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May 5, 2008

Letters from Rune - 1 August 1998

It was time, the day, the month, the year. So instead of going non-stop to New York, I side-tripped to Boulder. You know how difficult that decision was. You've been there. I had to see him, I had to. It was a cool day and the taxi took me just as dusk was settling in. Still, the light was bright enough to see that nothing had changed, nothing. As I walked up along the front path, they were just herding other patients into the side doors. I felt, not tension, dread. I hadn't called before or checked on anything. I didn't even know if he was still there. And when I asked for him by name, it was as if someone was standing next to me and I was listening to another voice. The split, the drift between what was and what happens from moment to moment is a permanent perception, a pervasive perception that grips all of my senses. They signed me in and took me far up the stairs to the top floor and down the long corridor to the end room, just as it always was. They let me into the room and closed the door. I was alone, he was there by the window sitting. I moved to his side and sat next to him. (Am I telling you anything new? How many times have you and I gone through this ritual, this rite?) He didn't look at me, even when I sat in from of him. His eyes looked through me. He looked well, the same as he looked two years ago. I talked to him, I whispered to him because I didn't know who might be listening. I talked to him about everything, a loose association of words in hope that one note might bring one note back from him. It didn't. It's the same, I'm the same, you're the same. Oh A., will it happen, will one day he not be there? I left without talking to anyone else. It made no difference. Will one day we not be there? And if not, who will see him?
Rune

May 8, 2008

She, Her Husband, His Wife and Her Lover

The stage is set with a series of platforms at different levels. We begin in the dark with faint light high up in the background. There is the suggestion of a window with a piece of curtain moving easily in a breeze. A touch of music, soft drumbeats in the background. Then a moan, anxious and erotic. Another moan joined by a low humming voice. The dim outline of a couple appears. They are turning and rolling together in what appears to be a bed. Flashes of moist skin as they move through and around each other. Her moans linger, his hum becomes constant, louder.
SHE. Yes, yes, oh yes.

LOVER. Uh-huh, uh-huh, uh-huh.

SHE. Yes-yes, yes-yes, yes-yes!

LOVER. Mmmm, mmmmmmm, mmmmmmmmmmm.

(Their sounds rise to a peak and stop suddenly as a door opens and a shaft of light cuts across the space. )

HUSBAND. I'm back early. I didn't think you'd be...

SHE. Oh my god!

(HUSBAND reaches for a lamp and turns it on, flooding the space with bright light. The two are stunned for a moment. Then they panic, frantically scrambling to cover their naked bodies, but unable to find a blanket or a sheet. SHE ends up holding his boxer shorts in front of her, stretching them in an effort to cover herself. LOVER can only find her bra, which he spreads between his legs like a jock strap. The three are frozen in amazement, unable to move.)

SHE. You're... back... early.

HUSBAND. I... am.

SHE. This is... my friend. And this... is my...

LOVER. I know.

SHE. ...husband!

LOVER & SHE. Oh my god!

HUSBAND. And she... is my...

LOVER. I know.

HUSBAND. ...wife!

LOVER & SHE. Oh my god!

(HUSBAND suddenly screams.
The other two join him in a chorus of screams.
They stop. HUSBAND begins to walk in a circle around the bed. )

HUSBAND. I'm trying, very hard, to be calm, to be reasonable.

LOVER. Please, don't kill me.

SHE. What?!

LOVER. Oh, sorry. Don't kill... us, please.

(HUSBAND stops pacing and stares at them. He begins to laugh, louder and louder. It's infectious, they laugh too, until all three are almost screaming again.)

HUSBAND. Stop!
(They do)
I can't think.

LOVER. (hesitantly) About what?

HUSBAND. I can't get a clear picture in my head.

LOVER. Be calm.

HUSBAND. I am. I just don't know what to say, I don't know what to do.

SHE. Don't say anything. Don't do anything. Just go back out and come in again. Everything will be all right.

(LOVER is shocked. He looks at her, then at him.)

SHE. Shhhh... just go.

(HUSBAND turns and leaves.)

LOVER. I don't believe it.

SHE. Don't say anything. Just get dressed... quick!

