Father’s Day Without Dad

Father's Day Without Dad

Mysterious Paper Airplane Lifts Grieving Daughter's Spirit

June 17, 1990

By
TAD BARTIMUS, ASSOCIATED PRESS; Tad Bartimus is a special correspondent
for the Associated Press. Based in Denver, she covers the Rocky
Mountain states.

March 19, Monday:

My father is dying.

It
is my worst childhood dread, the terror in the night come true. I sit
by his bed and hold his hand, trying to ward off my fears. I am failing
in my duty. I cannot save him.

There is a scene in the film
"Terms of Endearment" where the mother stands at the nurses' station
and screams for another shot of painkiller for her terminally ill
daughter. Now I, too, stand at a nurses' station. I say quietly,
politely: "I think it is time for my dad's shot."

They look up
at me, these kids, many of them young enough to be my daughters, and
say, "OK, we'll get it in a minute," and then go back to talking about
last night's date, a friend's birthday party.

I feel my face
contort. I have become Frankenstein. I stand there and fidget, my hands
balling into fists, my eyes welling with tears. My eyelids are already
so swollen I can hardly bear to touch them. I say again, between
clenched teeth: "I'm sorry to trouble you, but it is time NOW for my
dad's shot. NOW. NOW. NOW!"

My breath gets shorter. My voice
rises to a screech. I turn into a monster in that antiseptic hallway. I
hate myself for being this way, but I seem to have no control over my
rude behavior. It seems my only way to fight back against a medical
system that has my whole family in the strangling grip of its tubes,
wires, needles, thumping noises, offending smells and a cadre of
strangers who invade at their convenience our tiny cubicle of pain and
grief.

Cancer has transformed me, molded me into a 42-year-old
daughter whose only aim in life is to help her father die as
comfortably, and with as much dignity, as I can provide.

Three
months ago my father was on the golf links, a 68-year-old retired pilot
with a wide circle of friends, a keen intellect, a comfortable life. We
were so pleased because he had shed much of the extra weight he'd
carried around on bad knees since he was in his forties. He was proud
of himself as his pants size kept shrinking. Christmas brought him a
new wardrobe. But my mother was having secret fears, which she revealed
in the darkened room we often share with the quiet man in the bed: too
much weight, too fast. But never mind. Worry about it tomorrow. The old
saw is true. We see only what we want to see.

There was no
cancer in our family, ever. As a journalist, I read the statistics, I
kept up with the developments. Until Jan. 7, when the dreaded phone
call came, I thought of cancer only with detached, clinical interest.
Now the disease invades my heart, my mind, my very soul.

My father has become a statistic. Lung cancer. But where is the primary tumor?

"We
may never find it," said his oncologist, a father of five girls. He has
just a few more answers than I, the layman. The killer cell, the rogue
that launched the insidious assault on my father, will always elude the
CAT scans, MRIs, X-rays, blood tests and all the other diagnostic
invasions inflicted on the silent man in the bed.

We will never know how it began. But we know, with terrible finality, how it will end.

March 23-24, Friday and Saturday:

Like
the forest of Hansel and Gretel, my father's hospital room is littered
with reminders of the long journey we have traveled together.

Books
and magazines for when he could see; the television set for when he
cared, as he passionately once did, about the revolution in Romania and
the budget deficit and the verdict on the Exxon Valdez captain; lotions
for when he still complained of aching muscles, juice for when he could
still sip through a straw.

Finally, the last supper: 1 sugar
packet, 1 salt substitute packet, strained cream of chicken soup, 2
milks, Coke, vanilla ice cream cup, cranberry juice, coffee. The tray
was set aside, untouched.

It is nearly over. The nurses, every
one a father's daughter, increasingly care for us as well as him. They
have become allies, friends, the only constant in a situation out of
control. They never pass me now without a touch, a pat, a hug. They
have done this before. They know how close we are to saying
farewell–to each other, to him.

My father's doctors call in
from restaurants, from their own beds at 3 a.m. We are consulting
hourly now. I am making decisions I never knew anyone had to make,
making them with a cold detachment that stuns me. Yes, increase the
Demerol. No, it isn't working, so yes, I think we should switch to
morphine. Increase the morphine. More. More.

I hear myself
issuing opinions, but I keep looking at the still figure under the blue
blanket, half waiting for him to sit up and contradict me.

He
was always in charge. I never had a say in what we did, where we went
as a family. He was the leader, the chief of the clan, the only voice
of authority. When did the torch pass? I do not want it. But I cannot
give it back.

There is no privacy in a hospital. I discover the
linen closet down the hall and retreat there, behind the boxes of
plastic-coated pillows. In that tiny sanctuary I hyperventilate, cry
until I hiccup, pull myself together enough to go back into the
darkened room.

It is the cusp of spring, but the last storm of
winter has hurled itself out of the west and paralyzed Kansas City.
Nothing moves on the streets. The lamps glow yellow in the reflected
snow. The world is silent, suspended.

My father and I are alone
in the middle of the night. I am half on the bed, cradling him, telling
him all my secrets, all my hopes. I am racing the clock, my new enemy,
trying to cram the story of my entire life into the last precious hours
I will have with my daddy.

