L.A.’s whereyou end up when you have nowhere else to go.
A long time ago
I’d driven west from Missouri,a sixteen-year-old high school graduate armed with
a head full of desperationand a partial academic scholarship to the U.
Only
son of a moody, hard drinker and a chronic depressive. Nothing to keepme in the
flatlands.
Living like a pauper on work-study and occasional guitar gigs in
weddingbands, I managed to get educated. Made some money as a psychologist, and
a lotmore from lucky investments. Got The House In The Hills.
Relationships
were another story, but that would’ve been true no matterwhere I lived.
Back
when I treated children, I routinely took histories from parents andlearned what
family life could be like in L.A.People packing up and moving every year or two,
the surrender to impulse, thedeath of domestic ritual.
Many of the patients I
saw lived in sun-baked tracts with no other kidsnearby and spent hours each day
being bused to and from beige corrals thatclaimed to be schools. Long,
electronic nights were bleached by cathode and thump-thumpedby the current angry
music. Bedroom windows looked out to hazy miles ofneighborhoods that couldn’t
really be called that.
Lots of imaginary friends in L.A.That, I supposed, was
inevitable. It’s a company town and the product isfantasy.
The city kills
grass with red carpets, worships fame for its own sake,demolishes landmarks with
glee because the high-stakes game is reinvention.Show up at your favorite
restaurant and you’re likely to find a sign trumpetingfailure and the windows
covered with brown paper. Phone a friend and get adisconnected
number.
Michaela’s mother was a former truck-stop cashier living with an
oxygen tankin Phoenix. Herfather was unknown, probably one of the teamsters
Maureen Brand had entertainedover the years. Michaela had left Arizonato get
away from the smothering heat, gray shrubs, air that never moved, no onecaring
about The Dream.
She rarely called her mother. The hiss of Maureen’s tank,
Maureen’s saggingbody, ragged cough, and emphysemic eyes drove her nuts. No room
for any of thatin Michaela’s L.A.head.
Dylan Meserve’s mother was long dead
from an undiagnosed degenerativeneuromuscular disease. His father was a
Brooklyn-based alto sax player who’dnever wanted a rug rat in the first place
and had died of an overdose fiveyears ago.
Michaela and Dylan were gorgeous
and young and thin and had come to L.A. for the obviousreason.
By day, he
sold shoes at a Foot Locker in Brentwood.She was a lunch waitress at a
pseudo-trattoria on the east end of Beverly Hills.
They’d met at the
PlayHouse, taking an Inner Drama seminar from Nora Dowd.
The last time anyone
had seen them was on a Monday night, just after tenp.m., leaving the acting
workshop together. They’d worked their butts off on ascene from Simpatico.
Neither really got what Sam Shepard was aiming for but theplay had plenty of
juicy parts, all that screaming. Nora Dowd had urged them toinject themselves in
the scene, smell the horseshit, open themselves up to thepain and the
hopelessness.
Both of them felt they’d delivered. Dylan’s Vinnie had been
perfectly wildand crazy and dangerous, and Michaela’s Rosie was a classy woman
of mystery.
Nora Dowd had seemed okay with the performance, especially
Dylan’scontribution.
That frosted Michaela a bit but she wasn’t
surprised.
Watching Nora go off on one of those speeches about right
brain–left brain.Talking more to herself than to anyone else.
The PlayHouse’s
front room was set up like a theater, with a stage andfolding chairs. The only
time it got used was for seminars.
Lots of seminars, no shortage of students.
One of Nora’s alumni, a formerexotic dancer named April Lange, had scored a role
on a sitcom on the WB. Anautographed picture of April used to hang in the entry
before someone took itdown. Blond, shiny-eyed, vaguely predatory. Michaela used
to think: Why her?
Then again, maybe it was a good sign. If it could happen
to April, it couldhappen to anyone.
Dylan and Michaela lived in single-room
studio apartments, his on Overland, in Culver City, hers on Holt Avenue, south
of Pico. Both theircribs were tiny, dark, ground-floor units, pretty much dumps.
This was L.A., where rent couldcrush you and day jobs barely covered the basics
and it was hard, sometimes,not to get depressed.
After they didn’t show up at
work for two days running, their respectiveemployers fired them.
And that was
the extent of it.
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