One
I am on the Flanagan deck,
where Colin and I are conducting a war with Mother Nature. With mid-June temps
edging into the 80s, Colin has decreed that not one ounce of stain strike that
deck in direct sunlight. This means a day-long dance in which I hopscotch from
one surface to the next, following the squares of shade meted out by house and
tree.
I am utterly behind schedule. The
clock edges past six and I am still on the upper deck, applying a second coat
that simply has to be finished today.
And Maddalena Hart calls to me. I foxtrot our thousand-bristle brush across the
final foot of plank, unscrew it from the broomstick and drop it into a bucket
of water. Then I race downstairs to my car, grab my evening clothes and retreat
to the back of the house, where the hillside offers some visual shelter.
That’s
the thing about working in the mountains: you can get away with stuff you
wouldn’t dream of doing in the city.
I remove every stitch, grab a hose, brace for the shock, and crank the spigot.
I give myself a thorough soaking, then I use my work shirt as a towel, drying
off as much as possible before I start in on the evening wear.
I am trousered, shirted and
ready to go when I pass by a large black pipe and hear the sound of descending
liquid. Uh-oh. This is the sound of a toilet flush. Looking up, I see a small
window with a light on.
I run up the steps to the
driveway, toss my work clothes in the back seat, and am just pulling out when I
see Mrs. Flanagan’s silver LeMans in the garage. I discover our 82-year-old
client at the kitchen window, and give her a friendly wave. She waves back,
wearing a smile that is equal parts flustered and amused.
A half hour later I am
NASCARring along the sweet swath of Interstate 280, the fog drifting over
Crystal Springs Reservoir like an army of cotton balls. My refrigerator-level
AC has finally deactivated my pores, so I drop in at the Burlingame rest stop
to assemble my dress shoes and tie. I pull into the Civic Center garage with
minutes to spare, sprint up the urine-smelling exit and circumnavigate City
Hall, the frigid municipal wind blow-drying my deck-hair. I arrive at the side
entrance of the War Memorial Opera House and give a wave to the spry,
ginger-haired gentleman who serves as my gatekeeper.
“Billy! Hi.”
“Mister Siskel. Go on through.
Delores is hosting tonight.”
Four of my favorite words.
With her cutesy black-Irish features, youthful figure and actual personality,
Delores forces me to keep an eye on my dirty-old-man alarm system. I cross the
south hallway to find her in the press room, talking to the usual vaguely
European assholes.
“Oh! I went to the Los
Angeles premiere last autumn. They have a new artistic director. Dennis
McClintock. Used to be with Glimmerglass?”
I have never heard one of
these industry whores actually talk about an opera. They chatter like a squad of thirteen-year-old girls in a
cafeteria. Delores has spotted me and is giving me one of her profoundly
genuine-seeming smiles.
“Mickey! Let me find your
ticket.” She shuffles her envelopes, poker-style, and hands one to me. “Oh, and
the info sheets are tucked into the programs.”
“Fantastic. Thanks.”
I head for the coffee and
add a ridiculous amount of cream to bring down the temperature. I know it’s
Mozart, and staying awake is not a problem, but I want Maddalena’s voice to
stream along my synapses on wide-open channels.
Delores leans over my
shoulder. “By the way, Mickey, you know you could have a second ticket, right?
It’s been five years – you’ve definitely passed the test!”
“To be honest, Delores, I am
surrounded by people all week. If I can go on pretending that those tightwads at San Francisco Opera just
won’t give me a second ticket, I may continue to use this as my personal
retreat.”
She swats me with her
envelopes. “No, Mister Siskel! You may not
have a second ticket, and please stop asking!”
“Thank you. I mean, curse you, you miserly press relations…
person!”
Her eyes light up, then she
looks closer and develops a concerned expression.
“Oh, um… You might want to
check your forehead.”
I head for the mirror over
the refreshment table and discover a slash of golden stain over my left temple.
I dip a napkin into my coffee and manage to scrub it away. The chimes go off in
the hallway, so I head out, whispering a thanks to Delores.
There is not a square inch
of the War Memorial that I do not adore. The gilded florets that look down on
the cavernous lobby. The red-carpeted steps that lead to the auditorium; the
scroungy standing-room-onlys shuffling for position behind the back row. The
Olympic-sized gold bricks that cover the north and south walls. The spiky
gardenia of chandelier that shuts off in a dazzling spiral.
My ticket says row L,
fantastically close. I wait next to my aisle seat until my row fills up, then
sit down and applaud the conductor, Patrick Summers, he of the silver mane and
ruddy complexion, who should probably be astride a horse in an Eastwood movie.
The burgundy curtain rises to the heavens.
Cosi fan tutte is the ultimate romantic farce. Rascally bachelor Don Alfonso scoffs
at his youngers, Ferrando and Guglielmo, as they brag on the beauty and
fidelity of their fiancées. He then concocts the juiciest of wagers: the two
will pretend to leave the country, then return in disguise to test the
faithfulness of the other guy’s
chick. Make this a mid-century American film, and the women are tempted but not
won; the assembled cast laughs and smiles for the final scene as someone plays
Cole Porter. In the hands of Mozart and his librettist, da Ponte, things are
never that comfortable.
The folks at SFO have gone for a modernized
production. The purists hate these kind of things, but then I hate the purists.
The sneaky fiancés traditionally come back as Albanians, all facial hair and
Middle Eastern robes, but here they’re long-haired ‘70s-era rockers. The baritone
wears skin-tight leather pants, a copper-colored duster and no shirt, revealing
an impressive set of abs and an eagle tattooed across his chest. The supertitle
translator is in on the joke, as well. When one of the sopranos catches sight
of their weird-looking suitors, she asks, “Where are these guys from?
Haight-Ashbury?”
Speaking of sopranos, I have
found myself in a kind of sonic heaven. They have paired Maddalena with a
Dorabella whose mezzo is forceful and vibrant, a perfect match. Equipped with
Mozart’s harmonic magic – long passages of girl-on-girl singing – the two are
sending out chill after chill to give my spine the beat-down.
And then there’s Maddalena,
and since I do go on about her, perhaps I should give you a summary of her
talents. Her voice is huge, and powerful, but never forced. She manages to
maintain the buoyancy of the category known as lyric, showing a gymnastic agility that should be impossible for
someone with such a broad, buttery tone. Her delivery comes with impossible
ease, her tone spinning into the audience like a million tiny Frisbees. And her
top notes are absolutely secure, the dynamics of her phrasing always
thoughtfully dramatic. She also has that rare ability to appear as if she’s
simply talking – as if we should all
go around singing our conversations – when in fact she is launching pyrotechnic
displays of sound that mere mortals may only dream of.
What’s serving to intensify
my obsession is the present-day clothing. They have dressed her all in white –
befitting Fiordiligi’s chaste attitude – a flowing pantsuit with a long jacket
that flits here and there with her movements, revealing contours that one might
not expect from an opera singer. The generous knockers, yes, the stout ribcage
(an occupational hazard) – but the ass on this girl! Medium to generous, as
befits a diva, but possessed of a round shape and firmness that would give your
average construction worker hours of material. Throw in those oversized emerald
eyes, a head full of blonde Monroe ringlets, and those inflatable, flexible
lips that they emphasize for every album cover. By the time she arrives at the
big second-act aria, I’m already a mess, my heart on a platter, waiting to be
frappéd by her performance. But more on that later.
At the end of three hours, I
head downstairs for my pre-drive restroom stop, stopping at a portrait of
Renata Tebaldi from 1968 (in Andrea
Chenier) to run my thumb across her name plate. Maddalena has been compared
with her, and don’t go thinking that I disagree.
[Track 1]
On the drive home, I pop
Maddalena’s rendering of Dvorak’s “Song to the Moon” into the cassette player
(it’s an old car), and then I cleanse my palate with some AC/DC. I picture the
modernized Ferrando and Guglielmo onstage with Angus and Malcolm Young, as
young opera fans flash their tits at the stage.
The drive is long but not
difficult. Mozart to me is like crystal meth, and also I have my nightscapes.
My favorite arrives at Stanford, between the satellite dish and the linear
accelerator. The surrounding land is a green vale, dotted here and there by
live oaks and cows, painted silver by three quarters of a moon.
Twenty miles later, I’m
approaching the evergreen mountains behind Saratoga, speckled with the lights
of houses belonging to the rich – who spend most of their daylight hours
denying that they’re rich at all. But this is a previous lifetime, and I’m just
passing through, into the long ascending stretches of Highway 9. The deer
population keeps me alert, chewing on the roadside grasses perilously close to
the asphalt.
The final directions are a
little complicated. Half mile past the fire station, first Ped Xing sign to
your right, through the gate with the combination lock. After that it’s a full
mile of downhill dirt and gravel, the rain channels beating up the suspension,
and finally the much-anticipated left-hand sweep that signals home base,
ancient orchards to the right, cabin of Trey the Fish to the left. I park
between two redwood trees, take a moment to breathe the mountain air, check out
the moonlight sliding through the trees in dull metallic streaks, then reach
back in for my program and make my way to the steps.
“Ahwuff!”
“Jesus!”
It’s Katie. She’s on all
fours in the entryway, and, yes, as my eyes adjust to the dark I see that she
is wearing a dog suit: floppy black ears, big round nose-cap, and a furry white
beagle onesie with built-in paws and a springy spike of tail.
“Pretty cute, Katie. Could
you maybe call next time so I don’t have a freakin’ heart attack?”
“Hawroof!” She shuffles
forward and leaps on me. I pat her on the head and she pants her approval, then
adopts a cartoony growl-voice. “Mrrickey bring bone? Katie want bone!”
“No Katie, I didn’t bring
you a bone. Now let’s get inside and…”
She snarls (as menacingly as
a four-foot-ten blonde can) then pads her way down to my crotch and snuffles
around like she’s hunting for kibble.
“Urrh! Bone!”
“Oh! Okay. I getcha.” I drop
my program on a filing cabinet, undo my belt and drop trou to reveal that yes,
the dog has given the man a bone. She gives my dick a few exploratory licks and
then engulfs it with a messy, dog-like blow job. I grab her floppy ears and
endeavor to get into the spirit of things.
“Katie, you sexy bitch!”
“Haroomph!”
After a minute she pulls
away, circles around and raises her tail into the air. “Rrowf!” she says, what
sounds like a canine command.
Ah,
thinks I. I believe she wants to do it
doggie-style. Access is a bit of a puzzle, until my initial butt-squeeze
reveals a pair of large buttons. I quickly undo them and pull up the panel,
revealing Katie’s round, plump cheeks. I dip a hand between them to find that
she is well-lubricated, then I insert a finger, enjoying the vision of her bare
pussy in the moonlight. My cock is about ready to launch itself right off my
pelvis, so I take it in hand and guide myself home. It’s a grand feeling, but
her tail keeps whacking me in the face.
An hour later, we’re back to
human form, entwined beneath a couch blanket as we enjoy a small summer fire. I
cannot usually tolerate such lengthy stretches of personal-space invasion, but
Katie fits into the curve of my frame as if she were designed for the purpose.
She also has this natural taste and smell that I never tire of, augmented by
spearmint gum, vanilla shampoo, milk-white skin, bubble-gum nipples and labia –
she is my candy girl. Too bad she’s so fucked up, but it’s really not her
fault.
“How was the drop-off?” I
ask.
“Oh God. Same old shit. I
thought I was getting away clean, but then he calls me and says that Sara needs
her Hannah Montana sweatshirt. ‘Just pull up,’ he says. ‘I’ll come to the car
and get it.’ Always trying to get us alone together, like I find him so fucking
irresistible I will me mesmerized by his manly presence and decide not to
divorce him. For seven years I told
that asshole we needed to work on our marriage, for seven years he didn’t do a
goddamn thing, but now, now that I’ve
left his sorry ass – now he
desperately wants me back. Oh God, I’m sorry. I don’t mean to be so pissy. But
you shouldn’ta got me going.”
I stroke her hair, the way
she likes me to.
“Y’gotta dump on somebody. It may as well be me.”
She gives me a kiss.
“Thanks, honey.”
“As long as you’re bitching
about other men, I could listen for
hours! It’s just the price of admission. And what a show you put on tonight.”
“I’m a creative little
slut.”
“What do you say to popcorn
and a movie? They’re playing an old Hitchcock.”
She gives me that priceless,
impish smile, eyes the color of a spring sky. “Sounds fab, honey. You’re a great fuck, ya know?”
“Thanks.” I give her lips a
proper chewing and head off to the microwave.
I
have a life-long habit of dating brunettes, so it’s still a surprise to find
this golden-haired creature sitting on the edge of my bed, doing her best to
work out the morning tangles. She is a small sun over my nightstand.
The hour is another thing.
Ungodly. Fifteen minutes later I am re-awakened by a toothpaste kiss, and wet
hair that smells like peaches. I do my best to smile, and then I assemble
enough clothing to ward off hypothermia and walk her out to her car. The
morning is sharp and beautiful, lemon slices of sun cutting through the trees.
A pair of Steller’s jays wing in front of us to carry their squabbling to a
small madrone. I lean Katie against her car and do some more work on those
lips.
“So I was wondering… where
did you get that outfit?”
“Our church did a production
of ‘You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown.’”
“I was fucking Snoopy? Good
grief!”
“Yeahbaby.”
“This is Charles Schulz,
spinning in his grave.”
She bites her lip. “I better
go. Air kiss?”
I wrap my arms around her
back, lift her into the air and apply lips liberally, then I spin her a couple
of times so we can look like a scene from a screwball romantic comedy. Or Cosi fan tutte. Then she’s gone, up the
road, down the mountain, off to pick up the kids for church. I must be a good fuck, for all the trouble
she goes to. And I am profoundly impressed at her ability to compartmentalize
between Saturday night and Sunday morning.
I indulge in a couple more
hours of snoozing, but it’s not going to be more - I’ve got too many ideas
circling my bloodstream. My agenda begins with a long sit on the pot as I read
every shred of SFO’s program, including a seriously well-written piece on the
friendship between Mozart and his librettist, da Ponte.
Second is a long soak in my
most excellent clawfoot bathtub. I am a connoisseur of luxury soaps, and this
morning I am breaking in a French-milled Shea butter bar with the deeply sweet
aroma of linden blossoms. Over the next two weeks, this scent will suffuse the
entire cabin. I lather it between my hands, hold the suds to my nose and then
begin with my left foot before the water gets too high.
After that I’m raring to go,
so I keep the breakfast simple: two pieces of toast with butter and strawberry
preserves, followed by fresh-ground Ethopian coffee. I head to my writing
table, positioned before a window view of my twin redwoods, to the right a deep
hollow covered in madrone. To the left is the cabin of Trey the Fish, with yet
another topless woman flouncing on the deck. I make a mental note to thank him.
I position myself before a circle of books – a Mozart biography, Grove’s Book of Operas and the SFO
program (the cast page covered with written-in-the-dark scrawls) – set down a
spiral-bound notebook and pick up a cheap powder-blue stick pen. I don’t play
any music, because already I can hear Maddalena singing.
[Track 2]
If you were a singer in
Mozart’s company, you really couldn’t lose. He would write the role to
accentuate your strengths, and dance artfully around your flaws. Thus was
created one of the scariest roles in the canon: Fiordiligi of Cosi fan tutte, her stunning
rollercoaster vocal lines inspired by the awesome high and low registers of
Adriana Ferrarese.
It’s quite possible,
however, that that’s all she had.
Other than Fiordiligi and a few productions as Susannah in Le Nozze di Figaro, Adriana had a pretty lackluster career. This
came from two important shortcomings: she couldn’t act, and she couldn’t do
comedy.
Aha!
you say. (Go ahead – I’ll wait.) So why was Adriana so successful in the
decidedly farcical Cosi? Excellent
question, and here’s your answer: because Fiordiligi is the square peg, holding
firmly to her church-girl principles even as all around her are screwin’
around. This custom-crafted role came about either through good fortune or
because Adriana was sleeping with the librettist, da Ponte. The torridness of
the affair (owing largely to the married status of both participants)
doubtlessly contributed to the libretto’s conflicted views on love and
fidelity.
Regardless, given the way
that Mozart treats Fiordiligi as his own personal yo-yo, any normal soprano
should be forgiven for not being entirely up to the part. Fortunately, we’re
not talking about normal sopranos – we’re talking about Maddalena Hart. Hart’s
easy top notes are the stuff of legend, and her bottom end is not to be
disregarded. For recorded evidence, note the low sobbings at the denouements of
Boito’s “L’altra notte” (Mefistofele)
and Dvorak’s “Song to the Moon” (Rusalka)
from Hart’s Favorite Arias album. The
depth of these passages has won the singer much-deserved comparisons to
Tebaldi.
