I may not be a psychotherapist, but I like to cure my patients’ psychoses whenever the opportunity arises. And I don’t do too badly for “winging it!”
This morning, I was stopped at the parking level entrance to my office, honking and flashing my lights at the red BMW in front of me. The driver had waited ‘til he drove all the way up to the ticket dispenser before he rolled down his window and stuck out his hand. Everybody knows you’re supposed to drive up with your hand already out the window, as it’s more efficient. Well, I was honking and flashing my lights and gunning my engine and yelling, “I’m late for my ten o’clock patient, you goon! Get out of my way!”
The driver stuck his head out the window, looked back at me and smiled a boyish smile. “Oh hello, Charles!”he called.
It was my 10 o’clock patient, an award-winning actor. “Hello Timothy,”I said. “How are you today? Think it’ll rain?”
“Golly,”he peeped, with a sideways tilt of his small, round head. “I sure hope not! I get awfully depressed when it rains. Why do you suppose that is?”
“Lot’s of people are like that, Timothy,”I said. “It’s your reaction to a shift in barometric pressure and it affects your brain chemistry. Don't worry about it.”
“Really?”he smiled hopefully.
“Yes,”I said. “Although you do have a tendency toward moodiness, so maybe it’s something we need to look at. It might have to do with the time your uncle fondled you and…”
A battered, old U-Haul exited from the opposite side of the gate, revving its motor loudly. Timothy looked at me, cupping his hand to his ear, as if to say, “Huh?”
I shouted louder this time, “It might have to do with the time your uncle fondled you! How’s the filming going on your new movie?” Four women carrying Clinique shopping bags stopped and gawked. “Move on, ladies!”I added, like the fierce protector that I am. “This is a private conversation!”
“It’s going just great, Charles!” Timothy called, as the U-Haul creaked away. “The director has no idea I’m sleeping with his wife!”
“That’s excellent!”I said proudly. I had realized early on that I could help Timothy by encouraging his self-exploration, and now he was making good progress. Two more ladies passed by with Clinique bags stuffed full of goodies. “And how’s the bed wetting, Timothy?”I said.
One woman mouthed these words to the other: “He wets his bed?!”
“Keep moving, ladies!”I shouted, leaning out the window and waving my hands.
Timothy’s eyes brightened and he craned his neck. “Oh my God, I forgot to tell you, I've almost completely stopped wetting! Those electroshock treatments you sent me for, they seem to be kicking in! I wasn’t so sure at first!”
“Excellent,”I said. Was there a sale at the Clinique counter that I didn’t know about? Three more women passed by with shopping bags ready to burst.
Timothy’s face darkened. “The only problem is, I get ringing in my ears and sometimes I forget where I am. And I’m having trouble remembering my lines.”
I waved reassuringly. “Don’t worry, dear boy. That’ll pass. It affects everybody differently. By the way, who is the President of the United States?”
He paused for a moment. “Gosh, I ... I ... I don’t remember!”
“Well,”I called, “I want you to think about it and tell me, the next time you come for your session. That’s your homework. I believe that just about covers it for today, Timothy!”
He smiled brightly. “Boy, we covered a lot, didn’t we?” he said.
“Yes we did,”I said. “Now pull that ticket from the machine, OK? Do a U-turn and then drive out, and they won’t charge you when you leave. I’ll see you next week at the same time.”
“But I wanted to ask you---”he started.
“That’s all we should work on today, “I said. “I don’t want to overload you.”Besides, there was obviously a sale going on at the Clinique counter and I had 40 minutes to check it out before my next patient showed up. I was almost completely out of T-Zone Shine Control. Who knew when it would go on sale again?
“Huh? Well OK, Charles. I’ll see you next week. Bye bye! And thank you!”Timothy drove off.
“Be good, be well, be safe!”I said. I’ve been trying out different send-offs and I kind of like that one. It seems to cover it all!
Showing posts with label Michael Musto. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael Musto. Show all posts
Friday, January 7, 2011
Tuesday, November 9, 2010
Panicky Producer Disses Pitches
My receptionist Delphinia is a drama major at Santa Monica College and--if you ask her--the next Sarah Bernhardt. I wouldn’t know. I don’t recall her getting a Tony for her work in the Tierra Del Fuego Dinner Theatre production of “Planet of the Apes,” but who can say? It might have gotten lost in the mail.
“Charles, this guy is a huge producer,” said Delphinia, applying a fresh coat of cyan to her lips. “I've been taking a class on pitching TV and movie projects to producers and I can't wait to try out some of my new ideas!”
“You took a class in that?” I said. “You wasted your parents’ money.”
“What?” she said, sipping her pineapple boba.
“Sweetheart, everybody knows if you want to pitch a movie, all you do is this: name two previous movies and connect them with the word, 'meets.'”
“That’s it?” she said.
“Simple as that. It's all anybody ever does, take it from me. Of course, it's best if you can do it over lunch at the Four Seasons, but the important thing is, do it. Then just sit back and wait for the dough to roll in.”
“Really?” she said. Delphinia is a sweet girl but so horribly uninformed that I sometimes worry about her surviving in this jungle.
