Read The Sun in Your Eyes Online
Authors: Deborah Shapiro
As did Andy.
Jesse's label dropped him. He got fat. He got strung out. He got thin. At some point Lee was born. He left Linda or did Linda leave him? He took up with a groupie. He wrote songs other people made famous. He was going back to the studio. He died. Lee was four.
It all seemed removed from the girl who had just biked away. But it also explained her, and my instant fascination with her. People
obsessed over Jesse Parrish, worked his life into legend, and Lee was part of that. She was part of a level of society I was only beginning to see. I'd never met anyone famous, unless you counted Michael Dukakis, with whom I shook hands once in sixth grade on a class trip to the State House. The affluence I'd grown up around had exposed me, at its upper boundary, to remodeled kitchens and glitzy Bar Mitzvahs. Lee's father's fame was not the most lucrative kindâit generated more cultural capital than actual capital. But, as I learned from Andy, Jesse came from a family whose mini-empire of supermarkets had been dismantled and dissolved. But not before certain trusts had been established and, in Lee's case, well-maintained, thanks to her mother. On top of that, Linda West, former model, muse, and party girl, had turned out to be a remarkably savvy businesswoman.
The more I looked at Jesse's picture, the more I saw the resemblance to Lee. The sleepy, wide deep-blue eyes that darkened to violet at the edges, the fullness of her mouth, softening the sharpness and structure of her other features. They had
facesâ
made for cameras and stages, made to be looked at. Lee shared with her father (and her mother, I would come to find out) a powerful, preoccupying magnetism. So that, in a group photograph, you're always drawn to them first. When you can't look at them anymore because you know you'll never get to the bottom of them, then you start seeing the other people in the frame and wondering where the picture was taken.
“Does Lee talk about him at all?”
“Sometimes. Yeah. Last year some guy was writing part of a dissertation on him and wanted to talk to Lee. She agreed to, but in the end it just weirded her out. Like he was projecting all this stuff onto her father. But I think what really upset her is that she didn't know if it was a projection or not. I mean, she never really knew her father.”
I hardly knew Lee then, but I already wanted to protect her. I was at the beginning of something, something I didn't want to disappear.
T
HERE WAS A
girl we knew in college named Kirsten. She and Lee could both be impetuous and headlong. Kirsten was ultimately more successful at it, I think because she was more shallow. She treated our women's studies class to a graphic video of her girlfriend in bed and then got married not two years out of school to a guy she met while knitting in Prospect Park. We understood sexuality could be fluid. But we barely recognized her at the wedding without her dark eye makeup and bulky boots. What threw us was the realization that that had merely been a look in the same way that the letterpress place cards, the tea lights twinkling in the trees, the greenery in mason jars, her reworked vintage bridal gown, was all a look. Her ardor for performance seemed to exceed rather than express a passion for her groom. As though she were getting married largely for the pictures and a license to throw dinner parties. Lee and I scoffed. But it also made us insecure about who we were and what we should want.
“I envy her tolerance for being embarrassed,” I said to Lee. We were sitting on a stone bench on the grounds of an old estate, drinking champagne, not too far from the guests on the patio but out of earshot. “No, but I do. She doesn't care. She's not cowed by self-consciousness.”
“I think the word you're looking for is shameless,” said Lee.
“Yeah, but we say that like it's a bad thing. Where does shame ever get us?”
“Kirsten's a nutbag, okay? She throws a nice party though.”
Late into that night, music continued to drift out of the open French doors of a ballroom to the sloping lawn where a group of revelers kept going. In the early but still dark hour when dew starts to settle over everything, Lee and Kirsten and I found ourselves alone down by a boathouse. In my mind's eye we are sleepily draped across various surfaces, women in a pre-Raphaelite painting.
“I'm knitting him a pair of socks,” said Kirsten, apropos of nothing but the digressive course of the conversation we'd been having. We nodded in an indication of listening.
“No, like, I'm knitting my
husband
a fucking pair of fucking
socks
. I have the yarn and the needles and everything all packed up in my bag for our fucking
honeymoon
.”
We murmured some indistinct acknowledgments.