[Track 3]
Naturally, it’s not just having the notes, it’s how the notes are
deployed. Many a singer has come to these clifftop drops and landed on the low
notes with all the tender sensitivity of a professional wrestler. Hart manages
to make the descent more deftly, like a hang glider, dipping her toes to the
precise mid-point of the pitch before catching the next updraft. Not once does
this seem like work, and not once does she lose her supremely intelligent sense
of dynamic flow. Hart often creates the impression that none of this is so
unusual, that these are just everyday conversations that decided to take wing.
Since my rough beginnings, I
have made major strides. I am now able to complete a review in a matter of one
longhand draft, one computer draft and a final read-through. Considering the
fact that I’m not getting paid a cent, this is good. I head for my blog, Operaville, paste in the article, and
then I go to the SFO site to shop for a photo. The images there are sharp, and
beautiful, and provocative. I always feel like I’m cheating, like I’m applying
Chanel No. 5 to a pig. This time I settle on something comic: rocker-dude
Ferrando hauling Fiordiligi over his shoulder like a sack of potatoes, her
mouth open in a gasp of surprise. Maddalena is so freakin’ gorgeous all the
time that it’s hard to catch her being cute.
I download the image to my desktop, upload it to the blogsite, add the IDs and
photo credit, and press the magic Publish button, committing my words to public
consumption.
I celebrate by preparing my
slow-cook goulash, an olio of red peppers, onions, cabbage and potatoes over a
bacon stock, and spice it with oregano, cayenne pepper and some pomegranate
molasses that I discovered in a high cabinet. While that’s brewing, I sit on my
porch in the twilight treeshade and light up a cigar – a low-priced maduro from
Honduras. I have set my computer to let out a chirp when anyone responds to my
blog, and am pleased, halfway through my smoke, when DD rings in with her first
comment. She’s like clockwork, that girl. I finish the cigar, consume a bowl of
the goulash with a dollop of sour cream, and respond to a text from Katie that
reads, simply, Arf! (I respond with U r 1 fine piece of tail.) Then I mix up
some mango nectar with yogurt (a trick I picked up from an Indian friend) and
park it next to the computer.
DevilDiva: You can’t swing a dead cat without
hitting a modernized opera these days. I take it from your review that this
doesn’t bother you?
Mickey: I always wanted to start a jazz band called
Swing a Dead Cat. But yes! As long as a modernization makes sense, I’m all for
it. Whenever possible, opera should be fun.
DD: But infidelity, illicit sex, the fickle ways of
love -–how can a modern audience possibility relate to these things?
M: Funny!
DD: Thank you for not responding “LOL.” I hate that
shit.
M: OMG!
DD: Smartass. But I’m afraid these progressive ideas
of yours will never do. Opera is nothing but an excuse for fusty 70-year-olds
to impress their friends and obtain valuable tax writeoffs. Fun is utterly out
of the question.
M: Sorry. I had fun, and I make no apologies. And
the thing with the rockers? Hilarious.
DD: Yes, the Haight-Ashbury joke. Audiences love
that stuff. It is a bit unsettling,
though, how often they laugh at the supertitle before you actually get to the
line. I once had a director who brought in students for dress rehearsal and
instructed them to laugh at the funny supertitles right when they appeared on
the screen, just so we could get used to it.
M: Good idea!
DD: But darling! Let’s talk about this segue from
the historical to the musical, from Ferrarese to the way Maddie handles those
intervals. You are a magician, my dear. You are a singer’s dream. If I ever get
a chance to sing Fiordiligi, I’m definitely using that hang-glider visual. Why
are you not writing for Opera News?
M: A late start. I am the Satchel Paige of opera
criticism. And alas! I turned down that scholarship to Julliard.
DD: Okay, I’ll go along with the mythmaking process.
“Siskel left a promising career in professional tennis to write a blog about
opera.”
M: Hey! I’ve got a pretty decent serve.
DD: Okay. But tell me, honestly. Is Signorina Hart really that good? Or are you just buying
into the hype?
M: Sometimes I read the stuff I have written about
her, and I think, Come on! You’re going too far. And then I see her again, I
hear her again, and I realize that I am not exaggerating at all. It’s this
combination of intelligence and vocal power. Intoxicating! I find myself
holding my breath when she’s singing. And you’ve read my other reviews – I’m
really not a gusher.
DD: No. You’re amazingly even-keeled. And fair. So,
did you discover anything new about her?
M: You’re really digging today.
DD: Hey, if you want to be the best, you study the
best.
M: Okay. You know how most opera costumes entirely
obscure the body? Décolletage excepted?
DD: God yes! When I’m doing Mozart, I feel like a
freakin’ parade float.
M: Modern dress, of course, is much more revealing,
much tighter to the silhouette. And this first-act pantsuit… It turns out that
Maddalena Hart, in addition to killer top notes, a beautiful passagio, and a
divine sense of phrasing, has an incredibly fine ass.
I sit there for a couple of minutes, and I’m getting
nothing. This is not unusual. Out here in the boonies, I am a prisoner of
ancient dial-up technology. Perhaps a squirrel is sitting on the wire. I have
half a thought that I got a little too saucy, but DD and I have “gone there”
before, so I can’t imagine she would take offense. I take a break to clean my
dishes. When I return, sure enough, she’s back.
DD: Sorry. Life intercedes. So why no mention of
derrieres in the review?
M: Do you not recall the phrase, “…her bottom end is
not to be disregarded”?
DD: That is so
bad, on so many levels.
M: I save the R-rated stuff just for you, honey.
DD: You do recall that this is a public forum we’re
chatting upon?
M: You kiddin’ me? I’m counting on this stuff to get
me some page-views. In fact, I think I’ll plug in a search tag for “Maddalena
Hart’s ass.”
DD: Yeah, operatic porn is big these days. And what
kind of sleazy readership will that
get you?
Cordell: Somebody call?
M: Cord! Good to hear from you.
DD: Time for Diva to Di-part, hon. But one last
thought: I think you’re in love with Maddalena Hart.
M: Well who isn’t?
C: I’m in love with her, and I’m as queer as a
three-headed monkey.
M: Cordell! Nice bon mot.
C: Thank you. I saw an Oscar Wilde play last night.
DD: Ciao, belli.
M: Buona notte, signorina divina.
C: Not break up this little love-huddle, but rocker
duds? They really did that?
M: You woulda loved the shirtless baritone.
C: Please! I’m strictly about the art. Can I get a
photo?
M: Ha! I’ll smuggle you one from the website.
C: God bless you, young hetero.
Two
The Olsen house lies near
the southern tip of Skyline Boulevard, at the far reaches of a well-organized
mountain community. After a confusing series of forks, I pull onto a hilltop
hosting three large homes under a canopy of live oak. The center house, rather
Frank-Lloyd-Wrightish with all its natural touches, is one that we did last
summer. I recall a terrifically hardy species of lichen that took forever to
pressure-wash, as well as impractical white carpeting that we had to cover with
adhesive plastic runners. But we must have done a good job, since we’re now
putting in stakes with their next-door neighbors.
The
Olsen estate is an assemblage of blue-gray boxes – pretty jarring next to the
chaparral, but they’ve done their best to soften it with modern sculptures and
fountains. My favorite is a jumble of steel rods at the entryway that seems to
represent a pair of figures in erotic embrace. I find Colin piling equipment
along the front steps, his early-Dylan hair bobbing and weaving as he moves.
“Ay! San Franciskel. Right
on time as usual. You are a marvel of punctuality, my friend. Ready to spend
the day on your hands and knees?”
“It’s my natural position.”
He joketh not. Our clients,
a geeky software exec and his intermittently sexy wife, are inordinately fond
of their deck. They insist on preserving it with an organic mineral-based stain
so benign that it must be reapplied once a year. It feels more like we’re
sautéing the deck in teriyaki sauce. But I’ll give them this: at twenty years
of age, their deck is in immaculate condition.
The process is one royal
pain in the tuckus. A glacial drying time means that we must wait three days between coats. It also means
that, after laying the stuff down, we have to crawl around wiping up the excess
with rags. The rags must then be deposited in buckets of water, lest they
inspire spontaneous combustion. You don’t even want to whisper the word “fire” in these parts. This very mountain range
has hosted three major blazes this year, and it’s only June.
Our starting point is the
back deck, which offers one of the best views I’ve ever seen: a steep grassy
downhill that disappears into mile after mile of evergreen mountains, followed
by the faint low buildings of Santa Cruz (the white-steepled Holy Cross Church)
and the Pacific Ocean. I take a mental note to take occasional viewing breaks;
in the throes of labor, it’s easy to forget.
I position my trolley – a
flat wooden board with wheels – set down my paint tray and fill it up with
stain. Then I screw my thousand-bristle brush onto my broomstick, dip it in and
start laying it down. Colin takes up shop at a walkway, three feet down, that
rings the edge of the deck. We’re separated by a long limestone bench, but
still in easy conversing distance. Colin is a painfully social creature, and
not about to pass up the opportunity for a chat.
“Have a good weekend?”
“Yes. I saw Maddalena.”
“Ah! Is this a new one?”
“This is a soprano.”
“Ah yes – the one you’re so
keen on.”
“That’s the one.”
“Did she fulfill your every
desire?”
“All that I could ask for
and not be arrested.”
“Well! Much as I appreciate
a fine voice, I hope you’re having occasional meetings with actual women.”
“Oh, I did. Katie popped in
on me.”
“Ah! The blonde midget.
Guerrilla booty call?”
“Dressed in a dog suit.”
Colin replies in the
long-voweled manner of the titillated Brit: “No-o-oh!”
I answer in the falsetto
voice adopted by every American boy who grew up watching Monty Python’s Flying Circus. “She’s a saucy little bitch, she is!”
“Well I wish she would have
a word with my number three. Fantastic woman – absolutely passive in the sack.
May as well be inflatable.”
I stop, mid-dip. “You actually
call her ‘number three’?”
“Not to her face. But she knows she’s number three.”
“Really.”
“How’s a girl going to
improve unless she knows her ranking?”
“I wish I had your cojones.”
“Is that some sort of
Spanish dish?”
“Yes.”
Colin is a committed follower
of Burning Man, a group that assembles a small city in the Nevada desert each
summer for the purpose of burning a giant man. One of the offshoots of the
group’s libertarian leanings is a population that practices poly-amory –
committed couples who give each other permission to screw around. Colin refers
to these types as “polys,” and I cannot help but picture horny men and women
dressed as parrots. It’s clear that he means this expression dismissively,
which is pretty funny coming from a man who numbers his girlfriends. On the
other hand, my dismissal of Colin’s approach has less to do with principles
than laziness. I have a hard enough time managing a single booty call; I
wouldn’t know what to do with a harem.
“So this Katie sounds like
great fun, actually. Why don’t you get involved with her?”
“She’s too busy going
through a terrible divorce.”
“Ah, yes. Nuclear fallout.”
He works his way around the
corner, but returns to work on some side panels. It’s been a half hour, but he
takes up the conversation as if we haven’t missed a beat.
“Anyone else in the
picture?”
“I have this online pal,
DevilDiva, who claims that I’m in love with Maddalena Hart.”
“Ah, yes. You do wax poetic.
But that’s sheer fantasy, correct?”
“Yes. I do not believe in
the celebrity fuck.”
“I know who’s in love with you, mate.”
“Who?”
“This DevilDiva.”
“Really.”
“Classic female stratagem.
She accuses you of being in love with Maddalena Hart, because she wants you to
say, ‘Why of course not, DevilDiva – I’m in love with you.’”
He delivers this with a
swooning passion that truly cuts me up. I gotta say, it’s good to have a boss
with a sense of humor. But I’ve got no answer for his hypothesis.
“Well!” says Colin, happy to
have planted a seed. “I’d best fetch the rag-box. Hellish job, this, but we do
need the work, eh?”
I repeat his favorite
mantra. “It’s a slog.”
Colin abandons me at
lunchtime to go wrangle up some new clients. I have no complaints, because him dealing with the clients means I don’t have to deal with them. All I want
to do is work. Besides, as much as I enjoy our gossip sessions, Colin has a bad
habit of micromanaging.
It’s a warm day, and with no
one around I can take off my shirt and collect some rays. I slip into the
rhythm of the work, and am pleased when I reach that state where I can think
without thinking.
A few hours later, I have
reached the shaded steps near the garage, and am about to slip my T-shirt back
on when I hear a door. Misty Olsen stands on the top step in an elegant
ensemble: chocolate-brown dress, gold earrings, a copper-colored scarf. Misty
is the epitome of the mousy brunette, but like I said she can be unexpectedly
sexy. Something about my midway-dressed state puts a weird charge in the air.
She gives me an embarrassed smile.
“Hi. I’m meeting Mac for a
fundraiser in Los Gatos.”
“You look good,” I don’t
say.
“Oh,” I do say. “Have a good
time.”
“I hope you finish soon!
It’s got to be hot on that deck.”
“That’s all right – I’m in
the shade now.”
“Well. I brought you a Coke
from the garage. I’ll just leave it on the ledge here.”
“Oh. Thanks!”
“Well… Bye.”
“Have fun.”
Truth be told, I’m pretty
well-stocked. Colin once had a scary brush with heat stroke, so he’s pretty
insistent on throwing Gatorades at me. But still, as soon as Misty drives off,
I go for that Coke. Soda isn’t even all that good for hydration, but when
you’ve got one fresh from the fridge, little beads of sweat on the can – oh,
there’s nothing like it.
Clients of contractors
should understand this. I know you’re paying good money, and honestly there’s
no time that Colin and I aren’t shooting for the highest quality, regardless.
But with this single 50-cent Coke, Misty has purchased gratitude and loyalty,
and a good feeling that will enable me to work that much harder on her deck.
As it turns out, I need
every edge I can get, because the finishing slog is brutal. In the shade, the
deck drinks up very little of the stain, which means more wiping. But I’ve got
no choice; I’ve got to finish this first coat or our schedule will be all
screwed up.
Finally, as the sun lowers
over the ocean, I finish the last few planks. I take care to get all the rags
into the water-buckets, and I take a look down to discover that I am a complete
mess. So here I am stripping off again, a little spooked at Misty’s previous
entrance. I use the few remaining rags for an all-over wipedown, then I take my
softball gear out of my cleverly concealed duffel and get all suited up. I may
be utterly destroyed at all available joints and tendons, but it’s time to
play.
I cruise the familiar
downhills of Highway 9, locked in on a Giants game, the delicious roll of Jon
Miller’s baritone, Tim Lincecum casting his usual spell on opposing batters. I
arrive in time to get in a few warmup tosses and then we’re playing. Truth be
told, I have my best games when I am utterly exhausted. I think it’s because I
truly couldn’t give a shit, and there’s something about apathy that makes for
good softball. I am retired to second base these days, and the position suits
me. During twenty years at shortstop, my fondness for diving brought
fair-to-middling results – the throw to first is just too long. But at second
I’ve got all the time in the world, time to gather myself, get to my feet (or
at least my knees) and make that throw.
Tonight, however, I am
merely the sidekick. Doug, the Japanese fireplug with the surprisingly wide
range, is nabbing everything. He feeds me two perfect double-play balls in the
first three innings, and in the fifth we are offered the chance to achieve the
unthinkable. With men on first and second, the batter strokes a hard grounder
that brings Doug into the baseline. He tags the lead runner and flips it to me
at second. In the slow-mo nature of moments like this, I know immediately
what’s up: we’re going for a triple play. In his rush, however, Doug has tossed
the ball too far from the bag. Instead of stretching for it, I try to pull it
back toward me for the throw to first, and it drops to the dirt.
At the end of the inning, I
join Doug on his trot to the bench.
“Sorry, man. I could have
stretched for the double play, but I could see that look in your eyes.”
“Oh, you read me right.
Triple play or nothin’. You don’t get too many chances at greatness. And I
totally choked on that flip.”
“A little excitement is a
dangerous thing.”
We call our team the Bums,
and we too often play like it. At 47, I am a master strategist (at 47 I have to be), and it drives me crazy, the
stupid things we do on a regular basis. Like Marcus, our blowhard left fielder.
Good with the glove, impressive arm, no more brains than a sack of caramels.
Gets up with the bases loaded, one out, and rolls one down the line for an easy
third-to-first double play. Hit that ball anywhere else on the diamond and
you’ve got at least a run.
We lose by the usual
brutally small margin, and I walk with Doug to the parking lot.
