---WHAT
IF IT DOESN’T MATTER? THEN WHAT?
…Here
are some poems I wrote for a journal whose theme was celebrity:
Starlet
of a Different Kind
My
mother’s face on the screen
looms
like a costume
as
she handles one man after the other
art
imitating life
one
step up from prostitution
contrived
passion screened and airbrushed.
Her
fans love it.
None
of them knows
she
was a woman once
proud
and educated
with
two sons and a future.
Now
she’s archived on the internet
cataloged
under the heading MILF
a starlet
of a different kind.
Still
Famous
Klieg
lights sweep the rims of skyscrapers
as
the entourage arrives
tuxedoed
men and gowned ladies who look like
a
displace fairy tale.
The
man in the middle once called me brother.
Now
he wears a George-Cloonet-grin and dimpled bow tie.
At
the door I say, “Hey,”
but
he’s busy signing autographs.
By
evening’s end I’m still the doorman
and
he’s still famous.
As
the perfect posse drives away
the
Klieg lights blink off.
Someone
rolls up the red carpet.
Someone
else says, “Hey, give me hand with this garbage,”
and
I oblige because I’m paid by the hour.
Call
Me Gwyneth
We
tour homes of the rich and famous
instead
of taking in Disney.
The
kids fuss and squeal
in
the back of the tour bus
as
my wife asks takes down
notes
about O.J. Simpson.
She’s
the happiest I’ve seen her in years.
In
bed at our hotel that night
we
make love while listening to Madonna.
My
wife tells me to call her Gwyneth or Marilyn,
whichever
works for me
and
when I do, we break through to another side of us
the
room a toaster
air
thin as needles
sheets
soaked with sweat
Colbert
yammering on the muted TV.
For
breakfast we eat waffles shaped like Mickey Mouse.
Daffy
and Donald Duck come by our table,
Ariel
as well
and
photos are taken.
There
are more meals and more machination involving people
we’ve
only seen inside a box
or
lathered in glossy magazines,
The
town smog-laden is ripe with celebrity.
On
the plane home my wife cranes her neck
believing
Leonardo DiCaprio is in the seat in front.
She
swears it’s him.
She
squeezes my wrist
and
tells me he’s her favorite,
always
has been,
always
will be.
Idols
My
daughter holds her People magazine as
if it’s a bible
pages
splayed and dog-eared
notes
scribbled along some of the margins.
She
says she’s going to be famous when she grows up
and
for me not to worry because
I’ll
be famous because she’s famous.
When
I chuckle she tells me she’s serious.
Before
this she only wanted to be my daughter.
Then
came Beyoncé and Katy Perry kissing a girl and liking it.
One
evening I say, “How about I tell you a story.
I used to do that all the time.”
She
fakes a yawn, says she’s beat.
Outside
her door I hear
“If you like it then you should have put
a ring on it”
blaring,
the floor bouncing
as
my daughter practices dance moves
mimicking
an idol
and
future foe.
Facades
The
make-up comes off like a sheet of milky paste.
Eyelashes
are plastic cilia curled to resemble the ass of a full moon.
Lipstick
smears away the same as those berry-stained hands of yours
from
years ago
when
you were nothing
but
a fruit-picker.
You
watch the dye bleed black into the sink,
your
hair a muss of bark and moss now.
Cleansed.
Naked.
Unmasked.
You
ask the woman in the mirror who she is.
She
looks familiar,
A
cadaver after a last breath.
Tomorrow
you’ll arrive on set at the same time
and
the make-up artists will work their magic again
and
you’ll become something you’re not,
the
something everyone else loves.
Awards
Ceremony
We
toast our twenty-first with stems held high.
Angelina
applauds the thinness of your wrists.
“Wear
bangles,” she suggests. “They
slenderize.”
Mickey
Rooney—still alive—leans over,
telling
racist jokes about Mexican blankets
loaned
to drug mules on a sweltering day.
DeNiro
chortles.
Pacino
chuffs.
Nicholson
cackles.
“It’s
never easy being a woman,” Dustin Hoffman says.
We
listen to it all,
every
bit,
even
the drunken mutterings
which
are impossible to decipher.
Back
in Seattle,
rainfall
as thick as sludge pours from the sky.
You
light a fire, pull me to the couch,
and
whisper in my ear,
“I
don’t ever want to be famous.”
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