BASKING WITH BOOK SIGNING PALS AND GALS. PHOTOGRAPHS COURTESY OF TONY BONANNO OF SANTA FE.


CRADLE OF CRIME- SYNOPSIS


The memoir began as a compass to my fatherโ€™s secret and disreputable criminal history. It pointed to a young girl whose survival was wedged between shameless love and immobilizing fear of her father.DAD IN WING TIPS

As Benjamin โ€œBugsyโ€ Siegelโ€™s best friend and business partner from 1937 until his death in 1947, Dad acclaimed Ben Siegel. “He was the best friend I ever had.”

Dad sat inches from Ben the night he was murdered. Why did he survive? He ducked!ย  After convincing Meyer Lansky and Frank Costello he would not acceptย  immunity from deportation, and five counts ofย ย  claiming false citizenship, the Mob honored and protected him.

Faced with an identity meltdown ten years after Dad died I implored his friends, associates, historians, the Freedom of Information & Privacy Act, the Immigration and Naturalization Services,ย  and the Archives of the Department of Justice, to build the branches of my family tree. Along this irreversible journey I suffered disgrace, rage, and Dadโ€™s ghostly disapproval as I delved into the FBI files and discovered the family secrets. Most startling was not his gambling addiction, criminal activities, or imprisonment.ย  I learned my father’s attempt at reformation was thwarted by the FBI.ย  Aย  vendettaย  by Hoover for not cooperating as an informant. Iย  expose what I’ve learned because Iโ€™ve made the family history mine.

Incorporated within stories of discovery are government surveillance records, newspaper articles, court testimony, and criminal activities that defamed his reputation and our family. As the discoveries occur the reader is taken inside the transformation of my identity.ย  Once liberated from Dadโ€™s paranormal disapproval of my investigation, the book was written.

This is a startling, yet inspirational look inside the struggle of a gangsterโ€™s daughter to understand her fatherโ€™s allegiance to the Mob.


YOU’LL FEEL BETTER IF YOU TALK ABOUT IT


The throw of the dice this week lands on Adventures in Livingness.ย  The last time I wrote a column about life beyond the book was the Malibu series.ย  Iโ€™m still tainted by the U-Turn out of Malibu, but as Dad always said, โ€˜If you fall off the horse you get back on!’ย  Thatโ€™s what this book is all about; ย just how impressionable we are as children.

ย My pals who have commented after reading this material in six different memoirs are immensely important to this writer. Word press followers, you are recognized with every comment!ย  Pals, Baron, Blair, and Stone who took my hand into the offices of agents and editors thank you for believing in my dice!

Santa Fe. NM 3/26/2016

A photographic day for capturing the stillness of light on the roseย  20160311_112156[1]buds. Winter was a lot of writing, editing, and films. I must have seen a hundred this winter. All easy paved paths to escape.ย  The one I’d recommend is Divided We Fall; a Polish film set during the occupation of Poland. The Director managed to weave suffering and horror with extraordinary hope and brotherhood. If you like mystery-crime dramas,ย  Nine Queens, an Argentinian film that rattles the roots of a cheaters.

A FEW DAYS LATER

Today is sprayed gray and white cloud cover, and tiny drops of wet snow. I call the climate of Santa Fe, a woman with PMS.ย  Iโ€™m listening to Nat King Cole and withering under a ย hang-over after a sensational evening with Brother Marc, (the son I wanted) White Zen, his Mother, and Rudy. Iโ€™ve watched Marc grow up. Over the last seven years heโ€™s transformed from a shy, confused young adult, into a man of the mountain; wilderness is his passion.ย  He drives those big snow plow machines and grooms the mountains in Steamboat Springs, Colorado. He works at night and when he takes a break heย  looks at the stars.ย  Six-foot thin muscle, shoulderย  brown curls, and eyesย  shaped like two row boats filled with blue water.ย  Heโ€™s not only handsome, his instincts, original expression, and amusing bellowing deep voice tie this lad up in someone you love. Heโ€™s an original. You never get the question or answer you expect;ย  he pulls wisdom from his head and heart as easily as folding a napkin. One two three–a brand of thinking shoots out and I just look at him bewildered. Marc is a twenty-nine year old frontiersman andย  has been since he was knee high on a San Francisco skateboard. The Revenant!

Easter brings people together and Iโ€™ve sensed a developingย  surge to be in a group. Distanced friends come closer, family is the bread and butter of vacation, I see so many of them at La Posada, and couples are cooperating.ย  No one needs to hug a pillow when they go to sleepย  is my motto.