“Kids still small? No one in
college yet?”
Doug chuckles. “The oldest
is four. The youngest is still in diapers.”
“Good. I’m tired of finding
out my friends’s kids are graduating Princeton.”
We walk a few feet in
silence. I take note of Doug’s new-style softball backpack, two bats pointing
skyward in their holsters. He looks like Clint Eastwood, riding into town with
a pair of shotguns. Doug is my only teammate anywhere near my age – maybe 38.
Thank God, because all these youngsters make me feel like an alien.
“How’re things with you?” he
says.
“Oh, same ol’. Lotsa work,
which is good. Couple of operas. Occasional bouts of sex.”
“Ha! You make it sound like
boxing. You oughta be a writer.”
“I’ve thought about it.”
I haven’t told Doug about
the blog. Hell, he’s the only one who knows about the opera thing at all. The
field lights blink off. I have to slow down while my eyes adjust.
“I have the feeling that
something extraordinary is about to happen. I have absolutely no basis for
this. But you get these… signals.”
“I get those. Until I choke
on the throw to second.”
“Ah, but what I’m
envisioning is even bigger than a triple play.”
“Nothing’s bigger than a
triple play.”
“Welp. Here’s my car. See ya
next week.”
“See ya. And for God’s sake,
clean off that nasty arm of yours.”
“Oh. Yeah.”
Sixth inning. Grounder to my
right. I take a full-on dive. The ball ticks off the edge of my glove and heads
for center field. My throwing arm lands on a gravelly patch of dirt. In the dim
light of the parking lot, I touch my arm to my softball pants, leaving a
Rorschach blotch of red. I laugh. It’s good to be a guy. It’s good to bleed.
Three
For once, my opera-day
schedule is devoid of adventure. A half-day pressure wash above the Lexington
Reservoir, top of a freakin’ mountain, it’s hard to believe that places like
this exist. Much as I hate driving that dirt road to my cabin, I cannot resist
the chance to get myself clean. So I take my clawfoot bath, sunlight ticking in
through the madrones, doll myself up in the usual black suit, then pick out a
striped burgundy tie that Katie gave me.
So
I’m all moussed up and back on Interstate 280. It’s pretty hot outside, so I’ve
got the AC blasting away like a Wagnerian tenor. I slip in a Foo Fighters
cassette to give myself some audio contrast, and I’m feeling good.
The luxury of time allows me
to scout the curbside parking spaces, and I nab one just outside the Civic
Center garage, with a meter that stops nicely at 7 p.m. I arrive at the press
room a half hour before curtain, and I relish the chance to sit on a couch with
a coffee as I scour the program. This one’s got a vastly entertaining piece on
the life of Alexander Pushkin, although the language drifts into that
neo-Dickens that opera writers feel obligated to adopt.
Just across from me is a
television monitor showing the stage. They’ve given the production a full-size
title screen, a Russian village in the style of Chagall, Yevgeny and Tatyana
drifting overhead, accompanied by a flying cow and a violin. I’ve always
wondered if they use this monitor just to track the show, or if they force
late-arriving critics to sit here and watch the first act on TV. Fortunately, I
have yet to test the system.
I finish my coffee and
article and head for the refreshment table, where Delores has arrayed a fine
selection of crackers and spreadable cheeses. It’s good to be a critic. Delores
is occupied with her twenty-some guests, so I finish my munchies and slither
into the hall.
Tchaikovsky is such a mixed
blessing he’s almost a frappé. The orchestrations are lush, the vocal lines
soaring and graceful, but he’s certainly in no hurry to tell a story, and not
overly fond of quick tempos or jaunty rhythms. I saw Joan of Arc last year, and it literally put me to sleep. “How could
you possibly make Joan of Arc boring?” you ask. Mostly by following that
brilliant Russian tradition of keeping all the action strictly offstage. That
way, all the characters can gather to discuss it after-the-fact. It’s like skipping
the football game so you can get to the exciting post-game wrapup.
Pushkin was hardly innocent
of this himself ; his works are more dependent on social commentary and
descriptive details than plot. But somehow his verse novel inspired
Tchaikovsky’s most entertaining opera. Perhaps because the composer and his
co-librettist, Shilovsky, preserved much of Pushkin’s language and were happy
just to skim the cream from his story. They didn’t even call it an opera,
opting for the phrase “lyric scenes” and trusting that their audience had
already memorized the original novel.
The cast is certainly
promising. The title singer is Jesus Cortez, a Venezuelan baritone who came up
through SFO’s residency programs and is threatening to become the company’s
biggest find since Anna Netrebko. Playing Lensky, Yevgeny’s best pal, is Ramon
Vargas, a tenor who utterly knocked me out in last year’s Elixir of Love. That pure, lyric – dast I say Pavarottian – tone,
delivered with such ease, and a remarkable level of comfort on stage. With the
two of them, the papers are calling it “the world’s first Latino Tchaikovsky,”
but of course at the opera it’s just another night.
The most preposterous role
is Tatyana, a teenager who is rarely played by anyone under 30. It takes at least that long just to develop the
required vocal skills. But for once it’s not Maddalena’s singing that’s
impressing me so much as her acting. I’ll save the details for later, but her
handling of the Letter Scene is a revelation.
It’s a traditional
production, sometime in early 19th-century Russia. They’ve outfitted
her in a white country dress with floral patterns in blue. Her honey-blonde
hair hangs long down her back. She’s gorgeous, as usual.
At the end of the act, I’m
entirely wired on the performance. I’m loitering between the lobby and the
south hall when I find a woman in a beaded silver-blue dress advancing my way.
It’s Delores.
“Mickey! I’m so glad I found
you.” She hands me a blue envelope. “Sorry, have to run. Ta!”
She heads off to the lobby,
leaving me feeling like the straight man in a Neil Simon play. I open the
envelope to find a photographic note card portraying a collection of
pineapples, mangos and bananas in Mozartean gowns and waistcoats. The caption
reads Cosi fan tutti-frutti. Inside
is a handwritten note in a smooth cursive.
Would love to talk with you about your
writing. Please meet me at Jardiniere one hour after curtain.
Grazie – Maddie
I scan the walls, looking
for hidden cameras.
The rest of my evening is
its own rather enjoyable brand of hell. I need to take in enough to support a
reasonably intelligent review, but how is one bit of it going to penetrate my
brain when I know that I will soon be talking to Tatyana herself? (She turns
down Onegin, standing in her regal scarlet ball gown, nicely married to
royalty, every woman’s dream revenge for a first love scorned. And yet, she is
heartbroken.)
The worst part is that
post-performance hour. I understand all the cleanup, undressing, meetings with
friends and fans, but it leaves me with sixty absolutely unkillable minutes.
The ushers are eager to clear everybody out, so all I’m allowed is my visit
with Miss Tebaldi and the adjacent men’s room. Five minutes. After that, I
figure it’s a good idea to fetch my car and re-park it nearer to my final
destination. Ten minutes. Then I take a stroll around City Hall, but it’s
getting cold. I am downright euphoric to find a copy of the Bay Guardian, sitting alone in its box,
and I make my way to the bar to sit and read.
Jardiniere is like the most
elegant retro-‘60s Eichler living room you’ve ever seen. Entering the double
glass doors, you encounter a wide curve of staircase to your left. Straight
ahead is a horseshoe bar with cut-glass ornaments, and along a brick wall to
your far left you’ll find a series of long, straight couches with square
leather cushions, the seating enclaves marked off with armchairs and
glass-topped coffee tables.
The hostess, a young
brunette dressed in black pants and shirt, leads me to one of these couches,
nicely sheltered by the bottom of the staircase. Looking up, you can see
dining-room tables next to the upstairs railing, patrons peering over as if
there’s some kind of a show down here. A nice-looking redhead in the same black
uniform perches on an ottoman and takes my order, a lemon-drop martini. But no
appetizer. I’m hungry as hell, but I don’t think my stomach would be able to
handle it.
The place is pretty full,
but not packed. It’s hard to figure the demographics – locals? business types?
tourists? – but the clothing and hairstyles project a general air of wealth. I
open my paper and pretend to read, but the final fifteen minutes are horrible.
Every voice that jumps out of a conversation, every opening of a door yanks on
my strings. I feel like an actor doing his first Hamlet. I can’t pull this
off! They’ll never buy it. What’s my first line? Oh shit. Why couldn’t
Maddalena Hart remain in the comfortable realm of mythic figure? What the hell does she think she’s doing,
fraternizing with commoners?
She’s wearing blue jeans.
Black pumps, a gray suit jacket over a black blouse. And a gray fedora with a
silver band. She stands in the open area, looking around, and her gaze settles
on me. She smiles. Why the hell would Maddalena Hart know my face? Perhaps I’m
mistaken, perhaps I’ve got myself thinking that every woman who comes through
that door is a diva. But here she comes, and those enormous green eyes cannot
possibly belong to anyone else. I rise from the couch and I manage not to fall
on my ass. She smiles and takes my hand. I hope I’m not sweating. I hope my
breath doesn’t stink.
“Mickey!”
“Hi.” One word, two letters.
That’s all I’m going to venture.
“Excuse the film-noir hat. I
don’t exactly have a Britney Spears paparazzi problem, but we are near the opera house, and for some
reason the hat seems to throw them off.”
“Oh. Yes. I…” Three words.
I’m useless.
She nods toward the
armchair. “May I?”
Silly question. She can sit
wherever she wants. She can set fire to my hair. What am I, the armchair
police?
“Yes,” I say. “Please.”
Okay. That was pretty good.
She sits down and crosses
her legs. Her face is very large. That sounds odd, but I have heard that it’s
advantageous for performers to have large heads. I’m sitting across from an
album cover. Cripes. The waitress arrives and asks about a drink. Maddalena is
wearing pink fingernail polish. She dangles a hand over her knee. Her hand is
very white.
“Whatever he’s having.”
“Lemon-drop martini?”
“Ooh! Yes.”
The waitress leaves.
Maddalena studies me, as if I’m supposed to say something. She has heavy
eyelids, a sleepy look. Bedroom eyes. Lauren Bacall.
“Lemon-drop, Mickey? Isn’t
that a little gay?”
“Well, I’m… I guess… Sweet
tooth.” I’m pathetic.
She runs her left ring
finger along her lips, done up in a subtle pink, almost mauve. Her lips are
almost as pillowy as on the album covers, with those little crinkles at the
edges. Her speaking voice is husky, tired from the night’s work, though clearly
soprano, her accent that enunciated American that verges on European. No trace
of her native New York.
“God, Mickey. How do we get you past this celebrity thing? I know there’s a real person in there, and
I want to talk to him. But you’re all decoupaged into place, like I’m talking
to a Rodin. Would it help if I farted?”
“I’m… sorry?”
She leans forward and lowers
her voice. “Opera singers have tremendous control. It’s all in the diaphragm.
Backstage at the Met, we have competitions. Watch out for that Samuel Ramey. If
he’s had cabbage or Brussels sprouts, he has been known to fart the overture to
Giovanni.”
It’s that last image that
gets me. I chuckle.
“That’s it?” she says. “A
little snort? This is some pretty top-notch material, buddy.”
I attempt to sip from the
lemon-drop, and I realize what a precarious vessel is a martini glass. But the
sweet and the cold of it does me well.
“I’m sorry. It’s just…
you’re stupendous. You’re everything I…”
Maddalena places two fingers
to my lips. “No! Don’t even start. I
know exactly what you think of me, so… just… No!”
Maddalena Hart’s fingers on
my lips. I’m going to pass out. She sits back and gives me a sly smile, a
little wider on the right. She flicks her tongue along her front teeth. I’ve
heard that singers do this, always adjusting the equipment.
“I get more flattery than a
person should. There’s a certain pressure, having to answer to all that
admiration. As for tonight’s performance, I’d rather read about it on your
blog.”
The waitress arrives. Maddie
gives her lemon-drop an appraising sip.
“Mmm. The citrus feels good
on the throat. And, where was I? The blog! The level of understanding, so much more important than flattery. It’s like
this: I’ve been reworking Fiordiligi with my voice coach, Luigi Corazonne. I do
this every few years; it keeps my performances fresh. So I asked the staff at
SFO to gather all the reviews for me. I wanted to see what kind of impression I
was making.
“Most of them? Garbage.
Either critical for all the wrong reasons or favorable for all the wrong
reasons. Drives me insane. But way
down at the bottom I find a printout of your blog, and I am mesmerized. This
historical/critical hybrid, I’ve never seen anything like it. And all these
connections between Adriana and the role. We all know the basic story,
especially the loony tessitura, but I have never seen all the threads drawn
together like that. The affair with da Ponte. The custom-composing by Mozart,
Adriana’s lesser-known shortcomings.
“I felt like I had never
fully understood why the part was written that way. And your description of the
drops – the hang-glider, the toe-dipping. That was so affirming, because that’s
the flaw in almost every Fiordiligi I’ve ever seen. I was so determined not to
stomp those notes. Visualization is drastically important to me, and now I have
this lovely image to help me whenever I sing the part.
“I’ll tell you, Mickey, most
of the critics out there are so damn
sure that they know everything about opera, and never do they land on something like that. It’s all bluster. When
did they all give up on learning? I
didn’t. You didn’t. And no offense,
but I get the feeling that your operatic knowledge is anything but
encyclopedic. But maybe it’s the humility, the not knowing, that opens the way to discovery. Where did you come from, Mickey, and how do you come
up with this stuff?”
Maddie Hart the opera star
is tapping her finger into my chest. I cannot force a word past my mouth. I’m
an imposter. She immediately makes matters worse by taking off the fedora and
unpinning her hair. She shakes it out with a hand and lets it settle along her
shoulders, revealing subtle gradations of platinum, straw and sand. An elderly
woman in a black sequin gown creeps up from behind, program in hand.
“Ms. Hart? I hate to
interrupt, but you were fabulous tonight! Could I trouble you…?”
She hands Maddie the program
and a pen and waits as she signs the cover.
“Thank you so much!”
“Thank you for coming to the show.” The woman walks away, and Maddie turns
to me with a smile.
“You see what I mean about
the hat? It’s like an invisibility cloak. But opera singers have the most well-behaved
fans in the world. I would hate to
put up with those obnoxious movie fans. I asked you a question, young man!”
She slaps me on the knee,
another injury to my sense of reality. In doing so she leans forward, allowing
me a generous view of her cleavage.
“I’m sorry. What was the
question?”
She gives me a broad stage
laugh. I can see the little wrinkles at the corners of her eyes.
“Let me rephrase it. How did
you arrive at this unique approach to critiquing opera?”
“Oh. Well… I…” Hell. I was
just going to have to tell her the whole mediocre truth. It has to be some sort
of felony to perjure yourself to a diva. I take a deep breath.
“Absolute ignorance. I came
to opera late in life, with little musical knowledge. So I listened to
everything I could get my hands on, and I read everything I could. But still,
it wasn’t enough. I had to see it firsthand, but I couldn’t afford the tickets.
I have this friend who works at a community newspaper, and she said the local
performing groups were always offering her free tickets, whether she wrote
about them or not. With print media dying off, and arts coverage being hacked
to pieces, they’re desperate for any recognition they can dig up.
“So she told me I should
start a blog about opera, and request comps from the regional companies: Opera
San Jose, West Bay Opera, Mission Opera. If they gave me any trouble, she could
vouch for me. But they gave me no trouble at all. Fortysomething guy, corporate
demeanor, no problem.
“After that, however, came
the real puzzle: how was I supposed to write about these operas? I didn’t have
enough expertise to offer much of an opinion about the singers. Or the
production values, or the directing. So I covered my tracks with research, and
I discovered that almost every opera ever created has some fascinating
backstage story. So I connected that to my reviews, and I came up with
something that was, at the least, entertaining.
“The rest is in the details.
I had my newspaper friend hack up my stories until I became a decent writer. I
learned to upload photos, and made sure I got the credits right. I
double-checked the calendar and ticket info. Then I sent an email to the opera
to make sure they read it.
“A year later, I began to
find my reviews being quoted on singers’ websites, and on the season brochure
for West Bay Opera. I sent a query off to San Francisco Opera and was
absolutely shocked when they gave me tickets for the entire fall season. The
second production was Figaro, with
Maddalena Hart as the Countess. But that’s the story. I’m an imposter. I snuck
in through the back door. And now I’m sitting here talking to my favorite
singer.”
“Favorite singer?” she says.
“Or most famous singer?”
“Absolute favorite.” I’m
about to tell her the car story, but I decide that it would be too much. “How
far back in my blog did you read?”
