Magic Hour Susan Isaacs (best books to read for self development txt) đ
- Author: Susan Isaacs
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Carbone asked me.
âFifty-three years old. Dartmouth College graduate. From a rich familyâkosher provisions business. The ones with that commercial where they all sit around the kitchen table in crowns: âBologna for the Royal Family!â But it sounds like he wasnât all that turned on by lunch meats. He wanted culture. He started a big poetry magazine, Shower of Light, about twelve years ago. Put a pile of money into it. But then he seemed to have decided that poetry wouldnât get him what he wanted.â
âWhat was that?â
âWho the hell knows? What do most guys want? Excitement. Fame. Fortune. Superior ass. I mean, who would you rather hit on, a receptionist in a pas-MAGIC HOUR / 11
trami factory or a poet? Or a movie star?â Carbone the Thoughtful looked like he was actually beginning to contemplate the alternatives. âRay, the answer is: Movie star with giant boobs.â
âI donât like those big, big ones,â he said, thoughtfully.
âWhat do you like? A girl who looks like sheâs got two Hersheyâs Kisses glued on her chest?â
âNo, but you see a young girl with giant ones, you figure that when sheâs thirty-fiveâŠâ He shook his head in sadness.
âWhen sheâs thirty-five,â the ballistics guy interrupted, âyou trade her in for two seventeen-and-a-half-year-olds.â He chuckled at his own wit, then added: âMove back a little, out of my way.â
âAnyway,â I continued, as we moved back, âall along, Sy Spencer was pretty much a man-about-town, one of those people who pop up now and then in the gossip columns.
No dirt: just some guy with major bucks who gave money to the right causes, went to all those jet-setty charity benefits.
That seems to be where he met the movie types who have houses out here. And he got it into his head that he wanted to be a movie producer. Apparently, so do half the people in his world. But he got what he wanted.â
âYou know, Iâve heard his name. Good movies, right?â
âNo doubt about it. The guy had class.â
âSo, Steve. Gut reaction.â
âItâs going to be a media circus. Plus a major pain because weâre dealing with hotshots who expect heavy-duty ass-kissing: âNo, thanks, sir, I donât drink while Iâm on duty,â when they offer us the cheap-shit Seagramâs theyâve been keeping from before they became famous. Andâunless we get lucky in the next seventy-two hours and find someone in Syâs life strok-12 / SUSAN ISAACS
ing a warm .22âitâs going to be an absolute bitch to crack.
Sy was the ultimate fast-track guy; he probably had fourteen Rolodexes, and those were just for personal friends.â
âWhere would you start?â
âThe movie he was producing, I guess. Itâs called Starry Night. Theyâre shooting it over in East Hampton now.â
âNo kidding! Now? â
Having spent my whole life being local color in what people called the Fashionable Hamptons, I was used to rubbing shoulders with celebrities. Well, not exactly rubbing.
But from the time I was a kid, besides the regular rich and semi-rich summer people, thereâd be famous models squeezing tomatoes at a farm stand, or TV anchormen picking out a toilet plunger in the hardware store in townâright next to you. We knew to pretend they were just plain people, but we also knew it was okay to ogle as they paid the cashier.
Neither they nor we wanted them so plain as to be overlooked.
But Carbone came from the plain plain world, suburban Suffolk County, a world peopled by ex-third-generation Brooklynitesâshoe salesmen and IRS auditors and junior high school social studies teachersâa world that, if plopped down outside downtown Indianapolis or Des Moines, would not seem an unnatural part of the landscape. âEast Hamptonâs onlyâwhat?âten, twelve miles away,â he was saying.
His eyes were lit by a starry sparkle. âWe may have to go over there to question some people on the movie set.â Carbone was normally so levelheaded, so thoughtful, youâd think heâd have been glitz-proof, but at the thought of Lights!
Camera! Action! he was loosening his tie, unbuttoning the top button of his shirt. If thereâd been a straw hat and cane, heâd have grabbed them and high-stepped over to East Hamp-MAGIC HOUR / 13
ton, belting out âHooray for Hollywood.â âWhoâs starring?â
he asked, much too casually.
âLindsay Keefe and Nicholas Monteleone.â
âNo kidding!â Then, fast, he switched back to his Iâm-a-regular-guy mode. âI always liked him,â he said. âReminds me of a young Gary Cooper. Good without being a goody-goody. And sheâs a good actress.â Carbone shook his head in sadness. âBut too left-wing for my taste.â
âWith her body, do you care what her position on disarmament is?â
Suddenly it hit Carbone. âIs Lindsay Keefe here? â he asked, his voice a little hushed with awe. âIn the house?â
âUpstairs, with her agent. You didnât hear her? Heâs trying to calm her down.â
âCan you believe it? I was in there, interviewing the cook.
I didnât even know she was here, in the same house.â
âThe agent brought her back from the set. Heavy-duty hysterics.â Carboneâs eyebrows began drawing together in sympathy, so I added: âLetâs not forget sheâs an actress.
Anyway, according to the agent, for the last six months Lindsayâs been living with Sy. Here, and he has a duplex on Fifth Avenue. Theyâre madly in love. Perfect relationship.
Never a harsh word between them. Blah, blah, blah. The usual. Oh, and they were going to get married the minute the movie was finished.â
âYou believe the agent?â
âHeâs not a slimeball. Heâs an older guy named Eddie Pomerantz. Late sixties, early seventies. You canât miss him.
A color-coordinated hippo: pink polo shirt and forty-eight-waist pink madras slacks. He was the one Sy was on the phone with when he was killed. Claims they were discussing some minor problem about photo approval. A movie star gets to approve
14 / SUSAN ISAACS
any picture before itâs handed out to the press, and Pomerantz said someone on this movie slipped a shot of Lindsay drinking coffee with her hair up in curlers to USA Today and she started crying when it got published because itâs
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