My rise above familiar surroundings and comfort began the day Brussels was terror stricken andย  all Belgiansย  became one. I checked on Twitter that day, and was touched so deeply when I read the dozens of tweets offering shelter, food, and clothes for those in need. If I were a lifestyle journalist Iโ€™d go there and write about the emotional and physical patterns that will change over time. Imagine the consciousnessโ€™ of those personally affected after experiencing a bomb exploding beside them. I’ve asked a few people how they feel about terrorism. Some are inflamed and others refuse to discuss the matter as it elicits political commentary.ย ย  Terrorism has infiltrated the shuffle of disappointment and raised the inner riot in my head to world events. The importance of conversation so we don’t feel alone is vibrating. I don’t mean in text and twitter. It is too instant to embrace.ย ย  What happened to,

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย  ‘You’ll feel better if you talk about it’ psychology?

ย After a few weeks of submitting the book and reading rejection emails,ย  I realized I wasn’t as prepared as I thought.ย  Not taking rejections personally is like a handshake after you’ve been swindled.ย  I moused over to JK Rowlings and read a few rejection letters she posted after submitting a manuscript under the name of Richard Galbraith. One of the letters suggested she join a writers workshop! ย  Anonymous writers like actors, musicians, artists, and photographersย  are caught in the storm of celebritism.ย  If you are unrecognized theย  brick and mortar you have to breakย  through is an Olympian challenge.

I was writing a lengthy portrayal of Ben Siegel one day and it occurred to me that he had become a major character in my life.ย  He played a role that someone else should have; a noted author, or journalist, or poet.ย  Ben Siegel changed my history because I had to learn to love him.ย  Learning to love him meant erasing everything I had read or heard. It is said he was a ruthless killer, a savage, violent, and that he loved to kill. I turned to look at a photograph of my mother.ย  I was told that she loved Ben too. Where once I believed my mother was naรฏve and uninformed, I know this wasnโ€™t the case. She knew from the beginning. Mom fit into this strangely singular and controversial group of people. I see her in the full frame of who she was. (she is on the right in MGM Ziegfeld Follies 1946)get-attachment.aspxย  I like her this way because it raised my self esteem; my rebelliousness came from both parents.

While writing about Dad I questioned my prolonged interest in his choices, behavior, and his secrecy. I asked Uncle Myron who shared the same history.ย ย  Myron reaffirmed that my father was a true to the code gangster. No one ever got him to talk about what he knew or had seen.

Children feel the repression of truth as clearly as they do the pain of bruise.ย  The more you hide or bandage the more they seek and peek. At my root is the inclination to question the world around me, and to mend the breaks in life that molded my identity.

Along the way of the first chapter, I discovered that people like to know how it works; how we write in a state of solitude and selfishness.ย  A story or any work of art lives in the artist and God. Miracles do happen!

HONK IF YOU WANT TO READ MORE


 

SMILEYโ€™S DICE
Growing Up with Gangsters
By: Luellen Smiley

Synopsis
The memoir is written in the Creative Nonfiction genre and is ninety-two thousand words.
Writing my way home began as a compass to my secretive and dishonorable family history. This is the story of a woman whose survival was wedged between shameless love and immobilizing fear of her father.
After my almost perfect mother, Lucille Casey, an MGM musical actress died, Dad gained custody of me. I was thirteen years old. What followed was a nail-biting tumultuous father daughter relationship between Allen Smiley, a Hollywood gangster, and his teenage daughter, that Iโ€™ve named Lily.
As Benjamin โ€œBugsyโ€ Siegelโ€™s best friend and business partner from 1937 until his death in 1947, Dad acclaimed Ben Siegel. He was seated next to him the night Ben was murdered. The fatal outcome was speculation of his involvement fed by the FBI to the media, death threats from Mob associates, and vicious harassment from the Immigration and Naturalization Service.
Iโ€™ve learned by this time Dad had amassed a weighty criminal record, was under indictment for false claim of citizenship, perjury, and an order of deportation. After demonstrating to the Mob he wasnโ€™t going to seek immunity offered by the government; they honored and protected his life. Their methods are described in transcripts from the FBI files; amusing, violent,and illegal. Dad served the organization until his death in 1982.
Faced with an identity meltdown ten years after Dad died I implored his friends, associates, attorney, historians, FOIPA, Immigration and Naturalization Agency, and Archives of the Department of Justice, to build the branches of my family tree. Along this irreversible journey I suffered disgrace, rage, and Dadโ€™s ghostly disapproval as I delved into the files and discovered the family secrets.
Simultaneous with the reading is a dissection of my reactions to his criminal activities, gambling addiction, attempt at reformation, and hatred for the government. The vendetta the government placed on him for not informing earned my motherโ€™s silent devotion. In the end they won. She divorced him.
I could be mute about the subject, or expose what I know because Iโ€™ve made the family history mine.
Incorporated within stories of discovery are government surveillance records, newspaper articles, court testimony, and criminal activities that defamed his reputation and our family.

