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I repeat this story (as I have a few times before) because of an incident.
I saw
my first bullfight when
I was twenty... in an
arena in Madrid and it
was bewildering,
frightening,
disgusting,
exhilarating, thrilling
and very stimulating
for the macho ego. I
had read Hemingway and
seen Tyrone Power in
“Blood and
Sand”. I fell in
love with Flamenco, I
fell in love with
Lorca, I eventually
came to understand what
the Spaniards revered
in the ancient ritual
of corrida de toros
(literally, the running
of the bulls), what the
Spanish gypsies call,
la furia. But I never
quite accepted the
final killing of the
animal... it was
disturbing and rubbed
against my growing
misanthropic preference
for non-human
companionship. I came
to prefer the
Portuguese ritual with
a man on a trained
horse pitted against
the raw, reflexive
power of a creature
that simply wanted to
be left alone. More
beauty, more elegance,
more
“fury”,
even though it
irritated a belief I
had (and still do) that
humans should not ride
on the backs of horses.
Fast forward to some
years later in San
Francisco. I was
directing a studio
program for actors in
the days when I still
believed that this kind
of training was
significant and that
American actors,
especially California
actors could be
significantly trained.
One day, out of the
ever-present bay fog, a
fellow walked in,
registered for the full
program and plopped
himself down in a
corner of the studio to
take his first acting
class. His name was
Peter, which he
pronounced
“pater” in
well-spoken English but
with a European accent
that was hard to
place... definitely
Nordic, not necessarily
German, maybe
Icelandic. He was quite
good looking, actually
beautiful: many of the
women in the class
couldn’t stop
staring at him and it
was true of some of the
men as well. He was
tall, dark blonde,
smiled easily with a
gentle nature and had
the movement grace of a
dancer.
Peter was also poor. We
never did find out
exactly where he came
from and many suspected
that he was in the
country illegally
because he worked a
series of odd
distasteful jobs that
prevented him from
socializing with any of
his fellow acting
students. His clothes
were last year’s
“thrift
shop” discounts,
and he was awkwardly
thin and always hungry
and grateful when
anyone offered to share
a snack. He often came
to class with sores
around his ankles which
he attributed to a
rampant flea problem in
the hovel he rented. He
had no pets, just fleas.
His work in the studio
was mild, nothing
special other than a
brooding aloofness
which on occasion lent
an interesting presence
to a scene or an
exercise moment. But
one day, he unleashed a
surprise, a dimension
of himself and his
acting talent that...
for lack of a more
handy cliche... took
everyone’s breath
away.
This was a week in
which the students were
preparing and
performing a piece of
their own design that
explored risk, the risk
of opening oneself up
completely to an
audience, of walking
that high wire of an
all-or-nothing
emotional state. On
this late-light
Thursday afternoon, it
was Peter’s call.
He rose, took off his
shoes, and pulled out a
large red cloth. Then
he startled us: out of
his backpack he
produced a mouse, a
live mouse, actually a
hamster. Now prepare to
accept this: it was an
Israeli hamster, a
brown and white desert
creature that had an
amusing and effective
defense strategy
against predators. This
little furry rodent had
a tail made up of
horn-like segments each
connected to each
other. When a hungry
hamster-snacker grabbed
the running mouse
(sorry, hamster) by the
tail it simply pulled
out of its connections
leaving the hunter with
a mouthful of tasteless
pieces and the hamster
with an escape. And to
fully exploit this
amazing strategy of
evolution, the hamster
could act... it was an
actor, a natural.
Because when it was
cornered, instead of
dissolving in fear or
rearing up on its hind
legs, it turned on some
faux aggression and
charged its attacker,
turning away in just
the nick of time to
seduce the predator to
lunge at it and its
deceptive tail.
Didn’t work all
the time, but evidently
enough to promote the
longevity and abundance
of these Israeli
denizens.
Peter placed the
hamster in the center
of the floor. It was
obviously his friend
and a pet since it just
stood there twiddling
its mousey nose. He
announced his
performance with one
word:
“Matador”.
Then he began to move
like a Flamenco dancer,
circling the hamster,
waving the red cloth
like a cape. It was
rather funny at first
but eventually the
laughs disappeared as
Peter intensified his
performance punctuated
with increasingly
gripping short bursts
of dialogue. It was a
scene about a
bullfighter who had
lost his nerve and his
portrayal became
simultaneously intense
and well defined. The
incongruous comedy
dropped away when
Peter’s little
firebreathing
“bull”
played his role and
began his storied
charges... racing
toward him and then
away and then again...
each time driving
Peter’s character
to his knees until,
finally, he collapsed
and the
“bull” ran
right over him and
vanished into the
backpack. Peter
responded to this
moment as if he had
been gored, terribly
wounded by razor-sharp
horns. When he
struggled to his feet,
sweating and breathing
with unendurable pain,
there were no smiles
anywhere in the studio,
only an audience in
fear and pending
sorrow, as he sighed
his last breath and
crumbled for the last
time. He could
have played the scene
with an imaginary
“toro” with
good effect, but there
was something unnerving
and emotionally rocking
that came from the
belief in the reality
he had created around
that little hamster. It
was that belief we all
absorbed and it moved
us.
Peter stayed at the
studio for a few more
months and then left.
The next time I heard
from him, he was...
well, you know... in
the movies. And about
six years later, he was
a star, fully vested in
the magazines, on the
talk shows and with a
nomination or two.
Don’t ask me!
Pater, no longer called
Peter, reads Scene4 and
I’m sure
he’s pissed as
hell that I told this
little story.
He’s actually a
very private man!
The last time I talked
to him, he said,
“I learned in
your studio what acting
was and how important
it is to me. Some day,
I’m going to do
it!” And I
said to him,
“¡Con mucho
gusto!”
The Incident: He called me recently. He was shooting a film in Thailand and we had a drink or two at a cafe in Bangkok. I hadn't seen him eye-to-eye in years. He noticed how much I had changed physically. I noticed how much he hadn't.
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