Friday, September 10, 2010

Nine Years Ago Today

Nine years ago today, I wasn't a writer. Nine years ago today, I was in line in NYC waiting for an audition, complaining about getting up at the ass crack of dawn. Nine years ago today, I didn't lose anyone I loved. But, nine years ago today, my life changed.

Yours did too. No matter what state you live in. Or what country for that matter. My boss at the time lost her husband. Yes I knew him. Not well, but I will now remember every moment of those few meetings for the rest of my life.

I still can't look at pictures from that day without losing the ability to speak for a few moments. I remember when all the TV stations decided we'd had enough sadness and stopped showing them. But I read a few posts on Facebook today from parents saying their kids didn't know about 9/11. And I passed someone on a hike talking about it. I heard 'never forget.' So I'm writing this. Because I won't.

I woke up at 4:30 am to audition for some nameless musical. That's what I used to do back then. Probably surprising to most of you. I haven't been on stage in years. I still sing in the car, but part of my desire for that career disappeared after this particular attempt. I don't know how it works now, but back then, members of Actor's Equity had to line up super early for a choice audition spot. I brought my folding chair that looks like it belongs to an old person. (Doubles as a cane) I spent hours chatting with brand new bestest friends. It happens when you're forced together for hours like that. It was a beautiful late summer day. Not a cloud in the sky. Everyone always mentions that, don't they? We can never stop talking about the weather, no matter what happens to us.

We all started to file into the Citicorp building. You know, the one with the slanty top. There was a church with a stage in the basement and we all sat there in the audience, waiting for our turn. Someone gasped into the nervous silence...we were about to get our spots and once the nerves start, even gabby girls like me shut up. We all turned to hear someone turn up their Walkman, and a radio announcer said, '...massive loss of life expected.' We listened as the report told us about a plane hitting one of the Twin Towers.

Flashback...because I did have one. My late grandmother took me to see them when I was a little girl. I lived on Long Island and she took my sister and I in all the time. I remembered standing under them, looking up. They were so tall, it seemed like they were moving.

Second flashback...they were coming on fast as I waited, shell shocked like everyone else, for an audition time. My then boyfriend, now husband telling me that I could always find out which direction I was walking by looking for the towers. I remember thinking that was brilliant. And that I was a bit slow. I'd been in and out of the city since I was a baby and I'd never once thought of that.

Some part of me was still thinking that it had been a little plane. The word 'massive' still hadn't sunk in. I walked up the stairs to the street when it hit me that my dad was going to be working in the same building that day and he was meeting me for breakfast. I was grabbing my cell out to call him and tell him what happened...like he wouldn't have known...when I saw a woman run in, sobbing, to a pay phone. My hands started to shake a bit. You know that feeling when you walk into a room and you just know the people in it are about to tell you something horrible? As I walked up on to the midtown street, it was like a nuclear bomb had gone off. Every car was stopped on the street. Taxis had their doors open and their radios on. People were crowed around each of the zillion stores selling TV's and cell phones that every big city has. That's when I heard about the second plane.

As I walked in a daze to the Lexington Avenue stop to catch the N train home to Astoria, I left my dad a thousand messages, telling him not to come in. I called my boyfriend over and over to tell him to come home, but my phone had stopped working. I stopped in the middle of the sidewalk and it fell out of my hand. I couldn't remember where he was! He was supposed to be loading in a theater production on the upper west side. I'll never forget it. It was 'The Shape of Things' with Paul Rudd and Rachel Weicz. But that day, I thought he was supposed to be near the Empire State building, getting some sort of equipment.

I felt sick. I picked up the phone and started to run in that direction, but all of a sudden, a cop ran past me, saying 'Miss, don't go that way. We're going to shut it down. Get on a train and go home. Not sure how he knew I didn't live in that direction, but I ran back to the subway. I kept trying to call him. Over and over. Once or twice I got his voice mail, but mostly nothing. I actually remember trying to sound calm so I wouldn't upset him. I had no idea what was happening, but I'd heard the word 'terrorists' and landmarks just didn't seem like a good place to be. As I got to the station, I realized he was indeed uptown and finally started breathing again.

As I entered the subway, I heard an announcement declaring that this was the last train out of the station that day, but they apparently didn't mention it inside the train. Someone getting off saw my walking stick/chair and asked if I was a nurse, laughing. I kept saying to myself, 'You have no idea what just happened. You have no idea what just happened.' These people had no idea they were on the last train out of the city. And as the train emerged from the tunnel, I saw the towers standing for the last time. The smoke was incredible. I could already smell it. I tried calling everyone I knew. No one answered. No one on the street where I lived seemed to know anything. I got home and called everyone from my land line.