“Now would you please go get some fresh linens from the closet?” I said. “Let's have this place looking sharp. Producers are very picky." As she stepped into the closet, the door locked shut behind her.
“Hey, what happened?” Delphinia's muffled call.
“I don't know,” I said, jiggling the handle. “I can't seem to get the door to open. I'll go look for the key.” I couldn’t allow Delphinia to harass our new patient and so I wasn’t completely disappointed when the door locked quite accidentally.
Just then our new patient, a tall, thin man in a tweed sport coat, strode into the office. I cupped my hands to the closet door and whispered, “He's here!”
“Get me out!” said Delphinia. “I've got to talk to that guy!”
I waved the man in. “Hello, we've been expecting you. Sit down. What can I help you with?”
“I think I’ve got an anxiety disorder,” he said, rubbing his narrow forehead. “I don’t want to take drugs and I heard acupuncture might help. Only, I’m terrified of needles!”
“Don’t worry,” I said, putting my hand on his shoulder. “Just think of this experience as ‘Monk’ meets ‘Marcus Welby.’”
“Uh, what?” he said, tilting his head. “Do you think you can help me? As I was walking around the lot today I got one of these panic attacks where my pulse races and my head feels like it’s been hit by an atom bomb and--”
“Are these headaches like 'Pearl Harbor' meets 'Armageddon'?” I said. “Or more like 'Hellraiser' meets 'The Head That Wouldn't Die'?”
“Like what?” he said. “I don't get you.”
He seemed confused by my subtle infusion of pitches into the conversation. But since success is ninety per cent persistence and ten per cent inspiration, I marched onward. “What I'm saying,” I explained, “is that you must have been walking around the lot today with your head feeling like 'Saw' meets 'Grindhouse.'”
He gave me an irritated look and said, “Look, I don't know what you're talking about but I'd sure appreciate it if you could relieve my anxiety and these headaches!”
“I'll be happy to,” I said. “But did any of these pitches sound good to you? I mean, you are a producer, after all.”
“I'm a what?” he said. “Where'd you get that idea?”
“Of course you are,” I said. “You were telling me about how you walked around the lot today.”
The man laughed. “The lot? The car lot! I sell new and pre-owned Ferraris.”
“I knew that!” I said, hiding my disappointment.
“But I can tell you this: your pitches sound stale and uninspired. And your references are not quite out of fashion enough to be back in fashion.”
“Thank you,” I said. “It’s always good to get helpful criticism from a professional. What was it you do again? Sell used cars?” I made a mental note to myself: have Delphinia tape up the ‘It’s Nice to be Nice’ poster where patients have to stare at it. “Now,” I said, “if you'll wait here just a moment, my assistant will come help you with your paperwork and we'll start your treatment.”
Just then I put my hand in my pocket and happened to find the key to the linen closet. Stepping into the hall, I unlocked the door.
“Thanks, boss!” said Delphinia, panting and hoofing. “Where is he? Lemme at him!”
“He's waiting for you in my office. Good luck with your pitch; he's pretending to be a car salesman.”
“Oh my god!” she laughed skipping down the hall. “I’ll call you when we’re ready.”
Monday, November 1, 2010
A Halloween Birth in Hollywood
“Charles,” he said, “my wife is in labor! She’s in terrible pain. Can you get over here right away and give her some acupuncture anesthesia? We’ve got a suite at the Beverly Wilshire.”
“Take her to a hospital,” I said.
“We’re doing it right here,” he said. “She insists on natural childbirth. We’ve got a midwife and a women’s chanting circle and some stoned-looking monks and you-name-it. It’s a damned circus but it’s what she wants. My poor Jewish mother is fit to be tied.”
I jumped in the car and was about to call little Meryl to cancel our outing when my phone rang. It was Commando, the über-agent, calling.
“Chuck,” she said, “what’s your kid up to tonight? Are you taking her out? Let me do it for you. I’ve been trying to corner some elusive talent on the West Side and I’m thinking maybe your daughter could be my conduit.”
“What are you talking about?” I said.
“Look, here’s the plan: the kid rings the bell at some carefully chosen homes, then she does her little Trick-or-Treat thing and if Downey or Ansari answers the door, I step out from behind a bush and flash ’em a big smile. Next thing you know, they’re my clients. Kaboom! And the kid gets her Goobers.”
It sounded like a mutually beneficial arrangement to me, although I'm not sure I'd accept Halloween candy from Robert Downey. And so, as I pulled up to the hotel I gave the valet my keys, and the über-agent my blessing. In the elevator it occurred to me that the Universe takes care of you if you take care of It. Then it occurred to me that that didn’t make any sense.
“Thank God you’re here!” said the director, pulling me into the plush Governor Suite.
Seated around the room were a half dozen monks in saffron robes blowing rhythmically into curving, six-foot horns, filling the room with a deep, sonorous hum. The director whisked me into the adjoining room where a pale, athletic woman with flowing hair lay in bed, sweating and cursing while a group of frowsy, bra-less matrons in madras skirts chanted and clapped their finger cymbals. In the corner, a seventyish lady wearing a black, size-six cocktail dress and small, tight frown was watching “QVC.”
