Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Chapter Sixteen.

     This is one of my favorite chapters of the book. Not because I think it's the funniest story, and not because I think my writing is so good that Mark Twain would have shit himself being impressed. No, this is one of my favorite chapters because I remember that for the one year I lived in New York, I had this thought at least ten times a day: Did that shit really just happen? Every. Damn. Day.  And so I proudly present the latest installment of Making Sh*t Up: An Improvised Life. A big thank you to everyone who's made a contribution to the book so far. And if you haven't yet, I can only presume it's because you're trapped under something heavy. Or you have no soul. (I'm kidding. A little.)


Chapter Sixteen
New York (First Interlude)

If you can make it there... then you, too, can piss in the street.



    In 1999 when Wishbone was officially over and done with, I was trying to figure out what to do. I was getting offers for representation from some very respectable agencies in Los Angeles, and also in New York. The thing was, though, they would only represent me if I lived there. I’d been to Los Angeles and New York City several times in support of Wishbone, and they were essentially different planets. In different solar systems. In separate galaxies.
     I love southern California. I love the sunshine, the ocean, the music vibe. It’s all good. The only thing I never liked about Los Angeles was the fact that I could never have a conversation there that wasn’t about “the business.” I’m from Texas, y’all, and what you do for a living – and what industry you do it in – makes up only a very tiny amount of my interest in you as a person. I want to know your story, and only a small part of your story is your job. My experience in Los Angeles was such that, every time I asked a question that wasn’t directly related to the film and television industry, people’s eyes would glass over. There would follow some uncomfortable (for them) confusion, as if I had just broken a rule of the Social Contract, like letting my dog shit on their lawn without cleaning it up.
     I quickly discovered that the easiest way to derail a conversation in L.A. was to ask something like, “So, what do you like to talk about that has absolutely nothing to do with film or television?”  Because it seemed like everybody I ever met in Hollywood only wanted to talk about Hollywood, and what was going on in Hollywood, and who was doing what in Hollywood, and what they were getting up to in Hollywood, and who with. And I mean everybody. I ate in a lot of restaurants in Los Angeles while on press junkets for Wishbone, and I almost always ran into a server or a hostess who couldn’t wait to tell me about the screenplay they had written, or the fact that CAA or some other big agency was seriously considering representing them. I realize how cliché that sounds; people have written movies about that shit. But it was true. And it was exhausting.
     From a geographical and meteorological standpoint, I didn’t like New York City nearly as much as Los Angeles. I’ve always liked visiting the East Coast, but the plain truth is there’s too many fucking people. I don’t like sardines, and in New York City you are the sardine. Also, I don’t like the cold. And I especially don’t like when Wet and Cold get together – like they do an awful lot of the time in New York. What the city did have going for it, in my opinion, was its attitude toward “the business.” Namely, being an actor was just another fucking job. It didn’t define who you were as a person. New Yorkers were way more fascinated that I was from Texas than they ever were about my occupation. “You’re an actor, huh? Cool. Does everybody carry guns in Texas, or just the cowboys?”
     Ultimately the decision was to move to New York. Much like my first foray into television, I had no fucking idea what I was getting into. We moved into the borough of Queens, where, as a diehard Texas Rangers fan, I was relatively safe, as Queens belonged firmly to the National League Mets, and not the Yankees. We got an apartment in Forest Hills, which I later learned was one of the safest neighborhoods in the borough, as several mid-level mobsters lived in the attached houses behind me on Austin Street. There were no muggings or stick-ups, ever. Because one never knew if a potential mugging victim might be related to someone who could put you in a trunk in New Jersey.
     This is a true story about a mob guy I befriended during our brief stay in Queens. I’ll call him Marty, though that wasn’t the name he gave me, and probably the name he gave me wasn’t his real name, either. Pulling my wife Tracy out of her beloved suburbs and into the City was extremely traumatic for her, and so in an effort to make her feel more comfortable I wanted to establish some routine right away. I thought walking our dog down the shaded lanes of Forest Hills would be a good start.
     And so, our very first weekend living in New York, we leashed up our dog, Grady, walked out the apartment building and headed off. Forest Hills is a beautiful neighborhood. Lots of trees, old and well-kept attached townhomes, and plenty of mom & pop shops on Austin Street. What it doesn’t have – at all – is parking lots. So everybody who owns a car parks it on the street. The residential streets are narrow to begin with, originally built for nothing wider than a horse and buggy. And, because space is at such a premium, folks park on both sides of the street, making these lanes all but impassable to anything larger than an obese man on a Rascal Scooter.