Finally, my mother answered. She told me my dad was in a car with two co-workers and they were heading home. She asked if I was going back in to the audition. 'What? Are you kidding me? We were just hit by a terrorist! I think the audition may be canceled, Ma.' The TV was on by this time. 'Oh my god, they just hit the Pentagon!' My mother said, 'No they didn't. Not on Channel 2.' I practically yelled, 'Well, on Channel 4, they did!' I hung up and tried Eric again.

And finally...FINALLY...I got through. He was on his way home, walking. From 76th Street in Manhattan to Astoria. (I did something similar, walking from downtown Manhattan to Astoria during the famous blackout a few years later, but that's a story for another day.) I think I may have dropped to the floor. I couldn't remember later, but I had a bruise on one knee and one hand. And while I waited, I did what we all did. I watched CNN. It would be months before I felt comfortable turning it off. I wandered around my apartment, wondering if the entire country would be attacked. Wondering if Eric would make it home alright. Wondering if anything would ever be the same. And every time I passed a mirror, I saw someone I didn't recognize. I kept repeating, 'This is what shock looks like. This is what fear looks like.' Strange, I know. But I was an actor. Some weird autopilot after years of training that tells you to step back when you feel something and remember it. Seems really bizarre and selfish to me now, but if you're going to remember, you remember it all.

And later, when I had spoken to everyone in my family and Eric had come home with stories of free ice cream and water from people on the street, I fell asleep. I spent the next days glued to the television. Then I got a phone call. A friend of mine who worked at the same makeup counter told me they couldn't find our boss's husband. There were only three of us who worked there. The manager was this man's cousin. The CFO was his sister. We all knew and loved our boss, who was only a few years older than I was. And so I went back to the city, to 23rd Street, to help pass out flyers with his picture. Maybe someone had seen him. Yeah. Maybe.

They made us get off the subway at Times Square and walk the rest of the way. It was a ghost town for the most part. Paper everywhere. And the smell. My god, the smell. The further down I went, the more smoke and paper there was. And finally, people, passing out flyers, asking me to keep my eyes open for their husband/daughter/friend/co-worker/son/wife/girlfriend...sobbing, red-eyed people begging me to look. And I did. I did. By the time I reached the apartment, I had a stack of them. And I looked at every single solitary one, memorizing the faces. And I looked all the way home. I saw no one.

Before I went inside, one of the girls told me that someone had seen my boss's husband in the second tower, helping people in an elevator. And then it fell. He wasn't coming back. We went upstairs, we sat in the living room, listening to her crying and screaming and calling his name. She never came out. But her family was there. We asked her mother if there was anything we could do, she yelled, 'Can you give me my son-in-law back? Then no.' Her sister told us that we should probably go home. Our boss was in no shape for us and we couldn't do anything. We left in silence.

When we finally went back to work, days later, no one was buying lipstick. (I worked at a makeup counter. I forgot to say that.) And if they did, they said things like, 'This is to help us get back.' Walking to work, I saw a tank driving down Fifth Avenue. I bought an American flag scarf from a street vendor. I wore it everywhere. As the days went by, I saw funeral after funeral at St. Patrick's Cathedral. There was one when I went in, one at lunch, one as I left. It sucked the heart right out of me. I rarely cried, though people left work daily in tears. But I'm one of those people who look like icebergs at funerals. I don't cry in public. You know when it finally happened? Remember the pillars of light that they put up as a memorial? I went on my roof alone to see them and sobbed for hours.

I don't live in NYC anymore. I have to shut off old 'Friends' reruns when I see shots of the towers. I don't want to hear about any of it anymore. Even nine years later, I still feel sick when I think about that day. But we can't forget. We shouldn't. So here it is. My story. I didn't lose a loved one. I'll admit to getting pretty clingy with my poor husband for a few months, but he's still here. It's not a revelation. I've told people before. My story isn't going to give you a picture of a person who died that day or tell a tale of heroism or luck or horror. It's just one of thousands of stories about a New Yorker who was in the city that day. Thought I'd feel a little bit lighter after writing it. Funny, I don't.