(They scramble looking for their clothes. She comes up with a couple of towels.)

LOVER. Why are you speaking with British accent?

She says...

A Brief History of Time

A shaft of light falls on a large, crumpled, dark gray, dusty mound of cloth at the center of the stage. A pole extends straight up from the center of it and ends in a dark shadow just out of sight., After a moment, movement can be seen as if something or someone is trying to get out from underneath the mound. Gam pops his head through, sneezing and coughing. He shakes the dust off his face, grabs at the pole and begins to scramble up it. A hand pokes though the mound reaching wildly in the air. The hand grabs the bottom of Gam's pants. Bet pulls his head and shoulders out of the mound.

Bet Ho, whoa, I can't hold on.

(Gam kicks his leg free, scoots up the rest of the pole and slams his head into what is obviously a ceiling in shadow at the top. He screams as the collision knocks him back down the pole. He lands with a thump on Bet's head. The two sit there for a moment, Bet's face in the other's crotch.)

Bet Something's wrong.

Gam I know.

Bet We seemed to have stopped moving...

Gam True.

Bet ... and the smell is awful.

Gam It should be... look at your nose.

Bet (crossing his eyes) I can't see it, I can't see much of anything.

Gam It's dark all around us.

Bet And very quiet.

Gam Why is that?

Bet Because we've stopped digging, ergo, we've stopped moving, ergo, there is no light and no sound.

Gam Precisely.
(He looks up for a moment and squints.)
Why is that?

Bet Why... is what?

Gam All of that... what you said.

Bet Because... that's what I said!

Gam I see.
(The two stretch their necks in an effort to get a better view. Bet pushes hard and causes Gam to wince.)

Gam (breathless) I... see.

Bet What?

Gam I... see... stars...

Bet Where?

Gam All around... my head.

Bet Oh... sorry.

(Suddenly the two are thrown into the air as another pushes himself out of the mound. Alf shakes his arms and wipes the dust off his face.)

He says...

May 29, 2008

Lima

Before the acting, before the directing, before the playwriting, and at times afterwards, I did myriad things to earn a living (haven't we all!). Among sundry income-producing activities were stints with magazines and various media. I cut my teeth as a journalist with a news magazine and then went on to the glory and gluttony of a prestigious restaurant magazine in New York. My first international, over-the-seas assignment was to travel to Peru and capture an intriguing story or three about restaurateurs, chefs, and dining out in the not so voracious nightlife of Lima. Peru was and still is on the west coast of South America which was and still is considered to be the "hick" coast sans the vibrancy and chic of the East, of Caracas and Rio De Janeiro and Buenos Aires. It was okay by me.

I traveled on one of the last transoceanic Clipper flights with its all-night, in-flight restaurant, the overhead comfort of a bed for every passenger, and the charm of lovely and loving hostesses, stewardesses, now known, in our current politically-correct banality, as flight attendants. (Attendant. A name I always associated with the guy who gave me a hand-towel in a washroom.) Needless to say, I gathered my first story on the flight itself along with numbers and look-me-ups for a possible later survey of the East Coast (the "attendants" were all from Rio and Buenos Aires).

In my arrogant Manhattan innocence, I had made a naive mistake and so did my editor. I went to Lima in April, on a Friday, Good Friday, which provided a challenging scenario: nearly everything in this religiously over-burdened country was closed, for the Easter holiday, and the heavenly production designer art-directed a nearly unbearable heat wave for the celebration. It was an auspicious beginning.

After slowly, ever-so slowly making my way from the airport in a non-air-conditioned taxicab to the thankfully air-conditioned Gran Hotel Bolivar in the center of Lima, I called my photographer. Though I usually shot my own photographs for most of my stories, this assignment was long and broad enough to require a separate photographer, Tim McElhenny--a former news guy, National Geographic photographer and all-around shooter. Personal turmoil had reduced him to a stringer for news services, primarily in South America. But this was also his first trip to Lima. We were a couple of innocents and not too ugly Americans.

