Writing

This is How We Walk on the Moon

In a whirlwind development, I was offered a much desired job yesterday, which means I have to be on my best behavior on the ol’ blog today. No talking about the time my friend confused me for a homeless person on Venice Beach. No talking about fantasizing over a shirtless picture of Elton John as a thirteen year-old girl. No posting pictures of my butt cheek. No talking about how I like to glue chest hair to my body. Because all those things make me look weird.
Last night my computer became infected with a virus so I was not able to write a post. Please forgive my recycling, but the post below is pertinent to current events in my life.
A project recently fell into my lap that has me calling on an old acquaintance. This acquaintance is a bit of a hermit (you’ll see why below), so I’m in the process of writing him a letter to initiate contact.
The post below was based off a brief nostalgic trigger that occurred in August 2009 of an event that happened in November of 2007.
_____________________________________
The Mystery Man

I looked down on the shelf and saw Robert Blake looking back up at me.

He was dressed in a police uniform and had a very intense look on his face. The sort of stare that actors in the 60’s gave to add depth to their performance. Like Zoolander.

I picked up the VHS box for a Electric Glide in Blue and felt my heart pinch just a little. Then a combination of guilt and disgust quickly washed it away.


“You know, I’ve never seen this movie,” I said to Marc, tapping the empty box on my arm.


Marc works at I Luv Video in Austin. One of the largest independent movie rental houses in the country and where Quentin Tarantino will most likely be buried . Marc and I went to film school together and lost touch until we met up in L.A. He was in a band, I was in the film business. We cuddled to “Funeral” by Arcade Fire. He left the band to do some sort ecological job that I can never recall. I left the film business to stop myself from driving my car off the PCH. We lost touch and wandered around the country until we discovered that we both landed in Austin.


“Well, why don’t you rent it then?”


“I don’t know, man, I think it will kind of make me feel bad.”


“Why?”


I shrugged my shoulders and walked over to the next aisle. I wasn’t sure exactly why it would make me feel bad. I just knew that it would.


The Paul Morrissey video shelf. How pretentious can you get?


“You know, I called him last Christmas. It had been a year. He never called me back.”


Oh God. Kenneth Unger’s “Scorpion Rising”. Intro to Film Aesthetics and Analysis. Patricia Zimmerman’s class. 2003. Bullshit.


“It was his number still. Same voice message. “

How is this shit considered quintessential film making!?!


“It still says in a fake Texan drawl, “Robert’s not here right now. Leave a message.”

__________________________


They don’t tell you in film school how it’s really going to be. They might show you a movie with a bunch of leather clad dudes fucking to BobbyVinton and call it ground-breaking, but they don’t tell you about the lost souls you’ll encounter every day in Hollywood. The sort of situations you will find yourself in at 23. Those moments when you step back and go, “Shit, I finally get what David Byrne was saying when he said, “Well, how did I get here?”

How I met Robert is a long story, but one I will try to keep short. Two years ago I got a phone call at my desk. A man introduced himself as Robert Blake and asked if he could stop by the studio to drop a gift off to my boss. My boss’ father and Robert were friends back in the 1950’s and he had found a script that the two had worked on together. Robert’s acquittal was still fresh and we were all a little nervous to have him stop by. We waited anxiously as the tiniest old man in a ten gallon hat and purple cowboy shirt appeared. I was struck by his meander and hisincessant use of calling me “secretary”. I pointed out that we had a mutual acquaintance (my friend Ian lived in the same apartment complex in The Valley as Robert) and we chatted for roughly a minute before he said he had to go. And that was it. I didn’t hear from Robert again.

Until six months later…
Another call at my desk.

He was short and sweet. “I want back in the business and I need help.”
I told him that I worked exclusively for my boss at the time but I’d be happy to meet with him and talk. We made plans for breakfast and I hung up the phone wondering what the fuck I was doing.


And I went to breakfast with Robert.


And we talked for five hours.


And I met with him again the following week.


