Authors: Charles Bukowski
Tags: #Film & Video, #Performing Arts, #History & Criticism, #Hollywood (Los Angeles; Calif.), #General, #Motion Picture Industry, #Fiction
A couple of days later we were back down at Danny Server’s studio in Venice.
“Another guy has written a movie about skid row and drinking,” said Jon, “so why don’t you check it out?”
So we went there, Jon, Sarah and I. The people were already in their seats. But the bar was closed.
“The bar is closed,” I said to Jon.
“Yes,” he said.
“Listen, we’ve got to get something to drink...”
“There’s a liquor store about a block away, toward the water, on the other side of the street.”
“We’ll be right back...”
We made it down there, got 2 bottles of red and a corkscrew. On the way back we were stopped twice for handouts. Then we were outside the studio. I pushed the door open and we entered. It was dark. The movie was rolling.
“Shit,” I said, “I can’t see! I can’t see a fucking thing!”
Somebody hissed at me.
“Same to you,” I said.
“Will you
please be quiet
!” a woman said.
“Let’s try the first row of seats,” said Sarah, “I think I see a couple of seats but I’m not sure.”
We worked our way down front. I tripped over some feet.
“You bastard,” I heard a man say softly.
“Blow it,” I told him.
We finally located 2 seats and sat down. Sarah got out the cigarettes and the lighter while I corkscrewed open a bottle. We had no drinking glasses, so I took a pull and passed the bottle to Sarah. She took a pull and handed it back. Then she lit up 2 cigarettes for us.
The man who had written the movie,
Back From Hades
, had once had a series running on TV, one of those family shows. Pat Sellers. Well, the series had gone on and on but Pat lost the battle with the bottle and soon the series was doomed. Divorce. Loss of family, home. Pat was on skid row. Now Pat was making a comeback. Made this movie. He’s dry. And on the lecture tour, helping others.
I took another hit of the wine, passed it to Sarah.
I watched the movie. They were down on skid row. It was night and they had built a little fire. The men and women looked fairly well-dressed for skid row. They really didn’t look like bums. They looked like people who worked in Hollywood films, they looked like TV actors. And they each had a shopping cart in which they stored their earthly possessions. Only the shopping carts were brand new. They sparkled in the firelight. I had never seen shopping carts that new in any supermarket. Evidently they had been purchased for the movie itself.
“Gimme the bottle,” I said to Sarah.
I lifted it high and took a good hit. I heard the hissing sound again, followed by another hissing sound.
“These people are ugly,” I said to Sarah. “What the hell’s wrong with them?”
“I don’t know.”
Back to the movie and the people in the firelight with their shopping carts. There was a man talking. The others listened.
“...I’d wake up and I wouldn’t recognize the bed I was in, I wouldn’t know where I was...I’d get dressed and go out and look for my car. I never knew where my car was. Sometimes it took hours to find it...”
“Hey, that’s good,” I said to Sarah, “that’s happened to me plenty of times!”
There was another hissing sound.
“...I was in drunktank after drunktank...I often lost my wallet...I had my teeth kicked in...I was a lost soul...lost...lost. . . Then my drinking buddy, Mike, he got killed in a drunken car crash...that did it . .
Sarah took a hit.
“Now I am at peace...I sleep well...I’m beginning to feel like a functional human being again...And Christ is my high, greater than any drink the devil has put upon this earth!”
Tears were in the fellow’s eyes.
I took another hit.
Then he recited a poem:
I am found again.
I am made over by ten.
I have lost the yen.
I am brother to my kin.
I am found again.
He bowed his head and the others applauded.
Then a woman began to speak. She had, she said, begun drinking at parties. And it had gone on from there. She began to drink alone at home. The plants died because she didn’t water them. During an argument she slashed her daughter with a paring knife. Her husband began drinking also. Lost his job. Stayed at home. They drank together. Then she slashed
him
with a paring knife. One day she just got in her car and drove off with her suitcase and her credit cards. Drank in motels. Smoked and drank and watched TV. Vodka. She loved vodka. One night she set her bed on fire. A fire engine came to the motel. She was drunk in her nightie. One of the firemen squeezed her buttocks. She jumped into her car in just her nightie with only her purse. She drove and drove, in a daze. About noon the next day she was at 4th and Broadway. Two of the tires had gone flat as she was driving along. The tires had ripped off and she was driving on the rims, leaving deep grooves in the asphalt. A cop stopped her. She was taken in—for observation. The days went by. Her husband didn’t come by or her daughter. She was alone. She was sitting with the shrink one day and the shrink asked her, “Why do you insist upon destroying yourself?” And when he asked her this it was no longer the face of the shrink looking at her but the face of Christ. That did it...
“How did she know it was the face of Christ?” I asked aloud.