She gives me an embarrassed
smile that takes off twenty years. (Perhaps embarrassment is a youthful
endeavor.)
“Okay. You got me. I
searched your blog for every reference to me, and I didn’t read about any other
singer. But I was pressed for time! Honestly!”
I raise an accusing finger.
“Aha! So you are a soprano.”
Now that our flaws are on
the table, the conversation rambles freely, and it’s easier to forget the
golden identity of the person with whom I am speaking. And I have always found
this to be true: find two people with a passion for opera, and the time melts
away. In this way, Maddalena Hart is everything I have wished for: an intensely
focused performer with a need to constantly poke and prod at the secret meanings
and nuances of her craft, to do anything to increase her understanding and
sharpen her skill. I try my best not to sound like I’m interviewing her, but I
do pick up some tidbits that are bound to pop up in my review.
Maddie and I close down the
bar, and we find that my car is parked directly behind hers. She opens her
door, tosses her bag and fedora inside, and turns to receive whatever farewell
I might offer. The lights of City Hall strike the low overcast and fall over
her in a soft mist, spelling out the brighter tresses of her hair, glimmering
in the corners of her eyes. Even if she were not Maddalena Hart, I would be in
love with her. I take her hand and bring it to my lips. Being a diva, she knows
how to accept this, with a smile and the subtlest dip of her knees.
“I can’t even tell you,” I
say. “So I won’t. Thank you for appreciating my appreciations.”
“Thank you, Mickey. I can’t
wait to read your…”
Maddie stops and looks down,
rubbing her eye as if a piece of dust has landed there. She looks up with tears
on her cheeks.
“Don’t ever stop writing,
Mickey. You do lovely work.”
She kisses me on the lips.
Then she gets in her car, gives me a wave and drives off. I wave back. Maybe
five minutes later, I remember to get in my car and start it up. I doubt very
much if I will have a problem staying awake.
On the lips. I wait until I can see the Stanford dish, and then I play “Song to
the Moon.”
Four
“Continue
straight for the next fourteen miles.”
There’s
no way I could have written that review last night. And this morning, I didn’t
really have the time.
“Continue
straight for the next thirteen point eight miles.”
But
between Maddie and Tchaikovsky and the Latino Brothers Karamazov, I have enough
raw material for a novella, and the first paragraph is pounding on my mental
front door like an angry landlord. Write
me! Write me!
“Continue
straight for the next thirteen point six miles.”
“Hey, Larry. Any chance you
can get this bee-acch to shut up?”
“Oh,
sorry.” He hits a button on his navigation screen. “After a while, you don’t
really hear it anymore. It’s just like being married – and you so totally didn’t hear that from me.”
Between the wife, two
daughters and what you might call an actively present mother-in-law, Larry is
gynecologically surrounded. But he’s got a fantastic degree of patience and a
wicked sense of humor to help him deal.
Despite
the over-persistent vocals, the navigator is a fascinating little gizmo. I
watch the little dot that is us as it crawls past the junction of I-280 and 92.
Me,
I’m a terrorist. I’ve got this gorgeous little nugget of plastic explosive
sitting in my pocket, next to my cell phone. It’ll only work if I find the
right target, and the right time. Larry’s not it. As father of two rambunctious
girls and builder of Silicon Valley startups, he’s got way too much on his
plate to keep track of my musical obsessions. We are alike in so many ways, but
we are outfitted with vastly different lives. I leave the explosive where it
lies, and I keep the conversation light.
“How’s
Calypto?”
“Pretty
good. Still in the development stages. But our investment capital is
super-solid, and I got a nice deal on the new facilities.”
Larry’s
sort of a CFO, although his companies are never quite large enough for him to
cop to the title. Gotta love the names. The first was InSync, one letter away
from a boy band. Next was Expedion, three letters away from an online travel
site. The new one, Calypto, sounds like a foot fungus suffered by Harry
Belafonte. But I shouldn’t make fun. I’m the one who gets the logo golf shirts
when the companies get sold.
Carla and Linda are in the
back seat, maintaining a heavy chatter. The subject, as usual, is education. It
seems like every one of their kids is headed for college, so they’ve become
experts on the new generation of SAT scores, the balancing of tuition costs
with scholarship offers, the all-important question of How far away? and the more important question of Why didn’t we have our kids further apart?
“Oh!
The campus. No kidding – it was actually named one of the top ten best-looking
campuses in the country. Gorgeous.
And I really do think she’ll prefer going to a smaller school.”
“Still
playing ball?” asks Larry.
“Amazingly
enough. All these young punks tryin’ to push me out, but they didn’t count on
my craft and guile.”
Larry
laughs. “Sounds a lot like Silicon Valley. Oh, geez. I better reactivate the
bee-acch.”
He
presses a button and gets immediate results.
“Turn
right, Sneath Road exit, two point four miles.”
“Well,
at least she’s got a new song.”
We’re
into the North Peninsula – Colma, Daly City, South San Francisco – about
two-thirds along my opera commute and deep into Cemetery Central, where the
dead outnumber the living. We swing through the arched gates of the military
cemetery and find infinite rows of white crosses – enough to fill a stadium.
Our arrival, as usual, finds the place in rare form, fresh flowers everywhere,
small American flags planted at five-foot intervals. It’s not really our choice
– Mom’s birthday just happens to be May 31 – but it’s nice that the place
always looks so festive.
We
take a left and spiral up the hill to the cemetery’s central feature, an
enormous flagpole surrounded by commanders, privates and sergeants. Her stone
is modest and horizontal, etched with the words Grace M., wife of LCDR Harold J. Siskel. It’s funny that she’s
lodged in such a boys’ club, but she certainly put in enough time as a Navy
wife to qualify.
After
sixteen years, we have all developed our rituals. I brush away the grass
clippings that have fallen into the engraved letters, then pull out any roots
invading the edges. Carla manages to find one of the military-issue flower
holders – a metal cone attached to a stake – plants it into the lawn and works
an arrangement of roses. They come from her house and Linda’s house,
descendants of the bushes from my mother’s garden. I would leave the house late
in the evening and use my car key to cut off a blossom for my date. My
favorites were orange with swirls of yellow; they smelled like citrus and
vanilla. A year after she died, my father discovered an enormous purple iris in
the center of the garden. “Don’t know where that crazy thing came from,” he
said, but of course we both knew where it came from. My mom had planted it the
previous spring, even as the cancer moved from her colon to her liver.
Sixteen
years later, we are beyond much need for reminiscing, much more apt to sit
around Mom’s name and talk about the kids, the jobs, the A’s, the Giants, our
much more entertaining cousins – sort of the same stuff we would be telling her
about, anyway. In California, it’s second nature to steal ideas from other
cultures, and in this my Scots-Irish clan is very Latino, very Dia de los
Muertos.
A
few minutes later, we have entered our quiet phase – each of us, perhaps,
trying to bring up an image of her face, wondering what she would have looked
like if she had attained the old age she so richly deserved, and trying to
recall what life was like before we learned how to pronounce the word
“metastasize.” Linda retells a piece of the family liturgy, how she took a walk
on Mom’s beloved beach, the day of her death, and found that someone had
written the name Grace in the sand. I
follow with one of my own, Mom’s habit of pointing out her favorite women to Dad
and saying, “If I die before you, you can marry her.” One of those women was Sharon, who eventually became our
stepmother. How we decided that the siblings should meet every year on Mom’s
birthday, and visit her gravesite. And then it gets quiet again. I shuffle a
hand into my pocket and pull out my grenade.
“Last
night, I had a date with Maddalena Hart.”
My
principal target is Linda, she who retains an innocence that can break your
heart. She lets out a gasp (God bless her) and looks at me with wide eyes.
“Oh
my God! Isn’t she that opera singer? What do you mean ‘a date’? You mean you
got to meet her?”
“She
asked me to meet her at a bar after the performance. We talked for three hours.”
My
next respondent is big sister Carla, who is most up-to-date on my opera life.
“Wow! That’s like… Wow! Were you nervous?”
“I
was pathetic!”
“Was
she nice?” asks Linda.
“Nicer
than I could have dreamed.”
I
realize that this level of celebrity gossip is too good not to make use of, but
my bragging has left me feeling a little tawdry. I already miss the sense of
anticipation, the lump of explosive that I have now squandered.
“Hey!”
says Larry. “I think I saw her on PBS once. She’s kind of a babe!”
“Oh
Larry!” I protest. “Maddalena is such an amazing artist that I would never even
notice such a thing!”
And
now we all laugh. Because siblings know better. And now I feel less tawdry.
We
head across the freeway for lunch and pie at Baker’s Square, and by the time I
get home I’m beat. That lead paragraph is still parked on my brainstep, ringing
the bell like a Jehovah’s Witness with a quota. I, however, am too tired to
lift a finger, so I take a swan dive onto the bed and I don’t get up.
Is
there anything worse than the overlong evening nap? When you get up it’s dark outside.
At first you assume that you’ve landed somewhere deep in the night. You feel
this awful regret over the loss of time, and then you realize that it’s eight
o’clock and you have an entire Saturday night in front of you. Then you hear
the sound of a car pulling down the dirt road and stopping at the end of the
drive. And then, for a long time, nothing.
I
stumble from the bed, fully clothed, and peer out the window. Katie’s out
there, but why hasn’t she knocked? In the faint light from her dashboard, I can
see that she has buried her face in her hands. I make my way outside and cross
the front yard, redwood twigs snapping under my bare toes.
When
she sees me coming she waves me off, as if she wants me to go back to the house
and pretend I’ve seen nothing. Yeah, right. I open her door and kneel on the
ground so I can pull her to my shoulder. She doesn’t look like she’s been
crying for long, but the moment she pulls the key from the ignition, it all
comes out.
“It’s
okay.”
“No
it’s not,” she sobs.
“I mean
it’s okay to cry.”
So
she does. This may sound odd, but there’s are few things more beautiful than a
crying woman. Because this is real,
this is what matters. I suppose this is one reason that I love opera. All that
raw emotion.
Five
minutes later, I grab her weekend bags and head for the living room, where she
gives me the full account. Katie has landed herself in a nice little torture
chamber. Given no choice but to move out of her house (she mentions police
visitations, implies abuse), she moved in with her sister’s family. This means
Katie and her two daughters stuffed into a single room, this means imposing on
a sister with her own children to raise – but this is the only way she’ll be
able to get the teaching degree, and be able to support the family on her own.
This afternoon, as I was dining with my sibs, Katie’s sister was giving her the
dreaded speech: “You need to make plans
for moving out.”
Katie
sits on my couch, nursing her nose with a Kleenex. “I can’t stand being in that
house! I can’t breathe, I feel so bad – but what else can I do? I have to think
of my girls.”
I
have no answers, but that’s not my job. I’m the safe harbor, the weekend
retreat. I toss a Duraflame into the fireplace and light it up.
“Have
you eaten? Can I make you something?”
She
waves a hand. “I had some McDonald’s. But I brought some brownie mix. Can you
make me some brownies?”
“Sure.”
I pour some red wine and hand her the remote.
“Make
sure you undercook them by a couple minutes. I like them nice and gooey. And bring
me the mixing spoon. I want to lick the leftover.”
She
gets into this bossy mode sometimes. But that’s okay. She spends every day on a
carpet of eggshells, so I don’t mind her roughing me up. Besides, I’m still
pretty fuzzy from my nap, so clear instructions are helpful. Amazingly, I have
everything the brownie mix demands – one egg, cup of milk, baking powder. I pop
the tray into the oven, then I run a finger through the mixing bowl and lick it
off. Yowza!
We
spend the next hour consuming the entire tray, along with a full bottle of Cab.
Katie’s feeling good, and kissing my ear. I warned her about that. It drives me
insane, and should only be undertaken with serious intentions.
“Mickey?
I want you to make it all go away. I want you to destroy me.”
She
pulls my hand inside her shirt. She’s a nipple girl, and can sometimes reach
orgasm with nothing else. Between red wine, luscious brownies and Katie’s tits,
all thoughts of Maddalena Hart and that first paragraph have escaped my mind.
Now it’s my turn to be bossy.
“Go
to my bedroom, take off all of your clothes, but don’t get on the bed just yet.
I’ll be right in.”
“Oh-kay!” She hops up and strips, leaving a
trail of laundry as she crosses the room.
I
race outside to the car and dig around until I find a brand-new dropcloth. When
I return to the bedroom, Katie is seated on a chair, wearing not a stitch, legs
daintily crossed. I open the plastic packaging, unfold the dropcloth and spread
it over the bed.
“Lie
down, honey – face to the mattress.”
She
squeals and takes her position, the plastic crinkling beneath her.
“Now
close your eyes and don’t open them until… Well, you’ll know when.”
I
dash away to the kitchen, where I pour an entire quart of olive oil into a pot
and warm it to the temperature of a hot tub. Then I take the pot to the bedroom
and slowly empty its contents over Katie.
“Oh
my God!” she moans. “That is so… That
is so…”
I
strip off and saddle her butt so that I may embark on a full-body massage,
working every muscle from head to toe. I manage to keep this going for a half
hour, as Katie maintains a rumbling moan beneath me. My muscles are getting a
little sore, but I don’t care. My cock becomes so rigid that I can no longer
ignore its pleas, so I insert myself into Katie’s pussy as I continue to
massage her back. I didn’t actually think I could do this. The inside/outside
rubdown has an immediate effect on Katie, whose moans are growing in pitch and
frequency.
After
a few minutes, I get another idea and run outside, erection bobbing like a
diving board, to dig up a box of rubber gloves. Katie is mightily curious about
my disappearance, but it helps that she’s halfway to a coma. I pull her hips
until that gorgeous white bubble-butt is pointed skyward, and insert one, two,
then three fingers into her pussy, her breathing working into an excited pant.
Then I pull on a glove and insert a finger into her anus. She tightens up,
putting some impressive pressure on my second knuckle, but then I put my
ungloved hand back to work on her pussy, and soon she’s accepting my multiple
intrusions with glee. I’m a freakin’ gynecologist, and a minute later Katie is
bucking.
She
collapses, my hands still inside of her – but I’m not done. The word was, after
all, “destroyed.” I pull a butt plug from my nightstand – a beginner’s model,
three inches long – and work it into her asshole. Then I collect some oil from
her calf, slather up my dick and re-enter her pussy. After all the attention,
she’s hot as a sauna, and I have to stop for a second before I go spurting out
all the fun. From behind, I can fuck her in standard doggy fashion as my pubic
bone pushes against the butt plug, sending both pistons in and out of her at
once. She starts ramming her ass back against me, slamming the headboard with
both hands and screaming all manner of high-pitched, unintelligible filth.
That’s what I like about the woods. Nobody hears. Except for Trey the Fish,
who’s probably shocked that a 47-year-old gets this much action.
Katie
comes violently, then yells at me to keep going, and thirty seconds later is
coming again, letting out a series of glissandos that would make Maddalena
proud.
I
can take no more. I pull out, stand up on the bed and jerk off as Katie waves
her much-abused ass at me. I shout as loudly as I please and send sprays of
semen over her back. Then I collapse next to her and rub the whole messy
vinaigrette into her skin.
“Destroyed?”
She
turns, eyes wide with energy. “Y-yes.”
“I’m
going to pour you a bath, honey.”
“Mickey?”
When I look at her again,
she’s crying, but I think I know what she’s trying to say.
“You’re gonna be okay,
honey. Just hang in there.”
I kiss her, fill the tub
with hot water and bubble bath, then I carry her from the bed and settle her
into the water, like a baby at baptism.
The straw-colored sun at my
bedside. Fifteen minutes later, she’s back, fully dressed, damp hair, ready for
church. I walk her out. She looks tired. Destroyed. I give her a kiss and say,
“The next step. That’s where you keep your focus. Just get to the next step.”
“What is the next step?”
“Pick up your kids, take
them to church. And don’t let them blackmail you.”
“Right. Thanks for last
night. It was a nice trip.”
I kiss her again and watch
as she drives away, raising a parade of dust. I would tell her that I love her
– because I’ve been where she is, because I understand. But I won’t.
My third wake-up comes
early: ten o’clock. The lead paragraph is back, knocking at my cerebellum like
a Girl Scout with a cart full of cookies. Still, I’m going to insist on the
ritual. I have some new soap that I’m dying to open. French-milled with Shea
butter and mango butter. It lathers
up in a yellow cream, with a ripe tropical smell. I raise my hands to my nose
and take it in.
Twenty minutes later, I’m at
my writing table. Across the way, Trey the Fish is setting up for a party. He’s
an international spear fisherman. No kidding. I went to one of his barbecues
and found myself chewing on a zebra-stripe manta ray from New Zealand. But even
exotic grilling and topless women will not stay me from my appointed rounds.