I sob. I laugh. I talk about the dog
of my youth who was blown to us in a tornado and learned to play second
base. I remind him of the time the cat ate the Christmas goose. I thank
him for the blue bicycle, for teaching me to drive, for sending me to
college, for waving goodby with a smile on his face when I boarded the
plane for Vietnam, for all the money spent on phone calls to find me
halfway 'round the world. I thank him for all that extra champagne at
my wedding, and for all the steaks he barbecued for my journalist
friends who dropped in from Beirut and Bombay over the years.

I
feel closer to my dad that night than ever before. Occasionally his
eyes open, and I look deep into them and whisper in his ear, "I love
you," because everybody says no one knows what he hears, what he
thinks. Those three words become my mantra, chanted over and over and
over till dawn.

I also tell him how proud of him I was, and am,
how his exploits as a fighter pilot reflected on us, made us feel
special. I reassure him of my happiness in my marriage. I promise to
look out for mother, to love his grandsons forever, to treasure every
snapshot, every scrap of advice. I pledge to be good. I promise to
remember.

And then I give him permission to let go. I say goodby. I feel as if I am dying too.

"You can go now, Daddy. It's OK. Honest. I love you. You can go now, Daddy."

I
carry on the one-sided conversation for more than 12 hours. There is no
sound in the room except my hoarse voice. The only tube left is the
morphine drip. The nurses glide in and out. There is pain in their
eyes. The young doctor who has become my lifeline, my greatest source
of strength, stands at the foot of the bed.

"When?" I ask.

"I don't know," he replies. There are tears in his eyes.

My
father picks his own time, as he has his whole life. He waits for my
mother and my brother. At high noon, the storm over, the blinding
spring sunshine flooding the window, he opens his eyes. He speaks.
"Love!" he says, as they hold him in their arms.

And then he is gone.

March 27, Tuesday:

The
photograph in front of the altar shows a smiling young man in a
50-mission hat and a dashing Army Air Corps trench coat. A white silk
scarf is draped over the edge of the frame. On a velvet board are the
medals awarded for bravery, daring and endurance. Hyacinth freshly cut
from a neighbor's yard complete the memorial tableau.

I take a deep breath and pray for the strength and composure to deliver a eulogy.

"The newspaper obituary," I began, "gives you the frame surrounding the portrait of the man. This is the true picture.

"He
loved the song of a single bird in the morning, the sight of a chevron
of wild geese at dusk. He was sentimental and loved cards that rhymed.
. . .

"He could untangle any fishing line and fix any toy. . . .

"He taught his children that only people mattered, not things. . . .

"He was a fisherman, farmer, civil servant, lifelong Democrat, loyal American.

"But
at the core he was a pilot. A true hero. Dad's pilot buddies said no
man ever flew an airplane with such grace and skill and that God-given
gift that only angels have for flight. . . .

"A friend, trying
to comfort me, said she knew why Dad took his own time in leaving us.
He did not go in the dark of night when the blizzard raged. Instead, he
left with the sun high overhead. He waited, she said, for clear skies
to take off. . . ."

At the end, I borrowed the words of a friend who had walked this path before:

"Daddy,"
she wrote, "just follow the heading Peter Pan gave Wendy Darling. As
they surveyed the stars spread across the night sky, he showed her the
way like you have shown me:

"Second to the right, then straight on till morning. Have a wonderful flight. We'll all meet you there."

Then
the pianist broke into a resounding rendition of "Wild Blue Yonder" and
my duty was done. I had used the only true gift I had, the ability to
string words together, to say farewell. I believe he heard me.

March 29, Thursday:

I
was in the dream house my parents built when they retired. Stumbling
around in the dark, I reached into my open suitcase for a bathrobe. My
hand touched something that hadn't been there an hour before. Turning
on the light, I found an intricate paper airplane folded out of a
hospital dietitian's form.

Even though it was late I called my
husband, who'd flown back home that day. I thanked him for leaving me
the wonderful airplane. After a long pause at the other end of the
line, he told me, as one would speak to a slow-witted child, that he
hadn't made me a paper airplane.

The next morning I showed it to
my mother. She had no idea where it came from. I am sure there is a
logical explanation. I just haven't found it. Until I do, I've put the
delicate little plane away in a box in my hope chest, along with my
most precious treasures. When I feel inconsolable, I get out the box
and sail the beautifully proportioned craft through the air. It makes
me feel better.

"Take my hand," wrote the friend who is a year
ahead of me. "We'll walk together on the twisting road back." She
exhorted me to "look for the signs." And so I took the little paper
airplane to be the first one.

Father's Day, June 17, Sunday:

Father's Day was the weekend we always used to pick cherries
from the back-yard tree and bake Daddy a pie. Or clean out the garage
for him. Or endure a hot afternoon at the old fishin' hole. There were
shirts to buy and ties to wrap and cards to sign.

But not this year. Or next. Or ever again.

