How to Talk To Hollywood Directors

Santa Monica Daily Press June 2019

Everything Old Is Me Again

If you live in our fair city, you’ve seen Hollywood production crews on location sometimes around town.

One recent morning, I’m sipping a triple espresso on ice outside Sweet Lady Jane Café & Bakery when a guy – sunglasses dangling on vest – appears at my table saying:

“You’re in my shot.”

I see lights and a camera behind him. A black clapperboard chalked up with the word, “SiliQ”. His shot’s probably for one of those pharmaceutical commercials that seem to last for five minutes. A tall actress stands at the corner of 17th Street: fortyish, pale blue blouse and slacks. She’s about to stroll along Montana Avenue, playing one of the attractive people you see in the ads, living life to the fullest.

“Can you move?” asks the director.

“No thanks,” I reply.

“Huh?”

“I’m fine, really.”

“No … we’re filming here.”

There is no filming notification posted on my table. No blue sawhorses around, marking the crew’s territory. He says this will take fifteen minutes – tops. No problem, I say. I’ll just finish up my book (Sabbath’s Theater by Philip Roth – highly recommended!), overdue at our local library across the intersection.

photo by Satsui Nohado

 

“You’re not gonna move?”

“Can’t you just maybe move over a little, so I’m not in your shot?”

“You want me to re-set my entire crew.”

“What I want is for you to buy me a coffee.”

“Oh, come on!”

No, you come on, Doc Hollywood. I’m only here twenty-five years, but Santa Monicans know how this game gets played. I say (as the kids do today), “All. I’m. Asking. For. Is. Another. Espresso.” Preferably iced.

He says flatly, “You’re really gonna do this.”

I sense frustration. Exasperation escalates. Familiar juices stirring up inside me – which happens sometimes on caffeine, or alcohol or drugs. So now I’m set to go off on the guy with, like, “Get the (bleep) out of my face, you (bleeping motherbleeper)!“ That’s when anger management class kicks in. And what we learned last night was: “Anything can happen.” Meaning: I get to decide – in the space between feeling the emotion and expressing it – how I respond. Our therapist Greg says, “Freedom is between.” His methods for your madness include: taking deep breaths; asking yourself what would be a better outcome than blowing your stack; and why mess with some person’s poor life? (Even if he is a jerk who could easily come across with a cup of coffee.)

I dial it down. “Keep it on the d” – which is what my girlfriend calls it. Meaning: be deliberate. Proceed with all deliberate speed. The director asks if I could maybe slump down in my seat because I’m just at the edge of his frame. Can do, boss! A tall woman in pale blue – with a new prescription for life – passes my table, strolling west along the avenue …

“Cut! Moving On!”

You know, it’s amazing how a work of art can affect you. (Holding a mirror up to one’s nature, etc.) Philip Roth’s antihero in Sabbath’s Theater – Sabbath – is a sixty-something, ornery loser, fighting everything he hates in the world. I just turned sixty-something, and owe seventy-five cents for an overdue book. I hand a buck across the counter to Kathy, one of the delightful SMPL Montana Branch librarians, and say: “Keep the change! I support your fine institution!” She smiles. Kathy lives here, too, and knows I am not to be messed with.

      Friends of all shapes and species enjoy bath time

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Friendship, Friendship

 

2nd- Eye-to-Eye_02-2
drawing by Flash Rosenberg

Friendship Friendship!

It’s the perfect blendship!

Cole Porter

 

Want to be among the great conversationalists of the 21st century?

How about the 22nd?

You can get a head start by getting out there and mixing it up. By using your head.

So get out there and convert somebody— I mean converse with somebody!

Now go on, this time I really mean it!

 

And you can be a good listener, too.

 

Great conversationalists listen more than talk.

The Art of Conversation A Guided Tour of a Neglected Pleasure, Catherin Blythe, Gotham Books, 2009

 

 

My best conversations inevitably and invariably veer to warm giving and taking talk about matters of the heart.

