FRESH
YARN presents:
Not
Really a Star F#*ker
By Kate
Flannery
It's not
really star fucking if you know that the star is washed up and not going
to do anything for your career. Right?
In 1993, I was playing the part of Alice in the show The Real Live
Brady Bunch. Audiences would line up around the block to see us dress
up and reenact actual scripts of the '70s TV show on stage.
I was 28,
and profoundly heartbroken over a guy named Doug. So when they asked me
to join the national Brady Bunch tour, going to over 30 cities
in a year, I said yes.
What happened that year wasn't star fucking.
That year I had sex with a Pop Star. He was a member of the fab four named
after simians, let's just call them "The Chimps." I had sex
with a Chimp. One of the Chimps and I had sex. It wasn't the drummer.
It wasn't the goofy one and it wasn't the one with the red knit-hat, but
I don't want to say which one it was.
When the
British Chimp decided to join our tour to reenact his Brady Bunch
performance from 25 years before, the cult status of our show hit a new
level of "what the hell?!" We were performing reruns with the
real guy in the rerun.
It was like an acid trip and some days like a cruise ship. The tour went
like this: We'd check into a hotel, do the show in a 1,500 seat auditorium
for two nights, drive all that night, sleeping on a rock 'n roll bus once
owned by the Allman Brothers, with a golden sunset and palm trees airbrushed
on it, then arrive in a new city the next morning just in time to do the
local morning TV or radio shows.
We had great
chemistry, me and the former Chimp. I'd end each of our interviews pointing
at him, looking in the camera and saying, "It doesn't get any better
than this!"
On the tour bus there were 10 cast members, a director, a driver and a
Chimp. (The bus wasn't the only thing that had seen better days.)
The
first time he kissed me was on the Detroit morning news. I was dressed
in my Carol Brady wig and flowered polyester pantsuit.
It's not
star fucking if the star comes after you.
The cast members noticed he liked me when they saw him carrying my tray
from the salad bar to the table at Shoney's, or the truck stop. I'd protest,
"He doesn't like me, it's just the English-Irish thing." (My
dad owned an Irish bar. He drank in English bars.) But
I made him laugh. And he made me giddy.
After a week of sexual tension, and late night drinks, the Pop Star made
his move on me at the Quality Inn in Bloomington, IN. The next morning
I woke up to the sound of his guitar strumming at the foot of the bed.
He looked at me and said, "I feel inspired." Then he sang, "I'll
love you this year, I'll love you next year, I'll love you forever."
Well, I could hardly breathe. I couldn't believe that one of "The
Chimps" was singing to me. I was blown away. He was so charming and
so sweet and I felt so special. How many girls had dreamed of this moment?
I had watched reruns of his TV show in the 2nd grade. My inner seven-year-old
was thrilled!
During every show I'd help him on with his jacket in the dark, backstage,
before his big scene. I watched him strut onstage and sing, "Girl,
Look What You've Done to Me" every night. He'd always catch my eye
and wink at me in the middle of the finale. He could eat dinner with any
woman in the world, but he chose to eat with me, sometimes. Often I'd
offer to pay, just to keep it in check. (I had women studies classes in
college in the late '80s.) He
bought me a choker that matched the Indian outfit he bought himself (to
crack up his drinking buddies at the pub in England.)
In Flint,
MI in the throws of passion the Chimp sang in my ear, "Here we cum
"
That was pretty cool. I got to hang out with him in his dressing room
while he autographed 8 X 10s of himself wearing a lavender leather vest,
and a David Lee Roth mullet. He couldn't remember the name of this fan
who had seen him perform 22 times that year, so he just wrote "To
M'lady, I love ya!" And I got to hear all his private personal stories
before he'd repeat them to everyone else on the bus the next day.
His
star power may have dwindled in Hollywood, but you'd never know it touring
the country. The Ohio tollbooth guy went nuts when he saw him. Outside
a St. Louis liquor store, a homeless man lit up like a Christmas tree.
People would ask me to take their picture with him -- even in the frozen
food aisle of a supermarket in Kalamazoo. We'd hear "The Chimps"
songs in every town, restaurant and store. I was with the Daydream Believer
guy.
At every venue these two middle-aged ladies would sell his t-shirts. They
looked like PTA moms. One of them had a 12-year-old son who bore a striking
resemblance to my Pop Star. I was sure she would do anything for him.
Anything.
Then there was his fan club who came out of the woodwork. These 40-something-year-old
female fans would drive three, four and five hours to catch his act. They
showed up with roses, cameras and motel keys. I would make myself look
busy, like I wasn't waiting around for him. But I was.
They were the star fuckers, not me.
The Pop Star was 20 years older than I, separated from his second wife
and had four daughters. I knew he never belonged to me. He belonged to
the world. No promises, no demands.
Two weeks and six cities later, on a night before a two-week break in
the tour, he was drunk and he picked a fight with me over nothing in a
bar.
He said, in that British accent, "Do you know who you're fucking
talking to? Do you know who you're fucking talking to?" (As his anger
swelled I imagined him doing his signature "Daydream Believer"
dance the whole time...) "Do you know who you're fucking talking
to? Do you know? You're not fucking talking to Dudley Moore, you're not
fucking talking to Peter Noonan of Herman's Hermits! DO YOU KNOW WHO YOU'RE
FUCKING TALKING TO??"
Good question. I did not know who I was fucking talking to, or who I was
fucking, for that matter. I waited 'til I got home to my room at the Holiday
Inn to cry.
Star fuckers put up with this shit?
The other ten people on the bus, who we spent every waking moment with,
were a little more aware of what was going on than I thought. I came back
to the show after our two-week break, and received some advice from the
guy who played Greg Brady in our show. "Don't wait around for the
Pop Star anymore."
So I didn't.
Well, guess who kinda, started waiting around for me? Guess who winked
at me during the finale, again? And took me to dinner? And gave me a charm
that said, "LUV YA"?
And GUESS
WHO woke up the next morning in Slippery Rock, Pennsylvania at the Best
Western to the sound of the guitar strumming at the foot of the bed, again?
He looked
at me and said, "I feel inspired" Then he sang, "I love
you this year, I'll love you next year, I'll love you forever." Had
he forgotten that he felt inspired by me four weeks before?
The last
time I saw my Pop Star was a year later. He was shaking his tambourine
at a balloon and cheese festival in Temecula, California.
We were not alone that day. Besides my new boyfriend, the former Chimp
had about 25 women there waiting for him. He was busy autographing those
familiar 8 X 10's next to the petting zoo. I found myself waiting in that
line to say hi to him.
The 40-something-year-old fan club was out in full force. The t-shirt
ladies were working at their usual proximity to the Pop star. And near
the cheese display was the fan also known as M'lady. All the usual suspects.
When I got to the front of the line, it actually took him a minute to
place me. He gave me a hug, but he seemed so guarded and awkward.
How could I have put myself in this position?
We weren't on the road anymore. We weren't on a rock 'n roll bus anymore.
We weren't doing sell-out shows; no radio and TV interviews. We were not
the toast of every small town, or spending every waking moment ten feet
away from each other anymore. We were not anything anymore.
I don't think he even remembered my name anymore.
I thought, "Do you know who you're fucking talking to?"
He had moved on. And I had definitely moved on.
I was no longer a star fucker.
I grabbed my boyfriend, Minnie Pearl's Godson, and went home.
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