I
look out my kitchen window in Colorado, eastward toward my roots and my
past in Missouri. There is an old, majestic Ponderosa pine across the
way. In recent days an owl has perched on the highest tip of the
highest branch. Occasionally he leaves his aerie to soar over my house
in a graceful arc, his wings barely moving, catching the thermals and
letting the breeze take him high, higher, highest.

I watch him
in wonder and delight. I believe, as Wendy Darling believed in Peter
Pan. As long as there are larks to sing and eagles to fly and owls to
look down from the highest tree, my father will live on.

Posted in health | Comments Off on Father’s Day Without Dad

A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept: New Pope

June 21, 1963, New Pope

June 21, 1963: Pope Paul VI becomes the successor to Pope John XXIII and Jerry G. Tees is arrested on charges of impersonating an astronaut. I can't find any further information on what became of Tees — sounds like an interesting story. 

Posted in Front Pages, Religion | Comments Off on A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept: New Pope

U.S. Bans D.H. Lawrence Novel

June 21, 1959, I Feel Terribly Different

"I Feel Terribly Different."

June 21, 1959, Fathers Day

The Farmers Market ad pokes gentle fun at Times columnist Hedda Hopper.

June 21, 1959, Lady Chatterly's Lover

Postmaster General Arthur Summerfield defends his decision to ban "Lady Chatterly's Lover" from the U.S. mails.

June 21, 1959, Lady Chatterly's Lover

June 21, 1959, Lady Chatterly's Lover

Times book columnist Robert R. Kirsch says Summerfield's ban is "shockingly like the kind of literary criticism issuing recently from the Kremlin."
June 21, 1959, Best Sellers

What's on the bestseller list? Why, it's "Lady Chatterly's Lover"!

 
 

June 21, 1959, Miss Young Republican

Even the Republicans have beauty contests!

June 21, 1959, Neutra Church

A drive-in church designed by Richard Neutra? And get this: The minister is some fellow named the Rev. Robert Schuller.

June 21, 1959, Sophia Loren

Joe Hyams interviews Sophia Loren.

June 21, 1959, Duncan Trial

Audio excerpts from the Elizabeth Ann "Ma" Duncan trial.
 

June 21, 1959, Superman

June 21, 1959, Jealousy

At left, George Reeves' mother hires Jerry Giesler to investigate his apparent suicide. Above, Richard Ingledue kills Charles De Long in a fight over Dolores Mayfield. The judge sentenced Ingledue to a year in jail, calling him a "spoiled brat."
 

June 21, 1959, Murder Suicide

Abe Ben Fisher kills one man and wounds two others before committing suicide. "He just put the gun to his head and fired," says Donald T. Giertz, who was shot in the mouth. 

June 21, 1959, Puzzle

Newspapers in the 1950s often ran contests featuring peculiar puzzles — like this one. 

June 21, 1959, Ballet and Baseball

Ballet is like baseball — except I don't think dancers spit nearly as often. 

June 21, 1959, Sports  

Don Drysdale leads the Dodgers to a 9-2 win over the Reds, bringing the Dodgers within 2 1/2 games of first-place Milwaukee.
Posted in art and artists, books, broadcasting, Comics, Dodgers, Film, Hollywood, Sports, Suicide, Television | 2 Comments

Nuestro Pueblo: Wilmington

June 21, 1939, Nuestro Pueblo  
Posted in Architecture, Nuestro Pueblo | 2 Comments

Sheriff’s Father Near Death

June 21, 1899, Ads

June 21, 1899: New bicycles cost $766.47 to $1,021.96, adjusted for inflation.


June 21, 1899, Martin Biscailuz

The father of future Los Angeles County Sheriff Eugene Biscailuz is near death.

Posted in #courts, Obituaries | Comments Off on Sheriff’s Father Near Death

Mother Kills Dance Teacher Who Molested Daughter

June 21, 1889, Woman Kills Purported Molester

June 21, 1889: Mattie Marlette accuses dance teacher Alfred Sullivan of molesting her 3-year-old daughter and shoots him to death. Many people, especially the noirists, prefer the papers of the 1930s and '40s, but I think the 1880s-1910 period is just as fascinating. Los Angeles was a wild, crazy frontier town that was growing up.

Posted in #courts, Homicide | 1 Comment

Found on EBay — J.W. Robinson’s

Robinson's Hat

This vintage hat from J.W. Robinson's has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $9.99.
Posted in Fashion | Comments Off on Found on EBay — J.W. Robinson’s

Matt Weinstock, June 20, 1959

Summer Sadness

Matt Weinstock Yesterday was
the last day of school and the big thing with the youngsters normally
would have been report cards and autographs in the school annual and
parties and gay farewells to teachers and friends.

It wasn't. It was the despairing outlook at the beaches for the summer.

Those
who had looked forward to swimming and surfing and skin diving have
changed their plans, or had them changed by their parents. The
incidents at LaJolla and elsewhere have instilled in everyone's consciousness a violent fear of sharks.

The
youngsters will still go to the beaches but they won't go too near the
water. Looks like a big summer for lounging in the sand and listening
to portable radios. But it won't be quite the same.

::

A VETERAN ACTOR
got a call for an interview for a role in a TV drama and at the
appointed time appeared in a Hollywood office and was introduced to two
young men, Madison Ave. types. Right off one of them, barely 25, threw
the insulting question at him, "And what have you done lately?"