     So there we were, walking along an idyllic stretch of old New York neighborhood. I could feel Tracy finally starting to relax a little. And that was when we saw the black SUV coming down the street ahead of us; a behemoth of a car that had no business on these tiny streets. Even though it was moving at a crawl, it still knocked two rear-view mirrors off of two different parked cars as it approached us. Never even stopped. As it got closer I could feel Tracy tense up to the point of simply fleeing, leaving Grady and I to fend for ourselves. I gently squeezed her hand in what I hoped was a reassuring, I’ll-take-the-bullet kind of way – all the time hoping the big bad black SUV would roll right past us. I willed it to keep going. So, naturally, when it came abreast of us, it stopped.
     The driver’s side window powered down, unleashing a wave of Cuban cigar smoke. (All cigars are Cuban to me. It sounds cooler.) The guy behind the wheel was right out of a Sopranos casting call: late forties/early fifties, black hair (colored and permed!), shirt open to his shoes, with several gold chains tangled in a mass of chest hair that looked like it was growing up his neck to stake a claim on his face. Sitting beside him was a bleach-blonde, enormously-racked girl who was young enough to be his daughter (she wasn’t). He took his time eyeing me up and down, and Tracy squeezed my hand so hard that I heard a couple of the minor bones snap. He took the cigar out of his maw, and said, “Yo.”
     So I said, “Yo.”
     “What kinda dog is that?”
     Not what I had expected. I had expected, “You didn’t get my permission to walk in this neighborhood,” or, “How much for the woman?” I had not expected a query into the breed of my dog.
     “He’s an Irish Setter.”
    Pause, with some grimacing. “A what?”
     “Irish Setter.”
     Longer pause. This was the kind of tension that always happens in the movies right before a lot of bad shit goes down. What happened next was even stranger. This guy – who could not have been more mobbed up if he was in The Sopranos, broke out in this huge grin, and exclaimed, “THAT is a beee-autiful fuckin’ dog!”
     I managed to keep from soiling myself and said, “Thanks.”
     “Hey Carmen, look over here. Is that not a beautiful fuckin’ dog or what?”
     Carmen: “Yeah. It’s nice.”
     “Nice? Are you shittin’ me? Look at that coat! Look at those eyes! I never seen a Mick Setter before. Fuck me, that’s a beautiful dog! Say, what’s your name? You new around here? Where you from?”
     These were the questions I had been dreading. But, since he seemed to be enamored with Grady, I decided to keep it friendly and honest. “I’m Larry, this is my wife, Tracy. And this (pointing to my dog) is Grady. We just moved here from Texas.”
     “Hooolee shit, are you shittin’ me? Texas? Dat what the ‘T’ on your cap stands for?”
     It was only at that moment I realized I was wearing my Rangers cap.
     “Yep (in a slight drawl). That’s exactly what it stands for.”
     “Well fuck me. Two Texans and a Mick dog. What a day!” He stuck his hand out the window, and I had an awkward second of prying my wife’s hand off of me in order to shake with him. “I’m Marty. Everybody in dis neighborhood knows me. Hey, you need anything, I’m da guy. Ok, Texas? And that was what he called me always after that day.
     I wasn’t sure agreeing with what he asked was akin to climbing in bed with the mob, but neither was I sure that disagreeing with him was a wise choice. So, putting the drawl on a little thicker, I said, Sure thang, Marty. Sure thang.”
     Marty responded with a toothy grin and a pretty decent impression of me. “Shore thang!” He chortled at himself, and as he and Carmen drove away, I could hear him saying, “Two Texans and a Mick dog. Fuck me.”
     As we stood there, just the three of us, I heard Tracy start to breathe again. When she could speak, she merely asked, “Was that a…?”
     “Pretty certain of it, yeah.”
     Tracy: (pause) “Fuck me.”
     A couple of days after that encounter, I decided to try out the neighborhood pizza shop. I have developed a taste for authentic New York pizza that borders on the suicidal. I walked in and ordered my standard: pepperoni. You judge all New York-style pizza shops by how well they do on this simplest of pies. After the pizza was baked and boxed, I was standing near the cash register doing what I usually do when I meet new people: asking a lot of questions. The proprietor and his family were all immigrants from Argentina, and they all worked in the shop. He asked if I was new in the neighborhood, so I told him where I was from, and then I told a little white lie that I came to instantly regret. You see, I immediately liked this gentleman, and I wanted him to believe that other folks in the neighborhood had recommended me to his shop. So I said, “Marty says you make the best pizza in Queens.”
     The smile on his face during our entire transaction vanished. He pushed the box over to my side of the counter. I said, “How much?”
     “No charge.”
     “Aww, I can’t do that. What do I owe you for the pie?”
     “No charge. Have a nice day.”
     It took me a full minute to realize what I’d done. “Listen, Sir. Marty is not my friend. He’s just a guy I met that told me you made good pizza. Okay?” The elder gentleman searched my face, and seemed assured. “So, how much do I owe you for the pizza?”
     We completed our transaction on friendly terms, and I visited that pizza shop every Friday without fail for our entire stay in New York. And I never – ever – mentioned Marty’s name again, anywhere.