And we drove around Los Angeles as he told me stories about dancing on the Paramount Pictures sidewalk t at three years old looking for work, getting beaten and locked in the closet by his father, performing on “The Little Rascals”, doing heroin, calling Humphrey Bogart his mentor, hanging out with Truman Captoe and Dexter Gordon, going to jail, how Marlon Brando’s son was the one who really killed his wife, giving away the contents of his life to complete strangers, only shopping at garage sales, and believing that the most romantic thing he ever heard was Richard Farnsforth killing himself so he wouldn’t burden his wife with his cancer. As he was telling me this, he pointed to all the Los Angeles landmarks that only mean something to him, the same landmarks he had seen for the past 72 years of his life. In a town that had swallowed him up and spit him out ten times over. He spoke of going to Peoria, IL. The illusion of normalcy that only a small Mid-west American town can bring.
But Robert is to die in the muck of Los Angeles. It’s his home and all that he knows.


He let me into his home. A one bedroom apartment in the Valley that was empty other than old photographs and pieces of paper with the words, “Don’t give up” scrawled in child-like writing up on the wall. He told me that he would win an Oscar before he dies, dammit, and that he’s still got the gift.
Bobby Blake has still got it.


____________________________________


Last year, I wrote a thinly disguised essay about my friendship with Blake titled, “The Night of the Acquitted B-list Actor”. The biggest amendment I made to the story was the ending. I wanted to make it more romantic than it actually was.


In the fictional ending, I spoke of mixed feelings in my emotional involvement with a presumed murderer and separately my need to get out Los Angeles in order to rediscover myself. I wrote of Robert’s encouragement and his “seeing something in me”. He told me I had too much to offer the world. So as I watched the skyline of Los Angeles get smaller and smaller in my rear view mirror, I thought of Robert, of picking up the phone and calling him, but instead, I decided to leave it all behind me.


In real life, the dirty old bastard wanted to get in my pants! He’s fucking 50 years older than me! What the hell did he think? Did he think losing $40 million civil law suit for most likely killing your wife was is a huge turn-on?

…to Robert and to my fantasies of what it wasn’t. You do deserve that Oscar.

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8 Comments

  • Reply - B December 7, 2010 at 3:50 pm

    Yay for new jobs! ‘Tis the season! ^_^

    So, I hadn’t previously read the story about Blake, but wow! The “In Cold Blood” Blake? That’s crazy! You have the most interesting real life stories!

    And I’m pretty sure every man (regardless of age – isn’t he in his 70s now?) wants to get in a girl’s pants. It’s inevitable. At least you got to hear some great tales from old Hollywood though!

  • Reply Dainty Librarian Vintage December 7, 2010 at 7:37 pm

    You are dead on about the film industry which is why I got out of it too. LA has a way of stealing people's souls.

  • Reply Randall December 7, 2010 at 8:51 pm

    Congratulations. Always good to hear about good things happening to good, talented people.

  • Reply theTsaritsa December 7, 2010 at 10:27 pm

    Wow– now THAT is a story! Your experience with Mr. Blake definitely trumps my fifteen minutes with Jason Schwartzman. That's awesome that you were able to get to know him, even if he ended up being a lecher in the end. What an amazing memory.

  • Reply Brooke Farmer December 8, 2010 at 12:36 am

    What a story! I may be the first person in history to move to Hollywood with zero fantasies about entering "the industry."

    Great reinforcement there!

    Good luck with the new job! Can't wait to hear about it.

  • Reply Big Mark 243 December 8, 2010 at 2:55 am

    Congratulations on the new job!

    I really enjoyed reading the repost and the 'true' ending. My 'brushes with greatness', minor celebrities who are bigger in their own mind than they are in reality and Robert Blake may be more well known that some of the 'legends' I have met, but he is no different than any of them.

    Wish that this was part of a larger story and who cares where it would have ended… I wanted to know more about the movie store, the cat that worked there and the enviroment where you worked and met Mr. Blake. Not to mentiion what happened after that meeting.

    Congrats one more again on the job!

  • Reply Hipstercrite December 8, 2010 at 4:17 am

    Thanks for the well wishes guys! I'd write out longer personal messages but I'm typing this on my phone due to my computer virus. Your encouragement will be in my thoughts tomorrow!

  • Reply Melanie's Randomness December 8, 2010 at 11:52 pm

    Ohhhh best wishes with the new job!!!! =)

    Melanie's Randomness

  • Leave a Reply to Melanie's Randomness Cancel Reply