As the discoveries occur the reader is taken inside the transformation of my identity. Once liberated from Dadโ€™s paranormal disapproval of my investigation, I break my silence and begin writing columns about growing up with gangsters. This opened the doors to unknown relatives, mob friends, and an identity that suits me well.
A startling yet an inspirational look inside the struggle of a gangsterโ€™s daughter to understand her fatherโ€™s allegiance to the Mob.

Excerpt from Smileyโ€™s Dice.
I donโ€™t know how much more of this I can process. I donโ€™t feel Dadโ€™s disapproval as strongly; this expository involving my mother is deepening my resentment for the government. This is just one binder of two-hundred pages, and I have fifty binders. Iโ€™ll rearrange my dresser drawers or hand-wash sweaters for awhile. Itโ€™s too early to have a glass of wine! Two days have passed, as my resistance to more reading of these FBI files was due to a suspended state of melancholia.
April 13th- FBI file

โ€œSmiley received a call from —— and told Smiley that he was thinking of going into business with —–who is making twelve thousand a month putting on stag shows. Smiley told him not to get into the business. —told Smiley that he had attended a ball game and noticed that George Raft was there. Raft is now sporting a mustache and his cheeks are all sunken in, making him look like a drowned rat. Smiley did not like this comment.โ€
โ€œ____ asked Smiley how his case was coming along, and Smiley replied,โ€ They are going to ship me to Singaporeโ€
After the forgoing call was made, the conversation continued concerning _______ between Smiley, paramour of Jack Dragna, and Lucille Casey. While Casey was getting ready to go out to dinner, this unidentified woman, became very cozy with Smiley, according to the informant, and stated,
โ€œ Take my advice and donโ€™t talk on the telephone. You can sit right here and they can listen to you from over that hill. I know this because we have been on the other side all the time.โ€ Smiley replied he had an idea of that and she remarked that Smiley was a good guy, and she thought she should warn him.โ€
Signed R.B. Hood
Special Agent in Charge.

 

EXCERPT FROM SMILEY’S DICE- DAD’S MERRYMAKING


The day I was born, May 11, 1953 the headlines of the The Los Angeles Time read:

GANGSTERS INVADE SOUTHLAND CITIES.
Among gangsters and their hangers-on named were Abe (Longy) Zwillman, Frankie Carbo, Meyer Lansky, Allen Smiley, whose true name is Aaron Smehoff, Gerald Catena and William Bischoff.
When I met Daddy he had salty sea blue eyes and when my actions were worthy of laughter, his eyes retracted into a blur of skin. Dressed in perfectly matched shades of pink, silver and blue my child eyes rested cheerfully on his silk ties, a collage of jewel tones. The feel of his fabric was soft like blankets. He was very interesting to look at when I was a child and open to all this detail.
I clung to his neck in the back seat of his baby blue Cadillac. He sang songs and his hand fluttered about, catching me by surprise behind my head, and his laughter echoed in my ears. Sometimes we drove through the Paramount Studio Gates, and I was chauffeured in a cart to the Western Stage where we watched cowboys and musical dancers. I was too young to understand this was just a film; thus began my insatiable yearning to be a dancer.

Rory Calhoun was one of the stars Dad was close pals with.ย  Just this week I dug into research about Rory Calhoun. I learned he died in 1999, and that heโ€™d also been a ward in Preston Reformatory where Dad was sent at eighteen years old. Rory came a few years later.

