The Court of Two Sisters
New Orleans, Louisiana
1978
Dena flew into New Orleans in the late evening and checked into the Bourbon Orleans Hotel but she did not sleep. The next morning the phone in her room rang. A high, thin voice said, “Miss Nordstrom, I understand you have traveled to the Crescent City for the sole purpose of engaging in a scintillating conversation with me, is that correct?”
“Yes, Mr. Williams, I have.”
“Well, I cannot guarantee you how scintillating it will be. All I can do is to assure you that as of this morning I still have a heartbeat, so I will call for you at around eleven-thirty. Will that be convenient?”
“Yes, sir, I’ll be downstairs.”
She hung up. If someone had told her that one day she would be getting ready to meet Tennessee Williams she would not have believed them. At eleven, she was downstairs, sitting in the lobby under a palm tree, looking out on Orleans Street, hoping to see him first. She wore a thin white silk dress and was starting to freeze in the air-conditioning when a voice startled her. “Miss Nordstrom, I’m Robert, and Mr. Williams and I are here to take you to lunch.”
Tennessee Williams was standing by the front desk. He looked like a smaller version of the Count of Monte Cristo, as if he had wandered in from another century. Even his manner seemed to be that of another time. But when he spoke he was very much in the present.
“Miss Nordstrom, welcome to New Orleans. You’ve met Robert, who will accompany us through the streets, just in case I have a spell. I hope you don’t mind?”
“Oh, no, not at all.”
“I though we would take a little walk and then have a bite to eat, if that’s agreeable.”
“I would love to. This is my first trip to New Orleans.” They walked out into the brilliant sun, and the day was as humid as it was overlit.
While they walked he explained Robert’s presence.
“Robert is my clean-up man.”
Dena appeared to be puzzled and he laughed.
“After Mardi Gras they have clean-up men to pick up all the debris off the streets left over from the parade. That’s what I am, just debris left over from some past parade, and if I fall in the streets, Robert picks me up.” He cackled at his own joke.
Dena could tell he was shy with her so she tried to keep it light. “Do you tend to fall down a lot?”
His eyes twinkled. “Miss Nordstrom, I’m down now, but not out. Not quite, not yet this morning, at least. But I cannot vouch for this afternoon.”
The three of them walked down the street, one tall, cool blonde; one short man in a straw Panama hat and sunglasses; and Robert, a medium-sized young man in gray slacks and a maroon jacket. Everyone they passed recognized Williams. They walked over to St. Louis Cathedral and Bienville Square as he provided her with a short history of New Orleans. But Dena was more anxious to talk about him.
“Mr. Williams, I know this is a stupid question, but you are clearly the most famous living playwright in America. How does it feel to be so famous?”
He pointed to St. Peter’s Street, and an upstairs veranda. “That’s where I live. I have just a small place.” He walked her past the old Cornstalk Inn Hotel and showed her the wrought-iron fence that surrounded it. She realized that he might not want to answer her idiotic question.
He pushed his glasses up on his nose and gestured to a restaurant down the street. “Let’s go in the Court of Two Sisters; don’t you love that name?” They walked into a long, dark room leading to the restaurant and the maître d’ was pleased to see him. When they were escorted to a lovely outside courtyard, three waiters came over immediately. He knew them all. Williams and Dena ordered screwdrivers and Robert ordered iced tea. Williams explained to the waiter, “He’s driving,” and giggled. After his drink came he seemed to relax.
“Mr. Williams, getting back to … what we were talking about …” She took out her notebook.
He looked amused. “Oh, yes. You wanted to know about that mean old whore, fame.” He lifted his glass and stared at it.
“Yes.”
“Fame is like a shark with a thousand eyes, waiting to eat you, gobble you up. Eat and swim, eat and swim. Fame kills, baby. Fame is an uneasy place; people are either running toward it or running away from it but it’s not a place where anyone can live comfortably. No one enjoys it.”
“Don’t you think there are some people who like being famous?”
He took a sip of his drink. “I suppose there are some insensitive people out there who don’t mind living their lives out in full public view. But I don’t know of a true artist who can survive or create without some privacy. One must be allowed to break away from the herd and form different ideas. Don’t you agree?”
“Oh, yes,” Dena said, “completely.”
“But there are those determined to destroy privacy, to kill individual thought. Robert thinks I overstate my case but it’s a case that needs to be overstated. There must be privacy, even among the well known.”
“What did you expect being famous would be like, Mr. Williams?”
