“Mayer, huh?” I said. “I’ve got to talk to him about a raise. Do you know who drinks in the movies? Everybody.” I took a swig of scotch to illustrate. “Even Gary Cooper.”
“Should you be doing that stuff?” Heada said.
“Are you kidding? It’s cheap, it’s legal, and I know what it is.” And it was pretty good at keeping me from flashing.
“Is it safe?” Heada, who thought nothing of snorting white stuff she found on the floor, was reading the bottle warily.
“Of course it’s safe. And endorsed by W. C. Fields, John Barrymore, Bette Davis, and E.T. And the major studios. It’s in every movie on Mayer’s list. Camille, The Maltese Falcon, Gunga Din. Even Singin’ in the Rain. Champagne at the party after the premiere.” The one where Donald O’Connor said, “You have to show a movie at a party. It’s a Hollywood law.”
I finished off the bottle. “Also Oklahoma! Poor Judd is dead. Dead drunk.”
“Mayer was hitting on Alis at the party,” she said, still looking at me.
Yeah, well, that was inevitable.
“Alis was telling him how she wanted to dance in the movies.”
That was inevitable, too.
“I hope they’ll be very happy,” I said. “Or is he saving her to give to Gary Cooper?”
“She can’t find a dancing teacher.”
“Well, I’d love to stay and chat,” I said, “but I’ve got to get back to the Hays Office.” I called up Casablanca again and started deleting liquor bottles.
“I think you should help her,” Heada said.
“Sorry,” I said. “ ‘I stick my neck out for nobody.’ ”
“That’s a quote from a movie, isn’t it?”
“Bingo,” I said. I deleted the crystal decanter Humphrey Bogart was pouring himself a drink out of.
“I think you should find her a dancing teacher. You know a lot of people in the business.”
“There aren’t any people in the business. It’s all CGs, it’s all ones and zeros and didge-actors and edit programs. The studios aren’t even hiring warmbodies anymore. The only people in the business are dead, along with the liveaction. Along with the musical. Kaput. Over. ‘The end of Rico.’ ”
“That’s a quote from the movies, too, isn’t it?”
“Yes,” I said, “which are also dead in case you couldn’t tell from Vincent’s decay morph.”
“You could get her a job as a face.”
“Like the one you’ve got?”
“Well, then, a job as a hackate, as a foley, or a location assistant or something. She knows a lot about movies.”
“She doesn’t want to hack,” I said, “and even if she did, the only movies she knows about are musicals. A location assistant’s got to know everything, stock shots, props, frame numbers. Be a perfect job for you, Heada. Now I really have to get back to playing Lee Remick.”
Heada looked like she wanted to ask if that was a movie, too.
“Hallelujah Trail,” I said. “Temperance leader, battling demon rum.” I tipped the bottle up, trying to get the last drops out. “You have any chooch?”
She looked uncomfortable. “No.”
“Well, what have you got? Besides klieg. I don’t need any more doses of reality.”
“I don’t have anything,” she said, and blushed. “I’m trying to taper off a little.”
“You?!” I said. “What happened? Vincent’s decay morph get to you?”
“No,” she said defensively. “The other night, when I was on the klieg, I was listening to Alis talk about wanting to be a dancer, and I suddenly realized there was nothing I wanted, except chooch and getting popped.”
“So you decided to go straight, and now you and Alis are going to tap-dance your way to stardom. I can see it now, your names up in lights — Ruby Keeler and Una Merkel in Gold Diggers of 2018!”
“No,” she said, “but I decided I’d like to be like her, that I’d like to want something.”
“Even if that something is impossible?”
I couldn’t make out her expression. “Yeah.”
“Well, giving up chooch isn’t the way to do it. If you want to figure out what it is you want, the way to do it is to watch a lot of movies.”
She looked defensive again.
“How do you think Alis came up with this dancing thing? From the movies. She doesn’t just want to dance in the movies, she wants to be Ruby Keeler in 42nd Street — the plucky little chorus girl with a heart of gold. The odds are stacked against her, and all she’s got is determination and a pair of tap shoes, but don’t worry. All she has to do is keep hoofing and hoping, and she’ll not only make it big, she’ll save the show and get Dick Powell. It’s all right there in the script. You didn’t think Alis came up with it on her own, did you?”
“Came up with what?”
“Her part,” I said. “That’s what the movies do. They don’t entertain us, they don’t send the message: ‘We care.’ They give us lines to say, they assign us parts: John Wayne, Theda Bara, Shirley Temple, take your pick.”
I waved at the screen, where the Nazi commandant was ordering a bottle of Veuve Cliquot ’26 he wasn’t going to get to drink. “How about Claude Rains sucking up to the Nazis? No, sorry, Mayer’s already playing that part. But don’t worry, there are enough parts to go around, and everybody’s got a featured role, whether they know it or not, even the faces. They think they’re playing Marilyn, but they’re not. They’re doing Greta Garbo as Sadie Thompson. Why do you think the execs keep doing all these remakes? Why do they keep hiring Humphrey Bogart and Bette Davis? It’s because all the good parts have already been cast, and all we’re doing is auditioning for the remake.”
She looked at me so intently I wondered if she’d lied about giving up AS’s and was doing klieg. “Alis was right,” she said. “You do love the movies.”
“What?”
“I never noticed, the whole time I’ve known you, but she’s right. You know all the lines and all the actors, and you’re always quoting from them. Alis says you act like you don’t care, but underneath you really love them, or you wouldn’t know them all by heart.”
I said, in my best Claude Rains, “ ‘Ricky, I think that underneath that cynical shell you are quite the sentimentalist.’ Ruby Keeler does Ingrid Bergman in Spellbound. Did Dr. Bergman have any other psychiatric observations?”
“She said that’s why you do so many AS’s, because you love movies and you can’t stand seeing them being butchered.”
“Wrong,” I said. “You don’t know everything, Heada. It’s because I pushed Gregory Peck onto a spiked fence when we were kids.”
“See?” she said wonderingly. “Even when you’re denying it, you do it.”
“Well, this has been fun, but I have to get back to work butchering,” I said, “and you have to get back to deciding whether you want to play Sadie Thompson or Una Merkel.” I turned back to the screen. Peter Lorre was clutching Humphrey Bogart’s lapels, begging him to save him.
“You said everybody’s playing a part, whether they know it or not,” Heada said. “What part am I playing?”
“Right now? Thelma Ritter in Rear Window. The meddling friend who doesn’t know when to keep her nose out of other people’s business,” I said. “Shut the door when you leave.”
She did, and then opened it again and stood there watching me. “Tom?”
“Yeah?” I said.