Monday, May 28, 2018

Blind Item #4 - Letters - A Dancing Boy Blind Item

I don't get a lot of letters - I mean who does these days - but it came as a special surprise when in recent months I received a large padded envelope, return address a PO box in Hollywood. It was stuffed with letters, all of them from the 80s, and each stamped with an apparent rating: G, PG, PG-13, R, and finally X (which for those of you too young to remember = NC-17 today). They had been opened and read, I could tell, then returned to their envelopes. I immediately knew what they were: fan letters.

During my brief encounter with fame, these parcels came twice-monthly. Initially, they were unmediated - sent directly from my agent's office to my home address. Most were from tween girls, regular readers of teen magazines, and members of various fan clubs. I was advised to write back only rarely, when it was a child with cancer, or whose parents had just divorced, or something - you weren't supposed to be too accessible. All the others would get a canned reply, and head shot, if requested.

I promptly ignored this advice, writing back to as many of them as I could find the time. Almost always, they wanted to know: did I have a girlfriend? My agent told me to always say yes, whether or not it was true, because boys were supposed to have girlfriends. Umm, where's yours, I thought. He had only a "personal assistant" (the first time I had heard the term), this eighteen year old boy who he claimed to have rescued from a troubled home several years earlier. The first time I met him I thought he was my age, or no more than a year or two older. I thought it was his son. Nope, more like his "son."

(Funnily: my on-again, off-again beard since grade school - the first girl I had ever kissed - had with her twin sister been "discovered" by an associate of my agent, shortly before it happened to me. They had a small role at the opening of a lodging-themed cult horror flick, running and screaming, and were offered others afterward. But their mother, who became fast aware of how the business worked at the turn of the decade, pulled the plug on it all.)

My own experience with fandom soon took a dark turn too.

One of my correspondents was a boy my age in Nebraska - just about the only boy who wrote to me. He seemed nice enough, and (since I had a small/secret crush on him) it didn't even matter that our shared interests were mostly the fabrications of a bitter Hollywood screenwriter turned copywriter for the agency. (It was all, you understand, designed to appeal to tween girls, without ever being overtly gay - certain things were in, and others out. Unless you were being groomed for "bad boy" parts, for instance, a taste for heavy metal was verboten, as was an interest in horror movies. According to the press releases, my favorite band was "Wham!," and my favorite movie was "the Goonies" [which, at least, I actually did like]. I preferred Benihana [this was the 80s remember, when Japan was the future] to Mexican, but I'd never try sushi. The scar above my right eye was caused by a dog attack [a standard period sit com trope - I had actually collided with my teammate's front teeth playing soccer]. I liked the beach, playing cards, light blue...)


A month or two into our correspondence, I got a letter which I knew to have a picture inside. I hurriedly tore open the envelope, only to find the nude photo of a middle aged man lying naked on a lakeside beach. The accompanying letter, which described "traditional coming of age rites," from Sparta to New Guinea, laid bare (you'll forgive the pun) his interest in me. He would kidnap me, he said - like Zeus did Ganymede - and "show me the path to manhood so lacking in the modern world." You may not remember a single line from Shakespeare, but somehow the words of creeps stick with you for decades.

I left it on the counter for my parents to find, and that was the end of that. One of the office ladies - a nice woman who called me Bunny for some reason (I think I had shown up there in a Peter Rabbit costume once) - was assigned the task of screening my mail, and giving each letter a rating.

In those months, I managed to leverage my fleeting celebrity for one thing: a real pen pal. Maybe I was just mad at having been burned (as in deceived and taken advantage of) by Middle Aged Man, or maybe it was that I wanted to connect with someone who got what I was going through. (For all but the most well-adjusted - which I was most certainly not - a certain amount of withdrawal is common. People you've known think you're being aloof, but it isn't that at all. Prior to this moment, you've only ever had a private life, with all its expectations, and deficits - the stuff of normal life. Now you have a public self, which has taken over your body, and image, and increasingly your life. Strangers, and even some friends, begin to see you as that. As a kid, and even as an adult, a part of you just wants to hide.

As a counterpoint example, one of my friends in high school was this actress who played opposite probably the biggest kid star of the decade [all because of this one movie] in the flick that followed. I didn't understand it to be film noir, or kid noir - these were terms I wouldn't hear until college - but it was one of my favorite movies back then. It was also a big inspiration for this feature I'm writing, "the Little Drummer Boy." If kindness were a child actor, she was it: despite a regular tv gig she got straight As in AP classes, was always generous with her time, and did charity work not because she had to, but because she wanted to. I'd been hoping she might come out of actor retirement for the role of the dancing boy's mother, and I'm pleased to find she's willing to act again. In fact, I'm hoping her former screen mate might consider playing the dad. But I digress...)