[Track 4]
I first learned the immortal
Letter Scene from Tchaikovsky’s Yevgeny
Onegin through recordings. I had little idea of the text, or the context,
but I loved the passion of its vocal lines, the uplifting breeze-like
woodwinds, the life-transforming back-and-forth of the character’s monodrama.
Which is why my first
encounter with an onstage incarnation was so unsettling. The regal music was
there, as were the dramatic vocal lines, but the supertitles stripped away all
the mystery. Basically, you had a teenage country girl attempting to write a
crush letter to her hunky new neighbor, and tormenting herself with a
night-long oscillation. “OhmiGOD! What do I do? I mean, like, if I tell him and
then he doesn’t like me, that would
be like a totally wicked bummer! Does he love me? Does he not love me? Argh!”
The biggest news about SFO’s
production is Maddalena Hart’s innovative approach to this scene. Hart manages
to take Tatyana’s irritating indecisions and paint them with a tennis-match
conviction – as if every flip-flop is, in fact, a solid, committed step in the
advancement of her argument. She does this by delivering each new flight with a
distinct attitude, expression or movement, helping us to step inside the actual
crazymaking mindset of a teenage girl, for whom each new thought marks an
entirely new direction in the course of her life, on par with the discovery of
Relativity. The ride is vastly entertaining, and brings a palette of new and
vivid colors to Tchaikovsky’s legendary scene.
I had a chance to talk with
Ms. Hart post-performance, and she confirmed my impression. Every few years,
she refashions her roles, going back to square one and seeking new revelations
about her characters. With the Letter Scene, she began with the translation,
imagining how each sentence would feel, mapping out her reactions, and using
certain keywords as guideposts. She wanted to be sure not to have the same
exact feeling or reaction more than once. Hart also credits stage manager David
Cox, who designed a choreography of movements to go with these reactions.
And now for the history. In
1877, as Tchaikovsky embarked upon the project, his sympathies stood firmly
with Tatyana, whose first confession of love meets with a heartbreaking failure.
Although Onegin handles the situation with sufficient tact – saying that he can
offer nothing more than a brother’s love – he later proves himself a crass,
shallow schmuck.
During the composition of
the Letter Scene, Tchaikovsky found himself in the exact position of his title
character. He received a crush letter from a former pupil, Antonina Milyukova,
a young woman he barely remembered. His dismissal was much more brusque than
Onegin’s, including an instruction for Antonina to “quell her feelings.” After
completing the Letter Scene, however, he reconsidered his rude behavior and
decided to make up for it by marrying
the girl.
This was a huge mistake.
Tchaikovsky quickly discovered that he was repelled by physical contact with a
woman, and celebrated his honeymoon by hurling himself into the Moscow River.
The anticipated pneumonia failed to arrive, so instead the couple separated.
Tchaikovsky paid her off at the rate of 6,000 rubles a year. Despite all of
this trauma, he finished Yevgeny Onegin
in the span of eight months.
Despite bearing three
children by another man, Antonina refused a divorce. Sixteen years after the
wedding, Tchaikovsky was caught flirting with a duke’s nephew. A court of
colleagues issued a secret missive ordering the composer to kill himself. His
death, soon after, was blamed on the ingestion of tainted water. More recent
biographers conclude that he was, in fact, carrying out the court’s
instructions. Antonina outlived him by 24 years, drifting from one asylum to
the next.
The creation of the Pathetique Symphony, one of the most
melancholy pieces of music ever written, is often credited to Tchaikovsky’s
lifelong struggle with his homosexuality. The piece debuted in 1893, nine days
before his death.
I
upload a photo of Maddalena in her Letter Scene nightclothes, wearing one of
her well-designed expressions: utter radiance, her eyes raised to the light as
she considers the possibility that Onegin’s feelings might be equal to hers.
Her hair looks like spun gold. I press Publish, and I take a beer out to the
porch. I’m surprised to find that it’s only midafternoon. Trey’s party is going
strong, a dozen rascally young guys, a trio of girls, drinking and laughing and
eating God-knows-what from God-knows-where. The road is packed with vehicles;
I’m not sure if I could get out of here if I wanted to. Then I remember that I
forgot to set my computer’s response-alarm. When I go back in to check, DD’s
already there. That girl really needs to get a life.
DevilDiva: Um… Hello? Am I reading this right? You
met Maddalena Hart?
Mickey: Yeah, I did.
DD: All right, you’ve earned your coolness points
for playing it low-key. But please! A few details for the groundlings?
M: She liked my Cosi
review, so she asked me out for a drink. I’m still a little in shock. Three
hours! We talked for three hours.
DD: Did you sleep with her?
M: OMG! You little drama queen. Are you trying to
create a viral rumor?
DD: Couldn’t hurt your numbers, honey. So what was
she like?
M: I told
you I didn’t sleep with her!
DD: I sorta meant, ya know, personality-wise.
M: Doh! Charming as all hell. So much as I imagined
her that it sort of surprised me.
DD: You were surprised by the lack of surprise.
M: Exactamente.
DD: Looks?
M: Well, no one’s as perfect in person as they are
on stage. But I rather like the little flaws. Less goddess-like, more human.
Those eyes, though. Wow.
Cordell: I find that her eyes are even better in person.
DD: Jesus! Am I the only one who hasn’t met her?
C: I’m a voice coach, honey. I meet ‘em all. But I
wanted to thank you, Mickey, for that story about Tchaikovsky. I’ve heard
little bits of it, but I’ve never seen it spelled out in such a beautifully
tragic arc. And the secret suicide command! Is that new?
M: Yes, it is. It was discovered in somebody’s
archive, and reported in a biography a couple years ago. Of course, it might
also have to do with the increasing openness about homosexuality.
C: Amen for that. Meanwhile, so glad you got to meet
Maddie! She is a delight. A bit
mad-making sometimes, how neurotic she gets about the details – but that’s what
makes her the best.
DD: Yes, and now I have an additional reason for
disliking her. She’s met the legendary Mickey Siskel.
C: Maddalena is not our only green-eyed soprano. Mee-ow!
M: I’ll meet with either of you, anytime. I shan’t
forget my roots, now that I’m hangin’ with the stars.
DD: You got a deal.
C: Come up to Seattle and see me sometime.
M: Thank you, Mae West.
I have successfully given
birth to the lead paragraph, and everything that follows, and once the gang
leaves the comments page I realize what a weekend I have had, and how exhausted
I am. I dial up a baseball game – one that I have no intention of watching –
and I collapse on the couch.
Hours later, I awake, and I
realize that I’ve done it again: the accursed evening nap. It’s dark outside, a
whisper of sunset still in the heavens, and Trey’s party is down to a handful
of smokers, a string quartet of glowing orange tips. I notice that the baseball
game has become a soccer match, and that my computer is running its
screen-saver, a labyrinth of colored pipes building and unbuilding itself on a
gray background. I roam across the room, hit the space bar to clear the
plumbing, then click the refresh button on my comments page.
Mad Huntress: You are a poet. I have never heard the
story of Antonina and Pyotr told so well. It is excruciatingly sad. I’m certain
that Ms. Hart had a splendid time speaking with you.
Five
One thing I love about our
decking business: I’m always discovering little enclaves of civilization that I
never dreamed existed. Today I stand atop a sunny hillside next to Summit Road,
ten miles east of Highway 17. Looking at the uninhabited mountains to my north,
it’s easy for me to imagine that I’m in the middle of nowhere. Fly a chopper
over that ridge, however, and you will find the million-plus inhabitants of
Silicon Valley.
Colin
is a magnet for UK clients. Today’s deck belongs to a Welsh couple, high-tech
immigrants who seem intent on re-creating their agricultural homeland. The
fenced-off slope beneath the deck plays host to two horses, four goats, and a
quartet of peafowl – two cocks, two hens. As I’m off-loading the
pressure-washer, I look across the property to find one of the cocks perched on
the branch of a pine tree, thirty feet off the ground. I never knew that
peacocks could get to such heights. Nor that they produced piercing calls that
could eat your brains out. I’ll bet that’s real
popular with the neighbors.
Colin’s
in a hurry to get to another client, so he sets me up with Gatorade and beef
jerky and heads out. The message is clear: I am to stay on-site with my
survival rations and get this deck cleaned up.
The
job presents immediate obstacles. A small balcony means that I have to set up
the washer just below, start up the engine, then climb a ladder, wand in hand,
and hop over the railing. Performing the precarious trip back down, I recall
Colin’s favorite cautionary: “Now don’t go breaking your neck. That would be horrible for business.”
The
shaded balcony railings are thick with moss, and already my clothes have
developed a layer of pond scum. Things get worse on the main deck, where the
cracks are filled up with dog fur and dirt from wintertime puddles. Running the
stream into the cracks, I am blasting myself with black muck.
Fortunately,
it’s a sunny day, so it’s simple enough to ignore my evolution into a street
urchin and enjoy the vista. I am forever delighted by the landscapes that
accompany my work, and I laugh when I think of all those years I wasted in
cubicles.
With
the assistance of Colin’s generous provisions, I am able to work straight
through, and am about to turn the corner onto the last run of railings when I
come face-to-face with an enormous peacock. He has perched on the railings and
raised his tail feathers in a regal display.
I
am half-dazzled and half-petrified. Understanding this posture as a mating
ritual, I fear that the peacock has taken me for a rival, or worse, a potential
partner. The majority of my concern lands on that long beak, which looks like
it could be razor-sharp. This was not
in the company guidebook.
This
calls for a jerky break. I back away, switch off the engine and head for the
cooler. There’s still a little ice in the water, and that first swallow of red-punch
Gatorade is a fantastic sensation. I grab a strip of jerky and plop myself on
the grass next to the driveway. The two goats – ugly, ugly creatures in the
grand British tradition – stand at the fence watching me with soulless eyes,
stretching their necks between the wires to nibble on the grass.
Once
I am sated, I look back toward the deck to find the peacock still there,
feathers at attention. I extend my break a little further by going to my car
and checking my cell phone. There’s a message. The voice is young, female and
nervous.
“Umm…
Geez. Hi, Mickey? This is Delores, from San Francisco Opera? We’ve got a bit of
a crisis here, and we were hoping you could help us out. Could you possibly
meet Ms. Hart this evening? Um, tell you what. If the answer is yes – and I really hope it is – just give me a time
and location and I’ll look it up. I’m really sorry for intruding like this, but
I figured at the least I shouldn’t go around handing out your phone number.
Well. Thanks.”
This
is the single most preposterous thing I’ve ever heard. Give her my Social
Security number, my credit cards, my left kidney, what the hell do I care? I
text her back: Coffee Society, Stevens
Creek Blvd., Cupertino, 6 p.m.
The
response is immediate: Thanks. I
return the cell to its nest and I look to the railing. Goddamn peacock still in
place. Goddamn peacock about to meet up with 2600 pounds per inch.
I’m
screwed. I’ve got the station wagon packed and ready to go, but it’s 5:30,
which leaves me barely enough time to get to the coffeehouse. Problem being,
I’m a mess, and I’ve got no change of clothes. Perhaps I should just show up
naked. I take off my Wellies (the Brit term for galoshes), revealing a distinct
line across my calf between mucked-up and not-mucked-up. Well, screw it. If
this is truly a crisis, she’ll have to take me as-is.
The
Coffee Society is a habit that goes back to my previous incarnation. It’s part
of the Oaks Center, one of the few survivors from the early-‘70s trend of
landscaped outdoor malls. The buildings are modestly proportioned, topped with
clay-tile roofs, marked by beamed overhangs, pebbled walkways and fountains.
And oaks, lots of oaks. The specimens out front are old, sprawling live oaks
that give the place the feel of a private university.
The
Society resides in an airy space with angled, open-beam ceilings that give it
the feel of a mountain chalet. The south and west walls are made entirely of
glass, providing a good view across Stevens Creek Boulevard to De Anza
Community College. The college supplies the place with lots of students and a
young, funky energy to go with the laptop techies and the groups of immigrants
who gather for boisterous chats. The college also provides artworks, currently
a collection of airbrushed celebrity portraits that includes a gigantic
painting of Heath Ledger as The Joker.
Although
my cabin has turned me into something of a recluse, I still come here to fight
off cases of lead-block (the inability to come up with that all-important first
paragraph) or to digest a Sunday paper. I also have the occasional need for a
really well-done cappuccino, and the Society is one of the last places in the
Valley to get one. My favorite source is Caleb, a slim twentysomething baristo
with curly blond hair and a ready supply of rhetorical jibes. When I arrive
looking like a kelp monster, I’m an easy target.
“Didn’t
I make it clear that this establishment has a dress code?”
It’s
easier to play along than to explain myself. I adopt an abject expression.
“I’m
very sorry, sir. But a group of ruffians made off with our washing machine.”
“Russians
you say? Damn those Russians! I suppose you’ll want your regular?”
I
slam the counter. “Yes! And I want it now! And a banana!”
Caleb
mutters into his T-shirt as if he’s wearing a wire. “Suspect is ordering a
banana.”
I
hand him my money and switch to the pick-up counter so I can watch the
production. He pours the standard rosetta figure in the foam, but first he
mixes cocoa powder into the espresso, which gives the image an extra sharpness.
The effect is almost a little Van Goghish.
“I’m
waiting for a diva,” I say, attempting nonchalance.
“Aren’t
we all?” He hands me my drink and dashes off to the next customer. I head for
the patio, a railed-off area out front. I’m barely four sips along when I spy a
silver Lexus with Tatyana at the wheel. Since when are prima donnas on time?
And
how does one greet a superstar when one is covered head-to-toe in algae and dog
fur? The quandary is eliminated when Maddie virtually trots to the patio and lassos
me with a hug.
“Hi
Mickey.”
“Hi
Maddie. I’m sort of… I’m filthy.”
“Don’t
care.” She’s not letting me go. This makes me oddly uncomfortable. All I can
see is that pile of lush hair, the straw, the wheat, the honey. I think she’s
afraid to let me see her face. Is she crying? Do I have another Katie on my
hands? I hope to God Caleb’s watching this.
“I’m
sorry,” she says. “All I was sure of was that I needed to find Mickey and give
him a hug.”
“That’s
okay. Can I ask…?”
She
finally pulls back so I can see her face. No redness, no sign of tears, but a
tightness in her features, a pinched anxiety.
“No.
I can’t. Can we go for a walk somewhere? I need to walk.”
“Sure.”
I give a longing glance to my half-finished cappuccino. Maddalena Hart fits her
fingers into mine, and I lead her across the street to Memorial Park.
The
park is a magnet for waterfowl, particularly Canadian geese. The resultant glut
of fecal matter necessitates a chemical treatment that turns the water hunter
green. We walk the asphalt path that circles the pond. I seem to be
compensating for Maddie’s silence by relating a rambling story about
duckherding.
“I
just didn’t think that Mama and her kids should be wandering around next to an
intersection, so I decide I’m the freakin’ Duck Whisperer and I start walking
them back toward the pond. We’re halfway across the field – and I’m feeling
like I need some really tiny cowboys on the backs of dachshunds – when some
five-year-old kicks a soccer ball at them. I coulda wrung his little neck. And
then finally, when I get them to the pond, this big old mallard comes out and
pecks Mama right in the forehead! And I’m thinking, Jesus! These animals are
savages. So I scare him off, and I manage to get them to another pond, but then
I’m thinking, Do we have any business pursuing these St. Francis fantasies? Are
we just screwing with Darwin? Do we have any idea that what we’re doing is
helping at all? Maddie, really – are you okay?”
We
stop at the entrance to a gazebo. Just across a narrow channel of water is an
amphitheater of terraced lawns. They do free Shakespeare there, and it’s pretty
cool, watching a play across a moat.
Maddie
looks at me as if she has no idea how I got there.
“It
looks nice over there. Let’s go sit on the lawn.”
“Okay.”
We
settle on the third terrace. I sit with my back to a low wall. Maddie takes off
her silver-gray jacket, sets it over my dirty shorts and lies on her side with
her head on my lap, looking toward the gazebo. She’s wearing a gauzy mauve
blouse, the fabric done up in stripes of different widths. I work up the nerve
to run my fingers along her hair, the way I do with Katie. I feel like I’m
breaking a law, like a commoner daring to touch the queen. She sighs and takes
a long breath, and sighs again.
“Even
here, even in my escape, I end up at a theater. It’s beautiful, though.”
In
my head, I’m trying to pull up the calendar on the SFO website. I saw her on
Friday, then probably a Sunday matinee.