“Hurry Charles, please!” said the director. “My wife’s been screaming like this for the past hour.”
“How do you do,” I said, extending my hand to the sweaty, wild-eyed woman.
“Stop this pain!” she hollered, tearing a button off my shirt.
“Certainly,” I said. But as I was about to stick a needle in her outer ear, the baby poked its head from between her pale thighs. The chanting grew manic as one of the frowsy women--the midwife--stepped forward to assist with the delivery. Suddenly the lady in the black dress jumped up, shoving an elbow into the midwife’s rib.
“Outta my way, you beatnik” she croaked. “That’s my grandchild in there. Go back to your voo-doo! Okay sweetheart, push! You hear me? Push, push!”
The director’s wife pushed and howled and pushed some more and when the birth was complete, the lady in the black dress held the baby up like she had just won it bowling. Everybody in the suite crowded around the bed and clapped.
“It’s a boy,” said the little lady. “Thank God. My prayers have been answered. Now everybody take your incense and go home, and don’t steal the ash trays!”
On my way home I realized it wasn’t quite six o’clock. If I hurried, I could still take Meryl out for Trick-or-Treats. As stop signs flew by and yellow lights blurred in my rear view mirror, I thought about the doting director and his wild-eyed wife. I thought about how a good Jewish boy and a nutty New Age girl had found a cultural common ground in the love they shared and how--together--they had brought new life into the world. And it occurred to me the Universe really does take care of you if you take care of…hey, how long has that cop car been on my tail?
Friday, September 24, 2010
Über-Agent Pays in Cupcakes
Commando is a well-known, über-agent with a roster of clients that stretches from here to Betty Ford.
“Everything about me is über, Chuck,” she once bragged, kissing her own bicep.
This seemed an odd remark for a woman with a $20 flat-top from Supercuts, but I soon learned Commando speaks the language of extremes. And so, she’s just as likely to proclaim a client’s snobby, little art house flick, “The Most Ground-Breaking Film of the Past Fifty Years,” as she is likely to proclaim her coke-head tattoo guy, “The Greatest Portrait Artist Since Rembrandt.”
I was emergency-called to Commando’s Century City office today and was greeted by her latest assistant, a terrorized, young woman with frizzy, brown hair and a Band Aid stuck on her forehead. There was no point learning her name, I could see that. As any Industry assistant can tell you, when your boss throws a fit, your job is secure; when your boss throws a Brancusi, your days are numbered.
Commando roared from her inner office, “Get in here, Charles! Stick some pins in me quick, before my damn head explodes!”
Commando had kicked off her boots and lay on her sofa, looking up at me. “Ya know, Chuck, the pressure of this adoption is making me insane. It’s very stressful!”
“I didn’t know you’re adopting,” I said.
“Oh you bet I am, Chuck. And you’re the one who inspired me. There you are, a single parent -- I wouldn’t call your friend Myron a fully committed partner -- who manages to juggle career and fatherhood successfully. And what a great kid you’ve got. What the hell’s her name, anyway?”
Commando was referring to my daughter Meryl, who entered my life during an Oscars party five years ago. My caterer had brought along a woman skilled in the production of unbearably greasy baba-ganoush, which was bad enough, but then the woman ended up giving birth under my chocolate fountain just as Annette Bening was cheated out of Best Actress by Hilary Swank.
The woman begged me to keep the baby till Thursday while she arranged for friends to come get it, as her husband didn’t want any more kids. That was five years ago. My caterer later confessed the woman had rejoined her family in some remote Indian village, which makes me wonder: why baba-ganoush? Isn’t that Greek? In any case, while I’ve accepted the role of father, I know little Meryl’s mother could show up at any moment looking for her kid and wondering why I named her after “The Most Versatile Actress of the Past Fifty Years.” So I try not to get too attached to the little cupcake muncher in the flowered pinafore.
As I swabbed Commando with alcohol she unleashed a deep sigh. “Is it fun being a parent?” she said.
“That depends on whether you enjoy waking up in the middle of the night, unable to sleep because of all the crying. Your own crying.”
“Well, it would be worth it to me,” she said, lacing her fingers together and resting them on her stomach. “It’s for my job. It’s all about the nanny network. You could stick a few more needles in my scalp and I wouldn’t complain.”
“I see,” I said.
The nanny network, in case you didn’t already know, is more powerful than any other professional network in L.A. The idea is this: you enroll your child in the best school and on the best teams and then throw parties for your kid at every opportunity. The really important families will send their nannies along with the kids. During the fun-making, your nanny sits in the kitchen with the other nannies, where they all pump each other for gossip on behalf of their employers. More than a few Hollywood deals have been incubated in the nanny network.
“Parenthood is more trouble than you think,” I said. “I’m here to warn you.”
Commando rolled her head to one side and gazed out the window, up at the sky. Then she turned to me. “So, what if I just borrow your kid once in a while? She could pretend to be my daughter and I’d give parties for her at my place. I’d pay you for the favor. There’s some potential clients whose kids are taking acting classes on the West Side. I’ll enroll her in those classes and then give some parties and invite everybody. She could pull it off, right? You keep telling me what a great actor she is. And who knows, maybe I could sign her with the agency, if she’s any good.”