“God. You two. You guys are like a fucking
planet
together. You make me feel like a little ant or something. Do you know I almost didn't invite either of you? But I wanted to be generous. I wanted you to share this with me. But you know what? You don't really share anything with anyone but each other. So, like, fuck that!” She laughed and took another drag on the joint between her fingers. I looked to Lee, but she wouldn't return my gaze. She just stared up at the rafters, as though what Kirsten said was, for once, well-reasoned and true, and it disturbed her.
Within a year, Kirsten left her husband, moved across the country, and became an apprentice to a marketing guru. She was forecasting trends on daytime talk shows, wearing wrap dresses and stilettos, discussing happiness as it related to various colors. She and the guru renovated a San Francisco townhouse. They spoke of their love, for their home and for each other, in the pages of a shelter magazine. It wasn't Kirsten's fault that the guru soon began an affair with his new assistant, but hadn't I turned on the
TV one morning and heard her say, “You are your choices”? It was back to New York, where she lived with an advertising executiveâturnedârooftop farmer, incorporated antlers into the design of several downtown hotels, and acquired a new wardrobe of structurally challenging clothes you may have at first suspected weren't particularly flattering before concluding that your eye simply wasn't avant-garde enough to appreciate them. Kirsten moved through life in a series of clean breaks. Perhaps, in some parallel reality, a landfill of her past messes grew more and more massive. But unless this world collided with that one, she'd never contend with the garbage heap of her existence. I could try to heave myself up onto a ledge of superiority, tell myself that Kirsten didn't really know herself. But was knowing yourself worth more than all the life she had lived? How well did I know myself anyway?
About a year ago, I happened to be downtown for a doctor's appointment in the middle of the afternoon and I ran into her. She was leaving a showroom and looked like a celebrity dressed to avoid the paparazzi: sunglasses, flats, leather jacket, of-the-moment bag.
“Viv fucking Feld!” She insisted we go get a coffee right then. Sometimes I felt I alone had maintained a life that left room for unscheduled coffees and it was like being the last house standing on an otherwise razed block. Where had everybody gone? But here was Kirsten, and though I knew her impromptu availability wasn't the same as mine, I couldn't say no. I hadn't seen her since Andy and I got married.
We covered the preliminaries: she told me about jetting to Peru recently for inspiration. I said there was good Peruvian food in Queens. She told me how funny I was.
“Are you still withâI'm sorry, I've forgotten his nameâthe guy you were with at our wedding?” I asked.
“Russell. No. God, no! That seems so long ago.
Men.
” She sighed, as though that were the definitive word on the subject. But then she continued. “You and Andy are very lucky. Some of us just aren't built for marriage. We always want something more.”
“Right. I think there's a song about that.”
“Speaking of which, how's Lee?”
“I don't really know. We've kind of lost touch. I think she's in L.A.”
“Oh, yeah? What is she doing?”
“I'm not really sure. I think she was trying to figure that out.”
“Well, I hope she does. You only get one life. I just hope she's happy.”
I wanted to ask Kirsten if
she
was happy, but happiness (and what it had to with various colors) was merely a topic to discuss in front of a studio audience. And I suspected she was only capable of caring about Lee's well-being because she believed she had finally eclipsed her. I had never spent much time with Kirsten alone. I hadn't realized how much Lee's presence had kept her in check. Kirsten had acquired a triumphant yet breezy authority that, like a gas, filled the space where Lee would have been.
What Kirsten had meant as a slightâhow fortunate Andy and I were to be so easily satisfied with each otherâresonated strongly. Listening to her talk, I
did
feel lucky to be with Andy. Still, I remained awed by Kirsten's restless momentum. Lee's too. But if Kirsten, out of nowhere, had asked me to drop everything and hit the road with her, I would have said no without even blinking.
          Â
What would you say to those detractors or critics who've said your work can be repetitive? That perhapsâand I'm not saying I feel this wayâthat too many of your songs sound the same?
          Â
Well, I guess I would say it's all the same song. They're right. In the wrong way.
          Â
That's quite a koan.
          Â
Yeah, I should get it printed up, make some fortune cookies.
          Â
That would be an interesting sideline for you.
          Â
Put it on some T-shirts. A real merchandising opportunity.
