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Complete Works of F. Scott Fitzgerald UK (Illustrated)

Page 245

by F. Scott Fitzgerald


  “It’s no life at all,” Pat assured him with conviction. “I’d trade with you right now.”

  In the hall next day he intercepted Jeff Manfred who walked with the unconvincing hurry of one without a destination.

  “What’s the rush, Jeff?” Pat demanded, falling into step.

  “Reading some scripts,” Jeff panted without conviction.

  Pat drew him unwillingly into his office.

  “Jeff, have you heard about the shake-up?”

  “Listen now, Pat--” Jeff looked nervously at the walls. “What shake-up?” he demanded.

  “I heard that this Harmon Shaver is going to be the new boss,” ventured Pat, “Wall Street control.”

  “Harmon Shaver!” Jeff scoffed. “He doesn’t know anything about pictures--he’s just a money man. He wanders around like a lost soul.” Jeff sat back and considered. “Still--if you’re right, he’d be a man you could get to.” He turned mournful eyes on Pat. “I haven’t been able to see Le Vigne or Barnes or Bill Behrer for a month. Can’t get an assignment, can’t get an actor, can’t get a story.” He broke off. “I’ve thought of drumming up something on my own. Got any ideas?”

  “Have I?” said Pat. “I got three ideas so new they’re wet behind the ears.”

  “Who for?”

  “Lizzette Starheim,” said Pat, “with Dutch Waggoner directing--see?”

  “I’m with you all a hundred per cent,” said Harmon Shaver. “This is the most encouraging experience I’ve had in pictures.” He had a bright bond-salesman’s chuckle. “By God, it reminds me of a circus we got up when I was a boy.”

  They had come to his office inconspicuously like conspirators--Jeff Manfred, Waggoner, Miss Starheim and Pat Hobby.

  “You like the idea, Miss Starheim?” Shaver continued.

  “I think it’s wonderful.”

  “And you, Mr. Waggoner?”

  “I’ve heard only the general line,” said Waggoner with director’s caution, “but it seems to have the old emotional socko.” He winked at Pat. “I didn’t know this old tramp had it in him.”

  Pat glowed with pride. Jeff Manfred, though he was elated, was less sanguine.

  “It’s important nobody talks,” he said nervously. “The Big Boys would find some way of killing it. In a week, when we’ve got the script done we’ll go to them.”

  “I agree,” said Shaver. “They have run the studio so long that--well, I don’t trust my own secretaries--I sent them to the races this afternoon.”

  Back in Pat’s office Eric, the callboy, was waiting. He did not know that he was the hinge upon which swung a great affair.

  “You like the stuff, eh?” he asked eagerly.

  “Pretty good,” said Pat with calculated indifference.

  “You said you’d pay more for the next batch.”

  “Have a heart!” Pat was aggrieved. “How many callboys get seventy-five a week?”

  “How many callboys can write?”

  Pat considered. Out of the two hundred a week Jeff Manfred was advancing from his own pocket, he had naturally awarded himself a commission of sixty per cent.

  “I’ll make it a hundred,” he said. “Now check yourself off the lot and meet me in front of Benny’s bar.”

  At the hospital, Estelle Hobby Devlin sat up in bed, overwhelmed by the unexpected visit.

  “I’m glad you came, Pat,” she said, “you’ve been very kind. Did you get my note?”

  “Forget it,” Pat said gruffly. He had never liked this wife. She had loved him too much--until she found suddenly that he was a poor lover. In her presence he felt inferior.

  “I got a guy outside,” he said.

  “What for?”

  “I thought maybe you had nothing to do and you might want to pay me back for all this jack--”

  He waved his hand around the bare hospital room.

  “You were a swell script girl once. Do you think if I got a typewriter you could put some good stuff into continuity?”

  “Why--yes. I suppose I could.”

  “It’s a secret. We can’t trust anybody at the studio.”

  “All right,” she said.

  “I’ll send this kid in with the stuff. I got a conference.”

  “All right--and--oh Pat--come and see me again.”

  “Sure, I’ll come.”

