Saturday, September 12, 2020

ONCE AGAIN WE REMEMBER (A REPOST)

 

Berry Berenson was a friend to me in my early years in Hollywood. She was married to the movie star Tony Perkins at the time and until his death in 1992. They seemed really loving to each other and I admired their relationship. And I admired her.

Though she was often noted more as Perkin's wife or as model/actress Marisa Berenson's sister, Berry was a wonderful actor in her own right (see REMEMBER MY NAME). But despite her fame-for-whatever-reason, at least around me she was always the least pretentious or self-centered person I ever met anywhere.

She came to a play I was in early on in L.A, Landford Wilson's BALM IN GILEAD, and after the performance stuck around to talk to me. One of the things she said to me that night was that she had only seen one other person in her life who had the kind of glow, I think that was the word she used, that I had, and that was Marilyn Monroe!

She was wonderful on screen and off, either in front of the camera or behind it (she was a great photographer), and I only wish, as I too often do with many friends, that I had made more of an effort to see her more often. Especially after I heard the news that she had been on one of the two planes that crashed into The World Trade Center towers on 9/11.

I knew some others who went down with the towers on that tragic day, like Father Mike Judge, but Berry is the one I think of most often. As I later wrote in a poem ("March 18, 2003"), she was:

"a woman who was kind to me when
she didn't need to be[...]
How many people have died
before you got the chance to tell them what you meant to?"

R.I.P. to all those we lost on that horrific day (and those we continue to lose).

Thursday, September 10, 2020

BACK WHEN

A favorite photo of me and my two oldest (and at that time only) kids, Caitlin and Miles, in I believe New York's Kennedy Airport after flying in from L.A. and waiting to board a flight to Ireland, in the mid-1990s. They're both in their fifties now (as I was in this photo then). Life!

Wednesday, September 9, 2020

EL CAMINO

 

Caught this 1963 film on TCM last night (part of their fourteen week Tuesday night series on women directors over the last twelve decades) and discovered a new favorite film and director (Ana Mariscal, also a successful actress, writer, producer, etc.). EL CAMINO is a perfectly delightful and moving blend of the comic and the poignant, so artfully done I can't believe this wasn't on my radar before. TCM is my favorite channel or streaming site or whatever we call it these days. 

Monday, September 7, 2020

 I make a couple of cameo appearances in this terrific book and will be reading two short poems of mine that are in it at this event, please join me for this zoom event:



Thursday, September 3, 2020

ONCE

 

Me and Kim, one of the loves of my life, c. 1990 in my booth at Largo in West Hollywood. I was preparing for the weekly poetry reading I ran with my Poetry In Motion partner Eve Brandstein, and Kim was helping. The day after the night I met her I told all my friends I'd met "my last wife" and meant it. We had some great times, got along well, loved each other, but something happened and the connection dimmed and we drifted apart. We kept in touch for a while, then lost touch, as too often happened in my life. But the memories are so sweet.