Sunday, July 05, 2009

“The Secretary of Liquor” by Mark Rudman

Hey pallies, man the web is chocked full of Dinotreasures just waitin' to be Dinodiscovered. Gotta 'fess up likes I am so so totally obsessed by the thought that our Dino was so disengaged that I have been lookin' for more and more Dinorevelations on this.

Thens likes I remembered the amazin' Dinoquote that Tosches shares on this Dinotheme....“No one gets to know me.” Said to the producer of the Colgates when he wanted to have lunch and get to know our great man, our Dino makes it clear that he is and will always be likes totally unknowable.

So, I googled Dino Martin and the Dinoquote and what appeared is this amazin' Dinopoem by a dude tagged Mark Rudman. Tagged "The Secretary of Liquor" you can groove on it below and to see it in it's original form, likes just clicks on the tagg of this Dinopost.

Pallies, gotta tells you that likes I stand in total awe of our Dino who continues to inspire writers, musicians, and artists of all sorts to create literature, music, and art in honor of our Dino.

Just a few ago, we heard 'bout an Irish group, The Last Tycoons, who's cover song,"The Dry Law," to their first musical album is inspired by our Dino. And yet later this month, Miss Gayle Carline will unveil her first novel, "Freezer Burn," who's main character Benny Needles is a total Dinoholic. And recently, have been postin' Dinoimpressions by artistes from 'round the Dinoglobe who are honorin' our Dino with their art work.

And today, we uncover this totally cool poem dedicated to the life and times of our Dino. Likes how totally wonderful to find such Dinodevotion by so so many in the arts. Can't wait to see what next Dinotreasure that our Dino will be guidin' me to share with all you Dinoaddicted pallies..... Dinotreasurin', DMP






POEM
“The Secretary of Liquor”
by Mark Rudman

(JOHN F. KENNEDY’S INFORMAL APPOINTMENT OF DEAN MARTIN TO HIS CABINET)



What the fuck did they want, these men who needed the
company of others to make a life, as he needed a woman
to make babies?
—Dino, nick tosches


I always plays to de common folk.
—dean martin




It was casting time for The Young Lions.
Brando wouldn’t hesitate given this chance to dye
his hair white and do a German


accent. And while no one would hire Monty Clift
after his facially disfiguring car-wreck,
Brando convinced the studio that the other, slightly


older, kid from Omaha was the right man.
No one could play a more sensitive-tough than Monty,
like the artist-bugler-boxer Prewitt


mistaken for the enemy, gunned down
by his own men in the Pearl Harbor dawn;
or the way, as the seraphic cowboy Matt Dunson,


he got a rise out of his demented empire builder
father, John Wayne, by kicking over a tin cup,
sloshing the coffee into the dust to show his disgust.


Clift knew that Lions director Edward Dmytryk
was searching for someone to play a key
supporting role—as Frank Sinatra had in From Here To


Eternity—yet he was stunned to hear it was
“Jerry Lewis’s partner in shlock.”
Clift softened, nauseated when he saw


Martin’s competition
pander to the crowd on Broadway.
Lucky for Monty that he let it go: the two men


not only became friends; it was Dean
who put the man with the wired-jaw to bed
when he had the chloral hydrate and alcohol wobblies.


Ignorant of Brando’s intervention on his behalf,
Monty told Dean that Marlon’s fifty takes per scene
were getting on his nerves more and more


and he vowed to walk off the set if he tried
ONE MORE TIME to have his German soldier die
with arms spread wide to “echo the crucifixion.”


Clift, wasted with self-recrimination at forty-five.
Martin, an actor for whom one run through a scene
almost always sufficed.


Dean got a chuckle out of Monty with his response.
“It should be awful good with so many takes.”
Then the future flashed before him.


“I guess there are directors who want us to do
the same scene over and over again too.”
“Sure, lots. Some of the best.”


“I guess I got spoiled. Jerry and I got
to where we pretty much called the shots.”
And then—without any foreknowledge


that he’d be doing his only two other
serious roles in the next two years
and be subject to directorial rule on the sets of


Some Came Running and Rio Bravo—
he vowed in the future to set up his golf net
before shooting started on a picture.


Dean appeared to float, perfection
never an aspiration: that he was already as well known
for his insouciance and drunk persona as for


his singing and acting doesn’t mean he was so well-defended
that he didn’t feel any pressure about working
with such aces as Brando and Clift.


He didn’t have to stretch to play a would-be draft dodger,
Michael Whiteacre: “a likeable coward like myself,”
a screenwriter in Shaw’s novel, a singer in the movie.


The army doctor feeds Dean his first line in Lions
as if his future were visible in the instant:
art and life exquisitely commingled.


Doctor: “For a man your age and in your profession
you’re in excellent health. How do you manage it?”
Martin doesn’t hesitate: “Clean liquor.”