The actor glared at him and retorted, "I've been counting my residuals. Who are you and what have you done lately?"

He
didn't get the job, only a little satisfaction. he says, "It's bad
enough to take guff from people you work for but you don't have to take
it from some jerk you might work for."

These are the conditions which prevail in TV.

::

TO FATHER

We love the way you gaily laugh
Dear Dad, each time you pay the bills.
So once again our gift will be
A jar of tranquilizing pills.

–PEARL ROWE

::

THE WAY Walt Hackett
tells it, a certain college had on its football team a pair of famous
halfbacks. One was from a wealthy family and had no problems. The other
was a poor orphan who lived in a shabby section of town. To keep up his
morale the coach occasionally visited him.

One day college
authorities summoned the coach and demanded that he explain his visits
to Skid Row. He said, "I just wanted to see how the other half lives."

::

WHEN NEWS OF
the Miami tornado came over the wire the city desk put in a call for
Nelson Tiffany, attending the press photographers convention there, for
possible eyewitness material, but couldn't get him. Turned out he'd
been attending a theater a few miles from the disaster scene and didn't
even know it had been raining.

::

ONLY IN HOLLYWOOD — A man went into a restaurant alone. It was dark in there but it was still obvious that he was alone. Nevertheless the maitre d', a slave to a formula, greeted him with, "How do you do. One in your party?"

::

AROUND TOWN
You know the billboards showing several men with a batch of freshly
caught fish and some cans of beer? The one in the 8000 block on West
3rd Street, JohnnyEccleston reports, now states, "It's Lucky when you
live in California — unless you're a fish"… Speaking of which,
Melissa Caron overheard a man say, "The trouble with her is that she
went from beer to champagne without stepping up to Schlitz" … The
Highland Meat Packing Co. in Vernon advertises, "We would like to meat
you."

::

FOOTNOTES –– The newsreels have a sequence in which Robert McCarthy, explaining the DMV
crackdown on careless motorists, says, "It's better to lose licenses
than lives" … Morse bakery on San Vicente Blvd. had a cake on display
with "Happy Father's Day" in icing on one side, a miniature bottle of
whisky on the other … KatyGraydon became so enthusiastic about the
Disneyland TV show that she could hardly wait to take the submarine
ride and see all the sea "servants" … Mrs. G.O.M., who hasn't had a
citation in 25 years of driving, thought she'd had it when aCHP officer
stopped her on Atlantic Blvd. and said she thought she'd made it on the
yellow. No ticket, just a friendly warning, so she's still 100%.
Posted in Columnists, Matt Weinstock | Comments Off on Matt Weinstock, June 20, 1959

John Wayne in ‘Horse Soldiers’

June 20, 1959, Horse Soldiers

June 20, 1959: John Wayne as interpreted by Al Hirschfeld. Pretty great, no?

Posted in art and artists, Film, Hollywood | 1 Comment

Paul V. Coates — Confidential File, June 20, 1959

Confidential File

Mash Notes and Comments

Paul Coates(Press
Release) "Although 40 foreign nations and 46 states in the Union will
send candidates to the 1959 Miss Universe Beauty Pageant, to be held in
Long Beach, Cal, July 16 to 26, lovelies from the Philippines, Ireland,
Spain and Portugal will be absent.

"In the Philippines, a
college coed already had won the national crown but was forced to
withdraw from the international competition in Long Beach. her
university and church pressured her, revealed Oscar Meinhardt,
executive producer of the pageant.

"The objection: her wearing a bathing suit…

"Meinhardt
said that similar incidents had arisen in the past history of the
pageant, and admitted that even this year he hadn't been too certain at
first that Miss Indonesia would show up.

"Seems that the London
Times, Indonesia's leading newspaper, decided to blast the selection of
a native beauty for Miss Universe competition.

"Said the Times editorially:

"'The
very idea of a beauty being manhandled and ogled at should be taboo to
us … How can we glibly talk about sending an Indonesian girl to be
stared at and measured in tight-fitting trunks before thousands of
onlookers?" (signed) Sparky Saldana & Hank Levy, Publicity
Directors, Miss Universe Pageant.

–All right. All right. If she doesn't want to wear just trunks, she can wear a whole bathing suit.

::

"Dear Sir:

"This is a form letter, because my
secretary is pregnant!…" (signed: J.A. Small, Publisher, Western
Publications, P.O. Box 5008, Austin, Tex.

–Big mouth!

::

"Dear Mr. Coates,

"Dropping
by the post office, I found a postcard from Parkey Arnold Sharkey, in
which he gave me a message to pass along to you. He no longer wishes to
contact you directly.

"I read the message he desires me to give you.

"He has got a tax refund through aid of Gov. Brown and again owns his automobile such as the thing is with need of repairs.

"He
is no longer interested in the taxi business and now works as a
custodian in a Menlo Park bar, and he brags about having eight brands
of beer for guzzling when he has a hang-over.

"Well, I've given
you the message, but if you both would behave as grown adults, he
shouldn't have to use the devious method of writing to me to contact
you.

