My BFF in elementary school was the coolest person I knew, a
wry sophisticate permitted to use the oven by herself. She also had a finger on
the pulse of comedy and culture in the wee small hours—or Army-crawled into the
den to watch Late Night on the sly—and
so she was the person who introduced me to David Letterman.
I couldn’t stay awake. I was famous for conking out at
another girl’s slumber party at 9:30 PM, on the hostess’s mom’s bed (perhaps
the only reason I didn’t wake up to my hand in warm water or my training bra in
the freezer). But I gleaned some of what I was missing from BFF’s recaps: the
Velcro and Alka-Seltzer suits, a guy living—living?—under
the seats, someone pelting the audience with frozen peas.It was BFF’s idea to start an epistolary campaign, appealing to Dave on a weekly basis to put us on the show. Viewer Mail! I remember the plan, though I don’t think we ever put pen to paper. Maybe it would have worked. In someone else’s retrospective this week, I witnessed a blasé thirteen-year-old playing her nose as a Stupid Human Trick. So maybe they’d have booked a pair of idiot sixth-graders from the far coast, based on their sheer, dogged persistence. Which, it turned out, we did not possess.
*****
I’ve kept a longhand journal/diary/scrapbook of some kind
since I could write in sentences. Cut from a magazine and pasted into a volume
circa February 1994, unattributed, is this:
On the set one night, during a commercial break in the middle of the show, the band was playing so loudly that it was impossible for Teri Garr, one of the show’s favorite guests, to converse with Dave. When she all but shouted at him: “How are you doing?” Letterman grabbed a pad on his desk and scribbled a note that he passed back to her. The note read: “I hate myself.” When Garr tried to reassure him that he was, in fact, a wonderful guy and talented star, he grabbed the note back, underlined “I hate myself” twice, and shoved it back at her.
That hit me SO HARD, spoke to me SO LOUDLY, that I kept it.
Memorized it, nearly—enough that 21 years later I could track it to its source:
an excerpt from Bill Carter’s The Late
Shift, about the early-90s late night wars. (I remembered that the anecdote
featured Teri Garr, and looked her up in the index: score, a direct hit.)
I was 24, scrabbling at the edge of the cliff-drop to
Adulthood: about to finish graduate school, about to move in with my Serious
Boyfriend. I needed a real job. I owed Sallie Mae thousands upon thousands of
dollars to be parceled out over a decade, an unfathomable length of time. Together,
Serious Boyfriend and I had watched Letterman’s departure from NBC and his
triumphant ascension on CBS. I admired Letterman, relished his twisting a thumb
in the eye of the boss, the network, that had forsaken him. I found him
attractive in a way I couldn’t explain to myself: so gap-toothed and goofy
looking, so irritable, this smart-funny-angry
man, almost as old as my father, good
lord, what was I thinking? Thus, more perplexing still was the idea that I had
anything in common with a Successful Celebrity Grown-up Person. Letterman was
the newly anointed king. He ruled late night, from beneath the colossal marquee
at the Ed Sullivan Theater—maybe someday your name will be in lights. What
excuse could he have, to not want to
get out of bed in the morning? Here’s part of what I wrote, under that
clipping: “What can I learn from
this? Other than the fact…that [at $14 million a year] David Letterman can
afford a lot more and better therapy than I can.”
(Another thing we had in common, at the time: Neither I nor
Letterman had started a course of antidepressants yet.)
*****
Here’s another journal entry, September 22, 2001. I was
housesitting for friends whose honeymoon trip to Paris had been canceled, ruined;
they drove down the coast instead, in the first glimmer of fall, and I lay
awake in their strange bed (with the
flattest pillows I’d ever seen, like a pair of two manila envelopes against the
headboard, how did you guys ever sleep?? and would I ever sleep again, did it
matter?) and watched their television.
Monday, Letterman returned to the air, with what I still feel is one of the finest, most riveting and wrenching hours of television ever, period. He spoke honestly, with grief and rage and pride, saying he wouldn’t have come back if not for Giuliani’s urging all New Yorkers to return to work if at all possible….It was stunning, perhaps the only honest thing I’d seen on TV all week.
His first guest, Dan Rather, crumpled into tears twice—this, after being in his anchor chair some 15 hours a day for a week. More heartbreakingly, he apologized for it: “I’m paid not to do this,” he sobbed. And twice, Dave took his hand to console him. “You’re a professional…but good Christ, you’re a human being.”
And then, his second guest: Regis. God bless Regis, who was grating and typical and borderline tasteless, and very needed after the anguish of the first half-hour.
*****
I already owned and loved a copy of Phil Spector’s “A
Christmas Gift For You,” before the man went kookoo-bananas. I’ve grieved a
couple breakups to Darlene Love’s “Christmas (Baby Please Come Home),” that
Serious Boyfriend from graduate school among them. It’s not an anti-Christmas
carol, exactly, but it turns the usual sentiment inside-out somehow. It is beautiful, that Wall of Sound orchestration:
it rings like a cathedral bell. And it describes that marshmallow world from
Love’s other song on the record: Holidayland, awash in sleighbells and twinkle
lights and falling snow. Celebratory crowds hustle down the sidewalk
rosy-cheeked and bemittened; everybody is having the best time ever…except you. Trapped in the memory of happier
times. It’s a song about holiday depression.
