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Nineteen
Ruby
Three years
later, I was still with Joe’s troupe, Greenstreet Productions, alternating
between big roles and small, fending off anything that smacked of
administrative duties. I displayed my kryptonite competence only when it came
to knowing my lines, arriving punctually and performing with every cell in my
body. I did, however, have an intriguing proposition in my pocket: Joe had
invited me to direct one of the shows for the upcoming season. It was tempting
but scary, because I knew I’d be good at it and I didn’t want anything to come
between me and the audience.
It was late
summer, down-time before the fall opening. I found a flyer for an artists’
collective at a bar around the corner – a place called Savvy’s. When I walked
in, the mood was positively Beatnik. The garret from Puccini’s Boheme. Andy Hardy putting on a show in
the barn.
I swam
through the bar crowd until I reached a wide pit where a funk band was wrapping
up “Sex Machine,” a skinny black guy in a British cap spazzing a James Brown
shuffle across the floor. Then the DJ called up a slam poet, a short, squat guy
with a Fiddler-on-the-Roof beard. He jumped into a piece about trying to
eliminate the excess food from his pantry, and instead winding up in an eating
competition with Death. The rhythm of his words accelerated with a Bolero
graduality until they caught fire and burst into a Ginsbergian inventory of
comestibles. People were falling out of their chairs, probably on purpose.
By the time
he was done, a reggae band had finished setting up, and rolled into a Jimmy
Cliff tune. I took the opportunity to saunter up to the balcony, where a trio
of painters were doing “live works.” A large black woman was pressing broad
swipes of acrylic across a canvas, setting up the strata for a seascape. A
baby-faced Puerto Rican kid scratched at a charcoal portrait: an old drunk
leaning against a bar, wearing a look of utter dejection.
The third
guy was older, mid-thirties, tall, a head of thick black hair with apostrophes
of gray. He looked like he had never made an awkward movement in his life. He
was working on a cartoonish, beatific creature with fan-shaped wings – or
petals, I couldn’t tell. It stood upon a pedestal-like body, wide as a tree
trunk. The background was an intricate network of lines, but looking closely I
could see that it was actually composed of faces, their features melting into
the mass: an Aztec warrior in profile, an amoeba with misplaced Picasso eyes, a
robot alien with a saucer-shaped head.
The man was
dipping a terry-cloth rag into a bowl of raw sienna paint, then scrubbing it
into one of the petals – or wings. He gave me a quick glance, but kept steadily
at his work. For a moment, I felt guilty for distracting him, but of course
that’s what he was there for. And, to answer stupid questions.
“Whatcha
doin’?”
He looked
up with eyes so black you could fall right in. “You want the short version or
the encyclopedic?”
“Um… I’m
gonna go for the short.”
“We begin
with a central figure: the ruby-throated angelflower. A profoundly positive
presence, I filled in the background with a coterie of beer-coaster creatures,
then sort of macramed them together in order to, in order to… Actually, I have
no idea.”
“To make
them look like a crowd?”
He snapped
his fingers very loudly, then stared at them in surprise. “Wow – what’s that about? But yes! A crowd. Out of
which rises the angelflower, like the rare and sudden blossoming of the century
plant, erupting from the desert of the hoi polloi.
“I have
this thing about complicated backgrounds. I get so attached to a project that I
hate to see it end – so all this meticulous stuff helps to extend the work.
Right now you’ve caught me at the final step, which is frankly like a
three-year-old with a coloring book. I like to water down my acrylics, then
scrub them in. Gives a nice solid block of color – but transparent, so it
reveals the flaws in the canvas.”
“Why do you
want to reveal flaws?”
“I like a
surface that’s seen some livin’. This one was a dropcloth. Note the little
splatters of black at the top of the stem. That was an oil change.”
He took
another swab at his bowl and worked a corner of the petal, drawing the paint
right up to the thick black line at its periphery.
“I can’t
stand art that’s too smooth. If you’re not going to reveal the process at all,
then why bother? This notion of creating perfect, untouched forms is riven with
hubris. What are you doing after the show?”
He said all
of this at a shot, and I wasn’t entirely certain that I’d been asked a
question.
