Exactly drunk enough, it turned out, to make the biggest mistake of my life.

  I’ve always liked to think that, essentially, I’m a nice bloke. In fact, until that night, I would have settled for that on my gravestone: HERE LIES JOSEPH EDWARD GEORGE WEST. ESSENTIALLY A NICE BLOKE. So what happened next – and most of what’s
happened since – has to be seen as being out of character.

  As I reached the exit, my nostrils picked up a familiar perfume. I looked around and saw Olivia locked in animated conversation with Jack Reynolds. They didn’t notice me and I was almost past them when I heard Olivia yelp and saw that Reynolds had grabbed hold of one of her arms. It wasn’t clear whether he was trying to stop her from hitting him or from getting away. But there was no doubt she was not enjoying the experience and was struggling to free herself from his grasp.

  I still don’t know what possessed me. Instead of continuing out into the cold night air, I stopped, stared for a few moments, then heard a voice that sounded like mine but couldn’t possibly have been, say: ‘Hey, Ms Finch, is everything OK?’

  They both looked at me in stunned silence. Reynolds, the archetypal tough guy in so many movies, dropped Olivia’s arm and seemed to shrink as I walked towards them, shuffling a couple of paces to his left to position Olivia between us. She, still a little shocked at this turn of events, could only mutter, ‘Er, thank you, um … English, we’re fine. I was just leaving actually,’ then turned and made her way out of the bright lights into the lobby area beyond.

  I followed after her, making sure that Reynolds stayed where he was, skulking in a dimly lit corner of the room. Three liveried cloakroom attendants spotted Olivia approaching and raced to find her coat, fighting for the right to be the man to present it to her. I fumbled for my cloakroom ticket, checking every pocket of my jacket and trousers two or three times before I remembered that I didn’t have a ticket because I didn’t have a coat. It had been a warm April evening when I’d left the hotel with Bennett. Now, looking through the glass doors into the darkness outside, I could see it was raining hard. I contemplated a long, wet wait for a taxi along with every other hapless maggot drawn into the Big Apple.

 

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