Showing posts with label Zsa Zsa Dead. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zsa Zsa Dead. Show all posts
Friday, December 3, 2010
Electroshock for Outed Actor
Über-Agent stood at her office window this morning, gazing through wispy clouds, high up in Century City, and asked herself, “How can I torture Chuck today?” Then, crushing a Red Bull between her breasts, she picked up the phone.
“Chuck, my boy,” came her raspy voice, “I’m sending my client to you for emergency acupuncture. The tabloids have gotten wind that he’s been picking guys up from Craigslist, and we simply can’t have this foolishness. It puts his marriage in a bad light and my job in jeopardy.”
“What do you want from me?” I asked.
“Well, I sent him for Heterosexual Recovery Therapy yesterday. He did a session several years ago, but it must have worn off. Anyway, it's electroshock and it left him loopy so I need you to get him back in focus for his media tour.”
“You mean there's a shrink in L.A. who will do that procedure?” I said.
“Who said shrink? It's a buddy of mine with an electro-shock machine and a Playgirl calendar.”
“A buddy?” I said.
“Okay, my mechanic,” said Über-Agent.
“How did your mechanic get a hold of--”
“Craigslist, okay? You gonna help?”
Forty five minutes later, a handsome actor, well-known for his swagger and cheeky bravado, shuffled into my office, pulled by his tiny wife. He looked pale, confused, unsteady.
“Please sit,” I said. “Your agent tells me you’re a little bit out of focus. Is that true?”
The actor looked at his wife, with her sparrow print blouse and primly crossed ankles and long, denim skirt. Then he turned his bloodshot eyes my way and cleared his throat. “Yes,” he said. “Forgetful.”
“That must be annoying,” I said.
“And how! I put two backstage passes for Cher in my jacket pocket yesterday and now I can’t find them.”
“Backstage for Cher?” I said, wondering how he scored those tickets. “I looove Cher!”
“Oh, me too!” he said.
“You’ve got to find those tickets!” I said.
“Or I’ll just die! If I could only remember!” he said.
“If you could turn back time!” I said.
“If I could turn back time! If I could find a way...!” This musical snippet from the immortal Cher repertoire sprang out of us and hung like a storm cloud over his wife, who said:
“Oh dear god,” and stared miserably at a pineapple boba stain Delphinia had left on the carpet and which will be deducted from her paycheck.
“What else?” I said.
“I can't seem to 'get it up' for the life of me,” he said. “It's very frustrating. For my wife.”
“Did you try staring at a picture of Cher?” I said. “That always works for me.”
“Oh boy!” he said. “Wasn't she was fabulous at the 2010 VMAs?”
“I'll say!” I said.
“There she was in that iconic black jacket and the sheer body stocking with glitter scattered just everywhere!” And the wig, oh my god, I thought I'd die when I saw that fabulous—oh-oh!” He patted his groin merrily and winked. “I believe I've just given myself a you-know-what!”
I was pleased that his libido was returning, although his wife didn't seem very encouraged. She frowned at the boba stain and mumbled. “We're ruined.” I wondered if electroshock and an Audubon calendar would cure her mood.
I gave the actor an encouraging smile. “I believe acupuncture can help you.”
“Oh?”
“I've got experience in this area,” I said.
“Great. And I've got you babe!” he said
“People say your hair's too long!” I said.
“Let's start this treatment!” he said.
“Then we'll go find those Cher tickets!” I said.
“A-hem,” said his wife, and stood up. “Does that window open wide enough for me to climb out?”
“No,” I said.
“Well then, do you have a knife or something I can kill myself with?”
Pleased that she was at last joining in the fun, I said, “If you go look in the kitchen you’ll find one, but I think they’re all plastic. But you know, Delphinia hasn’t cleaned the fridge out in six months, so anything you eat in there would probably do the trick.”
As she wandered out the door, her husband turned to me and slapped my knee. “You're such fun!” he said.
“No you are!” I said, already anticipating a successful treatment.
“No you are!”
“No you are!”
“No you are!”
“No you are!”
“And the beat goes on!”
Labels:
Acupuncture Los Angeles,
Beverly Hills,
Burbank,
CAA,
celebrity,
Charles Yarborough,
I poke L.A.,
Los Angeles Acupuncture,
malibu,
THE WRAP,
WGA,
William Morris Endeavor,
Zsa Zsa Dead
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?
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
Labels:
Acupuncture,
Acupuncture Los Angeles,
Beverly Hills,
Burbank,
CAA,
I poke L.A.,
Los Angeles Acupuncture,
Michael Musto,
THE WRAP,
William Morris Endeavor,
WWW.THEWRAP.COM,
Zsa Zsa Dead
Monday, August 30, 2010
File Under: Acting Odd in L.A.
Yesterday, during the Emmys, I was sitting with a group of Industry types at a crowded West Hollywood eatery. My host was a sit-com actress who may never get a statuette unless her show gets better scripts and some serious studio push. Despite the lack of Emmy glow among my fellow diners--which included several actors and writers, a TV director, celebrity shrink Dr. Carla DelVecchio and two talent reps from rival agencies who are secretly dating--and despite our senses being dulled from too much champagne (we had finished off six bottles of Cristal and hadn't even ordered our food yet), we pricked up our ears when a voice drifted over from across the room.
“The Fox party?” came a young man’s voice. “Cool! Pass around your card. And there’s lots of single chicks? Cool. Work your charm, dude, work it!” A man across the room was talking to a friend on his cell phone, a friend who was calling from an Emmy after-party, downtown.
“I'll have you know,” I announced to my fellow diners, “I should be given an Emmy for the performance I gave on the phone this past Friday. If there were a category for best telephone performance, I’d be a shoo-in.”