But sauntering through this role didn’t mean
everything was swell: he felt so out-of-place
on location in France he gave up the offer of


a choice part in The Guns of Navarone
because it meant going back to Europe.
In his middle years, he ambled through the role


of “Matt Helm” in another toneless
Bondian takeoff, and when Columbia
wanted to shoot Murderers’ Row


on location in Cannes, Dino
set the studio straight: “fuck no,
just build some fake Riviera sets.”



2


A diffident crooner, he needed a stooge.
License to fuck around on stage.
After his split with Jerry, Dino’s drunk persona grew


into a ghostly partner, and by the time he had his own TV show
the public was so saturated with his presence,
many conflated the persona and the person.


When he landed the drunk’s key role in Rio Bravo,
he turned to Brando for help, “what should I do?”
Brando told him what to think about.


The more inscrutable the subject
the more this spectre stands out in relief.
Part of Martin’s appeal was that no one knew him.


It wasn’t a mask; his detachment was who he was.
He showed up, his spirit remained elsewhere.
His wives and children found him unknowable.


It wasn’t personal. When the Martins entertained,
the guests carried on while Dino disappeared
into his room to watch westerns on TV, alone.


It wasn’t personal. When the producer of
“The Colgate Comedy Hour” suggested they have lunch
to get to know one another, Dino


set him straight: “No one gets to know me.”
Martin was a man no one came close to knowing.
What does it mean, to know someone?



3


Why ask such questions at all after Socrates
beguiled us out of answers and set us on
the inexhaustible path...dialectics?


Don’t you think I haven’t wondered if I haven’t
strayed from my true path as I find myself
tracking the trajectory of such non-exemplary lives?


You’re thinking it’s a trick, and will not answer,
but before you judge my dissolute subject—
who like the money but thought all the attention


was a joke because “a singer is nothing”—
as a derelict choice, consider how philosophy,
while striving to become more concrete


continues to recoil before the problem of other minds.
And it is said that Monsieur Sartre turned paler
than his martini, when Raymond Aron


challenged the Husserlians, at the Bec de Gaz
in Montparnasse, to make philosophy
out of a cocktail glass.



4


There’s something about everyone no one can know.
There was no question of Dino taking orders
and being bossed around was out of bounds:


penalty shot incurred for the perpetrator,
who was, this time, the imperious Billy Wilder
whose streak of hits was breaking fast.


Dino as always was doing his job,
which was to literally play himself in Kiss Me,
Stupid, and Billy had the balls


to cap an interview at the Hollywood Press Club
with this tactless pearl: “stars don’t mean a thing.”
Was this because of what Stupid might have been


had Marilyn, whose presence he had counted on,
not done herself in? Was Wilder gambling
that fellow exiles from the Reich,


Lang, von Stroheim, and even the ghosts
of Lubitsch, Brecht and Thomas Mann
would have been there to applaud and acknowledge


that he, from a younger generation of German exiles,
was one of them?
Dino didn’t brood. Dino didn’t blow.


There would be no humiliating histrionics.
He would put Wilder in his place
with a letter, denouncing him as an arrogant


and self-important son-of-a-bitch.
Without angling for the director’s respect,
he got it, and more.


After six weeks of delectable footage
with Peter Sellers—whose American debut
was to have been in Stupid—


as the small town piano teacher
intent on writing a hit song
and enlisting Dino to “get it in the right hands”


the tetchy “thirty-nine year old actor had a massive
coronary,” yet not long after landing in Heathrow
found the breath to bitch to the press


about crowds on the set, wrote a letter
vilifying Wilder and Hollywood,
and swore never to return.


Wilder was used to being the abuser, not the abused.
He had to take it out on someone and no one better
to park at than Sellers’ replacement,


Ray Walston, as they reshot scenes.
Ray was cowed. Dino knew it.
Ray observed that Dino was never without a glass


in hand but assumed (wrongly) that it was filled
with ginger ale instead of vodka.
Which Dino was this, the persona or the person?


Dino advised Ray, IN A VOICE LOUD ENOUGH
SO THAT EVERYONE ONE THE SET COULD HEAR
to “tell that cocksucker to go fuck himself and do it your own way.”


Wilder went wild. Martin practice putting.
“If you wanted an actor, what the fuck did you get me for.
Why didn’t you get fucking Marlon Brando.”


It was as if Dino, who’d boxed in his youth
under the pseudonym “Kid Crochet,”
had sucker-punched the dictator, who found himself


disarmed by this unflappable and far from ugly,
American. Dino’s aplomb had Wilder
on the floor, howling with laughter, just as night-


club audiences used to crack up
out of sheer anticipation of the antics to come
while waiting for Martin and Lewis


to begin their act...which knew no limits.
They didn’t break rules, they made them up
as they went along, as when they leapt from the stage


followed by floodlights in Fort Lee, New Jersey,
to chase a slender tall brunette in a white dress
down the aisle, chanting, in imitation moron—


“we know where you’re going, we know where you’re going”—
because she had the nerve to leave her seat
before they’d finished their act.


