Oh, Rosalita-With
Marilyn Monroe, Montgomery Clift and Clark Gable’s Film Adaptation Of Arthur
Miller’s “The Misfits” In Mind
By Reviewer Zack James
Maybe it was something
in the drinking water but Louis Lyons was beside himself one he figured out the
real reason why he spent a couple of weekend nights watching a couple of
old-time flicks, films which he had gathered in from his Netflix service. Lou
had been on a long term kick about watching, or rather re-watching, films,
mostly black and white from his checkered seedy random youth. In those days he
would have viewed such films not on his HD television or via the stream of his
computer but at his local theater, The
Majestic, in his hometown of Oxford out in Western Massachusetts now long
since closed where he would spent many an ungodly Saturday afternoon viewing the current fare. The “ungodly’ part
for real his parents were devout Sixth Day Anabaptists whose day of worship
started midday Saturday and ended at dawn Sunday morning and although they were
liberal enough to see that Lou would have snuck out anyway always cast that epitaph
his way when he came sheepishly through the door after being hunkered down with
a box of made last popcorn and some candy bars purchased at Billy’s Variety and
“snuck” in under the watch-less eyes of the ushers.
Later in high school,
having grown out of kids’ clothing and Saturday matinees about the same time,
he let those epitaphs flow off his back like water off a duck after coming in
late on Saturday nights. Reason: or one of the reasons, Lotty Larson who was
the first girl who accepted his invitation when he asked her the locally
famous, locally famous high school movie date night, question-balcony or
orchestra? Orchestra meant maybe one date and out but balcony meant promise of
anything from a “feel” inside or out of some girl’s cashmere sweater to a tight
space blow job.
This trip, this
diversion down rural hills nostalgia road, has a purpose since it was on the
same track that was bothering Lou’s old mind. The eternal, infernal, ways of
sex which had one way or another bothered Lou’s mind since puberty, maybe
before if Doctor Freud and his acolytes were right. The association played out
this way. On Friday night he had watched for the umpteenth time one of his
all-time favorite films the film adaptation of Ernest Hemingway’s To Have And Have Not starring Lauren
Bacall and Humphrey Bogart. One of the reasons that he favored that film is
that although he did not see it when it had come out since he was only a dream
in his parents’ way of life in 1941 when the film had come out when he did see
the film in retrospective in college at the Brattle Theater in Harvard Square
he had told his date, name now long forgotten in memory, that some of the scenes
in that classic were as hot, maybe hotter, between two people with their
clothes fully on than half the porno being featured in the Combat Zone in
downtown Boston. (Lou vaguely remembered that night was a hot date night with
that unremembered young woman when they had gone back to her place on
Commonwealth Avenue.)
After that recent
viewing though he had remarked to his wife, his third wife, Moira, that given
the best of it Captain Morgan, Bogie’s role, a craggy sea salt, and Marie, the
Bacall role, that he had to be at least twice her age, maybe more. (He had actually
looked it up on Wikipedia and found
Bogie was forty-five and Bacall nineteen at the time so the “maybe more” was
definitely in play). That started a short discussion between them about younger
women being attracted to older men (as a sign of some kind of distorted social
norm older men being attracted to younger women never made it to the
conversation table). No conclusions were drawn at the time by Lou.
Saturday night Moira was
out attending her weekly bridge party with some of her girlfriends and Lou
wound up watching the other film he had ordered the film adaptation of Arthur
Miller’s The Misfits starring Marilyn
Monroe and Clark Gable (with serious supporting roles by Montgomery Clift, Eli
Wallach, and Thelma Ritter). Once again maybe giving Clark, playing Gaye, a
decided edge in the looks department over Bogie and the fact of being a real
cowboy over a sea captain an older man was attractive to a younger woman, Rosalyn,
played by Marilyn Monroe. Lou, a little younger than the older brothers and
fathers who saw Ms. Monroe as the epitome of 1950s sexual allure and beauty,
had seen the film when he was in high school, alone if he recalled.
The question of younger
women being attracted to older men would not have stuck out as much it had on
those recent nights on the first viewing of the films back in the day but since
then there had been Rosalita, his second wife, the wife that Lou had left for
Moira. The main reason, although not the only reason, had been the wide gap in
age between them, Rosalita had been twenty-five and he almost fifty when he
spied her one night in San Francisco at the City Lights Bookstore, the famous
one run by Lawrence Ferlinghetti and the big “beat” hang-out back in the 1950s
when being “beat” mean something socially unlike later when he tried to emulate
them with black beret, logger’s boots and flannel shirt , and got nothing but
laughs for digging something so passe. He was trolling the place, literally,
since he had just got divorced back in Massachusetts from his first wife, Anna,
and after the acrimonious settlement decided he needed to head west and make a
new start. Needed the company of a woman as well and somebody he had run into at
Ginny’s Bar in North Beach had told him that if you were looking for a certain
type woman, intellectually curious, maybe a little off-kilter, maybe easy too
then in San Francisco you hit the bookstores and City Lights was a magnet.
(That “custom” was not confined to Frisco Town he had met Moira at the Museum
of Fine Arts in Boston under the same imperative).
Lou had been looking for
a copy of Allen Ginsberg’s poem Howl
(in a paperback book format which came with other poems as well) since that was
one of his favorite poems, if not his most favorite at the time. Then this
thin, brown-eyed, black-haired good-looking young women whom he at first
thought was Spanish, maybe from Mexico given where he was came up behind him
and started going on and on about Ginsberg who had just died a few years
before. (Rosalita was not Spanish at all but Irish her mother just liked the
name.) He was shocked that anybody under the age of forty would know anything
about Ginsberg and the importance of his poem not only as a break in the kind
of poem that was acceptable in polite society but the harsh social message
Ginsberg was laying down. She, not he, asked if he would like to stop at the
café and have a cup of coffee. He figured why not (he did not find out until
after they had a couple of subsequent dates that women, women of all ages, also
trolled the bookstores looking for men, men who say would be looking at
something like Howl which told them
the guy could at least read unlike some of the beasts they had run across in
the bars or at some off-the-wall party).
That afternoon started
their affair but Lou was from the start apprehensive about their differences in
ages which came up often along the way, for example, when he mentioned that he
had been in Washington on May Day, 1971 and had been arrested in the dragnet
that the cops and military had set up that day she didn’t understand, could not
get around the idea that people would try to shut down the government if it did
not stop the Vietnam War. At times they could work through it like that first
day with Ginsberg (she turned out to have been an English major at Berkeley)
but other times, times when she tried to coax him into jogging which she was
crazy about they would fight civil war worthy battles. He always had the
sneaking suspicion that Rosalita was not telling the truth when she mentioned
that she had had trouble with her male peers, boys she called them, and had
been attracted to older men ever since her father had abandoned her family when
she was twelve. She had told him repeatedly that she was looking for the
maturity and security that an older man would bring. Lou could never really get
that through his head and eventually his tilted his behavior toward giving dear
Rosalita reason to boot him out the door. (On top of meeting Moira closer in
age to him at the museum when for one last effect to reconcile he and Rosalita had
moved to Boston).
That night Lou thought
though maybe Rosalita had been just like Marie and Rosalyn in the films needing
a safe harbor. Damn.
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