"He should write to you directly again,

"Sir, why don't you patch up your differences with Parkey?" (signed) Memphis Harry Lee Ward, P.O. Box 1963, Hollywood.

–I've tried, Memphis. God knows I've tried.

::

(Press Release) "Philadelphia plans
to embark on an advertising campaign to promote the sale of one of
nature's finest ingredients — water — reveals Engineering Record,
McGraw-Hill publication.

"The city's water supply is in such
good shape that residents will probably be asked to take more baths."
(signed) Publicity Dept., McGraw-Hill Publications, New York City.

–Don't ask 'em. Tell 'em!

Posted in Columnists, Paul Coates | Comments Off on Paul V. Coates — Confidential File, June 20, 1959

A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept: Your Faith

June 20, 1960, Billy Graham

June 20, 1960: At a crusade in Washington, D.C., Billy Graham says that Americans are letting their souls "go to seed."

Posted in Obituaries, Religion | Comments Off on A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept: Your Faith

GOP Unbeatable, Nixon Says!

June 20, 1959, No Laughing Matter

June 20, 1959: This Isn't Any Laughing Matter, Ted."

June 20, 1959, Blood Bank

The newspapers of the 1950s are full of stories about callous police officers (usually the LAPD, sometimes Beverly Hills) handing out traffic tickets. It must have been quite a phenomenon.

June 20, 1959, Nixon

Richard Nixon says the GOP will be unbeatable in 1960.

June 20, 1959, Baskin Robbins

Oregon blackberry ice cream at Baskin-Robbins.

June 20, 1959, Make a Gun

Our favorite Pasadena gun shop has a special on a do-it-yourself .30-06.

June 20, 1959, Sports

The Dodgers win against Cincinnati, 6-2.

June 20, 1959, Police Commission

The Times follows the Mirror story on the resignation of Police Commissioner Herbert Greenwood.

June 20, 1959, Police Commission

June 20, 1959, Religion

A Lutheran leader says the purported upsurge of religion in America is a myth and that membership isn't keeping pace with population growth. "We are living in a post-Christian era," another official says.

June 20, 1959, Sports Column

An update on the Hollywood Legion Stadium and boxing promoter Jackie Leonard.

Posted in #courts, Comics, Dodgers, LAPD, Politics, Sports | Comments Off on GOP Unbeatable, Nixon Says!

Drunks and Small Boys in Trouble!

June 20, 1899, Police Blotter
Posted in #courts, Downtown, LAPD | Comments Off on Drunks and Small Boys in Trouble!

Officer Rescues Girl From Streetcar Tracks!

June 20, 1889, Siegel the Hatter

Siegel the Hatter at 1st and Spring.

June 20, 1889, Rescued From Cable Car

June 20, 1889: Police Officer Church saves a life.

Posted in Downtown, LAPD, Transportation | Comments Off on Officer Rescues Girl From Streetcar Tracks!

Found on EBay — Great White Fleet

Great White Fleet, Kentucky A vendor has listed what appears to be an original photo of the Kentucky taken when the Great White Fleet visited Los Angeles. Bidding starts at $5.50.
Posted in Transportation | Comments Off on Found on EBay — Great White Fleet

Matt Weinstock, June 19, 1959

 

Los dos Refritos

Matt Weinstock When I read
the AP story stating people who eat a lot of tortillas apparently
absorb less strontium 90 from nuclear explosions than other persons, I
knew right off here was a matter crying out for immediate attention.

After all, Los Angeleans possibly consume as many tortillas in one form or another as Mexico City, where Dr. Carlos Graef Fernandez, nuclear scientist, made the statement.

Fortunately, I happen to have friends behind the tortilla curtain.

I checked Alberto Diaz, self-appointed mayor of Belvedere, who has been campaigning vigorously for a National Tortilla Week.

"I have suspected all along that what Dr. Fernandez said was true," he said. "The only fallout we get in Belvedere is when the chili colorado drips out of our tacos." After a reminicent moment he added irrelevantly, ""And after all, what is an enchilada but a bloodshot blintz?"

NEXT I alerted Paul Fierro, fresh from a role in "Never So Few" with Sinatra and Lollobridida. Paul, known as El Bandido
because he has played so many gad guys in TV westerns, was an Indian
Indian in this one: that is, a Hindu with turban. He is also a
connoisseur of Mexican cookery and was not surprised at Senor
Fernandez's statement either.

Recognizing the need for action we jumped into his Volkswagen and made a run for the Nayarit
restaurant on North Spring Street, barely ahead of a lynch mob. There
we prevailed upon the waitress to hustle us a double order of
tortillas, along with somelengua en mole, our favorite, and refritos con queso.

Not
only was our concern over radioactivity gone but when we got outside we
noticed that even the smog had disappeared. Of course, it could have
been the beer.

::

AT ONE TIME or another, coincidence catches up with all of us. Thus, as LaVonne Wood slowed because of an accident at Rosemead and Beverly Blvds.,
she noticed that one of the damaged cars had inscribed on its rear
fender, as is the fad among young drivers, the succinct phrase, "I've
Had It."