“I didn’t expect anything. I just wanted to write plays. I was not prepared for fame; nothing prepares you for that, baby. You struggle along for years, unnoticed, then you wake up one day and suddenly everybody in the world wants to meet you. But you soon find out they don’t want to meet you, they want you to meet them. All these pretty boys.” He nodded slightly toward a table full of unusually graceful young men over in the corner, who had been staring at him and whispering. “They don’t want me. It’s a piece of that hot fame they want. It’s shocking, the number of young men who try everything to catch my attention, like male birds strutting around the female, flashing their plumage.” He laughed. “And I do mean flashing. All thinking, mistakenly, of course, if I were to fancy them, they would become stars overnight. They have long ceased to consider that one ingredient called talent. And who can blame them? Look around. It’s the untalented hiring the untalented, all desperate for fame at any cost. But at any cost, the price of fame is too high, baby, way too high.” He raised his hand and a waiter was there. “Two more screwdrivers, please, and bring mine without the orange juice. I wish to donate my orange to some person in need.”
“Mr. Williams, I appreciate your seeing me for this interview.”
He smiled. “I’ve been assured that you were not out to do me harm. I rarely give interviews anymore. Of course, now it really doesn’t matter; they write them anyway.” Their drinks arrived. “I call them the Masturbation Pieces. They do it without me.”
His eyes changed as he began to stare across the courtyard at a brick wall.
“One such interview was particularly disturbing. This person wrote the most atrocious lies about me and some sailor! Afterwards I had young toughs riding by my home in Key West, throwing rocks and calling out the most … well, let’s just say it was a most hurtful and unpleasant experience to be stoned for something out of another’s warped imagination. But what can you do?”
He shuddered. “Today, public life is as unforgiving as heart surgery; one slip, one mistake and you’re dead. Fame for the strong and the invulnerable can be hard, but when one has a secret or a perceived weakness, living in constant fear of public exposure can be devastating; it can kill you, baby. I know, I was literally sick with fear at what certain printed information would do to my family, my mother, my sister, and my worst fears came to pass, of course. But no one is safe now. There are numerous unscrupulous people offering to pay for private information on anyone well known. Every person you have ever come in contact with is a time bomb waiting to explode and do you harm, even strangers who don’t know you.” The waiter replaced his drink. “There’s nothing one can do. People claim to have met me, or slept with me, claim to have been in my home … and that’s while I’m alive, baby. Imagine what will be written after I’m gone.”
Suddenly he seemed sad and put his drink down. “I don’t even know half the people who write those books. But when friends start trafficking in your life for money, it is a wound that will not heal. I am like a dog that has been hit too hard, too often. I don’t trust anything human anymore. I am completely baffled.” He looked at her. “What would cause someone to betray another and speak publicly of private and deeply personal matters? It is the ultimate betrayal, don’t you think?” He looked away. “It sickens me. But it happens every day now. Lovers betray lovers, children betray parents. I once said nothing human disgusts me but I was wrong. This disgusts me—and I am equally disgusted with the writer, the publisher, the so-called journalist, and the public who ultimately buys. No wonder the celebrity becomes deranged and confused. They see on one hand a large group of worshipers, and on the other a large group of people who have nothing but jealousy and contempt for no reason except that you are recognized and they are not. It wasn’t beauty that killed the beast, baby, it was fame.”
“What about your real fans, the genuine admirers of your work?”
“I suppose there are some, of course, but I rarely see them. They are not the kind to push themselves in front of anybody to get to you. I might be in a restaurant and such a person could be at the next table but they are not going to invade my privacy. The kind of people I would like to meet, I don’t, while the others push in front of them, shielding me from the gentle and shy people I would want to speak with.”
Dena felt uneasy. “Mr. Williams, did you ever have an idol?”
“Oh, yes, many, but it would never occur to me to run up and ask for an autograph. It never occurred to me to do anything but appreciate and enjoy their work. Work, baby—that’s what is offered, not his life. Two different things. Now the recognizable are being shot at, sued, or built up by public relations factories to some fevered, frenzied pitch, and when their time is up they are pulled down off their pedestals and eaten alive by interviewers asking rude questions. Oh, it’s worse than feeding Christians to the lions.… Mercy, I need a little more fortification for this conversation.” He raised his hand and immediately another drink was in it.
Now he seemed cheered. “You know, the Indians wouldn’t let you take their pictures. They thought people were trying to steal their souls. And they were right!” He repeated in a loud voice that could be heard across the room. “The Indians were right!”
“I think we should order some food,” Robert said, and waved at a waiter.
Williams squinted at him, then back at Dena. “Robert is concerned about my health. Or else he is trying to fatten me up for the kill.”
A waiter announced, “Mr. Williams, we have some awfully pretty oysters today.”