Monday, September 6, 2010

It's Okay to Hate Art

I'm about to say something that's either going to make you think I know nothing about culture or feel the need to clap your hands together while you nod in agreement. So here it is. Sometimes artsy is boring. I'm sorry, but it's true. Admit it! Oh, go ahead. I won't judge you. I don't care how much you pretend to love something to make yourself look like you 'get it' or keep people from thinking you're a Neanderthal. Sometimes art can be a snooze fest. I know what I'm talking about here. I have a BFA in Musical Theater. And yes, I know that sentence alone makes me sound pretentious. Trust me. It ends there. Because during my stay at Syracuse University, I failed to see the entertainment value in some of the 'classic' plays I read. Oh, I see the purpose. The intent. The message. I 'get it.' But I'm bored. And no way would I have said any of that to the other students. Even though I know at least half of them were thinking the very same thing. I could hear them snoring in class. I even got a bunch of them to admit it while drunk. (Oh thank the flying spaghetti monster we did NOT have Facebook when I was in college.)


I'm not lying when I say I love Shakespeare. But I am when I say I love 'Waiting for Godot.' Just an example. I understand the themes. I appreciate the meaning. I'm bored out of my skull. I know that's even part of the intent. But you don't EVER say you don't like that play. You immediately look like an idiot. You're uncouth. How could you possibly be an actor and not love every juicy moment of the boredom? How could you possibly be thinking about how much you have to pee and what a bad idea having a giant Diet Coke before the show was?

I love them both. I would be honored if either one of them adopted me. I would pay disgusting amounts of money to see them on stage together. I still hate 'Waiting for Godot.'

Someone loves it. Someone loves everything. I'm a geek...you may have noticed that when you read the title of my blog. I could talk about World of Warcraft and the adorable Murlocs in the Cataclysm beta for hours. Seriously, there are baby ones! I could speak endlessly about the methods I use to build my coffers or what it's like to actually fly over Azeroth. But if you're not into the game, you'd want to shoot yourself in five minutes just to shut me up. Go ahead and ask me about Tudor England, Greek mythology or themes in fairy tales...use the facilities and eat a hearty meal first, because you're not leaving your seat for the next few hours. Ask my sister what happened when she asked me about Mary, Queen of Scots as we drove through Scotland. She may growl at you. What I'm saying is this: it's alright to admit you're not into something. You're not an idiot. You just have other areas of interest.

Trying to convince my sister that this should be my niece's Halloween costume.

So what brought this particular rant on? 'The American.' And believe it or not, I liked it. I swear, I'm not lying. It was beautifully shot. We're talking about an absolute stunner here. And looking at George Clooney for a few hours is hardly a chore. Sure, he's a beautiful man, but he is also a fantastic actor and he handles both the dialogue and the two thirds of the film that are silent...no, I'm not exaggerating...with the ease of a seasoned pro. A lot of the movie-going public is not going to like it, and that's alright. And this is not a review of the film. It just made me think about the poor people who just went in to see Georgie without his shirt on. People who bought into the action film marketing. I imagine them leaving the theater, stunned by the lack of dialogue, but terrified to tell their viewing companion. 'Oh, no! It was wonderful! It was deep...and nice...and, well, deep.'

Oh yes. I know. It's hard to resist hot guys holding puppies. In underpants. Worse than crack.

Please understand, I can spend hours at the Met, dragging my poor friends through endless rooms of paintings and sculpture. I will wax poetic about the Pre-Raphaelites. I will watch a marathon of sub-titled Asian films and bore you to death with commentary on the differences in our entertainment culture. I'll discuss what's wrong with RPG's and why I need to use the One Bag cheat in WoW. I'm an art geek, a movie geek, a geek geek...see what I'm doing? I couldn't help myself. I'm trying to convince you I'm not an idiot. I'm a hipster of sorts, I swear! I wear cool shoes. I like tiny, fancy cupcakes! Me=smart, see?


So, in the end, it doesn't matter if I liked 'The American' or not. All art should be made and seen. And it's good to expose ourselves to everything we can. Try new things. See a French film. Talk to someone at an old age home. Adopt a puppy. Try that slimy thing on the menu at a new restaurant. Go to a museum. With me. Because I haven't been in a while and I need someone to listen to me babble about Waterhouse. Just admit it if you're not into it. And don't judge anyone else if they tell you the same thing. I cannot begin to count the number of people who have come out of a screening with me, talking about how much they loved a film, when the day before, they were railing against the very same thing. Since that screening, close friends have told me, in hushed voices of course, that they were bored, but afraid to tell anyone. Not the first time that has happened.

I love Waterhouse with the passion of a teenager's anger at the world. (Does that make me sound artsy?)

I'll still love you, even if you vehemently disagree with me in the comments section of my review of 'Pillars of the Earth.' I don't think your parents will disown you if you didn't love 'Inception.' I won't stop talking to you if you're a Twilighter. Um, can someone help me down off my soap box now?