::

HIGH NEIGHBOR

They picked out the man to send to the moon,
Then wined him and dined him as one honored alone
Till he took on the shape of a banquet balloon
And floated up to the moon on his own.

–MATTIE RAE

::

THE WAY Bill Larkin tells it a parent became concerned about his young son, an undersize
problem child, and when the boy failed to gain any stature for about a
year, a series of stretching treatments was recommended. The boy was
stretched out on a table and his arms and legs pulled. Some weeks later
a friend inquired if the treatments were doing any good.

"He hasn't grown any," the father said sadly, "but he has confessed to more than 100 crimes."

::

A HOLLYWOOD
hillside couple named George and Marian left yesterday for a tour of
Europe, particularly Italy. In anticipation they took a course in
Italian at UCLA. At departure time, however, it was a moot question
whether they could deal with the natives. What Marian and even the prof
don't know is that George, a sneaky one, has been taking intense 
private instruction and can speak fluently. At departure time he could
hardly wait to get to Rome to confound his wife with hissavoir faire.

::

AT RANDOM
— Between innings at the Dodger game the other night a girl of about
10, sitting with her father, did her school homework … The VanNuys egg ranch with the driveway signs "Entrance and "Eggsit" missed a bet, argues Tom Cameron. Why not. "Hentrance" … The credit card frenzy has reached the point that when Martin Ragaway
tried to pay cash for a purchase the other day the man wouldn't take it
until he identified himself. Martin is a comedy writer … From AdamTruty: "Horse players at least don't die in the gutter like drunkards — they die clean."

Posted in Columnists, Matt Weinstock | Comments Off on Matt Weinstock, June 19, 1959

Paul V. Coates — Confidential File, June 19, 1959

Confidential File

A Quiet Man Made Noisy Headlines

Paul CoatesHerbert Greenwood, the quiet man, made loud headlines yesterday.

He
announced his resignation from the Los Angeles Police Commission, and
in the same breath, accused this city's police department and its
chief, William Parker, of some very unbecoming attitudes and behavior.

It was a big story.

But a story with equal impact is the one behind why Greenwood did it.

It was as out of character for him to sound off as it would be for George Jessel to turn down an offer to serve as toastmaster.

For a lot of years, Greenwood's been connected in one way or another with public service.

No matter what the assignment, he did it the best way he knew how: by working hard with an undramatic diligence and an unsensational dedication.

He
disliked public controversy and shunned publicity. He almost made a
career of staying in the background, of being an uncontroversial figure.

He did it, plus the jobs he undertook to do, with high record of success.

This, undoubtedly, was an important factor in Mayor Poulson's choice of Greenwood as a police commissioner six years ago.

Greenwood,
being a Negro, would give the board "balance." And he had the kind of
personality to smooth over, rather than fire up, any problems between
the Negro community and the police.

This, I'm told, he
accomplished very well for quite a while. He considered it strictly a
secondary duty — his main job being to represent all of the people of
Los Angeles.

Eventually, however, the Negro press began playing
up incidents of alleged police brutality and prejudice. They screamed
for action.

And when no action came, one of the papers in
particular aimed its guns at Greenwood. In vicious attacks, he was
called practically every name in the book.

Badly neglecting his private law practice, the commissioner set out to investigate the charges against the police.

But
here, he ran into one problem after another. He wasn't satisfied
himself with the way the police were investigating the allegations.
Some of the police reports, he felt, were deliberately slanted to
protect the involved officers.

Sometimes, he said, he was just
plain refused access to certain information. And other times, he had
reason to believe, files were "thinned out" before he got them.

There was a situation a few months ago where colored office girls were being accosted regularly by Caucasian Don Juans. His own daughter was among the victims.

But
when some Negro community leaders met with the police to request
action, they were reportedly politely informed, "We're not going around
rousting anybody."

Greenwood was conscientious in checking out
many complaints against the police, not all of them involving Negroes.
His conclusion was that it's just impossible to expect a police officer
to do an unbiased job investigating another police officer.

Apparently,
Greenwood worked his way into the position of being the police
commission "rebel" — the man who wasn't willing to back Chief Parker
on every issue solely because Parker was chief.

He wanted answers, explanations — but he didn't get them.

Herbert Greenwood Spoke

So he decided to get out.

He could go gracefully, he knew. Resign without a reason.

That way, he would save embarrassment for himself, his friends, his family. He could keep his reputation as the quiet man.

But instead, Herbert Greenwood spoke.

Already
under attack in his own community for "doing nothing," he added to his
woes by firing the indignation of the police department for "doing
something."

Herbert Greenwood, today is a disenchanted man.

Posted in City Hall, Columnists, LAPD, Paul Coates | Comments Off on Paul V. Coates — Confidential File, June 19, 1959

Cooking With the Junior League, Atlanta

True Grits In this week's Cooking With the Junior League, Mary McCoy takes a look at historic recipes from Atlanta.

Published in 1995, True Grits:  Tall Tales and Recipes from the New South
is no spiral-bound, home-spun project.  It is fancy pants, and proud to
admit it:  “Make no mistake about it,” the authors lead off.  “Though True Grits includes recipes as traditionally ‘Southern’ as Fried Chicken and Buttermilk Biscuits, this is New South fare all the way.”