In other words, for best results, take talking time with a friend.

A friend can be a member of your family, too. Or somebody you meet at a bus stop, if you take the time to get to know them.

 

Talk about what you love. Notice how it seems to inspire you to talk about all that other stuff.

It can begin anywhere, anytime. My sisters Nancy and Jill loved talking about music they dug, sitting in their bedroom playing records for  friends who came over after school. My brother Jimmie and I talked more about comic books and sports with our pals. Games, names and the numbers on the back of uniforms.

Later of course we got into which kid or teacher was disgusted by us, and all the other things that disgusted us— as so much of it so often did…

 

Put that Book down toon

See how technology tries to separate us into our own worlds, at the same time claiming to bring us closer together?

It changes our own words. We may still have intimate times together laughing, crying, whispering about ourselves and other people. We’ll still talk on the food, the weather, books and movies and sex and what the landscape looks like, what games, podcasts or links to sites we go to or went to.

But, I wonder, does this kind of conversation go on anymore: The one with Shel or Stober or Steve Finkel and me skipping class to skip, gallop, tear on bikes over to Milton’s Drugs on Six Mile Road. Or to DeMott’s Drugs on Seven Mile? To sit at the counter drinking 12 cent chocolate cokes, grabbing a plastic bag of pork rinds to go. And one block closer to Woodward Avenue, the main drag, was Share’s Pharmacy –“Share treats you fair” it said on the window. On the corner there was a Biff’s, Nancy’s favorite place to skip out too, for burgers.

Where were those conversations for you? What did you talk about with your friends? Didn’t the city feel full of talking with your pals?

 

City of Convo

Hey look! It’s a whole new play about conversation! That’s gotta be a good sign.

 

Meanwhile, why are the conversations that took place back then the ones we can never remember when we get older?

Were we too busy throwing snowballs at passing cars to comment about it? (Today we’d have a page to comment on about it!)

 

Did you know that J.D. Salinger’s The Catcher In The Rye is all about conversations? Holden Caulfield has more than two dozen of them. Conversations come up everywhere he goes in the book. He even comments on what kind of conversation he’s having. What kind they are or were, looking back at them, or even right now during them! He comments on how the conversation is going —  one was a lousy conversation, another a witty conversation. Holden has brief and long conversations, “goddam boring” ones and “slightly intellectual” ones, too.

And at the end, after all these attempts to communicate, Holden is left in a pool of tears. Your heart really goes out to him. I recommend this book to all lovers of conversation. And everybody else.

 

Colorful Drawing of Man and Dog
Yael Kanarek

 

When my father was in college, he and his friends conducted “bull sessions.” That was in the 1940s. By the 70s and 80s, it was sitting up all night in the dormitory rapping. Shooting the shit. Sometimes Bob and Mike, Jerry, Byron, Ted or Kent and I kept on talking until we ended up trucking down to Main Street in Middletown to O’Rourke’s diner for its famous steamed cheeseburgers and eggs.

Walking and talking the whole way there and back.

After all, where can you hear cooler things than from your friends?

 

Sitting on the floor and talking till dawn

Candles and confidences

Trading old beliefs and humming old songs

And lowering old defenses

“Love Song” in the musical Pippin

 

One time I discovered that if I stayed up all night? I would learn something. Like staying open to experience.

Hey, I’m just trying to stay open 24/7 here! I’m  a one-stop talk shop. One of my college roommates Jeff always put it this way: “The people are the greatest.”

What did he mean? I think that as close as you want to get to another person, you are left finally knowing that there is always more to learn about them.

The mystery in that.

Does it ever end?

Not as long as we keep talking to each other.

 

So where are you going next?

What will your conversation look like today?

 

 

Two friends having coffee together/when something flies by their window

“Hypnotized” by Fleetwood Mac

 

A tavola non s’inveccchia  “When dining at the table with family and friends, one does not grow old.”

A toast from the founder of Riunite, Harry Mariani, from his obituary, NY TIMES Jan 11 2016

 

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