My pen pal and I had met at this charity dinner, which fittingly enough for the movie he was about to appear in, was devoted to funding Russian exchange students, and promoting "peace through friendship." (I don't know why I was there. It had been decided that my Special Interest would be world peace - which annoyed me because it sounded like a beauty pageant contestant - so I guess it had something to do with that. The Soviet-era swag on display though was pretty cool: old spy cameras [one a wrist watch, another a pen], folk art by Cossacks, an Afghanistan invasion force play set. My favorite was the spy stuff. It was like that game "Top Secret," but for real.)

You could tell even then that he was already over it, just wanted to get back to his friends,  and baseball (which was his original talent, and part of the reason he got the role in the first place). I figured it was why I stopped hearing from him after a few months, and why he never worked again. What I only realized, after getting this parcel, was that there might be more to the story. Astonishingly, there was one final letter from him - which began with his usual good will, and goings on (he'd mark each day he had left in Hollywood, as if it was jail), but ended with a warning.

The week prior, he'd been invited to a certain private club well known to CDAN readers. He was only there a short time before things got palpably strange, and uncomfortable, with one of the adults present. After demanding use of a phone for close to ten minutes, he was finally able to call his father in the midwest, who in turned called him a cab back to his hotel. (He was in town to do publicity.) The letter was marked with an X, presumably by my agent, to indicate it was not for my eyes: people protecting their kind, and all.

So, why did I get it now, after all these years? I'm thinking it's because of what's happened, beginning last October. You wonder who else is getting what. You wonder what they're turning over to the appropriate authorities. (As in: the letter is no longer in my possession.)

There was this other letter too, the envelope marked conspicuously with the stuff of 80s fan girls: hearts, clouds, rainbows, unicorns. That was all tongue in cheek, or at least meant in the best possible way. As it turns out, I knew, or at least had met my correspondent.

"Dear *****," it read. "Not sure if you remember me, but I was that studio intern who made sure you didn't end up on a milk carton. I just wanted to write and maybe cheer you up. I know you didn't get the part, but I thought you did good. And for what it's worth the production is a mess."

Oddly enough, even after all this time, this did make me feel better. In this business it isn't even always success that matters, but the perception of it. As I had said, more or less, I was or would start to become famous for something that didn't yet exist. I'm thinking that this is the proverbial way the world works. The only difference between a con and a hustle is that with the latter, you have the goods. You either break through the noise, or you don't. Almost never does anyone get an "e" for effort.
But I was just happy to hear from her too, however belatedly. She was that rare flower of kindness in the asphalt of Hollywood. And these being internet times, she wasn't hard to find. She's married now, with two nice and nearly grown kids.

Stay tuned for Part 2!

58 comments:

  1. I'm guessing Christina Nigra for actress friend/HS classmate retired from acting

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Which makes Henry Thomas the counterpart. (Cloak and Dagger)

      Delete
  2. Anonymous9:15 AM

    Please spare us part 2.

    ReplyDelete
  3. D.A.R.Y.L. for the pen pal’s movie.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh, good guess. Baseball scenes and several unknown actors.
      Better than the guess I had, Erich was Russkies.

      Delete
    2. Barret Oliver.

      Delete
    3. Oh he was a major childhood crush - I played D.A.R.Y.L and Flight of the Navigator (Joey Cramer) every Saturday morning before the folks woke up.

      Delete
  4. Too long. These blinds getting weirder and weirder

    ReplyDelete
  5. Anonymous9:45 AM

    Danny Corkill for the pen pal, that Alphy Hoffman Soda Pop whatever club for, well, the club.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Zzzzzzzzzzzz...

    And I thought the rappers and celebrity whore-moms were tiresome.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Anonymous9:49 AM

    I still want DB to give us more clues about the film that fell apart and the up and coming genre director making it. You know the one that started this whole thing.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Just when I thought we were rid of the Dancing Boy BIs....lol.

    ReplyDelete
  9. that ish is long af!

    ReplyDelete
  10. The internet buzz you thought you'd get from Enty and the Enterns isn't happening for you Dancing Boy.

    ReplyDelete
  11. This one was written a lot better and was easy to follow. People are being quite nasty. He doesn't have to divulge any of these details. I don't know enough about American teen stars. We had our favourites from America but they just disappeared....now I'm starting to understand why.

    ReplyDelete
  12. this blind is my favorite writer here.

    the message below appeared over a video-audio pop-up on this site:

    'The media playback was aborted due to a corruption problem or because the media used features your browser did not support.'

    2 days to catch up on if it holds...

    ReplyDelete
  13. Can we just stop with the blind boy items. They aren't interesting and it just seems like someones desperate need to be noticed.