“Who is that man?” I heard somebody ask.
My bottle of wine was empty. I corkscrewed open a new one.
Then another fellow told
his
story. The campfire just kept on burning and burning. Nobody had to add fuel to it. And no other bums came by and bothered them. When the fellow finished his story he reached into his shopping cart and pulled out a very expensive guitar.
I took a hit and passed the red to Sarah.
The fellow tuned his guitar, then began playing it and singing. He was right in tune, voice-trained. He sang away.
The camera panned around, capturing the look on all the faces. The faces were enthralled, some of them were crying, others had gentle, beautiful smiles. Then the singer finished and there was hearty and joyful applause.
“I never saw a skidrow like that one,” I told Sarah.
The movie continued. Other actors spoke. Some others had expensive guitars. It was guitar night. Then the grand finale came. There was a shooting star. It arched high above the upturned faces. There was a small silence. Then a man began singing. Soon he was joined by a woman. Other voices joined. They all knew the words. Many guitars came out. It was an uplifting chorus of hope and unity. Then it was over. The movie was finished. The lights came on. There was a little stage. Pat Sellers mounted the stage. There was applause.
Pat Sellers looked awful. He looked sleepy, lifeless, dead. His eyes were blank. He began to speak.
“I have not had a drink in five hundred and ninety-five days...”
There was wild applause.
Sellers went on: “I am a recovering alcoholic...We are all recovering alcoholics...”
“Let’s get out of here!” I said to Sarah.
We had finished the wine. We rose and moved toward the exit. We walked to our car.
“Son of a bitch,” I said, “where’s Jon? Why isn’t he here?”
“Oh, I’m sure he’d seen the movie,” said Sarah.
“He set us up. It’s kind of funny when you think about it.”
“Those were all A. A. members in there...”
We got in the car and headed toward the freeway.
My idea about the whole thing was that most people weren’t alcoholics, they only
thought
that they were. It was something that couldn’t be rushed. It took at least twenty years to become a bona fide alcoholic. I was on my 45th year and didn’t regret any of it.
We got on the freeway and headed back toward reality.
I still had the screenplay to write. I was upstairs sitting in front of the IBM. Sarah was in the bedroom beyond the wall to my right. Jon was downstairs watching TV.
I was just sitting there. A half a bottle of wine was gone. I had never had trouble before. In decades, I had never had a writer’s block. Writing had always been easy for me. The words just rolled out as I drank and listened to the radio.
I knew that Jon was just listening for the sound of the typer. I had to type something. I began a letter to a fellow who taught English at Cal State Long Beach. We had been exchanging letters for a couple of decades.
I began:
Hello Harry:
How’s it hanging? They’ve been running good. Badly hungover other day, got to track for 2nd race, gotta win on a 10-to-one-shot. I no longer use the Racing Form. I see everybody reading it and almost everybody loses. I’ve got a new system, of course, which I can’t tell you about. You know, if the writing goes to hell, I think I can make it at the track. Shit. I’ll tell you my system, why shouldn’t I? O.K. I buy a newspaper, any newspaper. I try to buy a different newspaper every day, just to shake up the gods. Then out of that newspaper I’ll choose any handicapper. Then I’ll line up his selections in order. Say there’s an 8 horse race. On my program I will mark next to each horse the order of his selection. Example:
horse 1. 7
horse 2. 3
horse 3. 5
horse 4. 1
horse 5. 2
horse 6. 4
horse 7. 8
horse 8. 6
The system? Well, you take the horse’s odds that go off below the number of the handicapper’s selection. If more than one set of odds goes off below, then take the greatest drop. For example, horse 1, selection 7 going off at 4-to-one is better than horse 6, selection 4 going off at 3-to-one. There is one exception to this system. If horse 4 goes off at below 1, that is 4/5 or below, then pass the race if there is nothing working against it. That is because plays on nothing but odds-on-favorites always show a loss.
The way I came up with this system was that when I was in highschool I was in the R.O.T.C. and we had to read the Manual of Arms and in this fat book there was a little bit about the Artillery. Now, remember this was 1936, long before radar and all the homing-in devices. In fact, the book was probably written for World War I, although it might have been compiled some time later, I’m not sure. Anyway, the way they figured how to lob an artillery shell was to take a consensus. The Captain would ask, “O.K., Larry, how far away do you think the enemy is?”
“625 yards, sir.”
“Mike?”
“400 yards, sir.”
“Barney?”
“100 yards, sir.”
“Slim?”
“800 yards, sir.”
“Bill?”
“300 yards.”
Then the Captain would add up the yards and divide by the number of men asked. In this case, the answer would be 445 yards. They’d log the shell and generally blow up a large proportion of the enemy.