“What ever do you mean?” asked the sit-com actress, who was wearing a Chicago Bulls baseball cap, hoping not to be noticed.
“Yes, tell us,” said one of the agents, sipping champagne from her boyfriend’s glass while her other hand was busy under the table.
“Well,” I said, “I was supposed to attend a parent-teacher conference with my daughter’s teacher on Friday morning but then I got a call from an oil exec to come give his wife acupuncture at the Beverly Wilshire. She was suffering with a migraine and none of her meds was doing the trick. So I called my daughter’s teacher and told her I had tonsillitis. I sounded so pathetic and feverish I actually started feeling sorry for myself. You should have heard me cough and hack. And she fell for it!”
Just then I felt a hand on my shoulder.
“Sir, excuse me.” The young man from across the room was standing over me, glaring through horn rims. “Sir, I could not help but overhear your comments. I’d just like you to know that I am a teacher and that your behavior is disgraceful and irresponsible.”
“Huh?” I said.
“Teachers work unbelievably hard for very little money just so the offspring of lazy bums like you can get a jumpstart on life. You should be ashamed of yourself.” He was trembling with anger and I could see the muscle in his cheek moving back and forth.
“Well, I, uh…gosh, now I feel kind of bad,” I said, hoping he wasn't armed.
The man squinted at me for a long moment, then flashed a broad smile. “Not really,” he said. “I’m an actor. Fooled you, didn’t I!”
“Huh?” I said. “But why…huh?”
He looked across the table at the two canoodling agents. The under-table hanky-panky suddenly ceased as the young man handed the woman his business card. “I recognize you,” he said to her. “You’ve got some big clients and I’m gonna be one of ’em one day! My name's Herbie and I'm a Tisch grad--NYU--and I've done two seasons of Shakespeare in the Park! So here's your chance to snap me up!" He winked at her and made a ktch-ktch sound from the side of his mouth. We all stared.
“Well, is anybody going to ask me to sit down?” he said, waving his arms like a marionette.
“Not me,” said Dr. DelVecchio. The young man looked around to see if anyone else would. Nobody did.
I felt a pain in the pit of my stomach, a mixture of hunger and guilt. "Now I feel bad for missing the conference with that teacher. Bummer."
“Don’t worry,” said Dr. DelVecchio. “You have a nanny, don't you? What do you think nannies are for?”
The agent glared at the young man. "I wouldn't give you a job if it was the last thing I did, not after that stunt you just pulled."
"Alright then," said the young man, and pulled a pen from his shirt pocket. "May I take your order?"
“The Fox party?” came a young man’s voice. “Cool! Pass around your card. And there’s lots of single chicks? Cool. Work your charm, dude, work it!” A man across the room was talking to a friend on his cell phone, a friend who was calling from an Emmy after-party, downtown.
“I'll have you know,” I announced to my fellow diners, “I should be given an Emmy for the performance I gave on the phone this past Friday. If there were a category for best telephone performance, I’d be a shoo-in.”
“What ever do you mean?” asked the sit-com actress, who was wearing a Chicago Bulls baseball cap, hoping not to be noticed.
“Yes, tell us,” said one of the agents, sipping champagne from her boyfriend’s glass while her other hand was busy under the table.
“Well,” I said, “I was supposed to attend a parent-teacher conference with my daughter’s teacher on Friday morning but then I got a call from an oil exec to come give his wife acupuncture at the Beverly Wilshire. She was suffering with a migraine and none of her meds was doing the trick. So I called my daughter’s teacher and told her I had tonsillitis. I sounded so pathetic and feverish I actually started feeling sorry for myself. You should have heard me cough and hack. And she fell for it!”
Just then I felt a hand on my shoulder.
“Sir, excuse me.” The young man from across the room was standing over me, glaring through horn rims. “Sir, I could not help but overhear your comments. I’d just like you to know that I am a teacher and that your behavior is disgraceful and irresponsible.”
“Huh?” I said.
“Teachers work unbelievably hard for very little money just so the offspring of lazy bums like you can get a jumpstart on life. You should be ashamed of yourself.” He was trembling with anger and I could see the muscle in his cheek moving back and forth.
“Well, I, uh…gosh, now I feel kind of bad,” I said, hoping he wasn't armed.
The man squinted at me for a long moment, then flashed a broad smile. “Not really,” he said. “I’m an actor. Fooled you, didn’t I!”
“Huh?” I said. “But why…huh?”
He looked across the table at the two canoodling agents. The under-table hanky-panky suddenly ceased as the young man handed the woman his business card. “I recognize you,” he said to her. “You’ve got some big clients and I’m gonna be one of ’em one day! My name's Herbie and I'm a Tisch grad--NYU--and I've done two seasons of Shakespeare in the Park! So here's your chance to snap me up!" He winked at her and made a ktch-ktch sound from the side of his mouth. We all stared.
“Well, is anybody going to ask me to sit down?” he said, waving his arms like a marionette.
“Not me,” said Dr. DelVecchio. The young man looked around to see if anyone else would. Nobody did.
I felt a pain in the pit of my stomach, a mixture of hunger and guilt. "Now I feel bad for missing the conference with that teacher. Bummer."
“Don’t worry,” said Dr. DelVecchio. “You have a nanny, don't you? What do you think nannies are for?”
The agent glared at the young man. "I wouldn't give you a job if it was the last thing I did, not after that stunt you just pulled."
"Alright then," said the young man, and pulled a pen from his shirt pocket. "May I take your order?"
Labels:
Acupuncture Los Angeles,
agents,
Burbank,
CAA,
I poke L.A.,
Los Angeles Acupuncture,
malibu,
Zsa Zsa Dead,
Zsa Zsa Gabor Dead,
ZsaZsa Dead,
ZsaZsa Gabor Dead
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