We met up at the Bolivar bar, which became our headquarters, and pumped up with the Bolivar's famous Pisco Sour, which became our anti-heat, anti-dust, anti-anti drink. Pisco is an indigenous liquor in Peru and Chile, made from grapes, a bit like brandy, but quite distinct. It taught me a lot about the hegemony of European spirits. After all, alcohol is not just alcohol, it's a fat drug.

After a restful dose, we wandered out into the thick heat of the Plaza De Las Armas (Plaza Mayor) where a huge crowd was building for the launch of the holiday. First shock to the eye: a helmeted, machine-gun toting soldier on every street corner. A scary, unfamiliar sight except in movies. Then a motorcade pushed its way though the crowd. Second shock to the eye: the government officials were arriving in brand-new shiny American Chevrolet automobiles (this before the Black SUV). The church officials including the Cardinal (who was not Peruano) arrived in Rolls Royces. Welcome to South America!

As the speeches began, newshound McElhenny decided to capture a few photos. He wormed and squirmed his way through the mass of people, as an experienced pro would do, and bounced up and down on barricades and lamp-post bases. His postures attracted attention and two soldiers, who shouldered him and grabbed his camera. He began to protest and one told him in Spanish, "No photographs!" The uniform opened the camera, stretched out the film, and threw it exposed to the ground along with the camera, a rather expensive Hasselblad. Then the other uniform leaned in nose to nose and said, "No photographs!"

A short time later, we needed to get out of the blistering sun and away from all the bombast of the speakers platform. We edged around the huge cathedral of the plaza and found a shady spot at the back wall. Suddenly, there was a familiar sound, the exciting purr of a sports car. It was a bright green racing-striped MG and it pulled up to a jolting stop just short of us. The driver was a gorgeous-looking young man, black curly hair, square-jaw, sharp roman nose--obviously a model, an actor, a playboy. But, no. When he popped out of the car, he turned his white collar around, smoothed out his shoe-length black cassock, tucked his square-cut Italian sun glasses underneath the folds of his robe, took a deep breath, put his hands together and walked quickly but easily around the corner of the church to where the voices and music were blasting. Yes, indeed, Welcome to South America!

I spent five weeks in Peru, picking up four good stories with exhilarating side trips to Cusco and the magic of Machu Picchu, and Mira Flores where... well, whatever you can't find in Lima, you can find in Mira Flores. Among many memories, two stand out.

One Tuesday, there was a power outage all over Lima. It lasted for two days. Even though the hotel had emergency generators, they only powered essential facilities which didn't include air conditioning or ice. No ice, no cold liquids of any kind, not even water. McElhenny came banging on my door. He wanted to see if maybe my water was cold enough to drink. It wasn't. Then he discovered something in the bathroom, a hilarious something which satisfied what he was looking for. The bidet--it actually looked like a water fountain with its recessed seat and skyward spout. It shot out a high stream of cold water, not just cold, ice-cold, refrigerated. Why, he chortled and wondered, is the water from the faucet warm, hot enough to take a warm bath in while the water from the bidet was frigid like ice in the heights of the Andes? It was a media question, was it not? I still wonder about it today.

A few days before we left Lima, we were lounging one night at the bar of the Carillon, a friendly place that gave us a good food service story. As the Pisco Sours multiplied, in walked a group of politicos with blonde trophies on their arms. McElhenny recognized one of them, an important Judge, and immediately whipped out his little sneak-shot Leica and began to photograph the man. Two non-uniformed guys immediately stopped him. Tim was buzzed and struggled. In a few seconds, they clipped him in the belly and dragged him and his camera out the door. As I moved to interfere, another non-uniform stepped in front me, took off his sun glasses and shook his head 'no'. I shook my head 'no', and sat back at the bar. A few hours later, I collected Tim at the local lockup, paid his fine, and understood that both our visas had been cancelled. We had 48 hours to retrace our steps to the airport. I remember thinking: I had already traveled through Europe and seen this happen there but not so blatantly.

I remember thinking: I'm happy that I live in the United States where this never could happen. That's all it is, a memory of a naive thought. "Never" is a spike that the naive sit on!

About May 2008

This page contains all entries posted to Thai Nights in May 2008. They are listed from oldest to newest.

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