She was mortified, but not for long.
They had no way of knowing that a young
woman who was that well put together


could be as painfully self-conscious
as this anonymous girl, who within a few
years would become my mother.



5


There is something beautiful and horrible
about Dino’s incarnation of cool.
Anger sublimated into a mask


that would not harden, could not crack.
Dino did not end in ruin, like the others.
His falling away was gradual.


His lifelong withdrawal, prelude to silence.
Henry Miller had finally gotten Tropic of Cancer
through the courts. He’d spent his life


in quest of freer spirits than his own,
and now, after Rimbaud and Lawrence
and The Colossus of Maroussi,


he found in Martin a priest of irreverence
who was beyond nihilism,
who shrugged off everything the doom culture


deemed valuable, and pulled strings to be
granted an audience with the man
who made heavy weather of nothing.



6


Driving home to the suburbs during rush hour
in the huge gas-guzzling cars that signified
America’s boom economy in the 1960’s,


married men without time sighed for the first
time all day when “Houston” came on the a.m.
Then, back in their gaudy palaces at last,


they stacked Martin’s LP’s
on the turntable while mixing martinis.
Was it the façade that never cracked, never changed guises?


And isn’t facade precisely the wrong term for one man’s
unchanging way of being in the world?
Dean would say that’s it’s a waste to waste this wasted


unasked for sojourn on earth thinking about shit
like what others think of us, or depressing shit,
like “the fucking Cold War or Vietnam,”


or rip-off artists like the Beatles
(“why do they spell it with an ‘a’?”).
Jealous? Never. Only annoyed that they kept bugging him


with questions. Why did he have to think?
Wasn’t it enough just to live? Dino didn’t work
to see his voice or image reproduced;


he acted, sang, and hosted shows, on screen
and in person, because it was easier than real
work.


Dino liked his inflated wages, but money
meant nothing beyond what it could buy.
“A singer is nothing.” Why did he sing?


It was the easiest way to make a bundle.
When anyone complained that acting was hard word
Dino responded as Crocetti, the barber’s son


from Steubenville: “You think acting’s work?
Try standing on your feet
twelve hours a day dealing Blackjack.”



7


If you agree that Dino lived to live on his own terms,
and if his triumphs were in the significant films
where he had allowed himself to take


direction, listen, learn, tremble and transcend,
then his second greatest trope
after inventing himself


was convincing producers and directors
to let him play a character
who sang and drank and thought about golf more than god,


so that the actor and the part were entirely one.
His string of walk-through roles
was like a continuous aside


to his audience, dissolving the boundary
between actor and spectator
and giving birth to a suspect and shadowy intimacy.
NOTES: I am indebted to Nick Tosches' splendid biography, Dino for some of the details from which I have fashioned this meditation.

Mark Rudman, “The Secretary of Liquor,” in The Couple © 2002 by Mark Rudman and reprinted by permission of Wesleyan University Press. www.wesleyan.edu/wespress

Source: The Couple (Wesleyan University Press, 2002)



Geography and place figure greatly in Mark Rudman’s work. Born in New York City, he spent . . . MORE »

6 comments:

Maria Jensen said...

Wow,i keep on reading all this new stuff about Dean.. things i have never ever read about him before, and i fall more and more in love with Dean's personality!
And one thing that i find about my self, is that i am a little Dino like.. In the way i do things, treat people, family and other stuff in my life.. I guess it has something to do with my Italian genes : )
By the way, last week we had this "school "play" and i got to sing Dean's songs :D Oh that was just so special and i sang 2 in Italian too : D

Keith said...

Hey pallie DMP. Great post as usual. I really enjoyed reading this. I hope you've had a nice weekend. I've given you an award over at my Dino Lounge blog.

dino martin peters said...

Hey pallie Maria, learnin' more 'bout our Dino is a huge purpose of this ilovedinomartin Dinoblog...and yes, how can we not fall more and more in love with our Dino as we learn more 'bout his life and message.....and yes, the goal of every true Dinoholic is to become more and more like our Dino...cool to know you got to share your Dinopassion at school...doin' your part to forge the Dinorevolution forward....so you speak Italiano....now that is real Dinocool for Dinosure....

dino martin peters said...

Hey pallie Keith, yeah, I loves to find more and more creative people usin' their gifts to honor our Dino...and this Dinopoem is just so so Dinospecial....just likes our great man....will have to go over to your pad to checks out this news....

Maria Jensen said...

Well, i don't speak fluent italian.. but i know a little : )

dino martin peters said...

Hey pallie Maria, that's cool...and continues to help you become more like our Dino...and introduce others to our great man....thinks it is so cool that you have been able to spread the Dinomessage at your school....