“When
are you singing again?”
Another
sigh. “Never.”
Oh no. Not on my watch. But I remind myself that she’s a diva – literally,
a drama queen – and given to exaggeration. I spread my hand across her forehead
and use my thumb and ring finger to rub her temples. It’s a trick I learned
from my ex.
“What
happened, Maddie?”
She
hums contentedly. “Won’t tell you. But keep doing that. It’s divine. I love
you.”
Exaggeration, I repeat. But Maddie Hart
just told me she loved me. Jesus. Bring on the kryptonite. I focus my
superpowers on the tips of my fingers. I can’t remember the last time a woman
gave me a massage. I have become a
healer. I will soon have rock singers, ballerinas and movie stars lined up at
my cabin, seeking asylum. Maddie speaks as if she’s dictating a dream.
“I
realize you’re a fan, a devotee, and that I am taking complete advantage of
your feelings for me. But I had to get away, and I… I can’t tell you right
now.”
“Okay.”
Just
over the gazebo, I see a groundskeeper dragging a square of chain-link fence
over the infield.
“Maddie,
I do have one… obligation.”
I
take her to a grassy mound just above the bleachers, and leave her there while
I fetch the car. I give her a clean dropcloth to serve as a picnic blanket, and
a stain-speckled Giants sweatshirt in case she gets cold. Then I take my bag to
a nearby men’s room and change into my uniform (wondering why I didn’t change
into it before – duh!). Maddie’s eyes light up at my return.
“Well!
Mickey Siskel leads a double life.”
I
adopt a baritone radio voice. “Effete opera critic by day, at night Mickey
Siskel becomes Softball Man!”
“Yeah
and you’ve got the tights for it, too. Nice codpiece, by the way.”
“Round
these parts we call it a cup.” I demonstrate by rapping my knuckles against it.
“You wouldn’t want me to go castrato on you.”
She
gives me a stage laugh, a Merry Widow
laugh. Pure manna.
“Of
course not. I don’t need the competition.”
I
descend to the field, feeling like a doctor abandoning his patient. Doug’s
doing his pre-game stretches along the right-field foul line. He gives a look
past my shoulder.
“Jesus!
Who’s the babe?”
“I’m
not sure if you’d believe me.”
“Supermodel?
CEO?”
“Biggest
opera star in the world.”
“You’re
shittin’ me.” When I don’t say anything, he gives me a serious look. “Wow.
You’re not shittin’ me.”
“Nope.
Hey, let’s warm up.”
I
have this ham instinct that kicks in when someone comes to see me play. Where a
normal person might get nervous, I get phenomenally good. With Maddalena
Fucking Hart in the stands, I am destined for greatness. On the first pitch of the game, their hitter
strokes a ball up the middle. I’m heading that direction when the ball glances
off our pitcher’s glove and heads toward the spot where I started. I stop and
sprawl back toward first to knock the ball down, then I grab it with my bare
hand, lunge forward and backhand the ball to first just in time to beat the
runner. Maddie’s soprano whoop fills the field. I clamber to my feet and give a
small bow.
At
the plate, I take a pitch down the middle and push it a little too much toward
right, causing it to elevate. I am so focused on hitting line drives, I’m
muttering curses as I jog toward first, until I realize that the right fielder
has stopped, that the ball is rolling toward the duck pond, on the other side
of the fence. I try my best to fake a home run trot, pointing a finger to my
one-woman fan club as I cross home plate, and make a mental note to never try
that again. The temptations of Lady Home Run can be as fatal as Delilah,
especially to a leadoff hitter, and this one was just a glorious mistake.
Four-for-four,
two double plays (one started, one turned), five RBI, four runs. We win
handily, and on the last play of the game I sprint into right field to catch a
shallow fly over my shoulder. Much to my chagrin, my soprano audience lets out
a resounding “Bravo!” I suppose it’s payback.
After
running the line of hands at the pitcher’s mound, I climb the steps, bag in
hand, and she greets me with a hug.
“You’re
so good!”
“Thanks.”
“Ooh.
You’re bleeding.”
It’s
the scab from last week, which I probably re-opened on that first play. I blot
it against my thigh, adding to my collection of Rorschachs.
“Occupational
hazard.”
“God,
Mickey. You’re so butch, I’d swear you were latent.”
“If
that were true, I probably wouldn’t
go to the opera so much.”
She
grabs my hand, which still puts a shock through me.
“I
don’t want to stop, Mickey. I don’t mean this in… the usual way, but… could you take me home?”
I’ve
had enough of being cowed by royalty. My answers are getting clearer.
“Yes.
Anything you want.”
“That’s
what I like to hear.”
I’m
careful to explain to Maddie about my cabin, so she doesn’t think I’m abducting
her. She makes me stop on the dirt road at the first overlook, where the lights
of Silicon Valley look like a patch of luminous gladiolas. I’m trying to ignore
the gasoline smell of the pressure washer, the piles of decking supplies, the
dozens of empty Gatorade bottles, but I suppose if she can hug a man covered in
algae, she can put up with a few alien odors. But that’s the part I’m not quite
getting. Why does Maddie Hart seem to have so much faith in me? She’s behaving
as if she’s known me for years.
When
we pull in at the twin redwoods, Maddie wanders toward the orchard, where the
full moon is painting the field in silver. She stands at the edge of the road
and reaches up with both arms, as if she’s greeting an old friend. Her hair
creates a dazzling silhouette. As I come behind her, she takes a deep breath,
drawing in air with the entirety of her frame, and she does the most remarkable
thing. She sings. She sings the opening lines of “Song to the Moon.” In person,
without an orchestra, the sound is rough and raw. It is the voice that I have
depended on for a thousand small salvations, contained within this physical
vessel, this woman I have spent the evening touching and talking to. She
approaches the refrain and I close my eyes, anticipating Dvorak’s ethereal
turn, the musical equivalent of moonbeams, expecting my heart to collapse right
here in the field – and then, suddenly, she stops, turns, and laughs.
“I’m
being a very bad girl, singing in the cold air.” She gazes back toward the
moon. “But how could I not?” Then she turns back to me, notices something, and
reaches out to touch my face. “Mickey? You’re crying. Does that song make you
cry?”
“When
you sing it.”
She
places a hand against my cheek. “Good answer. Now let’s go inside before I do
further damage to myself.”
I
collect her bags from the car and walk her up the steps. I soon have her
settled on the couch with a glass of pinot noir and a plate of macadamia/white
chocolate cookies. I light up a couple of Duraflames. She twirls a lock of hair
with a finger, which I guess means she’s comfortable.
“If
you don’t mind,” I say, “I’m tired of being filthy in your presence. I’m going
to take a bath.”
She
smiles. “A bath? Not a he-man shower?”
“A
bath. Would you like to watch TV?”
“No
thanks. A little silence would do me well. In San Francisco, they don’t have
silence. They’ve outlawed it.”
In
the bathroom, out of Maddie’s presence, I can feel myself aging. My 47-year-old
body has suffered much abuse. But the water and the mango soap are magical, and
soon I’m feeling better. I slip on a pair of jeans and a golf shirt and return
to the living room.
She’s
asleep. I should have expected it. Whatever affliction has driven her my way is
exacting a toll. She is curled sideways, her head on the arm of the couch, her
jacket folded across the adjacent armchair. I take a blanket from my closet and
drape it across her, pulling it up to her shoulders.
I
fully expect to lie awake for hours, riding the celebrity buzz, but the body is
wise. I’m two pages along on a biography of Rossini when my eyes begin to
droop. I switch off my bedside lamp and drift away.
Next
to me, something is moving. I squint at the ceiling, pull my arms under me and
roll over. It’s Maddie, in striped yellow pajamas.
“Mickey?
Are you awake? Are you conscious?”
I’m
self-conscious. Because I tend to
sleep in the nude. But I notice that she’s lying on top of my comforter, so we
still have one degree of separation. A whisper of light seeps through the
windows. I’m guessing it’s six, six-thirty.
“Um…
Hi.”
“Hi.”
She’s wide awake, full of energy. “I owe you an explanation. But I can’t tell
you unless you’re fully conscious.” She taps a fingernail against her teeth,
perhaps the habit of a reformed chewer.
I
rub my eyes, throw out my arms and stretch everything else, gaining an
immediate preview of all the aches that will follow me for the rest of the day.
I manage to generate one-half of a smile.
“Shoot.”
“It’s
those goddamn minor characters. I’m rushing through costume changes, making my
way to the stage, running parts through my head, and I pass the green room,
where I see Monsieur Triquet and Olga and they’re playing cards with the
techies and laughing, and I’m thinking, Why do I have all this freaking stage time? This is crazy! Why
am I doing this impossible thing? I have placed myself in a position where the
Sunday afternoons of thousands of people, the day’s wages of a couple hundred
musicians, ushers, administrators, et cetera and a notable percentage of the
local economy depends on my doing this horribly difficult thing. Stepping onto
that stage is like a bungee-jumper stepping off the platform. Every instinct of
self-preservation tells you that you are putting your trust in a thin elastic
band – your training, your memorization, your rehearsals, your stage skills –
to prevent you from becoming a messy smudge on the rocks below. But I do it. I
take that leap and these sounds fly from my mouth and I fill the artificial
soul and emotions of this fictional character. And I do understand that I’m
very good at what I do, but sometimes I don’t really understand how I do what I do. What I’m afraid of
is…”
An
idea lands on her satellite dish, her eyes widen. She grips my shoulder.
“When
I was a kid, I would watch these cartoons where the character, let’s say Daffy
Duck, would be thrust out over the edge of the cliff. But he wasn’t aware of it, so he would just hover in
mid-air. However, the second he looked down and realized where he was – that’s
when he would fall. (Of course, part of the joke was that Daffy kept forgetting
that he was a duck, and could fly.) But here’s the lesson: it’s not the gravity
that makes you fall, it’s the realization
of gravity.
“On
Sunday, during the final act, for the briefest of moments, I realized that I
didn’t know my next line, and for just a moment I froze. Jesus, bless him, saw
my predicament and bought me a second by kissing my hand. Then the conductor,
Donald, slowed the tempo just a bit – a grain of sand, but just enough for me
to recall the next line and smuggle it into the flow of the music. I’m sure
that no one in the audience knew a thing. But for me, for just that one
lightning-flash, a chink opened up in my little world, and through that chink I
glimpsed the enormous void of gravity and impossibility that underlies
everything I do. It scared the hell out of me.”
I
fully expect her to break into tears, but this is not a crying thing, it’s
something closer to the brain. Anxiety. Fear. She tucks her head into my
shoulder, I wrap an arm around her as best a civilized-but-naked man can, and I
stroke her hair. I am Mickey, who solves all problems by stroking hair. We lie
in pools of faint light for fifteen minutes. Maddie’s breathing slows to a
regular pace and she says, “Mickey? Could you make me some breakfast?”
Last
Thursday’s inspired round of grocery buying has left me in good stead. I lay
down a base of sausage, wait till it’s sizzling in grease and then slice in
some onions, red potatoes and Yukon gold potatoes. When everything’s fried up,
I stir in six eggs, and dish out our portions when they’re still a little
undercooked. When I deliver it to the coffee table with a pre-sliced grapefruit
and fresh-ground coffee, Maddie looks at me as if I’m Onegin, and I’ve just
said yes.
“My
God, he cooks too. Why have you not been snatched up by someone?”
I
laugh. “That requires an answer of
Wagnerian length. I’ve got a simpler question for you, though. When do we need
to get you back to the opera?”
She
gives my query a long, thoughtful blink. “Thursday. My final performance.”
“As
Tatyana.”
“Tata,
Tatyana. Then I start on Mimi.”
“Really?”
I take a forkful of my scramble and chew.
“I’m
a little old for Mimi. I have to find a way to use that.”
“Oh
come on, you’re not…”
“Of
course I am. A singer spends her entire life playing teenagers, being
constantly reminded of how old she is. And then, when her career is just about
over, they let her play the Marschallin. Finally! Someone her own age. But then
that scares the hell out of her, and she wants to go back to playing the
teenagers.”
I
point a fork at her. “You are
involved in a weird industry.”
“Indeed
I am.” She takes a sip of coffee and gives a satisfied sigh.
“So
I take it,” I say, “that by recruiting me as your rescuer, you have given me
responsibility for getting you back on that stage.”
“This
is what I do. When my cup of stress runneth over, I gleefully share it with
others. I’m lucky to have an occupation where I can get away with this.”
“So
you’re in my hands? I can do with you what I will?”
“That
sounds a little provocative, but yes. I give you the reins.”
“Are
you a hiker?”
“Yes.
I started to look like Montserrat Caballe a few years ago, so I hired a
personal trainer. She works me so hard that a critic recently made flattering
remarks regarding my derriere.” She gives me a look that threatens to melt me
into the floorboards.
I
pretend to take a long time chewing a recalcitrant pepper. I really have no
good response.
“It’s
all right, Mickey. It’s more than all right. It made me feel 14 years old.
Maybe that’s why I thought you could save me from the Daffy Duck Syndrome. And
I was right. Last night, watching you hurl yourself around the infield, that
was… thrilling.”
“I’m
a ham.”
“Oh,
and I’m not? Maybe that’s why we understand each other. Now do your job and
find me a way out of this labyrinth.”
I
take a swallow of coffee, relishing the bitterness as it spreads over my
tongue.
“After
breakfast, you will take a long bath in my clawfoot tub. You will use the mango
soap, which is produced by Valkyries in Valhalla. You will keep the window open
so you may gaze upon the madrone forest. Then you will put on some hiking
clothes – because today, you will be put to the test. Am I clear?”
She
spoons a chunk of grapefruit into her mouth and smiles. “Sir yes sir.”
As
Maddalena bathes, I step to a spot just east of the twin redwoods and manage to
work my cell phone up to two bars.
“Micko?
What’s up, lad?”
“Can’t
come in today. Really sorry.”
“Under
the weather, are we?”
“You
remember our agreement about days off?”
“Throwing-up
sick or a fantastically gorgeous woman.”
“That
last one there.”
Colin’s
voice goes up an octave. “Really? Anyone I know?”
I
consider keeping this to myself, but I don’t see how I can. The man is going to
spend the day sweating on a deck on my behalf.
“Maddalena
Hart.”
I
don’t need to see his face to know that Colin is beside himself. His answer is
packed with incredulous vowels.
“No-o-o-oh!
Really! Egad, friend. You’ve hit the fucking jackpot. Well, you give her a
couple of… you tell her I said hello. And do let me know what’s up for
tomorrow.”
“Thanks,
Colin. I owe you several favors.”
“By
the way, one of the peacocks has disappeared. I hope we didn’t scare him off
with all the noise.”
I
know I shouldn’t say anything, but I can’t help myself. “Maybe he couldn’t
handle the pressure. I’d better see to Madam Diva. Ta!”
“Ta!
You devil.”
Relatively
speaking, Big Basin State Park is right in my neighborhood, so it seems like a
good place to start. We begin with the main trail, where we gawk at monstrous
redwoods whose birthdates end in B.C. After a stop at the snack shack for
granola and bottled water, I lead her to the trail, a half-mile uphill followed
by 3 1/2 miles down. The final half-mile follows a creek banked in thick stands
of fern and moss, then takes a right-hand jog to Blackberry Falls.
The
falls make a modest drop of 30 feet, but the aesthetic qualities are absolutely
premium. It’s got a wide release point, ten feet across, and the water that
doesn’t make it to the big drop funnels off to the sides, running in silver
rivulets along walls furred with moss. It’s very Celtic fairytale Midsummer
Night’s Dream, and of course Maddalena, perched on a wide rock next to the
receiving pool, gives it an operatic context.
“Lucia
di Lammermoor. The fountain, haunted by the woman whose corpse was left there
by her jealous lover. I think Lucia was in love with that story; I’ve always
played it that way. I think she was in touch with the other side. And then the
other side came over and got her. You know, you can go crazy just doing that role. Often during the Mad
Scene I fall into a kind of semi-conscious state, and finally click back in at
a reception three hours later, my stage director waving a hand in front of my
face and saying, ‘For God’s sake, Maddie, where are you?’”
I
have found yet another charming quality. In her blue jeans and plaid shirt,
Maddie shows no sign of the fish out of water. I also notice something about
her teeth. They are a little bigger and out-front than they should be, giving
her just a taste of the chipmunk, making her smile easy and accessible.
“I’m
amazed you don’t all go mad. Like
that soprano in Tales of Hoffman
who’s told not to sing or she’ll lose her life.”
“Antonia.