    ReplyDelete
  14. After 3 rapper BIs I'll even read a Dancing Boy

    ReplyDelete
  15. can somebody tell me what is
    dancing boy
    blind boy & Hmmmmmm
    please thanks xx

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You'll have to go back and read all the blinds to make some sense of dancing boy. Some are brilliantly written but some are also quite difficult to fathom!

      Delete
    2. This is one in a long series. Do a search on this site (feature only available on web version I think) for "Dancing Boy". In I think the second or third blind, a reader cracks who it is, scroll WAY down in the comments.
      There's a lot to get through, clear your schedule.

      Delete
    3. Oh my. See you in a couple weeks.

      Worth it.

      Delete
  16. Thanks for the latest update! I have nothing else to add guess-wise.

    ReplyDelete
  17. His beard night be Camilla or Carey More.
    They were both in Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter in 1986

    ReplyDelete
  18. High School Friend: Anna Chlumsky/"My Girl" with Macauley Culkin?

    That's all I got, right or wrong.

    ReplyDelete
  19. Long time reader but I'm confused now. Are all of the DB blinds the same writer? The few I've read seem to be different people/stories/backgrounds.

    ReplyDelete
  20. Thank you for turning evidence over to the authorities (paragraph 14).

    ReplyDelete
  21. I was wondering that too. I just read the first DB blind and he says the first film he was cast in was cancelled because he didnt let them abuse him and they put him in the psych ward.

    How would he have gotten fan mail for so long if his only film was never released?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I thought that too....so are they different writers for the same subject? That's why this is all over the place. Is Dancing Boy just a reference now for abused child actors?

      Delete
  22. As an avid reader of tween mags in the late 80s/ early 90s, I can confirm that there were scads of unknown actors featured. Kids who were best known for print ads/ commercials, occasional TV walk-ons, upcoming features, or nothing at all. Sometimes celebrity siblings would have photo spreads.

    It was sort of a game for young girls to pick a crush from the mags and see if their career actually went anywhere. You could almost get bragging rights. Sort of like fantasy football or indie bands. (I knew them before they were big!)

    I understand now that these magazines weren't just for tween girls, but pedophiles. (Which explains why there were so many shirtless pics and pouty / bluesteel stares; 11 year old girls weren't into that.)

    I imagine they were also testing the waters in a sense: Float a young actor out there and see if they get a response. The actors who generated reader mail would probably get more roles, the ones who didn't get noticed would fizzle. These days it's measured in social media followers, I suppose.

    ReplyDelete

  23. "I believe the one next to me was the first girl I kissed, or that's her twin sister. They were in the opening sequence of that movie "Motel Hell," as Twin Nos 1 and 2, respectively."


    This is off the FB page of the guy who people guessed as Dancing Boy. So everything is more or less confirmed.

    ReplyDelete
  24. I can't believe Dancing Boy is still a thing here. I stopped reading after the second one.

    ReplyDelete
  25. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Don't forget the smart adaptive chat bots that boost a particular message by "debating" each other!

      Delete
  26. Anonymous1:01 PM

    I read it. I'm in. I skip anything that has "reality" or "rapper" in it, and I don't care that actors cheat on each other. This is the real stuff. This is the story from the other side, and it's fascinating. The best stories were the Hmms, like the tale of experiencing Hefner's vault, or the crazy party stories, or the old school actresses, but the Dancing Boy comes in at a close second for a story that would never be told, otherwise.

    Too long, didn't read? Go back to 4chan, you weak minded, lazy assholes. Just skip to the "rapper acting badly" posts then, idiots. This kind of story is wasted on you, anyway.

    Dancing Boy - tell your stories. A lot of us want to hear them! Forget these lazy assed trolls who just want their vicarious masturbation material in easy to read chunks with no hard words to sound out.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I agree. As for those writing very long comments just basically trying to display how amazingly 'intelligent' they are-get over yourselves. This is a writer who felt abused by the system and come out the other side and is being open and honest about a world we are gradually coming to understand. People lost their life's hiding these secrets or lost them by opening up.

      Delete
  27. @Aimless

    Most of us figured out your suggestions there a long time ago. This site is used for a whole lot of publicity purposes, we know.

    As far as creating buzz and selling a story, Dancing Boy ain't gonna cut it. Rather than be called a condescending cunt again, I'll keep my silence as to why (also, very busy right now), but it simply isn't going to work for a mountain of reasons.

    If anyone can give the skinny version of this segment it would be much appreciated.

    ReplyDelete
  28. I don't understand what I just read. Perhaps this is background for part 2?

    ReplyDelete
  29. Aimless, thanks for the insight. As Plot said, some of us figured out the marketing angle already, but I really like how you shared the strategy sometimes employed in the system.

