Thursday, December 26, 2013
The opera was Fidelio, Beethoven’s, mighty work. “What gloom!” cried the
baritone rising out of the dungeon under a groaning stone…I cried for
it. That’s how I see life too. I was so interested in the opera that for
awhile I forgot the circumstances of my crazy life and got lost in the
great mournful sounds of Beethoven and the rich Rembrandt tones of his
story. “Well Jack, how did you like our production for this year?” asked
Brierly proudly in the street outside. “What gloom, what gloom,” I
said, “it’s absolutely great.” “The next thing you’ll have to do is meet
the members of the cast” he went on in his official tones but luckily
he forgot this in the rush of other things and vanished. It was a
matinee performance I’d seen; there was another one in the evening
scheduled. I’ll tell you how I came at least, if not to the pleasure of
meeting the members of the cast, to using their bathtub and best towels.
Incidentally I must explain here why Brierly thought enough of me to
make arrangements of all sorts for my benefit. Hal Chase and Ed White
were his most highly regarded charges; they’d been to college with me;
we’d roamed New York together and talked. Brierly’s first impression of
me was none too favorable…I was sleeping on the floor, drunk, when he
came to visit Hal one Sunday morning in New York. “Who’s this?” “That’s
Jack.” “So that’s the famous Jack. What is he doing sleeping on the
floor?” “He does that all the time.” “I thought you said he was a genius
of some kind.” “Oh sure he is, can’t you see it?” “I must say it
requires some difficulty. I thought he was married, where’s his wife?” I
was married at the time. “Oh she just went on going; Jack gave up,
she’s in the West End bar with an undertaker who’s got a couple hundred
dollars and buys everybody drinks.” After which I rose from the floor
and shook Mr. Brierly’s hand. He wondered what Hal saw in me; and still
did in Denver that summer and never really thought I’d amount to
anything. It was precisely what I wanted him and the whole world to
think; then I could sneak in, if that’s what they wanted, and sneak out
again, which I did. Bev and I went back to the miner’s shack, I took off
my duds and joined the boys in the cleaning. It was an enormous job.
Allan Temko sat in the middle of the front room that had already been
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