Eesh. How awful. You know, I was a pianist first.”
“Really?”
“I
was a hyper child. Smart but unfocused. Today they would pump me full of
Ritalin. Instead, they gave me piano lessons. I found out I was good at it. But
I certainly didn’t love it. I only
loved the part about being good. But I stuck with it, all the way through a
bachelor’s degree. I wasn’t good enough to do concerts, but I had just enough
vocal training – choirs, madrigal groups – to make a good accompanist for
singers. They really appreciated that I understood what was going on with the
vocals, the spots where I needed to back off, or wait on an entrance, or a
sustenato.
“One
of them was a tenor named Ray Atlas. He went on to a wonderful career in Europe
– even landed a tour of Les Miserables.
Occasionally, when we were rehearsing, I would make reference to parts of an
art song or aria by singing them. ‘Okay, on this part – la la la la – do you
want me to take a pause,’ et cetera. One time he stopped me, mid-phrase, and he
said, ‘You need to sing somewhere. You’ve got a lovely voice.’ I thought he was
just being nice, or flirting – but the next day I saw a flyer on the auditions
board for a community production of The
Sound of Music. And I thought, What the hell.
“The
Mother Superior. A little odd for a 23-year-old, but I had the right sound for
the part. We had a three-week run, and the audiences seemed favorable. ‘Climb
Every Mountain’ is quite the show-stopper, and I got really addicted to the applause. After the final performance I’m
hanging out by the stage, talking to some friends when this man comes up. He
looked very professorial: balding, spectacles, tweed coat. He said, ‘You need
to sing opera.’ And I said, ‘Well thank you!’ and we talked for a while and I
didn’t think much of it.
“When
I woke the next morning, the phrase You
need to sing opera was sitting on my nightstand like an impatient housecat.
I was pretty well-versed on the local voice teachers – being one of their pet
pianists – and I called the most charismatic of all: Dr. Charlene Archibeque,
six-foot-two blonde, former fashion model, sometimes called “Big Bird” by her
students (but never to her face). Dr. A was personable, but dead serious when it
came to music. I had not had time to prepare anything, so I took something that
Ray was working on – Don Ottavio’s “Dalla sua pace” from Don Giovanni – and sang it up an octave, as I played the chords on
the piano.
“When
I finished, I turned to find Dr. A wearing a very puzzled expression, as if my
head had just sprouted forget-me-nots. She excused herself, dashed down the
hall and returned with a colleague, Dr. Sharkova. Then she looked at me and
said, ‘Again.’
“When
I finished, the two of them exchanged a glance, looked at me with two very
uncharacteristic grins, and the next thing I knew I was in the counselor’s
office, sorting through applications to MFA programs. I ended up at the
University of Houston, got my degree and began to play the regional opera
companies. Three years later I won the Met auditions, and a year after that I
made my debut singing Rusalka. Which explains my freakish attachment to ‘Song
to the Moon.’
“So
I owe it all to two men who told me I needed to sing. And here’s the difference,
here’s what I tell my students. I played piano because I was good at it, and I
enjoyed the approval. I sing opera because I
love opera. And I’m good at it, and I enjoy the approval. And the dresses.
And the money – did I mention the money?”
She
lets out a laugh that rings off the walls. It’s good to see her take a step out
of her funk, and it occurs to me that she has told that story (which she has
doubtlessly told many times before) more for herself than for me.
I
peer at the angle of the sun and say, “We’d better get going. And it’s all
uphill, baby.” I take her hand and pull her to her feet.
“That’s
okay,” she says. “I’m tough.”
“Big
talkin’ diva. Hyah!”
I
don’t really know any diva-worthy restaurants near the park, so I drive over
the hill to Saratoga. My old reliable is Bella Mia, an 1894 Victorian that’s
been dolled up like a layer cake in tiers of sky blue, navy and white. It sits
in the village, a strip of shops whose curbside trees are forever wrapped in
Christmas lights.
Since
we are royalty, a parking spot opens
up right out front, and soon I am escorting Maddie to a table on the patio,
separated from the sidewalk by a picket fence. I love sitting here. I love
watching the villagers walking their labradoodles, the slow parade of Mercedeses
and BMWs and landscape trucks. I sit across from Maddie as she digs into a
basket of pastry bread and a spicy blended butter. After a day in the woods,
she looks pretty roughed-up, but she looks healthier.
It’s like stripping the paint from a beautifully varnished armoire and
discovering that the wood underneath looks even better.
All
through dinner – mozzarella-stuffed chicken for me, shrimp rigatoni for her – I
sense a buzz in the air. For a Tuesday, the place is pretty packed, and I can
feel the attention being progressively focused on our table. Saratogans are
more immune to celebrity than most. Two arts venues bring famous musicians
through on a regular basis, and the old-money culture frowns on fawning. So no
one makes an approach – at least, until we receive our espressos con panna. I
see Maddie’s green irises lift from her drink, and I turn to discover an
elderly couple, leaning on our fence like friendly neighbors. The man is tall
and gangly, with a head of silver hair and a fin de siecle moustache. The woman
is slim and cute, a lady who will never lose her girldom no matter how old she
gets. The man speaks in a voiceover baritone.
“I’m
sorry to interrupt, but my wife and I saw your Tatyana the other night and we
just wanted to thank you. It was magnificent.”
At
this point, Maddie becomes a slightly different person. Public Maddie. Overly
pleasant, effusive Maddie.
“Thank
you so much! I always wonder how it’s coming across.”
The
woman laughs. “How could you ever
wonder about that?”
“This is my wife, Jeri,” says the
man. They exchange handshakes all around. “I’m Leigh Weimers. Used to write a
newspaper column.”
“Yes!”
I say. “I was in your column. Turkey on a Volvo.”
“Ah!”
says Leigh. “Turkey on a Volvo.”
The
women look at us very blankly.
“Up
on Skyline Boulevard,” I say. “I saw a wild turkey, sitting on the hood of a
Volvo.”
“This
is Mickey Siskel,” says Maddie. “He’s an online opera critic.”
“Oh-hoh!”
says Leigh. “Dining with the enemy.”
I
think I am realizing what I like about Leigh. He is exceedingly comfortable in
his own skin, and he’s obviously used to talking to celebrities. If Maddie
weren’t here, I think I’d be hitting him up for some tips.
“Mister
Siskel has the good taste to adore my
singing,” says Maddie. “To a soprano, there’s no quality quite as attractive.”
“Say,”
says Leigh. He pulls out a pencil and a steno pad, which after all these years
must be permanent appendages. “Give me your website. I’d love to see what you
wrote.”
“It’s
operaville dot blogspot dot com,” says Maddie. “He combines his reviews with
historical tales about the composers. It’s delightful.”
“Can’t
wait,” says Leigh. “Well, we leave you to your drinks with a hearty ‘Brava!’”
“Brava!”
says Jeri.
“Grazie,”
says Maddalena Hart. “I would take a formal bow, but I’m sort of trapped.”
“Bye!”
they call, and continue down the street. Maddie watches them go, then turns to
me with a smile.
“Did
I do all right?”
“Yes.
Gracious. Not too effusive. Friendly,
witty.”
“You’d
be surprised. I had a colleague, ten-year veteran of the big houses, and I
heard her arguing with her admirers. ‘Oh, no, I wasn’t very good tonight, I had
so much trouble with that one part in
the third act, blah-blah-blah…’ I had to take her aside and tell her to stop
insulting the judgement of her fans. Even if they’re wrong, just smile and say
thank you.”
“I
think I know someone like that. But no, I give you an A-minus.”
“Minus?”
“Are
you insulting my judgement?”
“Oh,
you’re good.”
“I
just want to give you something higher to shoot for. Have you ever been to a
laser show?”
“No.”
“Well,
you’re about to. Let’s get our bill.”
“I’ll get our bill.”
“Bless
you, diva.”
“Prego.”
I
saw a flyer for the Cosmic Concert on the Coffee Society bulletin board. I
couldn’t believe it was still around. In the ‘70s, my bored high school self
went quite often, and rarely in a non-altered state. It took place in the De
Anza Planetarium, where Maddie and I are lined up with an assortment of college
students and aging hippies. We filter into our reclining seats and gaze at the
star-spangled dome as the laser-master creates a menagerie of ultrabright
shapes and patterns to a rock and roll soundtrack. I am amazed to find that
many of the pieces are the same ones I saw thirty years ago: the B-52s’ “Love Under
the Strobelight” with spinning red telephones, Bowie’s “Space Oddity” with a
drifting green astronaut, Yes’s “Roundabout” with the equivalent of an indoor
fireworks show. My pupils are officially on overdrive, and I feel Maddie’s
fingers wrapping my hand, her hair brushing my cheek, her lips brushing my
cheek. My nerve endings are performing Swan Lake, and I know any second I will
wake up.
After
the show, I’m tempted to drive to Maddie’s car – which is parked just across
the street – and ask her to follow me up the hill. But I don’t think I could
bear the separation. Also, she might wise up and drive back to San Francisco.
So
we drive the mountain. The streetwise deer come out to say “How you doin’?” We
slip into that mode where nothing need be said. We’re descending the dirt road,
nearing the first overlook, when Maddie takes her hand off my shoulder and
searches the controls on my dashboard.
“Where’s
the heat on this thing?”
She
hits a button and finds her own voice pouring from the speakers. It’s “Song to
the Moon.”
Her
smile blossoms like a morning glory at sunrise. “Pull over here.” So I do. She
says, “Keep the song on and turn the headlights off.” So I do, and I join
Maddie in front of the hood. There’s a spread of grass on the turnout, and the lights
of the Valley are laid out before us like a Cosmic Concert picnic blanket.
Maddie holds out her hands and I take the invitation. We dance to Dvorak, we
dance to the song of my resurrection, in the dark and cold mountain air. When
the tape pushes forward to “Sombre foret,” Maddalena Hart comes closer and
closer and I kiss my diva for all I’m worth.
There’s
a third cabin on the property, but it’s hardly ever occupied. Apparently, it’s
being rented by people who never vacation. The previous renter assembled a fire
pit, using stones salvaged from the nearby woods. Maddie and I sit on a log,
caretakers of a vigorous blaze, doing our best to roast marshmallows on the
tips of bouncy coat-hanger rods. I consume my latest victim - blessed with a
suntan worthy of a bikini model – and I decide that it’s time to ‘fess up.
“May
I tell you my story?”
“I
expected you might,” she says, and takes my hand. “I give you the downbeat.”
I
steer a ship’s-captain gaze over the flames to find my subject, a third up from
the horizon, three percent on the wane, a wisp of cloud crossing its beacon.
I
didn’t have much of a calling, but I went to college during the Reagan era, so
I ended up in business school. Finance. I was a very social creature –
president of my frat, an athlete, not unattractive. My guidance counselor said,
You’re good with people – go into stocks. You’ll be good with the clients.
So
I did. Didn’t even need a master’s. He was right, I was good, and it was certainly the right time to get in. Weathered
the early-‘90s recession, got into tech stocks, surfed my way into the Clinton
boom. I married a co-worker, Allison – marvelous girl, beautiful, sexy, smart
as a whip. We bought a house in south San Jose, we were in excellent shape. It
was time to start a family.
We
couldn’t. Seven miscarriages. We got pregnant, but poor Allison couldn’t hold
them. She quit her job, thought that might help. It didn’t.
Our
reactions were a little cross-gender. Each of our miscarriages hit me like a
steamroller. Deep depressions that lasted for weeks, couldn’t even get out of
bed unless I had to go to work. I saw each one as a real, living baby – a
creature that poops its diapers and giggles when you make a face – so each one
was, to me, a genuine, visceral death. Allison seemed wholly unaffected, as if
these were not deaths but failures, part of a process. She wanted to try again,
as soon as she was able, for as long as it took.
After
seven, I couldn’t do it any more. And neither one of us wanted to adopt. That
might seem selfish, but I think it takes a certain kind of couple, with a
certain mindset, to take that on. We were wise enough to know that we were not
those people.
For
a few years we went on as a childless couple. People do this, we said. People
live fulfilling lives without children. I was always the wiz kid at the
brokerage, always on the edge of things, so it was natural for me to get into
derivatives. It was very creative. I was helping to invent entirely new ways to
produce revenue; sometimes it felt like I was pulling cash out of the air. But
a few years down the line, when the inventing part was over, I came to realize
that what I was doing had no real value. I wasn’t producing anything that was
any good to society. I was only using this mathematical sleight-of-hand to make
a stacked deck even more unfair, to make filthy rich people even richer.
I
decided that I wanted out. With no children to provide for, and Allison back at
her old job, I thought I deserved a little time to lift my nose from the
grindstone. I met Colin at a barbecue. He told me that he was starting a
deck-staining business and needed an assistant. I had always done all the work
on our house myself – including painting the exterior and staining the deck –
and, in fact, had found it to be excellent therapy. So I took Colin’s card.
Allison
didn’t like it. She wanted us to be a power couple; she wanted us to keep
piling up money and play the games of the elite: Junior League, charity boards
– maybe the opera. We fought for a month, non-stop, viciously, noisily. I’m
surprised the cops never showed up. She called me a lazy, self-absorbed piece
of shit. I called her a money-grubbing bitch.
I
summarily quit my job and began working for Colin. I adored the work. I loved
the ache in my muscles, the long, quiet hours, the spectacular views. There was
even an element of voyeurism, getting to invade all these private spaces, to
see how other people lived. And mostly, I loved the concrete-ness of the
product. We took these graying, sun-baked, moss-covered wretches, cleaned them
up, stained them over and made them into beautiful objects. I pictured our
clients coming out for their morning coffee, seeing their shiny deck through
the kitchen window and thinking, Maybe
I’ll eat breakfast outside.
As
I got more into the business, I realized I needed a more appropriate vehicle. I
bought my sister’s station wagon. It had already suffered ten years of child
abuse (so to speak), so I certainly didn’t have to worry about being nice to
it. For years, I kept discovering bits of its previous life: a Spiderman action
figure under the passenger seat, a pack of bubble gum tucked under a seat
cushion, an empty juice box next to the spare tire. The only thing I didn’t
like was that the stereo didn’t work. But after hot days I was certainly
grateful for the air conditioning.
Eventually
I moved into an apartment. I let Allison have the house. But that wasn’t
enough. I learned from mutual friends that she intended to ruin me. She hired
an expensive attorney and took everything: assets, bank accounts, my BMW. I
have no idea why she deserved any of this, but it’s amazing what a good lawyer
can do. His most astounding move was to use the miscarriages as an example of
the pain and suffering she had to undergo during the marriage. My lawyer (the
big overpaid jagoff) had no answer for this. The settlement included alimony –
alimony! – and I was soon on my way to bankruptcy. An actual bankruptcy, however, might have put an end to the
bloodletting, so they left me barely enough money to live on. And to twist
slowly in the wind.
The
apartment was now too expensive, but Colin was moving out of his cabin and told
me what a deal it was. I really wasn’t sure about the location, but I was
getting used to driving mountain roads, so I thought, What the hell. It seemed
like a good time to get away from civilization. On a Sunday in July, I made a
trip to the cabin and unloaded my first wagonful. When I got back in, the car
wouldn’t start. I checked the battery terminals, the wires, made sure the alternator
belts were tight. I tried the ignition. Nothing. So there I am, beset by all
these doubts about living in the woods, and already I’m stranded. As the full
weight of this thought struck me – accompanied by the baseline depression I was
already living with – I could feel the life force seeping from my limbs. It
wasn’t sadness, or anxiety – those carry a certain emotional vigor. This was
me, an empty shell, nothing left. This was the bottom.
I
sat there in the driver’s seat for a long time, in something like a
psychosomatic coma. Couldn’t move, couldn’t lift a hand, didn’t have enough
energy to swear. Allison had finally got me. I pictured her somewhere, holding
a voodoo doll, gleefully raising a pin.
Some
time later I noticed the fuse box, just behind the parking brake. I was just
ignorant enough about cars to see this as a possibility. I slid off the cap,
and behold! two fuses that appeared to be loose. I pressed them back into place
and, holding on to the thinnest thread of hope, I cranked the ignition.
The
engine did nothing. But the stereo came to life! And out of the speakers came
this song of indescribable, ghostly mournfulness. I had no idea about the words
– they sounded Slavic, maybe Hebrew – but I could hear the pleading, the
unbearably beautiful sadness. And the voice. I had the usual pedestrian ideas
about opera – that snooty thing that had nothing to do with real life. But this
voice, this woman, was so much the opposite. The voice was big but intimate,
confiding. I’ve been there too, she
said. I know how you feel. I imagined
her as the mother of my miscarried children.
