FRESH
YARN PRESENTS:
Mantooth
By
Leslie Nipkow
PAGE
THREE:
And
so I entered Corinth, a plastic Garden of Eden, overrun with silk
lilies, hand painted Astroturf, and cloudless blue cyclorama skies.
Here every hour was magic hour, and Mantooth was king, CEO, and
father of the bride, all rolled into one.
That was when things began to go south. Rather than dispatching
me to Mantooth's side of the church, the stage manager sent me to
the groom's side with the other Jews, truck drivers, and pudgy people.
Lamenting my working class punim, I took my position by the
canapés, and, suddenly, I felt Him near. Slowly, I turned
to find myself just a few feet from Mantooth himself, now aged like
a fine, slightly over-tanned wine. I had done it. By sheer force
of imagination, I had transported myself from my childhood living
room into Mantooth's presence.
A fellow extra, Alan, so garden-party-worthy he looked like he'd
been beamed straight out of Greenwich, Connecticut, followed my
eye line. "You're not even blinking. What's up with that?"
Overwhelmed by the enormity of the moment, I gave him the Reader's
Digest Condensed version of my fantasy life, and, to my abject
horror, he made a beeline for the 'Tooth. As I watched Alan's mouth
move, I prayed to God and Werner Erhard that whatever he was saying
included the words "adorable" and "hot tamale."
Then Alan pointed in my direction.
As I posed "nonchalantly" in my flapper dress and white
tights, stomach sucked in and eyes bugged out, a blowfish at full
blow, Mantooth's eyes met mine. I smiled a smile that said, "Remember
Sensuality Exercise Number Fifteen, The Hoover? That was always
your favorite." Mantooth's look replied, "Who let that
in here?" And then he turned away.
Alan slithered back to me with a look of chagrin.
"What
did you say to him?"
"That you loved him when you were eleven. What's that guy's
problem, anyway?" I knew. I was the human equivalent of carbon
dating. I made him feel like a fossil.
"Did you mention the dollar he owes me?" I blurted.
Alan
lent me ten bucks to get home.
Fast forward seven years to 2007. Loving and Mantooth's career
have long since bitten the dust. I, however, have become a writer
for the soap opera One Life to Live, wrangling my own tribe
of white faux-ristocrats, the Llanview Buchanans, cowboy oilmen
who live on the Main Line, like the Bushes of Connecticut.
In my time on the job, I've executed a man by lethal injection (he
survived), outed the Lieutenant Governor, split a mother and daughter
into multiple personalities with rhyming names, stolen babies, shattered
marriages, and engineered false arrests, a natural disaster, a matched
set of mine collapses, and three organ transplants, two of them
successful.
So it is that my fellow writers and I are sitting in a network notes
meeting discussing a white supremacist storyline. We're mulling
the character of the racist's father, when my boss announces, "I
just cast Randolph Mantooth."
"Oh no."
It's out before I can stop it. Ordinarily, I never utter a word
in these meetings, afraid that if I let down my guard, I may slip
and tell the truth. If the outside world finds out what my insides
are saying, I'll be fired so fast, time will go backwards, taking
my bank account with it. Too late. All heads turn toward me, as
my sordid tale spills out: the 8x10 I've been waiting for since
the '70s, the Loving fiasco, the suppurating psychic wound
left by Mantooth's cavalier dismissal of my devotion.
My confession is met by the same expression previously seen in the
mirthless eyes of Mantooth, his derisive stare salting me like an
errant slug. My outburst is dismissed like the ravings of a garden
gnome on crystal meth. But I refuse to slink off with my tale between
my legs. Mantooth owes me, and one way or another, I will collect.
I visualize the moment Mantooth realizes he now works for me.
For thirty years, I have registered barely a blip on his radar,
but soon he will know me as air traffic control. He's passing through
my town.
At this point, I don't even want to meet him. No, I intend to enjoy
pulling his strings from the comfort of my living room. I will prepare
a pu-pu platter of revenge. I am schooled in delicious evil, and
I will have my dollar of flesh.
Mantooth will do what I say, and say what I want.
I'll have him run into the show's matriarch ("Big Mama")
in the hospital waiting room, as her daughter (the one with extra
personalities) undergoes her second liver transplant in as many
months. Mantooth will offer Big Mama ("BM") a cup of hospital
coffee; she will respond with the standard knock at institutional
beverages, then accept his kindness.
I know how actors think. This on-screen moment will send Randolph
crowing to the soap press about his upcoming love affair with BM,
ending a long stretch of romantic constipation for her, and heralding
a big, fat, contract for him. He'll start working out, get Botox,
and rehearse his devil-may-care smile till his teeth hurt.
Once Mantooth embraces the idea of steady employment, I will send
his character to jail to take the hit for his racist, arsonist,
murderous, ex-baseball star son. I will write him weeks of scenes
in an orange jumpsuit, letting him believe he's headed for exoneration,
high romance, and a daytime Emmy.
Overconfident Randolph will go out and buy a new car. And as soon
as he drives that baby off the lot, I will kill him -- onscreen,
where it's permanent. Not at the hands of another major player,
no. He will be shivved in the liver at the hands of a prison extra,
preferably one with an actual rap sheet.
I will leave him devastated and broke, the way he left me all those
years ago. Who says there is no justice?
Sadly,
my revenge never achieves its full bloody bloom. The suits quickly
discover how tough it is to tell a story about racism without minority
characters. They pull the plug, ordering Mantooth iced in a fashion
far colder and more mercenary than any I have imagined: he dies
off-camera. I take satisfaction in writing him out using as few
syllables as possible.
Entering the writers' room a few weeks later, I sense something
amiss when my boss actually meets my eyes. My missile shields go
up. I reflexively compliment his Gucci loafers, and he hands me
an 8x10 publicity photograph of Mantooth posed in front of a fire
engine with his defibrillator kit. He has inscribed it: "To
Leslie, Love and Kisses, Randolph Mantooth."
I stare at the picture in shock and awe, wanting desperately to
feel something. I've waited for this moment for thirty years. All
eyes are on me, awaiting my response. And that's when the "marvelous
bitch" inside me slips and tells the truth.
"Thanks, but I'd rather have my dollar back."
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