Papa, Plimpton, and Capote Crash Fidel’s Shin-Dig

19 12 2008

It’s not good what becomes of great men; physically and otherwise: they turn into gloomy, arthritic pensioners in drab, dark clothing with large ears and hair follicles growing out of hidden orifices…once I literally ran into Hugh Sidey on 18th and K Street, just a block or two from the World Bank. I barely recognized the man: shivering, wearing a black, wool overcoat, fragile high cheeks, and bony hands. Hugh Sidey. And I bumped into him coming around a corner. Two pounds of Kenya AA ground for Turkish in my hand went spilling all over the sidewalk. I nearly broke the man’s sternum with the concussion.

Red Auerbach was the same, the night I held open the door so he could come into the warm lobby. This decimated, somewhat overweight, bald man with the remnants of a wet cigar, still puffing. Still huffing. My friend had to tell me who he was, even though I had been a Celtics fan all my life. This is what happens. They shrivel up and go kicking or screaming into obscurity, eviscerated by time and cold weather and whisky.

We shrivel up.

Plimpton went like that too, only he had the advantage of being tall, so that helped with the visual. The altitude smoothed over the process. Plimpton was upper-class, east side intelligentsia but for some reason he was a chameleon and could charm you even if you were crass and barbaric and into Bukowski and Fante and Jeffers, and even if you did only listen to Mahler but eschewed Mozart and Bach and Vivaldi…you know, the other geniuses.

Plimpton could tell the stories, too. Even at that age, you could still see the boy leak out of his eyes when he told them. He had the stories. And he loved the stories. All I could think of was that famous black and white photo of one of his parties in his east side apartment with dozens of writers milling about in the great room, gin and tonics in their hands. I recognize them all, but the one I like the most is Mario Puzo standing there alone, sort of half-smiling. Alone. I like him like that.

Plimpton once told about the time he and Hemingway and Capote were in Havana in ‘58 while Fidel’s Barbudos were trickling down from the hills. The three of them had been drinking at Papa’s favorite joint, The Floridita Bar, and were running on reserve fuel sometime around three in the morning, when some kid came busting through the doors, gesticulating wildly and screaming that three of Batista’s ministers had been caught, put up against the wall, and were going to be shot by Camilo Cienfuegos himself. So the three lions went stumbling out head first into the humid night to try to catch this repulsive by-product of Revolution. Along the way Capote was too tight to keep pace with his compadres and twisted his ankle, so Papa hoisted the little tub on his back and hauled him the rest of the way. When they finally hobbled into the scene, the ugly deed had already been done. The blindfolded men were collapsed into a bloody pile of bones and flesh and Cienfuegos was long gone. Papa got mad and in a tequila-fueled rage immediately accused Capote of weird mutiny, slowing them down and making them miss the ceremonies. Plimpton had to intervene and restrain the big, angry monkey from Michigan as he was about to flip Capote upside down and pile drive him into the cobbled street.

And that was it. Plimpton stopped it right there. I thought it was perfect. No need to expound on the hero’s after burn. I thought, that’s how you end a good story, true or not true. It’s like chopping wood. When you’re done splitting the last log, you put down the axe and go inside to start the fire. You don’t muck about straightening up, collecting the splinters into a neat pile.

It’s not good what becomes of great men. But their stories don’t follow them over the cliff. The great ones, the stories. They float around waiting to be picked up and added to, or subtracted from without really being compromised. Great stories live.





Some of Life, Again

19 02 2008

–Wake me up at six.
–Why?
–I want to talk with you.
She shuffles her feet on the wood floor. It sounds like someone is sweeping. Away from me. She goes back to the room and pulls shut the drapes. I hear her settle in bed. She pushes her body into the soft mattress and changes sides until she falls asleep. I love that about her. She doesn’t stop until she drifts.
My shift starts at seven and goes until five in the morning. Ten hours, four days a week. Only they’re not consecutive. Monday night, Tuesday night, Wednesday off, Thursday night, Friday off, Saturday off, Sunday night. And it changes every week, the days I mean. I am never able to sleep properly. Neither is she. We pass the days walking through fog and mist and the hot, July humid air, and we temper it with tequila and gin. It’s how it goes. I love that. I love that we know exactly what is taking us down. There is no gallantry in that, just truth.
I go to the kitchen and sit at the table with a little glass of clear Slivovitz. It’s not the home made stuff you get in the old country, but it does the job. It softens it all. There are three books to get through and a stack of newspapers. Everything is still now. The five clocks ticking sound like someone is swinging slats of wood at the walls, in an urgent rage. I hear her shift in bed again. I hear her prop herself up on her elbow.
–Are you reading?
–Yes.
–I’m sorry.
–It’s all right. It’s just the papers.
–I was thinking…let’s go away.
–Go to sleep, you have a good hour.
–I can’t. Let’s just go away.
–Where?
–Mexico. No. Cuba. Let’s go to Cuba.
–Funny. I’m just reading that El Barbudo resigned.
–Who?
–El Barbudo. The Bearded One.
–He did?
–His brother took over. Nothing’s really changed.
–Let’s go anyway. Nothing’s really changed in fifty years.
–We can’t go from here. They won’t let us.
–So we go from somewhere else.
–Go to sleep.
–We’ll take a boat.
–Go already.
–I can’t. I can’t stop anything.
–Try.
–I can’t.
–Just try.

It comes in from the sea, somehow. From the feet, and then slowly up the legs and the rest. We are both standing in the powdery sand with Rum and Chachaça cocktails and the music rushes up and envelops us.
–Ladies and gentlemen, Francesc d’Asís Xavier Cugat Mingall de Bru i Deulofeu!
She takes a long hit and smiles.
–And singing with him, Miguelito Valdés!
They go into a strange version of Perfidia. Ilsa and Rick are dancing to it in Paris. Then back to Cuba by way of Casablanca. Something lifts up from the hips and takes me back away from the waterfront. I watch the two of them still standing, listening to the musicians.
Then Cugat says:
I would rather play Chiquita Banana and have my swimming pool than play Bach and starve.
And we all applaud.