FRESH
YARN presents:
Carousel
By Cheryl
Montelle
I met Milton
the first day of rehearsal for the musical Carousel. I was 19 years
old. This was my first professional job. I'd only done two musicals before,
and they were at my synagogue when I was 11; they were Fiddler On The
Roof and Milk And Honey, and we stood on stage mouthing the
words to the albums.
The elevator
door to the rehearsal studio opened and someone pushed past me, knocking
my dance bag to the floor. As I bent down to pick it up, I heard, "Maybe
standing in front of the elevator isn't such a good idea." I looked
up into the sparkling eyes of a heavyset man with gray, unkempt hair and
a white goatee. "Oh I'm so sorry," I said standing up.
"Don't worry about it, are you in the show?" he asked.
"Yes
I am," I said proudly. "I'm a dancer -- my name is Cheryl Movitz,
I mean Montelle, I just changed it and I keep forgetting. You see, I've
never heard Jewish names in the chorus, and my grandfather, Sam Movitz,
wanted to be a tap dancer instead of a butcher, which he ended up being
anyway, but he was going to call himself Ronnie Montelle -- so I kept
it all in the family." God I was nervous.
"Nice
to meet you Miss Montelle, my name is Milton Rosenstien, and I didn't
change my name."
"Milton,
that's my dad's name, you know there aren't that many Miltons around."
He laughed and said, "You know, you're right."
As he walked
away, I noticed a thick bundle of music under his arm. I thought he was
one of the character actors, but as we started rehearsal, he took a seat
behind the table next to the director, and I discovered that he was actually
the musical director of the show. He caught my look of embarrassment,
raised his eyebrows, then gave me a wink.
From then
on, Milton looked out for me. Once, when I kept shifting off my alto line
back to the melody line over and over again, he took me aside after the
rehearsal and whispered, "Sing the melody. In fact, just sing the
melody whenever you feel the need to, but don't tell anyone I said so."
He walked
away with his wife, Sally. They were newlyweds and she was a singer in
the chorus. I always sat next to her in the dressing room and she taught
me how to put on stage makeup because, as she put it, "God knows,
I've slapped on enough of this shit!" A buxom blonde, she reminded
me of Mae West, only sweeter. Sally was about 40 to Milton's 65, and she
loved taking care of him. On tour, they'd rent rooms with kitchens so
that she could cook all his favorite foods. She even converted to Judaism,
calling herself "the Jewish shiksa."
Sometimes
at rehearsal breaks, Milton would sit down next to me, and just talk.
He'd tell me about growing up in Brooklyn, and how he delivered groceries
to pay for his piano lessons and trips to the Yiddish theater. He said
his parents were poor, but had a great love of music and wanted him to
become a concert pianist. "Yeah, well, I tried that route, but my
real calling was interpreting a score, not necessarily playing it. Besides,
I liked to watch all the pretty girls dance by me in the shows."
He talked
about the shows too, like Funny Girl; he was assistant conductor
on that one. "She was just a kid when she started, but I watched
Streisand bloom into a real talent. Her voice was pure; not like now,
always sliding up to hit the notes, singing pop music no less. And let's
not forget Merman, what a gal, what a love of the theater that woman had."
He'd worked with her on Gypsy. I thanked Milton for sharing his
stories and he shrugged, "I gotta tell somebody, and I knew you'd
get a kick out of 'em. Besides, I like you kid."
In Indiana,
a couple of weeks into the tour, I knew he really did like me when he
found me alone in the dressing room crying over a recent ex-boyfriend.
I'd lifted my soggy head off my folded arms to find a tissue, and there,
past my own reflection in the mirror, was Milton's. He was standing in
the doorway, wearing a frown and a soiled T-shirt, his large belly protruding
over his pants, held up by a pair of suspenders. His eyes were moist,
and I wondered how long he'd been watching me cry. I turned around, still
heaving, unable to catch my breath.
"Boyfriend
trouble?"
I nodded
yes. How did he know that?
"Is
there anything I can do?"
I shook my
head no.
He was thoughtful
for a moment, then brightened, "Well, cheer up kid, it only gets
worse." He disappeared down the cement hallway, chuckling. Something
in his delivery made me stop crying and start chuckling, too.
When it was
time to start the show, I took my place on a little platform along with
two other girls. We played kooch dancers, hired to lure men into a girlie
show at the carnival. I wore an exotic costume and played the castanets.