“Um, I
don’t really know.”
“I have to
show you something.”
I laughed.
“Don’t think I’ve never heard that
one before.”
He took my
hand and held on tight, as if we were about to shake on a deal.
“What’s
your name?”
“Ruby.”
He smiled.
Large, dazzling teeth. “You see?”
“Ruby-throated,”
I said. “As in fate?”
“As in
coincidence – which is better, and tastier. You
are one of the special ones. You do something creative?”
“So now
you’re a psychic?”
He laughed.
“Ask the right question in the right milieu, and your odds are pretty good.”
“Yes,” I
said. “Actress.”
“Ah – of
course. Lots of personalities swimming around in there. When you first came up,
I thought there was a whole mob watching me. I’ll be done at midnight. Can I
meet you at the bar?”
“What? I
can’t watch you?”
“Actually,
no. I’d be too distracted. Along with being one of the special ones, you’re
enormously attractive.”
Picture me
as an LP on a turntable; my needle has just been yanked away. I tried and
failed to fight down a goofy smile.
“Wait a
minute,” I said. “What’s your name?”
“Scootie.”
He shook the hand I’d forgotten he was holding. “And yes, there’s a story
behind that, too. But I need to get back to my painting.”
He let go,
and I drifted downstairs. I gave some serious thought to leaving – he was
entirely too smooth. But this cool punk band was playing, dressed in big chunks
of black and white fabric, and a beer sounded really good.
Two bands
and a standup comic later, Scootie appeared over my left shoulder, continuing
our previous conversation as if we’d never stopped.
“When I was
a baby, I had a middle ear infection. It messed up my sense of balance, and I
took to crawling sideways, like a crab. So I got my nickname: ‘Scootie’. Have
you done any Beckett?”
I fixed him
with a look, and attempted to restart the conversation in a more normal
fashion. “Hi, Scootie. How ya doin’?”
He blinked.
“I’m fine. How are you?”
“Good! Waiting for Godot.”
You could
see that little tidbit striking a speed-bump in his head – which was exactly my
intention.
“Isn’t
that…?”
“All-female
cast,” I said. “We thought of calling it Waiting
for Goddess, but we figured we were pushing our luck as it was.”
The bartender
raced by, planted a Heinekin in front of Scootie, spoke the words “Jacks and
Queens” and kept going.
Scootie
eyed the label, said “Ah, Jacks and Queens,” and took a drink. “What did you
think of it?” he asked.
“Jacks and
Queens?”
“Beckett.”
I did my
best to look thoughtful (I’m sure I did – I had practiced my “thoughtful” look
in a mirror many times). “Irrational. Maddening. Plotless. Ridiculous. I loved it.”
“You ought
to love me then.”
“Umm…
maybe?” Keep it moving, keep it moving. “So
where do your figures come from?”
“John
Cage.”
“Oh. I
thought Cage was a musician.”
“You
thought Da Vinci was a painter. Music was Cage’s day job. When the moon came
out, he was a philosopher. And the master cartographer of chance operations.”
Scootie
took a pen from behind his ear and flipped over a beer coaster. Then he drew a
long line, vaguely ess-shaped.
“I can’t
illustrate worth shit. Any time I attempt to pull in something from the real
world, it goes through some kind of crippling filter and ends up looking like
the work of an unimaginative three-year-old. So I go backwards.”
He drew a
straight line through the ess at a slant.
“I keep
drawing lines until something makes itself known.”
A question
mark with no period. Three sides of a square, facing down.
“When I
arrive at the point of identity, I finish the job with the universal
signifiers: eyes, nose, mouth – sometimes ears, or hair.”
He gave the
question-mark head a pair of almond-shaped eyes, then angled a mouth-line with
a small notch for a smirk. The nose was already there, a product of the first
two lines. The upside-down square offered a torso; he added long, thin
rectangles to imply arms.
“Sometimes
they turn out, sometimes not. Sometimes they become ruby-throated
angelflowers.”
“This one
looks French,” I said. “That smirk might actually be a cigarette.”