    For everyone blindly accepting whatever is said here, reread the website disclaimer. We aren't talking loudly during a movie, just interrupting some fantasies, so live and let live. It's a public site open to comments from all sides. And if you really want to get mad, how about going after the vile hate language posters. These are just stories, and whether true or not, no cdan reader is saving anyone by visiting this site. I give credence to the blinds that are unequivocally solved and the rest rightly stay in limbo until then.

    ReplyDelete
  30. @T.W.

    I finally read it, quite easily this time because the writing is somewhat better. It's connected to the other Dancing Boy blinds though it's impossible to say how. There seem to be multiple writers all claiming to be DB or connected in some way. Other than the original DB, these have been a little short on facts and clues. Russkie movie? Baseball movie with a star no longer in the game? Suddenly the writer is talking about the present and then it's clear he means the past. I really don't know.

    At any rate, Pt 2 is coming.

    ReplyDelete
  31. I like these blinds. Looking forward to Pt 2.

    ReplyDelete
  32. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  33. @Aimless, interesting angle you have there. I'm listening...

    ReplyDelete
  34. "That much wasted efforts gives credence to a titanic struggle to suppress it by malevolent and powerful men in a David and Goliath fight involving the (astroturfed) bottom stuck man seeking simple justice and closure. "

    And would feed the conspiracy theorists Outrage! over being so close, yet so far, from achieving closure for their fantasies...they imagine.

    "Miley and tearfully returns to the Jebus she loved as a girl." "

    That's news to me. Miley hasn't returned to Jesus as you say, though plenty of Fundies keep hypothesizing that she has using song lyrics and the like.

    If Pimp Mama is sucking on the Beibs train, she's catching it on it's wane.

    ReplyDelete
  35. Its sad people get pissed about reading. God forbid anything is longer than a tweet. That sack of fan mail sounds like it will develop into something a lot more interesting & you'll be pissed you asked for a tl;dr

    and @aimless, I am catching your drift..i think. big mom has (had?) church, affiliated with the biebs, model daughter has recently said in Vogue March 18.."..bisexual or gay bone in my body" ..and if that buzz happens again she's going to hire JC himself to save them all from the devil's gossip. just huge guesses, but keep going.

    ReplyDelete
  36. Did it need to be this long? I’m sure no one read it to the end.

    ReplyDelete
  37. Corey Haim interview about Alphy's Soda Pop Club. No mention of Brian Corkill or whoever the pen pal might be. But maybe some more digging could turn something up...
    Great call @Melvin!
    https://www.vice.com/en_uk/article/4wqnx3/him-himself-and-he-0000193-v19n4

    ReplyDelete
  38. i agree with many here who DON'T mind reading something longer than a tweet so keep them coming for those of us who DO have attention spans longer than a gnat's. did any of you complaining 'compassionate' people ever consider that the person or persons writing these NEED to share and get things out that they have either chosen or been forced to keep buried inside themselves most of their lives. trust me as someone who was abused most of her life by various people it's cathartic to just get this stuff out into the light. so here's the solution..no one forces you to read these long blinds or our long responses. if you don't like them and don't care then SIMPLY IGNORE THEM. very simple. personally i read them and want them to continue.

    ReplyDelete
  39. Dancing boys first kiss was with one of the twins from motel hell. Good little film... Hope the twins didn't eat the jerky 😉

    ReplyDelete
  40. "Stay tuned for part 2!"

    JFC, this massive pile of excrement wasn't the entire dump???

    ReplyDelete
  41. You ppl do know there is nothing FORCING you to read a blind you do not care about right? I mean well, not that I know of. I skip over anything about Rappers or the trashitans or NJ because i could care less (well i do care about my SON in NJ who is a cop.. lol. )
    If you just hit that scroll button you can move right past those that do not interest you, and i can promise you, i have never been shocked from existence by not reading one.
    And if i did not care to READ something, i DAMN sure would not take the time to comment on it. FFS.
    You all sound like the DM comm enters who find it necessary click on a story, and take the time to scroll all the way to the bottom, make sure they are logged in and comment, that they do not CARE about this person or that person. SMH.
    Find a live, there is one outside the internet,

    ReplyDelete
  42. Ok, I've read all 3 parts of this thing, and I've got this-

    Movie girls were in-Motel Hell
    Child actor/director-Ron Howard-movie-Cocoon
    Llama Owner-Michael Jackson
    Lost boy/lost man who freed the llamas-Macaulay Culkin
    Kid in the cart who became famous later-Paul Walker
    Friend of the famous boy who was the good student-Anna Chumsky

    That's all I've got so far.

    ReplyDelete

Advertisements

Popular Posts from the last 30 days