Friday, June 29, 2007



This is my Uncle Pete. He owns a small family restaurant in the downtown district of a rust-belt city. The restaurant smells exactly the same as it did when I was a kid, and my first sharp memory of being in Uncle Pete's restaurant is Christmas, 1966. My Dad had just returned from his first 12-month tour in Vietnam and we drove all night to spend the holidays not with family we are related to by DNA but the family we are related to by memory and affection, loss and shared history.

Uncle Pete isn't my genetic uncle (actually, he is my Godfather, I have the fading black and white pictures of him holding me in his meaty paw like a football on my christening day to prove it). Uncle Pete and my Dad met in basic training before they shipped off to Korea in 1956. They formed the core of a tight posse of Rangers who hung together through something harrowing enough to bond them for low these 50 years (but of which they have never spoken outside of their circle), made it back to the U.S., some stayed in and some rotated out (my Dad went back and finished college and OCS and re-upped as an officer and did another tour in Vietnam and later, Thailand and Cambodia).

Pete went back to his big fat Greek family in the northeast but he and Dad and their gang remain tight, through marriages, kids, divorces, the loss of two of their buddies in Southeast Asia (the only two times I have ever seen my father cry), illness and now, the assault of age.

Uncle Pete has always been like a second Dad to me. He's the kind of guy I can call at 3 a.m. and tell him I need $5,000 no questions asked and he's there. He wears Aqua Velva and always carries a little black comb in his back pocket. He goes to mass every Sunday and calls women "broads" and he cried when Roy Orbison died. They don't make guys like my Uncle Pete anymore. Happy Birthday Uncle Pete and congrats on the new heart valves. May your heart beat a gazillion more times.

Thursday, June 28, 2007


I saw one of these on U.S. 19 today as I drove home trying to outrun the sunset. It pulled up next to me at a red light and I knew what it was just by the sound of it and the silhouette in my periphery. So I closed my eyes and heard David Bowie and Freddie Mercury howling about pressure and it was 1987 and we were driving home late at night, the windows down and the smell of cigarettes wafting through the humid air and I wanted to floor it and crank up the stereo as loud as it would go so that David and Freddie were screaming so loudly the words punched through my chest and out through the back of my seat then through the back of the car and out into the evening, swirling skyward...
Why - why - why ?
Love love love love love
Insanity laughs
under pressure we're cracking
Can't we give ourselves one more chance
Why can't we give love that one more chance
Why can't we give love give love give love give love give love give love give love give love give love
'Cause love's such an old fashioned word
And love dares you to care for
The people on the edge of the night
And loves dares you to change our way of
Caring about ourselves
This is our last dance
This is our last dance
This is ourselves
Under pressure
Under pressure
Pressure

Monday, June 25, 2007

parting is such sweet sorrow (but don't put it in writing, moron)


So we closed the show last night, struck the set, had a nice little cast & crew party and bid a tearful fare-thee-well to one another.
The two boys who played my sons in this show (reprising the same roles we all played in a blockbuster two years ago and won regional theatre awards for but who's bragging?) headed back to college, one to Tallahassee and the other to Orlando to jump into summer jobs, summer classes and internships. I say "boys" but they are 23 and 21 now and one of them actually grabbed my ass several times in the course of the last two months which was a little unsettling but what the hell? What 40-something broad doesn't mind a 20-something cutie grabbing her ass backstage once in a while? Huh? I love them both and it was hard to say goodbye. But anyway.
One sweet little tradition in the theatre is the practice of gift or card-giving. Sometimes the gifts are gags sometimes not, but there is, at the very least, an exchange -- on opening night or closing night -- of some sort of sentimentalism that may make some gag but there it is.
Yesterday's gift/card exchange was especially memorable. I snapped lots of pix throughout the six-week rehearsal period and our month-long run and put together little albums for all five of my cast mates. The boys wrote me sweet, lovely letters and presented me with trinkets to remember them by. Flowers were exchanged, cookies were exchanged, etc.
The guy who played my estranged husband (let's call him "Brad") wrote us all letters. Like his character, Brad is likewise estranged from the world. He is a bitter divorcee and kind of a weird dude, but a dead-on actor who met me line-for-line in every scene we had together. He was a joy to work opposite from onstage. But backstage, he and the woman who played my sister (let's call her "Ginger"), another bitter divorcee who recently became engaged to a sweet man she met at church were at each other's throats nonstop. She became a sniping shrew as the weeks wore on and he became a bombastic pompous ass. The one-upping of insults was ridiculous and especially so because they are both professed "Christians" and don't drink or swear or do any of that vile stuff. At first the rest of us kind of found it amusing but after a while it became exhausting. Like a real family.
So anyway, Brad's letters to his cast mates created a stir with the boys because they amounted to cursory sentimentality followed by lists of acting tips which really affronted both of them. Mine was pedestrian, garden variety sentimentality. But the one he wrote to Ginger was the best. The. Best.
Because she and he had been fighting so much, she feigned disinterest in what Brad may have had to say and pitched the envelope that read "Ginger" into her tote bag. When the stage manager stopped by she noticed it peeking out of Ginger's bag and asked,
"So, what did Brad have to say to you, Ginger?" To which Ginger replied,
"Oh, who cares? Throw it away. Or read it yourself, I don't give a rat's patootie."
"Really, you want me to read it?" Asked the stage manager.
"Sure--read it out loud to us," Ginger said, sashaying across the dressing room and closing the door for privacy. So as I finished my hair and adjusted the lines on the back of my stockings, our stage manager (my 13-year-old daughter) opened the envelope.
My first hint that maybe this might not be a good idea was when Ginger leapt to her feet and said, "Be careful! Don't tear the paper!" As Schmoopie opened the sealed flap and read...
"Dear Ginger, I may never again know the love of a woman but no matter what lies ahead for me, I will always treasure the memory of our last night together. I cannot forget the vision of your naked body bathed in blue light, the curves of the mounds and the musky scent of your womanliness, the depth of our hunger and passion, the spiritual feeling of our lovemaking, deeper and deeper..."
We three were so stunned we were frozen, unable to move. My sweet little daughter looked up from the paper, her eyes wide. "He saw you NAKED?????!!!!!!????" she asked.
After a long moment of silence (and all that ricocheted through our heads in that moment) Ginger jumped to her feet, knocking over the chair she had just vacated which collapsed to the floor with such alarming clattering as metal chairs are want to do, that the boys rushed down the hallway and knocked on our door to make sure we were alright.
Ginger ripped the paper from Schmoopie's hand and loudly and dramatically (as drama queens do so well) proclaimed Brad's insanity. But we know better. Brad and Ginger totally did the nasty.
Ew.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

...and finally FINALLY rain


I durn near wept with relief to see the midday sky darken to this today. Pray it really is the earnest arrival of the rainy season. My poor little parched yard will finally wake up and shake itself off and put on some sassy summer green after months of huddling for shade in the brown sandy thatches that passed for "ground cover" lo these past few (but too many) months.

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

heat, humidity....


but the bouganvilla looks spectaular. This gorgeous fuscia explosion lolling across my fence and tickling the oak tree under its chin grew from a tiny clipping my neighbor, Mr. Jim, gave me.

Monday, June 04, 2007


I spent the weekend housesitting for a friend. Huge mental health break and just when I was starting to talk to myself my friend Jen dropped in for wine and baked asparagus bites and talk about boys and a night swim. The water is still a little chilly but not enough to keep us out of it. As usual. Plunge.