There was no point pretending. “Yes,” I said “she is a great actress. You should see her Blanche DuBois, her Lady MacBeth, her Joan of Arc. Playing the part of your daughter would be a cinch.”
“You know,” said Commando wrinkling her freckled nose, “my headache is all of a sudden gone! You’re a genius for thinking of this. Bring your kid to my place next Saturday and I’ll enroll her in acting school. I’ve already written you a check for the favor.”
“She’d enjoy that,” I said, pulling out the pins. “I’ll put the money toward her Yale Drama School fund.” Commando handed me a check. It was for twenty five dollars. Okay then … toward cupcakes.
“Everything about me is über, Chuck,” she once bragged, kissing her own bicep.
This seemed an odd remark for a woman with a $20 flat-top from Supercuts, but I soon learned Commando speaks the language of extremes. And so, she’s just as likely to proclaim a client’s snobby, little art house flick, “The Most Ground-Breaking Film of the Past Fifty Years,” as she is likely to proclaim her coke-head tattoo guy, “The Greatest Portrait Artist Since Rembrandt.”
I was emergency-called to Commando’s Century City office today and was greeted by her latest assistant, a terrorized, young woman with frizzy, brown hair and a Band Aid stuck on her forehead. There was no point learning her name, I could see that. As any Industry assistant can tell you, when your boss throws a fit, your job is secure; when your boss throws a Brancusi, your days are numbered.
Commando roared from her inner office, “Get in here, Charles! Stick some pins in me quick, before my damn head explodes!”
Commando had kicked off her boots and lay on her sofa, looking up at me. “Ya know, Chuck, the pressure of this adoption is making me insane. It’s very stressful!”
“I didn’t know you’re adopting,” I said.
“Oh you bet I am, Chuck. And you’re the one who inspired me. There you are, a single parent -- I wouldn’t call your friend Myron a fully committed partner -- who manages to juggle career and fatherhood successfully. And what a great kid you’ve got. What the hell’s her name, anyway?”
Commando was referring to my daughter Meryl, who entered my life during an Oscars party five years ago. My caterer had brought along a woman skilled in the production of unbearably greasy baba-ganoush, which was bad enough, but then the woman ended up giving birth under my chocolate fountain just as Annette Bening was cheated out of Best Actress by Hilary Swank.
The woman begged me to keep the baby till Thursday while she arranged for friends to come get it, as her husband didn’t want any more kids. That was five years ago. My caterer later confessed the woman had rejoined her family in some remote Indian village, which makes me wonder: why baba-ganoush? Isn’t that Greek? In any case, while I’ve accepted the role of father, I know little Meryl’s mother could show up at any moment looking for her kid and wondering why I named her after “The Most Versatile Actress of the Past Fifty Years.” So I try not to get too attached to the little cupcake muncher in the flowered pinafore.
As I swabbed Commando with alcohol she unleashed a deep sigh. “Is it fun being a parent?” she said.
“That depends on whether you enjoy waking up in the middle of the night, unable to sleep because of all the crying. Your own crying.”
“Well, it would be worth it to me,” she said, lacing her fingers together and resting them on her stomach. “It’s for my job. It’s all about the nanny network. You could stick a few more needles in my scalp and I wouldn’t complain.”
“I see,” I said.
The nanny network, in case you didn’t already know, is more powerful than any other professional network in L.A. The idea is this: you enroll your child in the best school and on the best teams and then throw parties for your kid at every opportunity. The really important families will send their nannies along with the kids. During the fun-making, your nanny sits in the kitchen with the other nannies, where they all pump each other for gossip on behalf of their employers. More than a few Hollywood deals have been incubated in the nanny network.
“Parenthood is more trouble than you think,” I said. “I’m here to warn you.”
Commando rolled her head to one side and gazed out the window, up at the sky. Then she turned to me. “So, what if I just borrow your kid once in a while? She could pretend to be my daughter and I’d give parties for her at my place. I’d pay you for the favor. There’s some potential clients whose kids are taking acting classes on the West Side. I’ll enroll her in those classes and then give some parties and invite everybody. She could pull it off, right? You keep telling me what a great actor she is. And who knows, maybe I could sign her with the agency, if she’s any good.”
There was no point pretending. “Yes,” I said “she is a great actress. You should see her Blanche DuBois, her Lady MacBeth, her Joan of Arc. Playing the part of your daughter would be a cinch.”
“You know,” said Commando wrinkling her freckled nose, “my headache is all of a sudden gone! You’re a genius for thinking of this. Bring your kid to my place next Saturday and I’ll enroll her in acting school. I’ve already written you a check for the favor.”
“She’d enjoy that,” I said, pulling out the pins. “I’ll put the money toward her Yale Drama School fund.” Commando handed me a check. It was for twenty five dollars. Okay then … toward cupcakes.
Saturday, September 18, 2010
Follow This Blog at www.TheWrap.com!
You can now follow this blog at The Wrap!