Scootie
smiled, initialed the coaster SJ and
handed it to me.
“Here.
Might be worth a dollar someday.”
He had a loft (of course he had a loft). It was pretty
bare of furniture, and instead of a rug he had a canvas dropcloth, ten foot
square, nailed to the floor. Affixed to the far wall was a canvas, five feet
tall, three wide. It appeared to contain a swarm of mosquitoes, but closer
inspection revealed words, hundreds of them, written with a black marker. I saw
libretto, 1967, and Sutherland.
“What the
hell is going on here?”
“Chance
operations,” he said. “The human mind craves organization – and that’s the
problem. I was in a choir once, singing a piece that called for white noise,
within a certain range of pitches. Inevitably, we would gravitate toward
consonance – toward chords. So we had to spend a half-hour assigning individual
pitches to individual singers. There were some who hated that piece, but I
thought it was the most beautifully constructed chaos I’d ever heard.
“The thing
is, in order to achieve true randomness, you have to set up some ground rules
beforehand. In this case, I determined to take the New Grove Book of Opera – all 687 pages of it – and extract the
first word from each page. On the canvas, I depended on my natural ability to
shuffle, beginning with any available white space and not caring if it ran
roughshod over other words. I wanted a virtual windstorm of verbiage.
Unbeknownst to you, I have already pencilled in the central figure, and will
now bring him into being. Please – sit.”
He handed
me a cushion, and I sat on the floor, cross-legged. He produced a small
housepainting brush, dipped it into a jar of black paint and drew a rough line
over the canvas. He began with two lines that started at the top center and
extended outward. He drew a vee from one shoulder to another, trailing into a
shape that resembled a tie. At either side of the X, he affixed the same almond
eyes as his coaster creature, then a wide, flat oval for a mouth, vaguely
merry. He stood back for a moment, then dipped the brush, took the tips of the
X and extended them to the upper corners. He took a last look, notched a pocket
on either side of the tie, then tossed the brush over his shoulder. It landed
on the dropcloth with a splat. Then he knelt behind me, gripped my shoulders
and said, “So. What is he?”
I took a
few moments to study.
“The
Creature from the Black Lagoon in a business suit.”
“Or a suit
for the opera,” said Scootie.
“But those
antennae…?”
“Yes! That
popped in just now.”
“Like a
cockroach. A giant impresario cockroach, off to the opera.”
“Luciano
Cucaracchi,” he said.
I let out a
burst of laughter, like a sneeze. “Okay.”
“Hey, I
don’t make up the names. They just come in on the satellite dish. Now, take off
your shoes.”
There was
my decision point. A girl doesn’t take off her shoes just for anyone.
So I did.
Scootie disappeared and came back with a pair of square plastic tubs. In one he
poured red paint, in the other black.
“It’s just
like roullette. Pick a color.”
I stood up
and gave them a study. “Dare I ask why?”
“Ask
yourself this question: what color do I want my feet to be for the next week?”
“You’re
nuts.”
“We’ve
established that. Now pick.”
“Red. Of
course.”
“Communist!”
“Vampire!”
“Go ahead.
Do the Hokey-Pokey.”
I knew if I
thought about it, I wouldn’t, so I didn’t think about it. I don’t need to tell
you how it felt, because you know how it felt. Scootie pushed a button on his
stereo and conjured a waltz – that soprano from Boheme, in the café. He rolled his trousers to his knees, planted
himself in the black, then left a trail of dance-instruction footprints on his
way to the center of the dropcloth. He raised his hands; I stepped forward and
took them.
And he
could waltz (of course he could waltz). And of course I could waltz – I was a performer. We stopped at regular intervals
to reload our feet. After that came Sinatra, “Saturday Night is the Loneliest
Night of the Week,” and we switched to swing. Scootie’s lead was perfect, all
the signals there in his big hands, twirling me one way, wrapping me the other.
At the ending, he dipped me so deeply that, the next morning, I found streaks
of red and black in my hair.
Scootie
pulled me to my feet, kissed my hands and said, “We’re done.”
I stood on
red tip-toes, kissed him on the neck and said, “Not hardly.”
Photo by MJV
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