Read more >>> 

Posted in Food and Drink | Comments Off on Cooking With the Junior League, Atlanta

A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept: Your Transportation

June 19, 1956, Pontiac

June 16, 1956: Pontiacs retain their value when you trade them in after a year or two.

Posted in Freeways | Comments Off on A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept: Your Transportation

Movie Mystery Photo

 

 

June 15, 2009, Mystery Photo
Los Angeles Times file photo

A solid majority wants to know the name of our mystery woman. She is Toni Gerry. Above, a 1958 publicity photo from "Broken Arrow."

Just
a
reminder on how this works: I post the mystery photo on Monday and
reveal the answer on Friday … or on Saturday if I have a hard time
picking only five pictures — sometimes it's difficult to choose. To
keep the mystery photo from getting
lost in the other entries, I move it from Monday to Tuesday to
Wednesday, etc., adding a photo every day.

I have to approve
all comments, so if your guess is posted immediately, that means you're
wrong. (And if a wrong guess has already been submitted by someone
else, there's no point in submitting it again.) If you're right, you
will have to wait until Friday. There's no need to submit your guess
five times. Once is enough. The only prize is bragging rights. 

The answer to last week's mystery star: Ana Bertha Lepe!

June 16, 1959, Mystery Photo

Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: Gerry in a publicity photo for "Boots Malone" with William Holden.

Here's another picture of our mystery guest!

June 17, 2009, Mystery Photo

Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: Gerry in a 1956 publicity photo for "Day of Triumph."

Here's another photo of our mystery woman. Please congratulate Lee Ann Bailey for correctly identifying her!

June 18, 2009, Mystery Photo

Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: Dorothy Ames, Gerry and Liberace in 1955. Gerry is wearing $1 million worth of jewelry as a publicity stunt for the premiere of the famous 1950s  TV show "The Millionaire." Here's to John Beresford Tipton!

Here's our mystery guest with some mystery companions.

June 19, 2009, Mystery Photo

Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: Gerry in a 1956 episode of George Sanders Mystery Theatre titled "The Call."

  

Memory Play

One-Woman Drama Tells of Love, the Holocaust and Survival in Biographical 'Hanna Speaks'

May 6, 1988

By MIKE WYMA, Mike Wyma is a frequent contributor to Valley View.


Toni Gerry; Veteran Actress Appeared in 150 TV Shows

August 1, 1991


Toni Gerry, an actress who once said "my credits read like a TV
Guide for the 1950s," has died after a long struggle with bone cancer.

Her husband, Hal Stiller, said this week that Miss Gerry was 65 when she died July 25 in a Los Angeles hospital.

Born
in Utah where she became stage-struck after playing "Snow White" in a
high school play, she began her professional career when agent Paul
Kohner discovered her in 1949 at the Pasadena Playhouse.

Her
first credits came in the infancy of TV in such landmark series as
"Hallmark Hall of Fame" and "Lux Video Theatre." In all she played
leads or supporting parts in more than 150 shows, among them "The
Millionaire," "The Loretta Young Show," "Schlitz Playhouse of Stars,"
"Wanted Dead or Alive," "National Velvet," "Mr. and Mrs. North," "Sea
Hunt" and more.

Her dozen feature films include "Lust for Life" (as Johanna), "Boots Malone" and "Bullet for Joey."

Most
recently she had been on stage locally in "Hanna Speaks," a one-woman
show she also wrote based on the true story of two Jewish lovers
separated by World War II.

Besides her husband, she is survived by her daughter, Lisa, and a sister.

When
it comes to stories of love and heartbreak–and, miraculously, love
once more–it's hard to match Hanna Kohner's. "I have been very lucky,"
she marvels. And yet, few people have endured so much misfortune.

Her
story–separated from her first love by the rumblings of World War II,
widowed from the second by the Holocaust, and nearly dying herself,
only to be reunited with her first love–is told in "Hanna Speaks," a
play running Sunday afternoons through May 29 at the Chamber Theatre in
Studio City.

It is a one-woman show starring actress Toni Gerry,
who also wrote the script. The director is Mike Road, who said the
play's structure is unusual yet simple.

Gerry talks to the
audience, Road explained, "but it's not an audience she's talking to,
it's relatives and friends. Someone says, 'What happened to you in
Europe 40 or 50 years ago?' so she tells them."

Hanna Bloch was
15 and Walter Kohner 20 when they met while ice skating in their native
Czechoslovakia. The year was 1935, and the two gradually fell in love.
By 1938 they were engaged, but as Jews they saw trouble ahead.
Anti-Semitism was spreading throughout Europe.

Tried to Follow

Walter
had a brother in the United States who would sponsor his immigration,
and he left to start a new life. Hanna tried to follow, but she was
stopped by Hitler's invasion of her homeland and, later, his invasion
of Holland, where she had fled.

Separated from her family,
sinking into poverty, Hanna kept up a correspondence with Walter. But
by 1942, their letters grew less frequent. Occupied Amsterdam was rife
with talk of deportation of Jews to concentration camps. In this
climate of desperation Hanna fell in love with Carl Benjamin, a young
German Jew, and married him.

