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March 2007
THE GRAND SURPRISE: THE JOURNALS OF LEO LERMAN by Leo Lerman, Edited by Stephen Pascal
Chapter 1: Call It Friendship, Call It Love
RICHARD HUNTER
The first time I saw Richard was in October 1933 at the Feagin School of Dramatic Art, in New York, where my in-theater life had started. Miss Lucy Feagin began our day, at 8:30 in the morning, with readings from the Bible. Miss Feagin, for all her activity on the gaudy fringes of one of the world's most ancient professions, was a god-fearing Southern lady. One day while we were all gathered in the greenroom, I saw a pair of brown-suede shoes and a young man whom I had not before noticed. There was something different about him: He did not look actorish. He looked removed, apart—there was no tempest in him. We became friends.
He wanted to be an actor; I did not. He was interested in designing for the theater, so was I. So he became part of a little group that sat up all night talking about the plays they wanted to do, or the plays they loved, and the actors they loved. We reveled in every aspect of being from, and almost of, The Theater. We fenced, we tap-danced, we painted our faces, we put on beards, we disguised ourselves according to play. We led strenuous theatrical lives. And, of course, I achieved one of the main goals of my becoming a scholarship boy at the Feagin School of Dramatic Art: I spent many, many nights in Manhattan and yet remained for a long time the respected, seemingly respectable son of an intensely organized Orthodox Jewish household.
Since the Feagin School, Richard and I have been devoted friends: First, my friend to whom I told all my love woes. Then, with a kiss (and a robin's song) in Central Park on Shakespeare's birthday, April 23, 1936, he became my permanent love woe. That lasted until 1948, with 1939 to 1941 the time of Laci. (1993)
APRIL 14-15, 1939 JACKSON HEIGHTS, NEW YORK
TO RICHARD HUNTER
I was listening to the Delius In a Summer Garden for the first time, which seemed lovely . . . a bit Debussy. I say "seemed" 'cause my bitchy relatives decided they couldn't shout at one another against so exquisite a background. They loudly said for quite some time, "I don't see what you hear in this noise! What do you get out of it! My Eddie listens to the [radio show] Make-Believe Ballroom and does he shake! What do you hear in it?" Since I didn't take the hints, they acted on their own behalf and done it in. I sat on the front steps and grouched a time.
It is now past midnight, and I am extremely sleepy, but they show no signs of departure. In fact, Momma is about to serve a midnight meal, after which they will go back to the carouseling [sic], and she will wistfully murmur, "I wish somebody"—with a bleeding look in my direction—"would do these dishes! I'm so sick . . . My head . . ." Howsoever, I will seal this missive, drop it into the mailbox, take me my pillow, and plant me on Jerry's bed. Fortunately, that monster is out dancing. Good night. I'm starting a new set of verses—about being afraid of the dark . . .
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