We spent a lot of time with the Calhoun family. They had two girls the same age as me. Their exotic Spanish villa on Whittier Drive and Sunset enraptured my girlish senses.ย  Inside it was like a movie set, with animal rugs, oil paintings of Spanish Troubadours and Moorish decorations. Rita, Roryโ€™s wife, wore tiny stacked high heels and she clicked across the Spanish tiles like a flamenco dancer. The whole family was blessed with dreamy looks. I didnโ€™t realize that I was surrounded with extraordinary beauty; everyone had these exceptional vogue looks. The importance placed on that kind of beauty was just as distorted as my examination.
Rita danced a stern feminine demeanor, extremely seductive but not without a battle. I learned my first lessons about temptation just by watching her. She fanned the room with perfume and laughter, and men just succumbed like drugged animals. I felt my first tingle of sexuality in the arms of Rory. He was a treasure of natural emotion, physically and orally.ย ย  They both gambled, borrowed money from the other, and they bet on everything.
On Sunday we went to Beverly Park, a cherishedย  amusement park across from where the whimsical Beverly Center shopping Mall is today. I was only two years old when Dad slung me over a big stinky pony, and insisted I ride around the ring so he could snap photographs.
Inside the Cadillac, insulated from the outside world by metal and glass, he drove without intention of destination, or so it seemed. Though I didnโ€™t know it, he often changed directions to confuse a tailing federal agent. The places he took me became our secret. Sometimes he asked me to close my eyes and count to a hundred. It was a game; he wouldnโ€™t tell me where we were going. Iโ€™d open my eyes and weโ€™d be somewhere unfamiliar, a storefront, hotel room, or someoneโ€™s home.
When the Ringling Brothers Circus came to town, Dad took me every weekend and I met some of the performers. He was no less enthusiastic about the circus than I was. Now I understand as Iโ€™ve learned he traveled with Ringling Brothers for a year just after he landed in New York. He was in the wardrobe department! How suitable to his style. Everyone we knew was in some kind of act.

I remember places like Canters Deli on Fairfax. We always had the same waitress, the one with a big air-tight bee-hive.
โ€œ Whatโ€™ll it be today honey?โ€
โ€œ Iโ€™ll have a hot dog.โ€
โ€œ No. Last time you got sick. Honey, get her a turkey sandwich. I have to talk to some people outside–make sure she doesnโ€™t leave. โ€œ
โ€œSure thing Mr. Smiley, you go ahead.โ€
โ€œWhen are you coming back Daddy?โ€
โ€œWhen you finish your lunch. Be a good girl.โ€
While I waited for the sandwich, I watched the waitresses very closely. They entertained me; their husky voices and swift mannerisms as they swooshed between tables, calling out orders, โ€œ Matzo ball soup–chicken on the side, Russian on rye no mayonnaise.โ€ Sometimes he left me long after the sandwich was gone. Iโ€™d turn and watch the door, to see if heโ€™d come in, or ask the waitress.
โ€œ Would you please tell my father Iโ€™m finished.โ€
โ€œFinished already! What about dessert? How about a slice of cheesecake?โ€ Even if I said no, sheโ€™d bring me dessert. Several times I was left so long that I got up and went outside looking for him. I noticed my father down the street talking with some other men. I ran back to the booth and waited. When he came back to the table, I asked him,
โ€œWhere were you Daddy?โ€
โ€œI had to meet someone about business. You remember what I told youโ€”Mommy doesnโ€™t have to know about this.โ€
โ€œI remember.โ€ Why my outings with Dad remained fixated as birth marks is because they were filled with wonder, amusement, and mystery. My father mixed a little business with my pleasure, but it wasnโ€™t obvious because no one had an office. His business associates worked out of shoe stores, cigar stands, hotels, barber shops; all sorts of fronts that camouflaged the booking of bets.

I bet too. That when I lose Iย  never give up on the silver lining.

0b7849ec465dda5a7fc7168f12ac6e14 moon and me

WHO IS BUGSY?


!Bh4GdiwBmk~$(KGrHqYH-C4EsMLP8z9dBLLYjivCm!~~_12

LUCILLE CASEY SMILEY

MGM MotherAll my life people have asked me the same questions:โ€ Whatโ€™s it like knowing your father is a gangster? How old were you when you found out? Arenโ€™t you afraid of his friends? You know they kill people.โ€
I live in a temporary tide-pool, a lily
floating against the current, weighted
down by a suit of armor that shields me
from the beauty, love and freedoms stirring in my bud.