  But he knew he wouldn’t. He didn’t like sickrooms--he lived in one himself. From now on he was done with poverty and failure. He admired strength--he was taking Lizzette Starheim to a wrestling match that night.

  In his private musings Harmon Shaver referred to the showdown as “the surprise party.” He was going to confront Le Vigne with a fait accompli and he gathered his coterie before phoning Le Vigne to come over to his office.

  “What for?” demanded Le Vigne. “Couldn’t you tell me now--I’m busy as hell.”

  This arrogance irritated Shaver--who was here to watch over the interests of Eastern stockholders.

  “I don’t ask much,” he said sharply, “I let you fellows laugh at me behind my back and freeze me out of things. But now I’ve got something and I’d like you to come over.”

  “All right--all right.”

  Le Vigne’s eyebrows lifted as he saw the members of the new production unit but he said nothing--sprawled into an arm chair with his eyes on the floor and his fingers over his mouth.

  Mr. Shaver came around the desk and poured forth words that had been fermenting in him for months. Simmered to its essentials, his protest was: “You would not let me play, but I’m going to play anyhow.” Then he nodded to Jeff Manfred--who opened the script and read aloud. This took an hour, and still Le Vigne sat motionless and silent.

  “There you are,” said Shaver triumphantly. “Unless you’ve got any objection I think we ought to assign a budget to this proposition and get going. I’ll answer to my people.”

  Le Vigne spoke at last.

  “You like it, Miss Starheim?”

  “I think it’s wonderful.”

  “What language you going to play it in?”

  To everyone’s surprise Miss Starheim got to her feet.

  “I must go now,” she said with her faint poignant accent.

  “Sit down and answer me,” said Le Vigne. “What language are you playing it in?”

  Miss Starheim looked tearful.

  “Wenn I gute teachers hätte konnte ich dann thees rôle gut spielen,” she faltered.

  “But you like the script.”

  She hesitated.

  “I think it’s wonderful.”

  Le Vigne turned to the others.

  “Miss Starheim has been here eight months,” he said. “She’s had three teachers. Unless things have changed in the past two weeks she can say just three sentences. She can say, ‘How do you do’; she can say, ‘I think it’s wonderful’; and she can say, ‘I must go now.’ Miss Starheim has turned out to be a pinhead--I’m not insulting her because she doesn’t know what it means. Anyhow--there’s your Star.”

  He turned to Dutch Waggoner, but Dutch was already on his feet.

  “Now Carl--” he said defensively.

  “You force me to it,” said Le Vigne. “I’ve trusted drunks up to a point, but I’ll be goddam if I’ll trust a hophead.”

  He turned to Harmon Shaver.

  “Dutch has been good for exactly one week apiece on his last four pictures. He’s all right now but as soon as the heat goes on he reaches for the little white powders. Now Dutch! Don’t say anything you’ll regret. We’re carrying you in hopes--but you won’t get on a stage till we’ve had a doctor’s certificate for a year.”

  Again he turned to Harmon.

  “There’s your director. Your supervisor, Jeff Manfred, is here for one reason only--because he’s Behrer’s wife’s cousin. There’s nothing against him but he belongs to silent days as much as--as much as--” His eyes fell upon a quavering broken man, “--as much as Pat Hobby.”

  “What do you mean?” demanded Jeff.

  “
You trusted Hobby, didn’t you? That tells the whole story.” He turned back to Shaver. “Jeff’s a weeper and a wisher and a dreamer. Mr. Shaver, you have bought a lot of condemned building material.”

  “Well, I’ve bought a good story,” said Shaver defiantly.

  “Yes. That’s right. We’ll make that story.”

  “Isn’t that something?” demanded Shaver. “With all this secrecy how was I to know about Mr. Waggoner and Miss Starheim? But I do know a good story.”

  “Yes,” said Le Vigne absently. He got up. “Yes--it’s a good story. . . . Come along to my office, Pat.”

  He was already at the door. Pat cast an agonized look at Mr. Shaver as if for support. Then, weakly, he followed.

  “Sit down, Pat.”

  “That Eric’s got talent, hasn’t he?” said Le Vigne. “He’ll go places. How’d you come to dig him up?”

  Pat felt the straps of the electric chair being adjusted.