Then
the orchestra began to well up, and the woman’s voice rose to these long,
sustained notes. I felt the sound strike me at a point just beneath my eyes,
and I sat there in my car, sobbing. A minute later, the woman sounded like she
was pleading for her life, and then, suddenly, that was the end. Another song
began, and I cranked the ignition, and it started!
I
find Maddie trying to suppress a smile.
“‘Song
to the Moon?’”
“Sitting
in that tape player, all those years, waiting for someone to reconnect that
fuse.”
“Me?”
“Yes.”
She
folds her hands beneath her chin.
“You
know, sometimes I get this idea that what I do has no relevance to real life.
Sort of like your derivatives. But then, someone tells me a story like that.
But I never dreamed that I faith-healed a car!”
“Well,”
I say. “It turns out it was the starter. Apparently, before they completely die
out, they can still work every fifth time or so.”
“But
only if you’re playing the right aria.”
“By
the right singer. No. I don’t give you complete credit for restarting the car.
But you did restart me. In any case,
I headed right up the hill, having no idea that I was driving to a tune called
“Somber Forest,” and I took it straight to my mechanic in Los Gatos. Colin was
nice enough to give me an advance so I could get it fixed. All things
considered, I remained at the low point of my life for perhaps ten minutes. So
I guess I can’t complain. You want another marshmallow?”
She
gives me a close-lipped smile. “I want another kiss.”
I’m
47, and I’m not dumb. I begin at the upper right-hand corner of those luscious
petals and I work my way across, taking my time to dip my tongue in between.
This will be no surprise to aficionados of opera, but Maddie is very talented
with her tongue. Keep that in mind the next time you see Rigoletto and you hear Gilda whip out a really wicked rolled R. Ten
minutes later, I finish with a kiss on the tip of her nose. She speaks without
opening her eyes.
“So
that’s when you became obsessed with the opera.”
“Yes.
That’s also when I dreamed up my devious, terribly involved plan to find the
woman who sang that gorgeous aria and make out with her.”
She
opens her eyes just barely and gives me a grin. “You are so lucky it wasn’t Joan Sutherland.”
It’s
early morning. We’re at Hobee’s, an American diner with a California
health-food attitude. I’m staring down a scramble and realizing it’s almost
exactly the one that I make at home. Am I in a rut? I laugh at the question
before I’m even done thinking it. Maddalena Hart the international opera star
sits across from me, the sharpness of her grapefruit juice producing two or
three of the expressions that she used in the Letter Scene.
“Have
you seen Rusalka?”
“Nope.”
“So
you don’t know the context of ‘Song to the Moon’?”
“I
considered it magic. You don’t want to come too close to magic, or you’ll scare
it away.”
She
takes a sip of coffee and folds her hands, assuming the demeanor of a
newsanchor. I can’t get over her hair. Even after a rushed shower and a drive
down the hill, the honey, the wheat and the straw tumble to her shoulders like
the hair of an angel. I’m back to the album cover.
“Rusalka
is a water nymph who lives in a lake, and she falls in love with a prince who
comes there to swim. She goes to the witch Jezibaba, who agrees to turn her
into a human, but there are a couple of catches. She must win her prince’s love
without the power of speech, and if she fails she will be accursed forever.
Before her transformation, Rusalka sings to the moon, asking it to tell her
beloved that she longs to hold him in her arms. At the end of the song – those
desperate final passages - she pleads with the moon, ‘O do not disappear! Do
not go!’”
It’s
not becoming for a man to be so constantly enchanted by a woman, but any
attempt at artificial coolness would be lame. So I accept my fate and go the
other direction.
“Are
you real?”
“Full-gonzo
water nymph, baby. Hum a few bars of the Habañera and I disappear.”
“O
do not disappear!”
“You’re
funny. For a prince. And I’ve met a few. So how come, last night, you didn’t
put the moves on me?”
“I
thought I… Didn’t I put on some moves?”
“You
know you could have…”
“I
had my suspicions. But… Damn. You’re probably going to insist on the real answer, aren’t you?”
She
gives me a solemn nod. “That’s what I’m asking.”
I
want to get this just right, so I look away from the hair and the eyes and the
famous face. A trio of overdressed Japanese girls stand outside, taking part in
a serious rund of chatter.
“Oh
God, don’t make me say the word ‘vulnerable.’ ‘Vulnerable’ is the word of
cowards. Let’s say ‘susceptible,’ ‘fragile.’ That’s what you are, and a proud
hunter does not like to knock off easy targets.”
“As
opposed to a Mad Huntress?”
“Yes.
And… You mean a little too much to me, Maddie. Frankly, I worship you. I’m not
ready to carry you down from the heavens.”
“I’m
not a diva, Mickey. I’m not a goddess, or a siren, or even a water nymph. And
it’s the nature of the business that I don’t always have the time for a
standard romance. In fact, for now this it. I’m off to Seattle first thing
Friday. I don’t have a different man
in every port. I kind of wish I did. But I had a feeling about you, Mickey.
You’re one of the good ones.”
Her
anxious expression melts into wistfulness. She puts a hand on my knee and
smiles.
“I’m
sorry. I didn’t mean to rain on our parade. It was so sweet of you to offer me
distractions, to tell me your beautiful story. To romance me. To kiss me. And
I’m going to tell Speight Jenkins to use lasers in his next Ring Cycle.”
“Spate…
who?”
She
laughs. “Sorry. Opera singers are so
presumptuous. He’s the general director in Seattle. And he’s nuts! Believe me,
he’ll consider the lasers. But Mickey… I’m certain I’ll see you again. I guess
what I’m saying is… What I’m saying is Yes! Be a little rude next time. I can take it.”
I
slip a hand under her hair, around the back of her neck, and give her a messy,
highly inappropriate kiss. She settles back against her chair, eyes
half-closed.
“Yeah.
Like that.”
I
walk Maddalena Hart the opera star to her Lexus, parked on the street behind
the Oaks Center. I wave her off down the road, and I get in my car, and I head
for the hills. Colin leaves his paint-tray to greet me, looking like a proud
father.
“Behold!
Mickey San Franciskel, diva debaucher.”
I
accept a brisk handshake.
“No
debauching, but yes – a remarkable weekend. Thanks for the day off.”
“Absolutely
no problem. I will expect the same during my impending affair with Jennifer
Aniston. But I will be needing some
details.”
“Of
course! Why don’t I start on these steps, and I will shout my story in your
die-rection.”
“Splendid!”
Six
The Campbell Little League
complex is situated right up against Hamilton Avenue, a busy suburban arterial,
and offers the occasional sight of a home run hopping through traffic like a
wayward frog. But it’s exactly the cramped feel – two fields and a refreshment
stand crammed together like urban brownstones - that gives the place its
atmosphere.
I
enter through a gap in the chain-link fence and am greeted by the sight of my
nephew Kyle straddling the mound. Playing the field or standing at the plate,
Kyle gives me the kind of jitters that perhaps only a blood relative could
feel, but on the mound he is utterly unflappable. He nods at the catcher,
brings those skinny legs together and chucks the ball homeward, not like a
pitcher but like a kid throwing a ball. No blazing fastball, but he’s always
around the plate, and has a three-quarter arm slot that produces a natural
downward spin. He gets a lot of grounders.
Right
now he’s just warming up, so I continue leftward to the main attraction:
one-dollar hot dogs, with an impressive buffet of condiments. I fix one with
mustard and onions, another with ketchup and relish, and head for the main
bleachers, nicely shaded by a wide awning. I find sister Carla high up, chewing
nervously on sunflower seeds.
“Hey!”
she says. “Already stocked up I see.”
“You
kidding? This is dinner. And, well, lunch.”
“That
Colin works you like a dog.”
“We
thought of that for a name, actually. ‘Deck Dogs.’”
Carla
shifts quickly into update mode. She’s quite good at this. Perhaps she was a
broadcaster in a previous life.
“He’s
doing well. It’s a good hitting team, but we’re still tied. At the plate, he
ran out an infield single and flied out to right.”
“Hey,
as long he’s hackin’.”
“Yep,
he knows the rules. Called third strike – the floggings begin.”
I
suppose you need a sick sense of humor to survive parenthood. I like their
priorities, though. They’d much rather Kyle go up there and hit something than
wait for a walk the way some players do.
“Uh-oh,”
says Carla. “Here comes trouble. This kid hit one onto Hamilton last time.
Hopped all the way across, like a…”
“Wayward
frog?”
“Ha!
Yes. Missed all the cars at least.”
The
kid’s huge, twelve years old and taller than me. What are they feeding these
mutants? They’ve got a runner on second, so Kyle’s coach signals for an
intentional walk. Catcher Jack stands up and receives three outside pitches,
but on the fourth the batter takes a lackadaisical swing-and-miss.
“Uh-oh,”
says Carla. “I heard about this.”
Kyle
throws another outside pitch, and the kid takes another nothing swing. Kyle
looks confused.
“What’s
that about?”
“This
kid gets walked all the time, so the coach told him to swing a couple times to
add to the pitch count.”
“Well,
that’s pretty bogus. I say – drill ‘im!”
“Shh!”
says Carla. “Last week, some coach ordered up a beanball.”
“Really?
Wow.”
“They’re
a little touchy about it.”
Kyle’s
coach calls time-out and meets him for a conference. When play starts again,
catcher Jack remains in his crouch.
“Uh-oh,”
says Carla. “I hope they know what they’re doing.”
“I
guess the temptation is just too great. I just hope he pitches it outsi-”
I’m
rudely interrupted by the sound of metal on cowhide. The ball screams over the
left field fence and strikes a large tree right in the midsection.
“Ah,
man!” says Carla.
“Crap.
Shoulda drilled ‘im.”
“Shh!”
“Overgrown
freak.”
Monster
Kid lopes around the bases and is mobbed by his teammates as if he has just
clinched the World Series. Carla chews some more sunflower seeds, probably
gauging how upset her son will be at this latest turn of events. I take the
chance to sample the sweet alchemy of mustard, onions, bread and pork parts.
“So,”
she says. “What’s it like, being famous?”
I
swallow. “I really wouldn’t know.”
She
reaches into her bag and pulls out a folded piece of newspaper. It’s the
society page of the San Jose Mercury-News.
The headline reads Lambs Eat Pasta with
Lions.
And performers dine with critics. International diva
Maddalena Hart was seen al-fresco’ing Tuesday night with local opera critic
Mickey Siskel at Saratoga’s Bella Mia. We can only assume that Siskel’s review
of Hart’s performance in SF Opera’s Eugene
Onegin was favorable, but according to former Merc scribe Leigh Weimers, he
really had no choice. The divine Ms. H was even more divine than usual. LW also
recommends Siskel’s blog, www.operaville.blogspot.com, which offers a unique blend of
critique and tales of the composers.
“Holy
crap! I’m famous.”
“And you just got two hot dogs for two
dollars,” says Carla. “I don’t think life gets much better. Oh! Kyle’s up. I
told him I would videotape his at-bats.”
My
curiosity gets the best of me, so I make a stop at the Saratoga Library. The
place was built three years ago, and is pretty much a biblioparadise. The
computers are shiny-new, and situated around circular tables that offer
generous pie-slice portions of personal space.
I
pull up my blogsite, check the bottom of the Onegin review and find 27 comments. Holy crap. Most of them are
names I’ve never seen, requesting details of my time with the diva. They may as
well be asking for my spare kidney. I do give a brief, vague account to Cordell
– who has certainly earned my trust – but the only person who might rate the
nitty-gritty is strangely absent.
Seattle. Seattle.
My
straw-blonde sunrise returns to kiss me awake. She’s delicious, chewing on
something vanilla to go with the minty toothpaste. Still, it’s harder than
usual to produce a smile. I grunt, force myself out of bed and pull on a pair
of jeans. Outside, it’s already warm – our usual early-summer hot spell – but
Katie is bundled up nonetheless, a white parka over a blue turtleneck. I lift
her into the air and plant a kiss on her lips, but she’s not buying it.
“Is
something the matter?”
The
best way to lie is simply and directly. “No. A little existential funk.”
“Poor
baby.” She trails a finger around my lips. “Maybe you’re having your period.
I’ll say a prayer for you.”
“No.
Sing a hymn for me.”
“You
got it. And it’ll work, too. I’m an excellent singer.”
“I
know. I’ve heard you in the tub.”
I
hold her aloft and carry her to the door. She gets in and beckons me forward
for one last smooch, throwing in plentiful tongue just to make sure I’m paying
attention. Before she even rounds the corner I’m headed for the house,
stumbling through the living room, hurling myself back into bed.
Long,
long hours later, I’m soaking in the tub, threatening to turn myself into a
prune. Maddie’s in Seattle. Probably starts rehearsals Monday. But what now?
Receptions with donors? Dinner with friends? A booty call with a Northwest
critic? I wouldn’t blame her (the smell of Katie all over my sheets), but I
take consolation in what I’ve seen of my fellow critics. Even when they’re
hetero, they’re not exactly appetizing.
I
don’t even bother with breakfast. I start up the coffee, boot up the computer
and discover 25 more strangers on my comments page. It’s like a fucking Mardi
Gras in there. No Mad Huntress, but there at the bottom, at long last, is
DevilDiva.
DD: Bruh-thuh! What the hell is going on here? Did you marry the bitch?
M: Any chance we could talk in private?
DD: Well, since you’re the instant celebrity, I
guess I’ll have to be the courageous one. My email is…
Real-name revelations are not forthcoming. Her email
address begins with DevilDiva@. I flip over to my email account and ring her
up.
M: Thanks. Cyberspace is getting a little wacky.
DD: You’re more popular than a celebrity porn site!
So I surmise that you’ve been doing some fraternizing with Madame Hart? How
exciting is this getting?
M: We were spotted by a retired journalist, who sent
an item to the local daily. Apparently, opera fans read newspapers.
DD: Who knew?
M: Maddie was experiencing some performer’s stress
and decided that I was the one who could help her out of it. I still don’t
understand why. I’ve really done nothing to earn her trust.
DD: Maybe she had
to trust you. Maybe she’s working on instinct.
M: Well, she’s right
to trust me. As a performer, she already means the world to me. And now, as a
person… She’s incredibly genuine, which has to be such a hard quality to
maintain when you’re such a public person.
DD: Hmm, you’re beginning to wax poetic. Do I detect
something romantic?
M: Okay, well, yes. I’m trying to be careful with
the details – and believe me, you’re the only one I’d say anything to, but yes, it was pretty freakin’ romantic.
DD: (Sigh) My Mickey, in love. I think I’m jealous –
but I’m not sure which one of you I’m jealous of.
M: So you would consider going lesbo to further your
career.
DD: Why not?
M: Did I mention how glad I am that we’re not
discussing this on a public comments page?
DD: Prude!
M: Harlot!
DD: And quite the circus it has become.
M: I’ll tell ya. It’s not like Maddie gets hassled
in public a lot – only twice, when I was with her. But she certainly leaves a
wake.
DD: Celebrity is a powerful force. Enjoy the ride,
baby. Will you be seeing her again?
M: She’s due back at SFO in the fall, but right now
she’s off to Seattle to do Bohème.
DD: Mimi?
M: Yep.
DD: Well, even if it was one-tine-only, you’ve got
one hell of a story.
M: Yes, but I’m also human.
DD: Meaning?
M: I call it the Plateau Syndrome. Five minutes
after reaching a new level of achievement, we spot the plateau just above us
and begin the yearning process all over again. We are the grasping species, the
species with opposable thumbs.
DD: Keep grasping, baby. I gotta head for a voice
lesson. Keep me up-to-date, okay?
M: You got it. Thanks for being my confessor.
DD: My privilege. Ta!
I’m about to go for that cup
of coffee, but when I flash back to the inbox I find a strange name: Michael
Sinclair. And here’s what he has to say:
Dear Mickey: It’s not often
that I receive a recommendation from Maddalena Hart! But I scanned your blog
and I must say I’m impressed. I run a website called theoperacritic.com, and
although I’m based in New Zealand, I publish reviews from all over the globe. I
would love it if you would be my West Coast stringer. I don’t pay anything, but
I do have good relations with all the major companies, so you’d be able to get
press comps in San Diego, LA, Portland, Seattle – even Vancouver B.C. if you
feel adventurous. And it’s no problem if you’d like to keep running your
reviews on your blog, as well.
Let me know what you think.
I’d love to have you on board.
Cheers – Michael
I drift off toward the
kitchen, I pour a cup of java and I swear I see letters spelled out in the
steam.
Seattle.