Tillie's
Punctured Romance: A Suite
1
The Movie Itself
There
had been a few features before,
the
majority of them foreign,
but
there
hadn't been anything like this,
so
we were definitely taking a gamble:
would
the audience stay all the way through
a
feature-length comedy?
They would,
and
they did Of course,
Charlie
would benefit the most
from
the movie's great popularity,
but
Marie
and I did well as well,
and
formed
a mutual-admiration society
SPOILER
ALERT:
both
of us realize
we're
better off without him
Now
in life . . .
2
His Mother
Mack
was a momma's boy,
and
so she was against me
at
the start of our romance
But
as time went by
she
realized I was the best hope
for
the grandchildren she wanted,
so
she eventually came around
and
supported our getting hitched
For
whatever good it did
3
Mabel's Stormy Love Affair
My
friends said
Mack
wasn't "husband material",
but
being
in love I didn't listen to them,
though
I must have at least
partially
absorbed their opinion,
because
when I heard Mack
was
with another woman
on
the eve of our wedding,
I
didn't dismiss the allegation,
but
rushed over to confront him
Big
Mistake
The
other woman (who shall remain
anonymous
in this poem because
she's
been named in many other places)
and
I started arguing with each other
instead
of with Mack,
and
she
beaned me with a glass vase
Friends
tried to keep it quiet,
even
coming up with
a
couple of alternate explanations
for
how I got hurt,
but
I
was in bad shape
and
a doctor had to be called
I
needed brain surgery just to stay alive,
and
was never really the same after that
Would
Mack try to make it up to me?
4
He Did and He Didn't
Mack
was desperate to keep me,
professionally
if not personally,
promising
more features,
promising
better scripts,
promising
a decreased workload,
even
giving me my own studio:
the
MABEL NORMAND FEATURE FILM CO.
It
was everything a girl could want,
professionally
if not personally
But it
wasn't everything it was cracked up to be:
though
the studio had my name on it
it
was tied up with Keystone
through
complex financial maneuvers,
and
the bigger fish swallowed Mack
and,
by extension, me,
and
though
I still earned a nice salary,
someone
else got the profits from Mickey,
the
most popular movie ever
when
measured by tickets sold
Oh,
Mabel Behave
I
once wrote a poem called
Short
Short Story:
"I'm
bad, bad, bad!
If
there was one sprig of poison ivy
In a
field full of four-leaf clovers,
I'd
pick it up.
If
it was raining carbolic acid,
I'd
be the dumbbell sponge."
and
some
of that 'badness' was well-chronicled
in
the newspapers of the day;
the
December 8, 1920, issue
of
the Los Angeles Herald
listed
me
(correctly in this instance)
as having
one
of the Six Best Cellars,
i.e.,
a
cellar stocked with booze
(purchased
legally before Prohibition took effect)
There
were other things
that
haven't been referenced yet
that
didn't make the papers at the time:
a
miscarriage of Goldwyn's baby,
a
stint of drug rehabilitation
in a
center in Watkins Glen, New York
in
1920 (though I did relapse
after
returning to Hollywood;
today
I would have tried rehab again)
And
there were other 'misadventures'
that
were well-chronicled both at the time
and
in books down through the years:
the
fact that I was the last person,
other
than the murderer,
to
see Bill Taylor alive;
the
fact that my chauffeur shot someone
while
I was celebrating on New Year's Eve,
and
I
was forced to testify at his trial
even
though I didn't witness the shooting
My
chauffeur was acquitted of the shooting,
but
it came out during the trial
that
he was an escaped convict
(something
I didn't know),
and
there
were calls, many successful,
to
ban my films because of my 'involvement'
in
these scandals;
that, and declining health,
led
to a lack of movie work for me
People
may not know this,
but I was a practicing Catholic:
I was a regular at confession
and
I received last rites
while
dying of TB in a sanitorium;
I
regret the marriage ceremony wasn't religious
You
probably want to know
if
there is life after death
I
could certainly answer that,
but
I'm not going to;
you'll
have to find out for yourself
Michael Ceraolo is a 64-year-old retired firefighter/paramedic and active poet who has had two full-length books (Euclid Creek, from Deep Cleveland Press; 500 Cleveland Haiku, from Writing Knights Press) published, and has two more, Euclid Creek Book Two and Lawyers, Guns, and Money, in the publication pipeline.
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