And you can catch up on the latest Industry news while you're there.
Link: http://www.thewrap.com/blog/charles-yarborough
And you can catch up on the latest Industry news while you're there.
Link: http://www.thewrap.com/blog/charles-yarborough
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Wednesday, September 8, 2010
File Under: Conservative Values Applied Liberally
Mrs. X is the wife of a nationally syndicated Conservative TV host (you can’t avoid him!). She came to my office this morning with a serious problem: she caught her husband cheating. She had read his text messages and was terribly upset.
Mrs. X needed to talk before her acupuncture treatment. She sat on my sofa, crossed her lovely, toned legs and wiped away a tear. She said, “I was so surprised when I found that romantic message on my husband's phone, I nearly fainted!”
Mrs. X said, “This is unforgivable behavior from a man who lectures to the entire nation about Family Values!”
"What I’m hearing," I said, "is that you can’t tolerate him being a complicated and imperfect human being."
Mrs. X stared at her shoes and frowned. They were gold buckled Gucci pumps from three seasons ago and frankly, I would have frowned too. She said, “And worst of all, he’s been carrying on with our nanny. How unimaginative!”
"What I’m hearing," I said, burping up a delicious risotto con fungi porcini from Il Cielo, “is that you had hoped your husband would show more imagination than you do. By the way, are you still carrying on with your pool boy?”
“What?” she said, hearing me for the first time. “What did you say, Charles?”
“I said, how is it going with you and the pool boy?”
“Oh Jesus!” she said. “Thanks for reminding me! I’m supposed to meet him at the house at one o’clock. I’m giving him a brand new BMW and I need to get there early to surprise him. Gotta run! Sorry!” She stood up and bolted out the door, tossing a wad of cash my way.
“Take your time!“ I called to her, hoping Mrs. X wouldn’t get to the house too terribly early. I'd hate for her to catch the pool boy with the nanny.
Thursday, August 26, 2010
File Under: Does Anybody Sleep in L.A.?
Commando never makes an appointment to see me. Instead, she waits until she’s in a crisis, then sends up a flare. “I’m desperate, Charles!” she panted into the phone today. “Four of my clients are up for Emmys and I haven’t got a damn thing to wear. What’ll I do?”
This seemed an odd question for a successful agent to ask an acupuncturist. After all, she almost single-handedly (by her own grandiose estimate) keeps the primetime sit-com slate populated. “Why don’t you check with one of those assistants flitting around your office?” I said. “You’ve got quite a natty little group of go-to’s.”
“What, and give those twinks the upper hand?” she said. “No way!”
She had a point. Well-trounced minions must not be given a reason to feel needed. It disrupts the sacred hierarchy of abuse. How, after all, can you hurl your attributed-to-Brancusi bronze at the person who dressed and coifed you for the Emmys? Unfortunately for Commando, I didn’t have the time or talent for a fashion makeover so I sent her to Saks on Wilshire. I knew she wouldn’t be going onstage at the Nokia so she wouldn’t want to overdress, and Saks could be relied on to keep her from appearing overly off-the-rack.
On my way home from the office (where, by the way, I treated one of Commando’s clients, an chronically insomniac actress on an Emmy-likely sitcom. Does anybody sleep in L.A?), Commando called. “Charles,” she said, “guess what? Problem solved! I found the perfect get-up for the Emmys.”
“You went to Saks?” I said.
“Nope. I got in the car and started driving toward Saks but when I saw those mannequins in the window in those frilly-dilly outfits, I said to myself that ain’t my style. I’m not frilly-dilly. So I kept driving and ended up at the Army surplus.”
“At the what??” I said.
“Everything I needed, right there,” she said.
“You what?” I said. “How could you possibly--what do you mean--are you out of your--” Then I remembered. She didn’t find success by batting her eyelashes and swaying her hips. She leaves that to her assistants--her twinks. She’s Commando. Pretty is for pansies. And so, on Sunday evening, if the camera should swing across the Nokia and you glimpse a square jawed woman with a flattop, wearing a tux jacket and camouflage trousers, pushing people out of the way, don’t be too quick to judge. She populates your primetime viewing. And what she lacks in frilly-dilly she makes up for in Emmys.
*********************************************************************
(Meet Commando: July 12, 2010 entry)
This seemed an odd question for a successful agent to ask an acupuncturist. After all, she almost single-handedly (by her own grandiose estimate) keeps the primetime sit-com slate populated. “Why don’t you check with one of those assistants flitting around your office?” I said. “You’ve got quite a natty little group of go-to’s.”
“What, and give those twinks the upper hand?” she said. “No way!”
She had a point. Well-trounced minions must not be given a reason to feel needed. It disrupts the sacred hierarchy of abuse. How, after all, can you hurl your attributed-to-Brancusi bronze at the person who dressed and coifed you for the Emmys? Unfortunately for Commando, I didn’t have the time or talent for a fashion makeover so I sent her to Saks on Wilshire. I knew she wouldn’t be going onstage at the Nokia so she wouldn’t want to overdress, and Saks could be relied on to keep her from appearing overly off-the-rack.