The music was strange, dreamlike, and the choreography, sensual. I watched
Milton for our cue, and as he brought down the baton he looked right at
me and nodded. I began dancing. I took my arms over my head Spanish-style
and turned slowly around swinging my hips. I caught Milton's eye again,
and he was grinning ear to ear.
Carousel
is a moving story about love, loss, and eventually hope. It's full of
dark undertones and beautiful dances and songs. It's one of the great
American musicals. Unfortunately, by the time we got to New Orleans our
production had been panned in every town. Our star couldn't remember his
lines so he ad-libbed all the way through the show.
Ah, but New
Orleans. We stayed on the edge of the French Quarter in a run-down but
festive motel called the Vieux Carré. The lobby was small, but
opened onto a huge courtyard thick with green bushes and blooming red
flowers. There were white lights strung in the trees and in the middle
of the courtyard was an old bar, a place the cast met after each show.
Around the perimeter were the rooms, two stories high, with iron balconies
-- very French. The whole place had the quality of another century. I
had this eerie sensation that past and present collided here; that masked
behind the party atmosphere, the eyes of those who lived before us were
watching our every move, manipulating things just this side of dangerous
-- like the day we arrived. My roommate, Patty, was still checking in
and I was completely alone in the room. I walked into the bathroom and
didn't just slip, but felt pushed from behind. I went up and then down
with such momentum, and landed so hard on my right elbow, I was out of
the show for two nights. I could feel the strange forces at work in this
old town.
Three days
into our stay, we gathered at the bar as usual after the show. We ordered
our first round of many drinks, and lit up our smokes. Patty was complaining
about abdominal pain. Milton said, "Let me try something." He
put his right hand on her belly and closed his eyes. Patty said she could
feel heat coming out of his fingers, something shifting deep inside, then
-- no more pain. Milton came out of his trancelike state, and moved on
to talk with the director, leaving the rest of us to wonder what the hell
had just happened. We all knew Milton was a gifted musical director, but
this was a side of him we'd never seen before. Maybe he could do something
for my elbow; I made a mental note to ask him about that later.
I slept badly
that night. I woke early and decided to treat myself to Café Du
Monde for a chicory coffee and an order of their famous beignets -- square
donuts dipped in powdered sugar, my recent downfall.
When I entered
the lobby, I was surprised to see Sally, Milton's wife, and Marie, a tough
middle-aged redhead featured in the show. They looked exhausted. Sally
was at the front desk, crying, her bags around her feet. She was wearing
big dark sunglasses and a black and white scarf tied under her chin, Audrey
Hepburn style. I moved toward her, but Marie put her hand on my shoulder
and said, "Not now, Cheryl." Just then, our stage manager approached
Sally, picked up her bags, and pointed to a blue van outside. She nodded,
and as he escorted her out the door, she wiped her nose with a tissue,
looked back at us, and shook her head. Her face was blotchy, and her upper
lip was bruised.
"What happened, Marie?" I asked.
"Milton
and Sally had a fight and Milton hit her; he hit her a few times, the
bastard."
Milton hit Sally? I couldn't quite take that in. We watched the van drive
away. Sally was going back to New York, leaving the tour, leaving Milton
-- and what about Milton? How could he hit her? They were on their honeymoon,
for God's sake. Marie's hand was still on my shoulder. I turned to her,
"Now what, Marie? How do we face Milton?"
"The real question Cheryl, is how the hell does he face us?"
She walked
away, and I was left alone in the lobby staring at a folding table that
was holding a pot of stale coffee and a few Styrofoam cups.
I walked
outside. The Quarter was quiet, and the streets were wet from a light
drizzle. There was no sun that morning, but the humidity was already on
the rise. I went to the café, ordered my coffee as planned, then
sat down at one of the outside tables. Pigeons pecked at crumbs as I tried
to make sense of what happened between Milton and Sally. They probably
stayed too long at the bar -- I'd seen them both tie one on more than
once. I knew the show was in trouble, an added pressure. Milton was busy
keeping our spirits up because the show wouldn't be going to Broadway
after all.
What happened?
Was Milton a jealous man? Did he drag Sally back to the room where she
made him chicken soup from scratch, and hit her because he thought she
was coming on to another guy? Or was it the other way around? Maybe Sally
needed Milton that night, and he wasn't interested; maybe she taunted
him, and he told her to knock it off and when she didn't stop, he shut
her up with his fist.
This
was not the Milton that took me under his wing, feeding me stories of
Broadway legends. Last night he'd laid healing hands on my roommate Patty's
belly. They were big, his hands. When he conducted, the baton looked small
and yet he held it so delicately. Sometimes he didn't even use the baton.