          Â
Does that bother you? That maybe it's becoming more about the marketing than the music?
          Â
It's always been about the marketing. As long as there's been a market. You're setting me up for these, I swear. [Laughter from the audience]
          Â
Okay. Different subject. Is it true you believe in flying saucers?
          Â
Flying saucers?
          Â
I've read that you've been to a flying saucer convention.
          Â
Oh. Yes. My wife took me there.
          Â
It's your wife, then, who believes in aliens?
          Â
Oh, I think the aliens believe in her. [More laughter from the audience]
          Â
Do you get a lot of ideas from your wife?
          Â
I get a lot of ideas from a lot of places. I'm easily influenced. I'm very, uh, I'm very permeable. [Laughter, cheers] But, yes, Linda. She's right there. She can tell you. [Applause and shuffling, as a microphone is brought to Linda]
          Â
Hi, Jesse.
          Â
Hi, Linda.
          Â
Well, I think I understand those aliens now! Linda West, everybody. [Applause from the audience]
          Â
Aren't you gonna ask me how we met?
          Â
Sure. How did you two meet?
          Â
At a party. In the kitchen. At her boyfriend's house.
          Â
Whoa there, this is national television. You're scandalizing us, Jesse.
          Â
You and the kitchen, man.
This interview used to be hard to find, bonus material at the end of a Jesse Parrish import box set. Now you could download it in seconds. You could be anywhere. You could be driving up the Hutchinson River Parkway, through Westchester, in 2010, listening to Jesse in 1970. How transporting it was. I needed it in order to feel involved in this world and justified in leaving my own. And to not feel quite so guilty for being excited about it. And I was glad Lee put this on because it gave us a focus, a distraction from the fact that here we were in a car, back in each other's lives.
So now what?
“I don't know if I remember it or I just think I do,” said Lee. “But he had such a nice voice, the way he talked.”
“He did.”
I had heard snippets of interviews with him here and there, but I had never listened at length. I tended to think wit had to be surgical, swift, and a bit cruel, but Jesse's was lingering, it had warmth.
          Â
I have to say, you don't seem particularly interested in playing a game with journalists, the way some of your, well, peers [chuckle] do.
There are some notoriously prickly recording artists out there, and one or two of them have even deigned to come on this show. But you're very open and I don't feel like you're putting me on.
          Â
Why would I put you on? [Laughter again] It's like this. If I said something in a song, I needed a song to say it. So I get how it's a drag to be asked to explain yourself beyond the song. But that doesn't mean I can't sit here and have a perfectly fine conversation with you about extraterrestrials.
          Â
Your fans certainly feel they understand your songs. They're extremely devoted to you.
          Â
Yes. Yeah.
          Â
You seem to inspire a great deal of fantasy, of fantasizing.
          Â
They're very imaginative, the fans. Very creative. They do like to imprint me into their fantasies.
          Â
I want to read an excerpt of thisâit's from a fan letter that was sent to our show. This womanâI say woman though I don't know how old she isâthis woman writes: “In the dream, Jesse is waiting in line behind me at the airport and the line isn't moving so he leans over my shoulder and suggests we get out of there. He takes my hand and all of a sudden there's a moving sidewalk that brings us all the way to this beautiful old palace with loads of rooms and I get lost. It's also a little like the White House. I pass a lot of people wearing suits and ID badges. They are looking at me because I am running down this marble hallway and I can't find Jesse anywhere. Then he pulls me through a secret door and he says he has disguises for us, the disguises that we're going to need. He asks me to help him take off his clothes.” I'll stop there. It gets considerably more detailed. Does it ever shock you?
          Â
Uh, it doesn't shock me. I think that's what, uh, performance does. What it can do, when it's good. It creates a space for the imagination. I love that I can do that for people. It can get a little heavy, though. Sometimes. Sure.
          Â
Does it ever leave you feeling, well, I imagine it might leave you feeling rather blank?
          Â
Uh, depleted, sometimes. I don't know about blank. You know, that's interesting about the disguises. I'd like to know what they were!
          Â
Jesse Parrish, ladies and gentlemen. I want to thank you again for coming on the show this evening. It's been, well, what would you say it's been?
          Â
It's been a pleasure.