On my way home from the office (where, by the way, I treated one of Commando’s clients, an chronically insomniac actress on an Emmy-likely sitcom. Does anybody sleep in L.A?), Commando called. “Charles,” she said, “guess what? Problem solved! I found the perfect get-up for the Emmys.”
“You went to Saks?” I said.
“Nope. I got in the car and started driving toward Saks but when I saw those mannequins in the window in those frilly-dilly outfits, I said to myself that ain’t my style. I’m not frilly-dilly. So I kept driving and ended up at the Army surplus.”
“At the what??” I said.
“Everything I needed, right there,” she said.
“You what?” I said. “How could you possibly--what do you mean--are you out of your--” Then I remembered. She didn’t find success by batting her eyelashes and swaying her hips. She leaves that to her assistants--her twinks. She’s Commando. Pretty is for pansies. And so, on Sunday evening, if the camera should swing across the Nokia and you glimpse a square jawed woman with a flattop, wearing a tux jacket and camouflage trousers, pushing people out of the way, don’t be too quick to judge. She populates your primetime viewing. And what she lacks in frilly-dilly she makes up for in Emmys.
*********************************************************************
(Meet Commando: July 12, 2010 entry)
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Friday, August 20, 2010
File Under: Arc for Art's Sake
It was six p.m. and I needed a sugar fix so I jumped in my car and headed toward Vanilla Bakery on Wilshire. Making my way through traffic, I got a creepy feeling and it grew creepier and creepier, like disembodied fingers massaging my neck. And as I pulled up to Vanilla I realized the reason: I was being followed. A black Escalade with tinted windows and blinding hi-beams had been close on my tail for the past six blocks and as I backed into a parking spot by the curb, it sidled up next to my car.
This, I thought, is not a good thing.
Then I remembered Myron’s suspicion that his new bosses were following him around in black BMWs. I had assumed this was the paranoid delusion of a man who had missed his matutinal meds, but it turned out he was right. After all, Myron is now in the business of escorting valuable goods into the U.S. for the purpose of underwriting film projects. Why shouldn’t the bosses put a tail on him and his friends? I called Myron on his cell phone but it went to voice mail so I called the house. His grouchy Czechoslovakian maid, Fanny answered.
“No, Meester Charles,” she wheezed, “Meester Myron is not here. He vas called avay dis afternoon. He is having a meeting with der hoodlums he now vorks for. I hef not met these people but the whole ting smells bad, very bad. Like donkey goulash. Very bad smell, yah! Smell is bad, taste is worse. If offered, do not eat!”
“I’ll remember that, the next time I’m at Spago,” I said. If Myron’s goons were following me around, it probably wasn’t to get my autograph. But since I had nothing to hide, there was nothing to worry about. I opened my door and as I did the front passenger window of the SUV slid down.
“Mister Yarborough,” came a woman’s stern voice. It was Miss Feather, my daughter’s kindergarten teacher. “Mister Yarborough, come here,” she commanded. I went up to the window, half relieved and half anxious. I had blown off our parent/teacher meeting again last week after promising to change my ways and become an “involved” parent. And now, since I had ignored her numerous calls, she had gotten in her car and followed me. With gray hair pulled together and choked into a bun atop her head, Miss Feather sat primly in her seat, shooting disdain over the rim of her glasses. “Come closer,” she said. “We need to talk!” I came closer and, no sooner had I set my hands on the door when she swatted my knuckles with two great cracks of a wooden ruler.
“That’s for your unexcused absence on Friday,” she said.
“But Miss Feather, I had to go to a very important--”
“No excuses!” she said. “I expect to see you in my classroom at 5 p.m. sharp, next Friday for our parent/teacher meeting. Understood? Are you aware that your daughter showed up at school dressed as Joan of Arc this week and started a bonfire in the trash can?”
“She did?" I said. "What’s wrong with that? We all started fires as kids.”
“At your reform school?”
How did she know about that, I wondered. “Look, it’s just a little trash can fire,” I said.
Miss Feather’s face grew red. “She was standing in it at the time.”
Damn, I thought. What a towering talent! Meryl is only five years old and she’s already got Method Acting down cold. Yale Drama School will be lucky to have her. “Okay,” I said, pulling back from Miss Feather and heading toward Vanilla. “I’ll see you on Friday.”
“You’d better.”
Brilliant, I thought, brilliant. Meryl gets a bourbon cupcake and fifty bucks for this one.
This, I thought, is not a good thing.

“No, Meester Charles,” she wheezed, “Meester Myron is not here. He vas called avay dis afternoon. He is having a meeting with der hoodlums he now vorks for. I hef not met these people but the whole ting smells bad, very bad. Like donkey goulash. Very bad smell, yah! Smell is bad, taste is worse. If offered, do not eat!”
“I’ll remember that, the next time I’m at Spago,” I said. If Myron’s goons were following me around, it probably wasn’t to get my autograph. But since I had nothing to hide, there was nothing to worry about. I opened my door and as I did the front passenger window of the SUV slid down.
