Travels with Eleanor #3 - Onward - by Nan Brooks
Born with the teeth to play her
Photo by Cynthia Rumbaugh
There is that advice that goes, “Follow your bliss and
synchronicities will happen.” And “Do what you love, and the money will
follow.” I’m not convinced about
the money thing, but synchronicity is real, and it happened with “my” Eleanor.
Previously: Dear Mrs.
Roosevelt opened by the skin of her teeth, audiences were happy, and the drama in
the company surrounding the production could be put to rest.
Speaking of teeth, I’d always hated mine. It was family
advice down generations not to smile in photographs because our crooked teeth
would show. Now they were an asset and over the years I must have said, “…born
with the teeth to do this role” a gazillion times in interviews.
After those first two performances at the summer arts
festival in Bloomington, Indiana I thought I’d let the production rest for a
year or more. My sons deserved my undivided attention and I had a new and
demanding job now that I’d finished my undergraduate degree. I needed to seek
legal advice about using Eleanor’s life story and her words, and I needed an
agent. Permission from the Roosevelt family would be good, but that was out of
reach. There were too many details to attend to and it all seemed daunting. And
overambitious.
Charlotte Zietlow, a local progressive mover and shaker, was
one of my favorite politicians, a real leader. She called one day and asked if
I would like to meet Ann Roosevelt Johnson, Eleanor’s granddaughter. It turned
out IU professor Judith Johnson was Ann Roosevelt Johnson’s sister in law and
Ann was coming for a visit. Charlotte would see if she could arrange a meeting.
I hoped to learn more from Ann about her grandmother and even perhaps find a
way to seek permission from the Roosevelt family to keep the play going.
Perhaps I could tour, but that was unlikely.
We met over lunch at a local restaurant and talked mostly
about our children, Professor Johnson and Ann and me. When I lamented the
struggle to get a compassionate education for my younger son, who was yet to be
diagnosed with Asperger’s Syndrome. Judith Johnson said, “But remember, there
is always a pocket of sanity in any system.” I've quoted her many times and those words have kept me going often through the years. I remember
getting a recipe for inexpensive chicken salad from Ann. I was embarrassed,
appalled might be a better word, when someone stopped at our table, pointed to
me and then to Ann, and said, “Oh my, I couldn’t figure out which one of you
looks more like Eleanor!” After an awkward pause, we returned to our
conversation.
Ann described the work of the Eleanor Roosevelt Foundation
and how they were teaching conflict resolution to New York inner-city
teenagers. The kids would arrive at Val Kill, Eleanor’s home in Hyde Park, New
York, for a retreat. But the place was so peaceful, conflicts didn’t arise. I
said, “Maybe her spirit is still there.”
Ann looked me in the eye and said, “Why do you want to play my
grandmother?” I probably gulped and
said, “Because of what we’ve been talking about, her work for social justice.
We need to hear from her now. And because she never gave up.” Ann simply nodded and the conversation went
on. I didn’t know if I had passed muster, or even if there was any muster to
pass.
A month or so later I had a call from the president of
Franklin College, a small church-supported school in Indiana. He explained that
they were planning their annual weekend in which they would focus on one person
in history and what could be learned from that person’s life and work. They had
chosen Eleanor as the historic figure and had invited Ann Roosevelt Johnson to
talk about the Foundation. She had told
him about me. When he asked my fee, I just made up a high number. I hadn’t even
thought about what it would cost to do a touring production. He said my fancy
number it was too high, so I offered to cut my fee in half if Ann Roosevelt
Johnson would be there and see the play. He said, “That’s what she said about
you.” Apparently, I was going on tour,
albeit about 50 miles from home.
Franklin College needed publicity material from me, so I would
have to suffer through the head shots. I have hated having my picture taken since
I was a child, and it shows. I think I’ve had two headshots that were anywhere
near attractive over my acting career. Telling a photographer that I wanted to
look gentle and strong often meant blank looks or a lecture about how those two
qualities didn’t go together. My professional photos were lackluster at best. But
it had to be done despite my bad attitude. I was whining about this sad state
of affairs to my friend Cynthia Rumbaugh one day, figuring she would have some
advice for me because she is an excellent photographer. She said, “I’ll do them
at my house, and we’ll have a good time doing it, too.”
I always have a good time with Cyndi and I trust her. She worked
hard to set up a space in her unfinished basement with lighting and a backdrop
of some kind. The lighting was tricky because the ceiling was so low, but she
figured out how to get a good angle. We did have a good time; I remember
laughing a lot. For once I didn’t have to worry about my crooked teeth. They
are my favorite headshots of all time.
Cynthia Rumbaugh and I were up to something, but who knows what.