What seemed insignificant at the time was the diving board into my Dadโ€™s history. I was watching a Bugsy Siegel documentary on my television in San Diego during 1993. It was the first one Iโ€™d seen. Three historians joined in on the violence Bugsy honored and esteemed. Half-way through the celebratory lynching of Bugsy and his pals, a reporter made the statement that โ€˜Itโ€™s obvious Allen Smiley was there to set Bugsy up for the hit.โ€™ Andy Edmonds stated that Dad conveniently disappeared into the kitchen during the time of the shooting. It wasnโ€™t until a photograph of my dad appeared on the screen; a man with thick graying hair that I noticed an expression Iโ€™d never seen, horrifying misery. I moved closer to the television to see his face up close. A kaleidoscope of emotions rose to the surface: anger, shame, curiosity, and disbelief. I was forty years old.
smiley aThe first time Iโ€™d seen those photographs of Ben Siegel slumped on that sofa; an eye bleeding down his face was a day back in 1966 at the age of thirteen. My best friend Dena lived in Brentwood with her divorced mother and siblings. We hooked in the unfamiliar and confusing imbalance of a broken home life. Dena was suffering depression after her parents divorced and I was dangling from my fatherโ€™s fingertips hopelessly conflicted after my mother died. Dena wouldnโ€™t let a day go by without calling me. โ€˜Are you all right?โ€™ She didnโ€™t like my father and her reasons were mature beyond her years, โ€˜Your father scares me.โ€™ After school one afternoon we stopped in the Brentwood Pharmacy. Dena was looking at the book rack and I was following along.
โ€œLily, my mother told me your father is in a book, The
Green Felt Jungle. Itโ€™s about gangsters. Wanna see if they have it?โ€ I agreed to look because Dena was interested, but it meant nothing to me. She twirled the book rack around as I stood behind her watching.
โ€œThatโ€™s the book! Let me look first and see what it says,โ€ she whispered. I could feel her arm tense up as I grasped it.
โ€œOh my God! There he is,โ€ she said. We hunched over the book and read the description of my father, โ€œAllen Smiley, one of Ben Siegelโ€™s closest pals in those days, was seated at the other end of the sofa when Siegel was murdered.โ€ Dena covered her mouth with one hand and kept reading silently.
โ€œWhat does that mean? Who is Siegel?โ€ I asked.
โ€œShush–not so loud. Iโ€™m afraid to tell you this. Itโ€™s awful.โ€
โ€œWhatโ€™s awful? Tell me.โ€
โ€œBugsy Siegel was a gangster in the Mafia. He killed people. Your father was his associate.โ€
โ€œI donโ€™t think I should see this.โ€ I turned around abruptly to leave the drugstore. Dena followed me out.โ€
โ€œLily you canโ€™t tell your father you saw this book. Please donโ€™t tell him I told you.โ€
โ€œWhy not?โ€
โ€œMy mother told me not to tell you. Swear to me you wonโ€™t tell your father!โ€
โ€œI wonโ€™t. Donโ€™t you tell anyone either.โ€
A few days later after Dad left for the evening I opened the door to his guarded bedroom. I walked around the bed to a get a closer look at the photographs on the wall. It was the first time I could read the inscription.

DSC01871 - Copy

 

 

 

BOOM BOOM BOOM I’m DEAD


READING FROM DAD’S FBI FILE SOMETIMES BRINGS LAUGHTER.

TO: DIRECTOR, FBIย  STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL- ALLEN SMILEY:ย  WHITE SLAVE TRAFFIC, RACKETEERING, CRIME SURVEY LOS ANGELES, FALSELY CLAIMING CITIZENSHIP, PERJURY

TA-1 – (Means FBI agent one- There were twelve of them working the case.)

On February 25, 1948 Mickey Cohen invited Smiley and his girlfriend, Lucille Casey ( Mom) to the Cohen home for dinner. The invitation was accepted, and it is noted that this is one of the few times Smiley has visited the Cohen residence since the killing of Bugsy. During the Christmas holidays, Smiley refused to attend a dinner at Cohenโ€™s stating he could not be seen with Cohen due to his own legal difficulties. On February 26, Smiley contacted ——-and stated he had been betting on Cohenโ€™s stinking horses. Smiley expressed the idea that โ€œit is going to blow up there any day.โ€ Referring to Cohenโ€™s place.โ€ย  During the course of the conversation between Smiley and —- it was interesting to note that Smiley did not care to discuss any matters and at one time stated, โ€œ Listen: if this room is miked, boom! boom! boom! And Iโ€™m dead. The attitude of Smiley toward the Bureau is reflected on page two of the attached letter. Smiley stated โ€œThis country ought to be at war, with the FBI, the Gestapo, that Hoover, who indicted me for picking my nose, with all those other elements here threatening to overthrow the government and this and that.” ย With reference to his arrest by three Agents, in a somewhat braggadocio manner Smiley informed one of his guests that โ€œ I would be glad to strip to the waist and take each one of those three guys on, one at a time, even if it killed me.โ€ย  He continued that in his opinion the FBI were a bunch of idiots and that he wished someone would drop an atom bomb on this country and he would take his chances on getting out alive just to get rid of the FBI.