“Mister Yarborough,” came a woman’s stern voice. It was Miss Feather, my daughter’s kindergarten teacher. “Mister Yarborough, come here,” she commanded. I went up to the window, half relieved and half anxious. I had blown off our parent/teacher meeting again last week after promising to change my ways and become an “involved” parent. And now, since I had ignored her numerous calls, she had gotten in her car and followed me. With gray hair pulled together and choked into a bun atop her head, Miss Feather sat primly in her seat, shooting disdain over the rim of her glasses. “Come closer,” she said. “We need to talk!” I came closer and, no sooner had I set my hands on the door when she swatted my knuckles with two great cracks of a wooden ruler.
“That’s for your unexcused absence on Friday,” she said.
“But Miss Feather, I had to go to a very important--”
“No excuses!” she said. “I expect to see you in my classroom at 5 p.m. sharp, next Friday for our parent/teacher meeting. Understood? Are you aware that your daughter showed up at school dressed as Joan of Arc this week and started a bonfire in the trash can?”
“She did?" I said. "What’s wrong with that? We all started fires as kids.”
“At your reform school?”
How did she know about that, I wondered. “Look, it’s just a little trash can fire,” I said.
Miss Feather’s face grew red. “She was standing in it at the time.”
Damn, I thought. What a towering talent! Meryl is only five years old and she’s already got Method Acting down cold. Yale Drama School will be lucky to have her. “Okay,” I said, pulling back from Miss Feather and heading toward Vanilla. “I’ll see you on Friday.”
“You’d better.”
Brilliant, I thought, brilliant. Meryl gets a bourbon cupcake and fifty bucks for this one.
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Tuesday, August 17, 2010
Terrified Shrink Tasers Tinseltown Tramp!
Celebrity therapist Dr. DelVecchio called me on the phone today. Charles,” she said, “can you come give me acupuncture right away at my office? I’m a pathetic wreck!”
“So what?” I thought. "I treat a dozen shrinks each week and they’re all pathetic wrecks. Isn’t that why they’re shrinks?” But I also had a couple hours to kill before my next appointment so I said yes, got in my car and drove east to the Brentwood high-rise where she rents a penthouse. Pushing open the heavy, oak door, I found Dr. DelVecchio lying face-up on the floor, cell phone in hand, her tweed skirt up above her knees.
“Thank God you’re here,” she said, waving a bony hand. “Help yourself to the bar. You haven’t stopped smoking, have you?”
I lit two Camels and handed her one. She took a deep, greedy hit and sent up a cloud of ash and anxiety. “Jeez!” she said. “I’ve got to get out of this career. My patients are all perverts! Make mine Wild Turkey with a splash, will you, Honey?” Somehow, over the course of two years, my professional name had morphed from Charles into Honey.
“What happened, Doc?” I said, stepping across the room to a lacquered cabinet full of bottles and tumblers. “What’s the problem?”
“I’ve just had the shock of a lifetime. It’s that woman again!”
That Woman, the wife of a big director (with a 3-D pic currently in theaters), is a notorious, bleach-blond nymphomaniac, an Industry giant’s bored, horny wife in a world full of ambitious, young filmmakers. Last year--by her own report--she bedded half the Official Selection directors at Cannes.
“During her therapy today,” said Dr. DelVecchio, “that woman yakked on and on about her sexual conquests, so I offered to hypnotize her. I’d take her back to her childhood, and we’d examine how she became sexually fixated. Well, she regressed beautifully, back to three years of age.”
“A mere toddler,” I said.
“Then,” said Dr. DelVecchio, “she wanted to sit on my lap, so naturally I let her, although she’s six feet tall in those thigh-high Manolo boots that I’d literally kill for. Well, she was all goo-goo and ga-ga and the next thing I knew, her hand was in my blouse. That’s when I realized she wasn’t hypnotized at all! So I reached into my drawer and pulled out my taser and gave her a jolt to the buttocks. The only problem was, she was sitting on my lap, so we both got jolted and fell to the floor, unconscious. When I woke up, she was gone and my skirt was up over my head. I’m hoping the worst didn’t happen. The very thought of lesbianism makes me want to vomit! What on earth will I tell my husband? Give me that drink!”
I handed her the drink. She propped herself up on an elbow and slurped. I said, “Doc, isn’t your husband the guy who raises orchids and plays the harp in his velvet pantaloons? I wouldn’t worry too much about your husband.”
She thought about it for a moment, then laughed. And so did I. After all, a man who recites the Kama Sutra to his Venus fly trap must have secrets of his own.
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
File Under: Arab Princess, Peppy, Pins
I had just stuck a dozen pins in the Arab princess when somebody called out my name. It was the mailman, standing in the waiting room. He had a certified delivery, a scented, orange envelope addressed in large, childlike letters.
“Take this quick,” sneezed the man, waving the envelope at me. “I’ve got chemical sensitivity and this thing is toxic!”