Williams’s eyes lit up. “Pretty? Well, this is a phenomenon. I have never seen a pretty oyster in my life. You see, Robert, beauty is in the eye of the beholder.” He turned back to the waiter. “Bring me eleven pretty oysters and one old ugly one!” He screamed with laughter and they all ordered oysters Rockefeller. Dena thought he might be drunk, but he picked up the conversation precisely where they had left off.
“The line between the public life and the private life has been erased, due to the rapid decline of manners and courtesy. There is a certain crudeness and crassness that has suddenly become accepted behavior, even desirable. But you are talking to a relic left over from the war before the cannibals took over. I’m just an old barnacle still clinging to that shaky, rotten pier of civility.”
The waiter brought their lunch, and when he put the plate down, Williams said, “Point out the ugly one, Louis.” Louis pointed and said, “There it is, Mr. Williams.”
“Fine. I’ll save it for last.”
After he left, Williams said, “Louis has soul. Any man who can perceive beauty in an oyster is a poet. Leave him a large tip, Robert; he must be rewarded.”
After he had eaten, he said, “Ahh, just like in life. Sometimes the ugly ones are the most delicious.” He sat back.
“Mr. Williams, do you believe in God?” The question surprised her and after she asked, she wondered why she had.
He seemed amused. “God? Well, he’s either the meanest bastard that ever lived or the most careless. He certainly has an uncanny talent for looking the other way, turning a deaf ear. But I’m still trying to hold on to a thread. Trying not to get mean and bitter, like little Truman. I wouldn’t be surprised if Capote doesn’t start biting people any day now.” He laughed. “And that would be a poisonous bite, baby! All I know is that our civilization is a result of struggling and defining the ultimate truth.”
“What is that?”
“We must be kind and forgive one another or we won’t survive. But even among the most religious there seems to be a great blind spot covering the world, an inability to learn from past experience. Civilization is as precarious as a sand castle. All the care and effort it took to create it can be knocked down in a second by some bully or another. And the world is full of bullies. But I suppose we have got to keep trying. Who knows, maybe one day … but don’t look to me for answers, baby. I’m looking myself, in every nook and cranny. People come here year after year looking for answers, but I have none. The body and soul have already been stripped. Nothing left but a few old bones for you to rummage around in. You got here too late.”
Dena slowly closed her notebook. “Mr. Williams, I lied to you. I really didn’t come here to interview you. I don’t know why I came here … except that I love your plays. I guess I wanted to ask you how to survive. How have you survived?”
“How?” He sat silent for a long moment. “By a concerted effort on my part to develop some small milieu of insensitivity. And then there’s sex, and booze, drugs, anything to soften the blow, to dim the glare and muffle the noise—anything to keep the world at bay. I’ve even resorted to insanity, of course; in or out of the loony bin, we are all insane. But at least the ones in the bin are being watched. That’s something. It’s the ones who are loose that you have to worry about, the ones making the bombs to blow the world up eight times over. Now, if that isn’t a valid enough reason for confinement to a mental institution, I don’t know what is.”
His voice began to drift off. “The earth, baby … sometimes I think it’s just a holding pen for crackpots. Who knows what planets have discarded us as factory rejects, unfit to live among more civilized planetary societies. We may be living on the dark side of the moon and don’t know it.”
He seemed a million miles away and Dena realized he was tired. She did not want to overstay her welcome. She reached for her purse. “Mr. Williams, I can’t thank you enough for your time. I really appreciate your seeing me, I really do.”
When she stood up Williams tried to stand, but he was unsteady and Robert had to help him to sit again.
He looked up at her. “Miss Nordstrom, I find myself in the embarrassing position of not being able to accompany you back to your hotel, but Robert will be your gentleman escort. Do you mind?”
“Oh, no, that’s all right, I can find my way.”
“I wouldn’t hear of it. Robert can pick me up on his return. I have enjoyed our luncheon. I’m afraid I don’t look at television, but I’m told that you are headed in the direction of fame and success, so I suppose our meeting has been like two strangers passing one another on a narrow road, one coming from the front lines, the other walking toward it.”
He started to say something more, then hesitated. “But you probably don’t want to listen to the drunken babbling of a failed playwright.”
“Mr. Williams,” Dena said, “first of all, you are not a failed anything. And I would listen to anything you said.”
His eyes suddenly became watery and he looked away. “Then I would warn you, I would say, run, baby—turn around and run for your life before it’s too late.”
As she and Robert left the restaurant, Dena could see Williams’s reflection in the mirror in the hall, a small man, alone, with his hand raised to order another drink. It broke her heart because she could see that his heart had been broken.
That night she had the same dream again about trying to find her mother.
The next morning she sat up in bed in the hotel room in a cold sweat remembering what Tennessee Williams had said. When one has a secret, fear of public exposure can be devastating.