That’s my Dad.

EXCERPT FROM BOOK- SMILEY’S DICE


In the summer of 1994, infuriated from a broken affair, another job displacement, and skimpy funds to support me, I found myself in Beverly Hills, walking along with half-hearted interest in seeking employment.

I stopped in the shops Dad frequented; Gearyโ€™s, Schwabโ€™s, and Nate ‘nย  Al Delicatessenย  seeking a root to hang onto.
Beverly Hills has the most powerful effect on me. As soon as I hit Beverly Drive I want to shop, need to shop, must shop! A rise of envy turns into jealously and my attention to wealth fades as Rodney Dangerfield crosses the street, his face contorted by some agitation.ย  I walked past Jack Taylorโ€™s Menโ€™s Haberdashery and hesitated a moment. I had not seen Jack in ten years. The last time was 1982, at my fatherโ€™s memorial service. Jack was the only friend Dad trusted outside of the Mob.

JACK TAYLOR SUIT

โ€œHi Jack, I was in the neighborhood, I wanted to say hello?โ€
โ€œJesus Christ! What a surprise,โ€ he said rushing over to kiss me.
โ€œCome in and sit down. My God, where have you been-what have you been doing?โ€ Jackโ€™s attention toward me was exacting and unavoidable.
โ€œIโ€™m in transition right now. Iโ€™ve changed careers-well, several times. I was in real estate in San Diego for a long time.โ€
โ€œI knew you were in real estate, your Dad told me. What are you doing now?โ€ Are you married?โ€
โ€œNo, not married. Iโ€™m living here now, and looking for a job.โ€
โ€œWhat kind of job?โ€
โ€œWell, something where I can use my skills in marketing andโ€ฆโ€
โ€œWhy not come work for me?โ€ he said leaning closer.
โ€œHere, in the store?โ€
โ€œYeah, why not? Youโ€™ll be great.โ€ he beamed.
โ€œBut Iโ€™ve never sold menโ€™s clothes before.โ€
โ€œSo what! Iโ€™ll teach you. I need someone–my girl just left. I want to get out and play golf. Iโ€™ve spent my whole life in this goddamn business. Forty years for Christโ€™s sake. Iโ€™m tired, you know, Iโ€™m not a young man anymore,โ€ he said without sentiment.
I hope heโ€™s not doing this because he feels sorry for me, was what I was thinking. I heard my Dadโ€™s voice, and he said, โ€˜Be grateful he offered you a job! Youโ€™ll be in the centerfold of high rollers.โ€™ Dad still managed to interface my life in admonishment and disapproval. He was not just in my head. He was in command of my choices. His disapproval was still the beam I ducked from. Sometimes I felt his presence; like you do when a cat enters a room silent as snow.
The next day I called Jack and told him I could start the following Monday. Jack is a legend in Beverly hills; he cut cloth for the Rat Pack, Jackie Gleason, Tony Martin, Cary Grant President Truman and Allen Smiley.

JACK TAYLOR ADVA custom suit starts at three-thousand dollars. I stood by the front windows folding the finest cotton shirts, cashmere sweaters, and ties. Jack jogged back and forth, from the tailor shop to the retail shop, to the telephone, juggling all their demands with explosive keenness and a lot of cussing. This was a stage I wasnโ€™t prepared for; the illustrious display of wealth on the street. Iโ€™d forgotten people still have their own drivers, and valets open the shop doors, and limousines double park in the middle of the street. It just dazzled me into a sort of trance.
โ€œLily! Youโ€™re standing there like a lick of honey in a hive of rich bees. Want me to introduce you to one of them?โ€
โ€œIโ€™m not ready.โ€
โ€œFor crying out loud! What are you waiting for? Stop looking out the window for Christโ€™s Sake. Get them to look at you!โ€ Jack escorted me to the womenโ€™s collection and yanked out a suit.
โ€œTry this on. Youโ€™re a six right?โ€
โ€œYes, howโ€™d you know?โ€
โ€œWhatta’ you think I do in this shop? Weigh turkeys.โ€

The best time of the day was four oโ€™clock in the afternoon. Jack fixed himself a high ball, turned up the volume on a Frank Sinatra CD, and took off his mask. He poured me a drink, placed a bowl of mixed nuts on the coffee table and stretched out on the leather sofa.