     One more story about Marty. It happened that Tracy had to be out of town for a weekend, so it was just Grady and I at the apartment. I had rented a couple of movies from Blockbuster (a very outdated thing to say), and when Sunday afternoon rolled around, I remembered that I had to take them back. When I walked out of my building the sky was gray and overcast, threatening rain. But I grew up in Texas, where threats of rain are treated with the contempt they deserve. So I walked down to the Kew Gardens station and hopped the train up two stops to drop off the videos. Upon my return, I came up out of the same station to find that rain threats in New York should never be treated with contempt. It was what MeeMaw would have called a “frog strangler.”
     As I had no umbrella or raincoat, I decided all I could do was run back to the apartment. Fortunately it was a short run on a wide sidewalk fronted with shops, most of which were closed on Sunday - except the pub. The pub was always open. It’s called Cobblestone’s now, but I’m not sure that’s what it was called when I lived there. But they still have the big green awning out front. Anyway, I was trotting past the pub, when I caught movement out of my peripheral vision. Toward me. I turned my head in time to duck under a punch that some big, drunk asshole swung at me. I’d vaguely noticed him holding up the wall outside of the pub, and now all of a sudden he was launching a haymaker at my head.
     He was shit-face drunk, and I’ve been holding off on mentioning my experience in martial arts because I am no kind of a badass. The truth is my dad started me in martial arts because I sucked so bad at every other sport, and he was desperate for me to do something athletic. Turns out I was actually really good at that, and I’ve been practicing one form or another for years. Ironically, the pub where this idiot swung on me is two doors down from the ju-jitsu club I was training in when I lived in Queens.
     So I pretty easily dodged his swing, ducked under his arm and gave him a little push, which combined with his forward momentum, sent his big steroid-infused ass to the concrete. He rolled around like an upended turtle for a minute, struggled to his feet, said something completely unintelligible and squared off for another run at me. Just then his buddy (I assume it was his buddy) came bounding out of the pub, grabbed the drunken asshole, and said to me, “It’s cool man. No harm. He’s just drunk.” I didn’t have a witty riposte, jacked on adrenaline as I was, so I simply resumed my trot back to my building, taking care that neither of them saw me go home.
     Now, I can sense your disappointment. You thought you were about to read about the time I got into a genuine street fight in New York. No. Trust me, the truth is way scarier (at least to me). Two days later the skies cleared, and I was down on Austin Street doing the daily grocery shopping. (You shop for groceries daily in New York. Not because everything is fresh daily, but because most apartments don’t have pantries.) I was headed over to the local green grocer, when from across the street I hear, “Hey, Texas!” It was Marty. I waved.
     “C’mover here!”
     I crossed the street with my little red grocery basket on wheels; something I felt made me a true New Yorker. Marty was looking uncharacteristically agitated.
     “Hey, you have some trouble out front of that pub on Queens last Sunday?”
     “Sunday?”
     “Yeah. Heard maybe somebody gave you some trouble out front of that pub.”
     “Oh. You’re talking about the drunk guy? That was nothing. He was just wasted. No big deal.”
     “This was a big guy, right? All muscles and shit? Roid freak in a tight t-shirt with a ball cap on backwards like a douchebag?”
     The description was dead on. I’d told no one about that incident, not even Tracy, and she’d been back two days. Somebody in the bar had made a phone call.
     “Like I said, Marty. He was just a drunk asshole. Probably would have swung at anybody who crossed in front of him. No harm.”
     Marty would not be appeased. “Yeah, well don’t worry about it. He ain’t gonna make trouble for you no more.” And then he walked off. Just like that.
     Now, I’m not going to speculate. Speculation is bad for relationships, it’s bad for the economy, and it’s bad for America. I’m just going to stick to facts. And the fact of the matter is, I never saw the drunk asshole after that. Not once. The bar on Queens Blvd is a local bar. Tourists don’t come to Queens, and if they did this is not a place they’d visit. And experience has taught me that a guy who hangs out in a bar on a Sunday usually hangs out in that bar every Sunday. So, the very next Sunday after my encounter with Marty, I walked into the bar, at about the same time in the afternoon as my little altercation the week before. No drunk asshole. Nor was he there the next Sunday. Or the next. I decided not to inquire as to the drunk asshole’s identity or possible whereabouts, because I didn’t want to put anybody else on the spot the way I unwittingly had my new friend at the pizza shop. I saw Marty a few more times after that, before our stay in New York ended and we packed back off for Texas. He was always friendly, always gregarious, always fond of calling me Texas.
     And we never – ever – talked about the drunk asshole.

     Next Week, Chapter Seventeen: New York (Second Interlude)

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