It contained a letter from Miss Feather, my daughter’s kindergarten teacher, scribbled on pink paper. “Dear Mr. Yarborough,” it said, “I look forward to our parent/teacher conference this Friday. May I suggest you actually show up this time? Despite your previous behavior and whatever limits of imagination you possess, I believe you are capable of grasping the importance of your participation in the education of your child.” Well, BLA BLA BLA it went, ending in this directive:
“For our meeting, you will need to bring two #2 pencils, sharpened. Pens are not allowed and will be confiscated. A snack will not be provided, so eat a hearty breakfast. If you need to make pee-pee during our meeting you will have to hold it, so I suggest you plan your morning accordingly. Lastly, may I suggest you pack up your peppiest attitude and display it enthusiastically upon arrival? Anything less than a peppy disposition will trigger severe consequences. Cordially, Miss Feather”
Maybe it was my imagination, but I didn’t see anything cordial in that letter. Still, I knew I’d better show up for our meeting since I had missed a few here and there and our last rendezvous (see July 17) didn’t go so well, due to her being a jerk (If she reads this, there’ll probably be severe consequences).
Now it was the Arab princess’ turn to call out my name. “Charles,” she cried hoarsely, “come quickly!”
I ran into the treatment room to find a bent pin protruding from her outer ear. Pulling it out, I asked what had happened, although I knew the answer. She had, despite my warning, decided to talk on her cell phone.
Now here’s the deal with Arab princesses that I've met: they’re used to being surrounded by domestic servants and--until you prove you are otherwise--they will regard you as such. This means that if you tell them not to talk on the cell phone during their acupuncture treatment, they’re going to do it anyway. The other side of the equation is this: once they trust you and understand that they’re getting good value for the money, they are the most faithful and generous patrons you could hope for.
“You pushed that pin in with your cell phone, Princess,” I said.
“I know, I know, I know,” she said, waving away my accusation with the back of her hand. “Take these out. I’m done for today.”
Now it was the Chniese delivery guy’s turn to call out my name. Well, It wasn’t my name he was calling out, exactly. It was, “Shrim fry rye, shrim fry rye! I gottee shrim fry rye!” My lunch had arrived. I paid him and went back to the princess and finished removing her pins.
“Mmmmm,” she said, seductively batting her large, dark eyes. “Shrimp fried rice sounds delicious.”
“Well then,” I said, with my peppiest disposition, “I think you should have it.”
As she walked out the door I handed her the aromatic package and--as she was used to getting whatever she wanted--she took it without a word of thanks, tossing a wad of bills on my desk. Well, I thought, we all have our own way of expressing gratitude, some better than others. And hers is pretty good.
“Take this quick,” sneezed the man, waving the envelope at me. “I’ve got chemical sensitivity and this thing is toxic!”
It contained a letter from Miss Feather, my daughter’s kindergarten teacher, scribbled on pink paper. “Dear Mr. Yarborough,” it said, “I look forward to our parent/teacher conference this Friday. May I suggest you actually show up this time? Despite your previous behavior and whatever limits of imagination you possess, I believe you are capable of grasping the importance of your participation in the education of your child.” Well, BLA BLA BLA it went, ending in this directive:
“For our meeting, you will need to bring two #2 pencils, sharpened. Pens are not allowed and will be confiscated. A snack will not be provided, so eat a hearty breakfast. If you need to make pee-pee during our meeting you will have to hold it, so I suggest you plan your morning accordingly. Lastly, may I suggest you pack up your peppiest attitude and display it enthusiastically upon arrival? Anything less than a peppy disposition will trigger severe consequences. Cordially, Miss Feather”
Maybe it was my imagination, but I didn’t see anything cordial in that letter. Still, I knew I’d better show up for our meeting since I had missed a few here and there and our last rendezvous (see July 17) didn’t go so well, due to her being a jerk (If she reads this, there’ll probably be severe consequences).
Now it was the Arab princess’ turn to call out my name. “Charles,” she cried hoarsely, “come quickly!”
I ran into the treatment room to find a bent pin protruding from her outer ear. Pulling it out, I asked what had happened, although I knew the answer. She had, despite my warning, decided to talk on her cell phone.
Now here’s the deal with Arab princesses that I've met: they’re used to being surrounded by domestic servants and--until you prove you are otherwise--they will regard you as such. This means that if you tell them not to talk on the cell phone during their acupuncture treatment, they’re going to do it anyway. The other side of the equation is this: once they trust you and understand that they’re getting good value for the money, they are the most faithful and generous patrons you could hope for.
“You pushed that pin in with your cell phone, Princess,” I said.
“I know, I know, I know,” she said, waving away my accusation with the back of her hand. “Take these out. I’m done for today.”
Now it was the Chniese delivery guy’s turn to call out my name. Well, It wasn’t my name he was calling out, exactly. It was, “Shrim fry rye, shrim fry rye! I gottee shrim fry rye!” My lunch had arrived. I paid him and went back to the princess and finished removing her pins.
“Mmmmm,” she said, seductively batting her large, dark eyes. “Shrimp fried rice sounds delicious.”
“Well then,” I said, with my peppiest disposition, “I think you should have it.”
As she walked out the door I handed her the aromatic package and--as she was used to getting whatever she wanted--she took it without a word of thanks, tossing a wad of bills on my desk. Well, I thought, we all have our own way of expressing gratitude, some better than others. And hers is pretty good.
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