  “Oh--I just dug him up. He--came in my office.”

  “We’re putting him on salary,” said Le Vigne. “We ought to have some system to give these kids a chance.”

  He took a call on his Dictograph, then swung back to Pat.

  “But how did you ever get mixed up with this goddam Shaver. You, Pat--an old-timer like you.”

  “Well, I thought--”

  “Why doesn’t he go back East?” continued Le Vigne disgustedly. “Getting all you poops stirred up!”

  Blood flowed back into Pat’s veins. He recognized his signal, his dog-call.

  “Well, I got you a story, didn’t I?” he said, with almost a swagger. And he added, “How’d you know about it?”

  “I went down to see Estelle in the hospital. She and this kid were working on it. I walked right in on them.”

  “Oh,” said Pat.

  “I knew the kid by sight. Now, Pat, tell me this--did Jeff Manfred think you wrote it--or was he in on the racket?”

  “Oh God,” Pat mourned. “What do I have to answer that for?”

  Le Vigne leaned forward intensely.

  “Pat, you’re sitting over a trap door!” he said with savage eyes. “Do you see how the carpet’s cut? I just have to press this button and drop you down to hell! Will you talk?”

  Pat was on his feet, staring wildly at the floor.

  “Sure I will!” he cried. He believed it--he believed such things.

  “All right,” said Le Vigne relaxing. “There’s whiskey in the sideboard there. Talk quick and I’ll give you another month at two-fifty. I kinda like having you around.”

  A PATRIOTIC SHORT

  Esquire (December 1940)

  Pat Hobby, the writer and the man, had his great success in Hollywood during what Irving Cobb refers to as ‘the mosaic swimming-pool age--just before the era when they had to have a shinbone of St Sebastian for a clutch lever.’

  Mr Cobb no doubt exaggerates, for when Pat had his pool in those fat days of silent pictures, it was entirely cement, unless you should count the cracks where the water stubbornly sought its own level through the mud.

  ‘But it was a pool,’ he assured himself one afternoon more than a decade later. Though he was now more than grateful for this small chore he had assigned him by producer Berners--one week at two-fifty--all the insolence of office could not take that memory away.

  He had been called in to the studio to work upon an humble short. It was based on the career of General Fitzhugh Lee who fought for the Confederacy and later for the U.S.A. against Spain--so it would offend neither North nor South. And in the recent conference Pat had tried to co-operate.

  ‘I was thinking--’ he suggested to Jack Berners ‘--that it might be a good thing if we could give it a Jewish touch.’

  ‘What do you mean?’ demanded Jack Berners quickly.

  ‘Well I thought--the way things are and all, it would be a sort of good thing to show that there were a number of Jews in it too.’

  ‘In what?’

  ‘In the Civil War.’ Quickly he reviewed his meagre history. ‘They were, weren’t they?’

  ‘Naturally,’ said Berners, with some impatience, ‘I suppose everybody was except the Quakers.’

  ‘Well, my idea was that we could have this Fitzhugh Lee in love with a Jewish girl. He’s going to be shot at curfew so she grabs a church bell--’

  Jack Berners leaned forward earnestly.

  ‘Say, Pat, you want this job, don’t you? Well, I told you the story. You got the first script. If you thought up this tripe to please me you’re losing your grip.’

  Was that a way to treat a man who had once owned a pool which had been talked about by--

  That was how he happened to be thinking about his long lost swimming pool as he entered the shorts department. He was remembering a certain day over a decade ago in all its details, how he had arrived at the studio in his car driven by a Filipino in uniform; the deferential bow of the guard at the gate which had admitted car and all to the lot, his ascent to that long lost office which had a room for the secretary and was really a director’s office . . .

  His reverie was broken off by the voice of Ben Brown, head of the shorts department, who walked him into his own chambers.