Decades later I was sitting at the track one day and the Manual of Arms came back to me and I thought, why not apply the Artillery system to the horses? This system has worked for me most of the time, but the problem was and is human nature: one gets bored with the routine and sets off in another direction. I must have at least 25 systems all based on some kind of crazy logic. I like to move around.
Now you ask, how the hell did I land on a 10-to-one shot in the 2nd race the other day. Well, it’s like this, I write down the handicapper’s selections before scratches. This horse happened to be selection #16 before scratches. When it went off at 10-to-one, curiously, it was the largest drop from the handicapper’s selections. A rarity, true, but there it was. And when such things occur, they make one feel very odd indeed. Like maybe there’s a chance sometimes. Well, I hope you’re O.K. and that your young lady students don’t give you a hard-on, or maybe I should hope that they do.
Listen, is it true that Celine and Hemingway died on the same day?
Hope you’re all right...
Keep ‘em crying,
yrs,
Henry Chinaski
I took the sheet out of the typer, folded it, hand-printed the address on an envelope, stuck it inside, found a stamp, and there it was: my writing for the night. I sat there, finished the rest of the wine bottle, opened another one and walked downstairs.
Jon had turned off the TV and was sitting there. I brought two glasses and sat down next to him. I poured them around.
“The typer sounds hot,” Jon said.
“Jon, I was writing a letter.”
“A letter?”
“Have a drink.”
“All right.”
We both had one.
“Jon, you’ve paid me to write this fucking screenplay...”
“But, of course...”
“I can’t write it. I’m up there trying to write the thing and you’re down here listening for the sound of the typer. It’s hard...”
“I could go some place at night.”
“No, listen, you are going to have to move! I can’t go on this way! I’m sorry, man, I’m a dog, a heel, I’m the heel of a dog! Do dogs have heels? Anyhow, you’re going to have to find a place to live. I can’t write this way, I’m not man enough.”
“I understand.”
“Do you?”
“Of course. But I was going to have to move anyhow.”
“What?”
“François is coming back. His business in France is done. We are going to have to find a place together. I am looking now. In fact, today I think I found a place. I just didn’t want to bother you with all this.”
“But are you guys able to...?”
“We have money. We are consolidating our resources.”
“Christ, then will you forgive me for wanting to throw you into the street?”
“There’s nothing to forgive. I was only worried about how to tell you that I had to move out.”
“You wouldn’t bullshit an old drunk, would you?”
“No. But have you written anything?”
“A smidge...”
“Can I see it?”
“Sure, buddy.”
I went upstairs, brought down the pages, put them on the coffee-table. Then I went back upstairs, went into the bedroom.
“Come on, Sarah, we’re going to celebrate!”
“Celebrate what?”
“Jon’s moving out. I’m going to be able to write again!”
“Did you hurt his feelings?”
“I don’t think so. You see, François is coming back, they have to find a place together.”
We went downstairs. Sarah got another glass. Jon was into the screenplay.
He laughed when he saw me.
“This stuff is fucking great! I knew that it would be!”
“You wouldn’t bullshit an old drunk, would you?”
“No. Never.”
Sarah sat down and we had a quiet drink together.
Jon spoke. “I used Wenner Zergog’s phone to call François. I found out François fucked up. He got canned. He got a few days’ pay, then got canned. Same old thing...”
“Like what?” asked Sarah.
“He’s a great actor but now and then he goes crazy. He’ll just forget the script and the scene he’s supposed to be doing and do his thing. It’s a sickness, I think. He must have done it again. He got canned.”
“What does he do?” I asked.
“It’s always the same. He does all right for a while. Then he fails to follow direction. I will tell him, ‘You walk over there and say your line.’ He won’t do it. He’ll walk somewhere else and say some other line. And I’ll ask him, ‘Why do you do this?’ and he’ll answer, ‘I don’t know. I have no idea.’ Once we were shooting and he walked away and pulled down his pants and bent over. He wasn’t wearing shorts.”
“God damn,” I said.
“Or, he will say things like, ‘We must hasten the natural process of death.’ Or, ‘All men’s lives diminish me.’ “
“Sounds like a hell of a guy.”
“Ah, he is...”
We drank into the early morning, far into the early morning.
I awakened about noon and went downstairs and knocked at Jon’s door. There was no answer. I opened the door. Jon was gone. There was a note.
Dear Hank and Sarah:
Thanks much for all the drinks and everything. I felt like an honored guest.
Hank, your screenplay is a justification of my belief in you. It is even better than that. Please continue it.
I will phone you soon with my location and phone number.
This is a wonderful day. It’s Mozart’s birthday. There will be beautiful music all day....
yrs, Jon
The note made me feel terrible and good at the same time, which was the way I felt most of the time anyhow. I went upstairs, pissed, brushed my teeth and got back into bed with Sarah.