They were together two years, much
of it in detention camps, before being sent separately to Auschwitz,
where Benjamin was killed. Hanna survived, in part because friends
performed an abortion on her. They knew that as part of the "final
solution," the Nazis gave the extermination of pregnant Jews a high
priority.

Walter, meanwhile, was a U.S. soldier stationed in
Luxembourg. He still yearned for Hanna and, through a combination of
persistence and luck, found her in 1945. They married, moved to Los
Angeles and had a daughter. Today the couple lives in Bel-Air. Hanna is
68, Walter is 73. They attended a recent performance of "Hanna Speaks."

Feelings Return

Hanna said that watching the play brought back all the feelings of the war years.

"The
time that's passed doesn't make any difference," she said. "It's always
been my life and it always will be. I remember it very well."

Director
Road said the play differs from other one-person shows, such as Hal
Holbrook's portrayal of Mark Twain, James Whitmore's Harry Truman or
Henry Fonda's Clarence Darrow.

"This is a narrative," Road said.
"This is a memory piece. To take something that's memory and present it
as drama is a very different kind of form."

Both Road and Gerry
acted on television in the 1950s and early '60s. After appearing in "77
Sunset Strip," "The Roaring '20s," and other shows, Road branched into
voice-over work in cartoons and commercials.

"I was directing all the time in theater," he said, adding that the stage is his first love.

Gerry,
who said her credits "read like a TV Guide for the '50s," appeared in
"Schlitz Playhouse of Stars," "Wanted Dead or Alive," "Perry Mason" and
others.

"When my daughter was born in 1962, I decided to become
a full-time mother," Gerry said. "Then when she was old enough, I
wanted to act again. But at my age good parts are hard to come by. I
was looking for a project, and I thought of Hanna's story."

The
common thread in the lives of Toni Gerry and Hanna Kohner was Hanna's
brother-in-law, Paul Kohner, one of Hollywood's most successful agents.
Over the years his Kohner Agency represented Ingmar Bergman, Max Von
Sydow, Charles Bronson, Debra Winger, Liv Ullmann and others.

Paul
Kohner came to Los Angeles from Czechoslovakia in 1921 to work for Carl
Laemmle, then president of Universal Pictures. The two had met at a
Czech health spa, where Laemmle was a guest and Kohner a cub reporter
for a Czech entertainment newspaper.

Kohner provided the
sponsorship affidavit needed by his brother Walter in 1938 to immigrate
to the United States. He also was Gerry's first agent, signing her
after seeing her perform at the Pasadena Playhouse in 1949. Paul Kohner
died this year at 85.

'Hanna and Walter'

A third
Kohner brother, Frederick, author of the books that led to the "Gidget"
movies, also figures in the story. Before his death in 1986, Frederick
helped Hanna and Walter write an account of their turbulent war years.
It was that book, "Hanna and Walter," published by 1984 and translated
into a half-dozen European languages, that Gerry thought of when she
needed an acting project.

"I adapted it to the stage," she said. "A lot of it is sections of Hanna talking that I took straight from the book."

"Hanna
Speaks" runs 53 minutes, not including the intermission. A production
of the Meridian Theatre and Academy, the play opened in the 37-seat
Chamber Theatre on April 3. Audience response, said Gerry, has been
emotionally charged.

"We emphasize the love story, but it's
still a Holocaust story. Some of it–like when Hanna is sitting alone
in an attic in Holland, wearing the sealskin coat her mother gave her
and wondering how all this separation came to pass–it's really quite
powerful."

Labor Camps

Hanna said that in addition
to her first husband, family members killed at Auschwitz included her
mother, father and several aunts and uncles. Hanna spent only one month
in the infamous death camp but was imprisoned at other sites, called
transit or labor camps, for much of the war.

She said she might
have avoided the ordeal if she and Walter had married in 1938, when he
had the papers necessary to leave Czechoslovakia and she did not.

"We
talked about it, of course, but for him to go to America with a new
wife and no job and not a penny to his name, it seemed too much. At
that time he was an actor. What prospects does an actor have? We
thought I could get out later. We all were blind to a certain extent.
By the time we realized it, it was too late."

Jews desperate to
leave Europe before and during World War II faced two
obstacles–immigration quotas imposed by nations such as the United
States, and the frequent refusal of German occupying forces to grant
exit permits. There was a randomness, a "craziness," said Hanna, to the
fate of people like herself.

A stroke forced Walter Kohner to
retire last year from his job as an agent at his brother's business.
Although the stroke did not impair him physically, it affected his
ability to put thoughts into words. He said he does speech therapy
exercises daily and is improving.

While the play is about Hanna,
and much of the suffering was hers, Walter is responsible for the
storybook ending. Although Hanna had given up any thought that they
would be together, Walter had not. When he found her in Amsterdam in
April, 1945, after the Germans had withdrawn, seven years had passed.

Asked why he hadn't married someone else in the meantime, Walter shrugged.

"I dated other girls," he said, "but it just wasn't the same."

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo | 75 Comments