We both wanted to talk about Dad.
โ€œI watched a documentary on Ben Siegel; they alluded that dad had something to do with Benโ€™s murder.โ€ I said.
โ€œYouโ€™re lucky your father will never hear you say that.ย  Dad spent a lifetime in fear that theyโ€™d take him out too. He tried to stay away from the business, he wasnโ€™t even allowed back in Vegas after one incident. You know about the Ryan business?โ€
โ€œNo. What was that?โ€
โ€œForget it.โ€ He stood up and filled his glass again.
โ€œYour father had a temper, but he was a rose petal compared to Siegel. Anyway, Dad couldnโ€™t leave this goddamn town; he was afraid they wouldnโ€™t let him come back.โ€
โ€œBut he got his citizenship in 1966. Why couldnโ€™t he leave after that?โ€
โ€œIt was youโ€” he was afraid something might happen. These other guys like Meyer and Costello–they were afraid of nothing.โ€
โ€œI met Meyer.โ€ I said.
โ€œYeah, so you know.โ€
โ€œI donโ€™t know. Meyer was very gentle.โ€
โ€œYouโ€™re Al Smileyโ€™s daughter! Thatโ€™s different. He wasnโ€™t always so gentle.โ€ Jack shook his head, private thoughts stirred.
โ€œYour Dad tried to stay low, but he couldnโ€™t walk away from the thing,โ€ he said shaking his head.
โ€œWhat thing?โ€ I persisted.
โ€œFor Christโ€™s sake, what are we talking about? You know, the Mafia.โ€
โ€œMy father wasnโ€™t in the Mafia!โ€
โ€œSweetheart Iโ€™m just telling you what I know. Maybe Iโ€™m wrong.โ€
โ€œBut he couldnโ€™t have been. I mean my mother wouldnโ€™t have married him.โ€ Jack threw his arms up in frustration.
โ€œHe was Siegelโ€™s partner, and then Roselliโ€™s right arm! When Johnny was murdered your father changed.โ€ Jack shook his head regrettably and continued.
โ€œHow did he change?โ€ I asked.
Just then the door swung open and a distinguished man in a suit and overcoat walked in.

Excerpt from soon to be finished book, Smiley’s Dice


THE SNOW SEDATED the choppy feeling in my stomach, the conjecture ofย  discovering why my father was wired with anxiety. His whole life was a chase scene: arrest him, convict him, send him to Russia, and never pull the tap from his apartment, or the FBI guys from his tail.

Me,ย  Diane Friedman and Cindy Frisch.

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Now there is a wash over my interpretation of his obsessive, protective, paranoia, distrust, and interrogation of my friends. I wonder if those gals I grew up with knew about Dad from their parentsโ€™. I relied heavily on the open arms of my friend’s families. They’re remembered more than my teachers: The Blair’s, Bourneโ€™s, Both Friedmanโ€™s, Frischโ€™s, Hoffmanโ€™s, Pindler’s, Saunders, Schwadelโ€™s,ย  Taubmanโ€™s, and the Tefkin’s.ย  Hope I didn’t leave anyone out.ย  I left out the Berman’s and the Crosby’s.

THE ART OF CONVERSATION – FRANCE VS THE USA


SANTA FE, NM.

LAST NIGHTย  AT LA POSADA,ย  the hotel across the street from where I live,ย  I cushioned myselfย  fireside to read the newspaper.ย  The circle of conversation across from me was loud enough to hear and so I listened.

” The rental rates of vacation rentals has skyrocketed. We have a vacation rental in Colorado and it is always occupied.ย  You know you can make a lot of money, it is very hard work.”ย  It has taken many years to listen objectively rather than critically. I’m not underlining the narrative as much as why would they discuss finance in the midst of terrorist mayhem.

I sat there for at least forty-five minutes and the conversation thread did not waver from personal income.ย ย  I’ve approached the subject of terrorism with friends and acquaintances since Friday the 13th. Only one couple who’ve just relocated here engaged. The gentleman was born in Belgium and he was eager to share his European opinions.

Over the last few days I’ve been watching Sky News.ย  http://news.sky.com/watch-live. This is an international online station. The journalists report news, they do not debate, criticize, or condemn those they interview.ย  During the program the scenes in Paris, London, and around the world capture the public’s activity, conversations, triumphs and tragedy.ย  What this illustrates is thatย  conversationย  in many US arenas must pass the political censorship exam.

I understand political discussions strike fiery bantering and this may cause a rouse and attract attention, and that isย  unacceptable in respectful society. Not so in France!ย  For me, this truly illuminates the difference between our cultures.ย  They are educated in the art of conversation, and in love with expression.