Letterman calls it the only Christmas song worth a damn,
legendary crank and depressive that he is. And that suited how I felt, the
first couple years alone, watching Darlene Love belt out regret while they made
it snow in the Ed Sullivan. Always the last episode before Christmas proper,
the Darlene Love show periodically aired on my birthday, which added another
layer of personalization to it in my head, a ritual exchanged just between us. At
first I commiserated. I wept. But. Over the years, I’ve memorized the Christmas
episode, a liturgy I know by heart:
- Paul impersonates Cher singing “O Holy Night” (This year, I shouted at the TV: under a Victorian lamppost, Paul! Paul! You forgot the lamppost!)
- Jay Thomas tells his Lone Ranger story (They’ll believe ME, citizen!), and then participates in the Holiday Quarterback Challenge to knock the meatball off the top of the Christmas tree
- Some other hapless guest…is a good sport, basically
- Darlene comes out and blows the doors off
Somehow the show became a
purification ritual, for me. I laughed at the familiar beats, could recite it along
with the television. How would they introduce Aaron Heick with that big bari
sax this time—fly him in on a wire? Have him strut down the center aisle? At
some point, I put seeing that episode, live, on my bucket list.
*****
Last December, I was still jobless.
I’d taken the month off from the job search; I knew that hiring managers were
all on vacation themselves, and I wanted to stretch my unemployment benefits into
the new year. I had a couple free hotel nights and a ridiculous amount of airline
miles about to expire. I was about to turn 45. Back at the office, I’d had a
different magazine clipping taped to my monitor for months, this one a quote
from Amy Poehler: “I will tell you that the good news is, both personally and
professionally, I have a large case of the fuck its right now.”
So I got on a plane, and I queued
up outside the theater at 9:20 on a Monday morning to hand in my request for
the ticket lottery. They were taping two shows that Thursday afternoon, and I’d
done my research, knew one had to be
the Christmas episode. Eventually they let us into the lobby (heated) and then,
one by one, behind a panel to talk to the audience coordinator in the (ice-cold)
foyer. (I was delighted to confirm that tiny truth myself, that Letterman keeps
the joint like a meat locker.) I hinted and winked and underscored Thursday on my application, and now can’t
help kicking myself just a little, woulda
coulda shoulda been more blunt—because my friend David and I got Thursday
tickets…for the first taping.
It was still worth it. “My” David
wasn’t overinvested steeped in the traditions of the show like I am; he
enjoyed himself well enough, I think, but I was on high-alert, thrilling-detail
overload: How could the set be so small?
How could this tiny space contain the Beatles? There’s the Christmas tree!
There’s the meatball! Speared on a cheapo Empire State Building souvenir! Which
pierces a pizza from next door! There’s Alan Kalter, come to warm us up! There’s
Pat Farmer, sans Oprah transcript! There’s Biff Henderson! There’s a person
whose job apparently is to swap Paul’s empty mug with a full one during the act
break!
They led us out past the next
audience, clumped in the lobby waiting for the Christmas episode. I wanted to
squeeze some stranger’s arm and call them a lucky bastard, wanted to hang
around somewhere between Rupert’s Hello Deli and the dumpster, see if I could
hear anything. But it was colder outside than in, and I was working on what
turned into a nasty sinus infection, and I didn’t want my traveling companion
to think I’d lost my entire mind. I’d had my Christmas, with my extended,
estranged, adopted TV family. And if it didn’t go exactly as planned? If I didn’t
get everything I’d wanted? It was still pretty goddamn great. Isn’t that the
point?
*****
I don’t have a proper conclusion
for this. I’m not sure who it’s for...like, I don’t expect David Letterman to pick my blog post out of the sea of media
tributes and accolades he’s racked up this month.
Another thing that’s bugging me: today,
May 20, is the anniversary of my father’s death. I don’t keep track of such things,
I try not to—but Mom was quick to remind me, this week. I know it’s pure
coincidence. I certainly don’t equate Letterman with My Absent, Remote Father
Figure. And then you put the sexual attraction factor in there and EWWW, GAAHH,
WHAT IS EVEN WRONG WITH YOU. But I will admit that I am having some muddled,
confusing farewell feels, tonight.
“Your whole personality has
changed!” Mom told me recently—after leaving my last job, she meant. “You’re SO
much happier, and more relaxed, and pleasant to be around!” I was glad that she
thought so, glad that she’d noticed…and then there was a tiny part of me going “um,
thanks?” It was a little left-handed, that assessment. Tell me how you really
feel! How do you like me now?
But she wasn’t wrong. I have
changed. I don’t, can’t know Letterman…but
I feel a bit like I grew up with him. I identify with him. I too am weird, and
intelligent, furious, hilarious. Moody. Fallible, and terrified of it. And,
eventually, redeemed. Mellowed. A work in progress. And he was there, on the periphery of the living
room, for an awful damn lot of it. Letterman’s had a profound influence on
broadcasting and comedy for a generation. Maybe it sounds silly, and sentimental,
to attribute my personal growth to him as well. He has also influenced a random ding-dong in the Pacific Northwest!
But as Norm MacDonald noted on the show last week, the truth is not sentimental.
And my truth is that I am sincerely grateful to a man I’ll never meet, who doesn’t
know me from Adam, who will never scream at me via bullhorn from a sixth-story
window (though a girl can dream). It has been one hell of a long, complicated,
fucking funny ride, sir.
Thanks, Dave.