Costume and accessories by Opportunity House thrift store, Bloomington, Indiana
At Franklin College I was to perform in a former chapel, so
we set up a few pieces of furniture for ER’s sitting room and placed the props
– photographs and mementos of Eleanor’s travels. The president came to meet us
while we were setting up and showed the seat in the front row they had reserved
for Ann Johnson. That meant I would be able to see her reactions to the play
all too clearly, but I decided not to complain and to prove to myself that I
was a real trouper. She would be sitting right behind the spot where my
invisible guest, the reporter to whom I was telling “my” life story would be. I
dressed in the room that opened directly onto the set and when the time came,
simply opened my dressing room door and walked on. When I looked out, Ann
wasn’t there. That meant she had decided not to come, a disappointment and a
relief. I’d have to think about all that later.
I was surprised how comfortable I felt being back in
Eleanor’s shoes, as it were. Not that those costume shoes had become any more
comfy. But I felt completely at home, found new moments in the script to
explore, and had a fine time. After my curtain call, without a crew this time
because the two women traveling with me flatly refused, I walked into the
little robing room and promptly pulled
off my very sweaty dress, wig, girdle, and stockings. There was a knock at the
door. “May I come in?” I thought it was
one of the crew and didn’t worry that I was standing there in my slip with my sweaty
hair plastered to my head. But it was Ann Roosevelt Johnson and she was
teary-eyed and beaming all at once. She wrapped me in a hug despite my
apologies for being so damp. She asked if we could talk, so I threw on some
street clothes and we sat on the set while the crew packed up around us. It
tuned out she had decided to sit at the back of the audience because she didn’t
want to be a distraction to me. I was grateful for her understanding and
nervous about what she had thought and felt. That sweaty hug was my answer.
“Your hands! I couldn’t stop watching your hands,” she said,
“you got them perfectly. I loved watching Grandmere’s hands.” It was my turn to
be a little teary, “And she loved watching her grandmother’s
hands.” “She did?” said Ann, “I didn’t
know that.” It was an opportunity for me to give her the smallest gift, but one
that clearly mattered to her.
Ann spoke the next morning and the other WomanShine women
and I were there in the front row. She began by recounting something I had told
her, that I’d heeded Alice Walker’s advice that we all choose a spiritual
grandmother. Of course, I had chosen Eleanor. Ann told the audience that
morning, “So, you see, Nan and I must be sisters,” and thanked me for my
portrayal. That memory is still clear these 35 years later.
After the trip to Franklin College was over, capped by a
letter of endorsement from the college president, I put Dear Mrs. Roosevelt
away for another year. Sid Reger had been the WomanShine company booking agent
for a couple of years after seeing a production in Indianapolis and asking what
she could do to support our work. That is a dangerous question to ask about a
shoestring feminist organization! With
the goal of touring in a year, she prepared brochures for a direct mail
campaign and sent them to colleges and conference organizers in the Midwest. We
figured the brochures, simple three-fold information sheets with my Eleanor
headshot on the front, would arrive in time for people who were planning the
following winter’s campus events and so on.
A few weeks after those went out, synchronicity popped up
again and it became clearer to me that Goddess/the Universe had plans for my
version of Eleanor that I could only guess at. Sid received a phone call from
the organizer of an Illinois Humanities Committee chautauqua to be held in Southern
Illinois. The gentleman had seen that brochure on someone’s desk at Southern
Illinois University when he had stopped there to explore co-sponsorship. He
hadn’t intended to find a presenter, but there was Eleanor looking up at him. He
explained the Chautauqua plan and we said yes, though it was still in very
early stages. My year off had shortened to a few months; we would spend two
weeks in southern Illinois in early June.
The Chautauqua movement was popular in the late 19th
and early 20th century and was a way for adults to gather for
educational opportunities such as lectures and concerts and sometimes for
religious services and classes. The first such event, in the upstate New York
town of Chautauqua, was a way to expand a church camp summer session into a
Sunday school for adults. The name, it is said, came from an Iroquois word
meaning “a bundle tied in the middle” or “two moccasins tied together”, a
description of the shape of the lake where the town is located. You can learn
more about the movement at https://www.chautauqua.com/about-us-history/chautauqua-movement-history
As it turned out, we would perform in Muddy and Carbondale,
Illinois in rotation with two other actors who portrayed historical figures.
The theater performances would be in tents, in the Chautauqua tradition. We
would also visit schools and community organizations in each city. I had wanted
to do summer stock since I was a teenager, and this adventure would come close
to fulfilling that dream.
I'm loving these recollections!
ReplyDeleteWonderful stuff.
ReplyDeleteI feel your emotions, and your strong spirit in this story!
ReplyDelete