  ‘Jack Berners just phoned me,’ he said. ‘We don’t want any new angles, Pat. We’ve got a good story. Fitzhugh Lee was a dashing cavalry commander. He was a nephew of Robert E. Lee and we want to show him at Appomattox, pretty bitter and all that. And then show how he became reconciled--we’ll have to be careful because Virginia is swarming with Lees--and how he finally accepts a U.S. commission from President McKinley--’

  Pat’s mind darted back again into the past. The President--that was the magic word that had gone around that morning many years ago. The President of the United States was going to make a visit to the lot. Everyone had been agog about it--it seemed to mark a new era in pictures because a President of the United States had never visited a studio before. The executives of the company were all dressed up--from a window of his long lost Beverly Hills house Pat had seen Mr Maranda, whose mansion was next door to him, bustle down his walk in a cutaway coat at nine o’clock, and had known that something was up. He thought maybe it was clergy but when he reached the lot he had found it was the President of the United States himself who was coming . . .

  ‘Clean up the stuff about Spain,’ Ben Brown was saying. ‘The guy that wrote it was a Red and he’s got all the Spanish officers with ants in their pants. Fix up that.’

  In the office assigned him Pat looked at the script of True to Two Flags. The first scene showed General Fitzhugh Lee at the head of his cavalry receiving word that Petersburg had been evacuated. In the script Lee took the blow in pantomime, but Pat was getting two-fifty a week--so, casually and without effort, he wrote in one of his favourite lines:

  Lee (to his officers)

  Well, what are you standing here gawking for? DO something! 6. Medium Shot Officers pepping up, slapping each other on back, etc.

  Dissolve to:

  To what? Pat’s mind dissolved once more into the glamorous past. On that happy day in the twenties his phone had rung at about noon. It had been Mr Maranda.

  ‘Pat, the President is lunching in the private dining room. Doug Fairbanks can’t come so there’s a place empty and anyhow we think there ought to be one writer there.’

  His memory of the luncheon was palpitant with glamour. The Great Man had asked some questions about pictures and had told a joke and Pat had laughed and laughed with the others--all of them solid men together--rich, happy and successful.

  Afterwards the President was to go on some sets and see some scenes taken and still later he was going to Mr Maranda’s house to meet some of the women stars at tea. Pat was not invited to that party but he went home early anyhow and from his veranda saw the cortège drive up, with Mr Maranda beside the President in the back seat. Ah he was proud of pictures then--of his position in them--of the President of the happy country where he was born . . .

  Returning to r
eality Pat looked down at the script of True to Two Flags and wrote slowly and thoughtfully:

  Insert: A calendar--with the years plainly marked and the sheets blowing off in a cold wind, to show Fitzhugh Lee growing older and older.

  His labours had made him thirsty--not for water, but he knew better than to take anything else his first day on the job. He got up and went out into the hall and along the corridor to the water-cooler.

  As he walked he slipped back into his reverie.

  That had been a lovely California afternoon so Mr Maranda had taken his exalted guest and the coterie of stars into his garden, which adjoined Pat’s garden. Pat had gone out his back door and followed a low privet hedge keeping out of sight--and then accidentally come face to face with the Presidential party.

  The President had smiled and nodded. Mr Maranda smiled and nodded.

  ‘You met Mr Hobby at lunch,’ Mr Maranda said to the President. ‘He’s one of our writers.’

  ‘Oh yes,’ said the President, ‘you write the pictures.’

  ‘Yes I do,’ said Pat.

  The President glanced over into Pat’s property.

  ‘I suppose--’ he said, ‘--that you get lots of inspiration sitting by the side of that fine pool.’

  ‘Yes,’ said Pat, ‘yes, I do,’

  . . . Pat filled his cup at the cooler. Down the hall there was a group approaching--Jack Berners, Ben Brown and several other executives and with them a girl to whom they were very attentive and deferential. He recognized her face--she was the girl of the year, the It girl, the Oomph girl, the Glamour Girl, the girl for whose services every studio was in violent competition.

  Pat lingered over his drink. He had seen many phonies break in and break out again, but this girl was the real thing, someone to stir every pulse in the nation. He felt his own heart beat faster. Finally, as the procession drew near, he put down the cup, dabbed at his hair with his hand and took a step out into the corridor.

  The girl looked at him--he looked at the girl. Then she took one arm of Jack Berners’ and one of Ben Brown’s and suddenly the party seemed to walk right through him--so that he had to take a step back against the wall.

 

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