He'd caress the air, his right pinky raised to coax a note from a flute
or a single horn. On opening night, he'd put both hands on my shoulders
and gave me a good luck squeeze. They were warm and reassuring even before
he said, "knock 'em dead kid." Now those hands had blackened
my friend Sally's eye. How could this be the same man? What was it that
filled those hands with so much rage? What stories did you leave out,
Milton? Is this what you meant when you said it only gets worse?
Backstage
that evening, morale was low. I sat and stared at the empty makeup station
next to me. When the five-minute warning was announced, it took the cast
a long time to move to opening positions. The overture began; the haunting
melody had always been my favorite part, foretelling the tragedy to come.
Tonight that tragedy was ours. The curtain came up and being professionals,
and in honor of Sally, we gave one of our best performances. Even our
star remembered his lines! I stole a peek into the pit. I was curious
to see if there was any noticeable difference in Milton. Other than avoiding
eye contact with anyone on stage, he conducted as gracefully as ever.
Outside of
the theater, I didn't see much of Milton after that. I just couldn't.
In Virginia, our last stop, I was eating dinner at the Greek diner across
from our motel. I was only having split pea soup, thanks to complaints
from my dance partner -- too many beignets I guess. As I ate, I watched
the waitress behind the counter loading plates up her arm, knowing that
I'd probably be doing the same thing in a couple of months. Just as I
was about to spin into a mini-nervous breakdown, contemplating my future,
Milton walked into the diner alone and I was relieved to see a friendly
face, until I remembered New Orleans. He smiled and took a seat next to
me.
"So
how's the soup?"
"Not
bad, it's what you would expect from a Greek diner."
He scanned
the menu. I tried so hard to stay distant, concentrating on the cakes
and pies turning slowly around in their case near the counter. After he
ordered a turkey sandwich to go, he put both elbows on the table and leaning
toward me asked, "So what's your plan of action when you get back
to New York?"
"You
know, auditioning again, looking for work."
"Well,
hang in there kid, you won't be in the chorus long, that's not where you're
headed; you've got something special." He pointed his finger at me,
and said, "Don't give up!"
"Okay
Milton, I won't."
"My
next job is The Music Man with Dick Van Dyke. Michael Kidd's directing
that one. I'll mention you to him, you'd be perfect for that show."
"You
would do that for me Milton?"
"Sure,
why not? Just come to the audition, and we'll take it from there. I gotta
run, meeting with the big boys." He rolled his eyes. "Thanks
for letting me join you."
"Milton?"
"Yes?"
"I .
. .thanks"
He looked
me in the eyes for a moment, as if he knew what I wanted to say but couldn't,
turned, and walked out the revolving doors.
A week after
we returned home from the road, Milton did point me out at The Music
Man auditions, but Mr. Kidd wasn't interested. I don't think he cared
for the size of my thighs marching across the dance floor.
After that,
I didn't see Milton again until I heard he'd had a heart attack, but had
recovered and was conducting The Dance Theater of Harlem. I felt a strong
need to see him, so I bought a ticket to see Giselle.
Milton came
out in his tux, faced the audience and bowed. He looked weary, but the
light in his eyes was still there. After the show, I waited at the stage
door. It was freezing and I was just about to leave when he came out.
I went to give him a hug, but he put out his hands -- those hands -- and
I gave them a squeeze instead.
"I like
Giselle, but I came because of you. I heard you've been ill, Milton, how
are you feeling? You look a little thin."
"I'm
fine, but what's the matter with your voice?" How did he know? I'd
strained my vocal chords teaching aerobics. "It's nothing,"
I lied, "I'm just getting a cold, that's all." I was embarrassed
- aerobics.
"Listen,"
he said, "it's cold out here, and I'm tired. Here's my number, call
me and we'll share a bite to eat sometime. I'd like to catch up."
"Okay,"
I said, and took his card. He helped me hail a cab, then said goodnight.
I never called.
I meant to. Maybe I was ashamed that I hadn't lived up to his expectations
as a performer, but, in truth, I think it was my inability to admit to
myself that I cared deeply about a man who could hit his wife. And then,
it was too late. The man who took me under his wing, believed in me, encouraged
me, told me stories, and eventually gave me my first glimpse of the dark
side of a passionate heart, died of another heart attack.
He died alone,
I'm told, in his one room flat on 56th and Broadway.
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