When I lived in Malibu last summer, most of the guests of the owner were Parisians.ย  This artistic andย  talented group talked without pause from dusk to dark, drank bottles of wine and smoked,ย  a mise- en- scene from the French salons of the thirties. ย  They raised their voices, shouted, laughed in unison, teased and taunted without restraint.ย  At the end of the evening cheeks are kissed, hands held, and appetites satisfied.

Discussion with the Queen of Conversation

Harriet Dautel Funk. San Diego Opera 2006

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PARIS WILL NOT PERISH


I watched coverage today in Paris from an online British station. It is important to me. More important than writing or dressing or going out. The journalists were sympathetic, the interviews soulful, the images–silencing. I don’t believe prayers are enough. President Hollande declared war.

Last night I watched a French film, Lola, before I heard the news. This was a film of Paris as golden and grainy as autumn. I thought I must go to Paris. Today I still must go to Paris.ย  BN-LG537_1114FR_J_20151114151709

SINGULAR DAYDREAMING


DAYDREAMING
When I watch my wild birds, I daydream of their freedom.

When I listen to Wes Montgomery I dream of Brazil, and riding on a float at Mardi Gras, just once, with a feather hat, and dressed like Rita Hayworth.

When I sit at my desk and look at my motherโ€™s photograph, I dream of the lunch we never had, and the lunch we did have, inย  Bullockโ€™s Garden Room, watching the fashion show and discovering tuna salads.

When I lie in bed at night I dream of him, whomever he is, wherever he is, and his strong shoulder cupped around my head, watching an old Cagney movie.

When I shovel snow I dream of California, of old Del Mar and running along the shore barefoot.ย  When I walk along Palace Avenue in Santa Fe,ย  I dream of walking in Brooklyn, or 5th Avenue at about 6 pm, when everyone pours into the street, a fountain of limbs and accessories.

Daydreaming unlike night dreaming where we are flying, conquering, or battling some inner masked trauma, illuminates where we want to be, and who we want to be, and if you take it seriously, how to get there. The medicine of daydreaming is unmatched by books, health food, vitamins, yoga, religion, mind altering experiences, it’s the essence of who we are, it defines our reality.

Mostly these days, I daydream6a011168668cad970c0120a94abd12970b-400wim of finishing the longest work-in progress book and as my pal Blair says, finish and move on with your life. For those of you who know me, when the time comes for a diligent writing routine, the act is outwardly selfish. Engagements canceled,ย  phone is not answered, and my email correspondence drops off.ย  If a trauma settles in my mind while Iโ€™m writing, the rhythm dissipates. Avoidance of the temptations that can draw me away from the work; men, my gal pals problems, Rudy falling off the ladder, and a vacant income.

As I assemble my columns, government transcripts, book excerpts, and emotions into a page of writing what is different this time is I know what belongs and what doesnโ€™t. The worst part of writing for me is vacillating, that mind twist of indecision. It is like the indecision of moving, or breaking up, or taking a different outlook, one youโ€™ve never even considered before.

The world we are living is not familiar; everyday it erupts with an inconceivable corruption, act of violence, and viciousness against humanity. It’s not the Italian roast coffee that wakes me up, itโ€™s world news.ย  I feel less and less a part of the humanity and more like a wild creature that is fighting for the past. My outlook on social clubs, synagogue and church congregations, group classes, and all that letโ€™s meet up organizing makes a lot of sense now. Especially if you donโ€™t have children, or a life mate the temptation to retreat into your own world of fantasy is irresistible. My next thread will be on the single life, I can claim expertise in that!

Last night a stranger in a sports jacket, silver hair, and polished shoes sat beside me at the Staub House. He struck a conversation and within fifteen minutes he said, ” I’m going to the Chamber Music Concert series tonightย  and next week I go to three operas. ” My interior dialogue is assessing him; he’s very presentable, wears glasses well, and loves the arts. Maybe he will invite me. We continue chatting and then suddenly he switches tenses; it is no longer I, now it is we don’t live in Colorado in the winter, we have a house in Tuscon.

After a few travel stories he says,” I have an extra ticket for tonight. Would you like to go? I’m meeting some friends afterward at the Compound.”ย  A second of hesitation on my part, as this is the temptation I was talking about.

” I’d have to change and you’re running late.”

”ย  I guess you’re right. Will you be here tomorrow night?”

” Maybe.”

What’s interesting today looking back, is that he didn’t even lie about being married or involved long-term.ย  Men use to lie about that didn’t they?ย  I mean what’s so unusual about having a tryst with a married man today? Daydreaming is not indecisive or dishonest. Maybe one of the most genuine of vices.
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