Monday, July 19, 2021

for Frances

 


SCENES FROM LONG AGO

On Beard Street,

In Kernersville, there are colorful

Wall murals which give glimpses

Into what was, long ago.


I saw ladies in billowing long

Red and white dresses standing

With gentlemen wearing tall hats

All waiting at the railroad station

For family arriving from faraway places.

Soon, they would all step into a horse

Drawn carriage to take a short ride home.


Nobody looked up to see the child

Perched high above who on bleak days

After school would climb to the flat roof

To wait for the trains to pass.


The trains were carrying weary passengers

Traveling to faraway places, and they were

Also going home.


Many years later, she would remember

The sound of the whistle as the trains

Passed and she would speak of the sound

As both sad and mournful,

Perhaps because it always

Strangely reminded

Her of all times past.


--- Marjorie J. Levine

Friday, July 16, 2021

Monday, June 28, 2021

Monday, May 10, 2021

My friend: Luke Sacher

 

Luke Sacher and I connected after I sent him an E-mail in which I praised the videos he posted at his YouTube channel. 

We began telephone conversations and we spoke on a regular basis and after a short amount of time we bonded closely regarding our mutual interests.

I am delighted to call Luke my friend. He enhances my life in layered ways and each time we talk I grow so much because he is so intelligent, referenced, and well educated.

I value my friendship with Luke and he sincerely inspires me to learn, to be more creative, and to consider all the nuances within daily life.

His work is extraordinary and his documentaries are award winning.

Luke's documentaries include: AIDS BLOOD AND POLITICS, The Rat Pack for A & E, Who Killed Adam Mann, and RADIUM CITY... soon on Vimeo. 

Luke at at IMDb


And by the way, Luke's great uncle is Herbert Biberman: 

Monday, March 29, 2021

SEX, LIES, AND DECADES LATER... THE INTERNET



These greeting cards are pieces of a bittersweet memory from 1970 to 1973, and the messages are quite romantic. I saved the cards to always remember a man I loved named: Lou. But, this was a dark and layered and mysterious "love" because Lou was not just a man... he was my therapist.


Lou looked like Al Pacino in "Serpico." And he was married with several children. I'll be brief...


I began seeing a therapist in about 1970. His office was in Greenwich Village and after just a few sessions I came under the seductive spell of "erotic transference." I grew attached and I was dependent. I fell in love, or thought I had fallen in love. The feelings were not yet mutual. There arrived the day when Lou told me he was moving his practice to Staten Island. I was not ready at all for the separation and I was emotionally devastated. So, I followed him to Staten Island and became a twice a week ferry regular.


The longing for him until my sessions each week was unbearable. I was vaguely aware back then that transference was a common feeling when in analysis. And I had fallen deeply in love with my therapist. Lou sent a real mixed bag of messages; by turns flirting with me and allowing me to believe the feelings were becoming mutual, and at the end of each session he drove me back to catch the ferry. But, in the sessions he would emotionally push me away. He pulled me in and gave me hope and played with my desire, and then confused me by pushing me away with his mercurial whim. He vaguely promised to soon meet me for lunch in Manhattan and then in the next session he told me to find another therapist. I returned home filled with longing and I was confused and desperately unhappy. I was in anguish. I wrote him long love letters in which I poured out my heart.


He sent me greeting cards for Valentine's Day and my birthday... copies hang at this blog (configured with folds to fit.) The saga continued for several years and well.. as it goes with time, the hypnotic spell eventually broke and I ended the "therapy." One day, just like that.


About eight years later, in 1981... I tried Lou's old number and I called. I needed closure. Lou was very excited and happy to hear from me. He was now divorced. He started calling me twice a day. I had to tell him to calm down. So, we had dinner at a Manhattan restaurant. He sat there all pompous and clueless. We went back to my apartment and well... anyway, when he left he hugged me and I knew it was a good-bye forever. He had not changed. He had told me over dinner his experience with me took him to a place where he made a decision to never allow physical contact with a patient in a session ever again. The man was a fast and quick study!


I look back on this episode of my life now and it is totally meaningless. I am not angry. I feel nothing. I know this goes on. I watched "In Treatment." Lou was verbally unprofessional, unethical, and his behavior was inconsistent. He did not know what to do about me and he could not handle and come to terms with his own feelings. Transference is serious and should be handled properly by those who have fallen under it's seductive spell. I think my experience with Lou exacerbated my condition of limerence and I actually never knew I had that until a viewer in my broadcast was listening to one of my many stories and gave it a name. 


I am happy I saved all of Lou's cards because I am reminded of a bittersweet chapter of my life. 


Added after the above: a few years ago, I saw online that Lou had passed away. I called a number I believed could have been his (to offer some form of condolences to whoever answered... I am not a grudge holder and shit happens). A woman answered who told me she was his wife, allowing me to conclude he remarried. After some quick back story to identify myself, I asked her if Lou ever mentioned me. She said no... and as my saga unfolded she was riveted to my story and listened intently. She actually seemed to enjoy hearing it. At the end, she told me her name was also Marjorie. Damn, I am so sad he is gone. I really would have liked to talk to him again. 













Wednesday, March 3, 2021

a found piece of a letter from long ago

 


Yetta... from Yesteryear

For decades, I tried to "make it" in comedy. But, I was never good enough, or remarkable enough, or lucky enough.

But when social media prospered and live broadcast sites became popular, I decided to try to do shows on the internet so I fired up my computer cam. I became "Yetta Telebenda" and "Cookie Lipschitz" and I was off and running!

A viewer with the nickname "TripCode" became my videographer and he faithfully recorded my shows and uploaded the videos to YouTube. But, I still remained mostly invisible except for a small group of loyal "fans" who I gathered along the way and they became my devoted "cult following." But, fame still eluded me and no casting agents ever called. However, I persisted and through the years found new and creative ways to reinvent myself and keep my content fresh.

I enjoyed developing my new life and making my shows as beautiful as a live memoir in an old silent movie. I fit the pieces of my unique puzzle into a new journey which took me straight to the streets of Broadway. And with pathos, I performed on The Great White Way and said jokes like nobody was listening and mimed like nobody was watching.

And the most bittersweet and sad part... nobody there was. I was all alone on that old and famous avenue and somehow it did not even matter. In my mind's eye, I was famous. For one night, I was a celebrity and as the strangers passed without even giving me a second glance, I hardly even noticed. 

And when my "performance" was over, as I walked home in the crisp night air there was one thought that remained with me. I knew that there could be fulfillment in small scale poignant ways because in that personal magical moment in time, I was shining in my own imagination like a sentimental Broadway star who would sparkle and twinkle on... forever.

taken down by TC:



watch here:






Tuesday, February 2, 2021

Voices from The Road


My father made a series of "records" when he was in the Army during WW2. They were made as he crossed the country from New York to the Aleutian Islands in Alaska and they were for his family who were back in Brooklyn.

After he died in 1994, I had the records transferred to audiotapes. A copy of the tapes are now at THE NATIONAL WWII MUSEUM in New Orleans.


"Ruby" later had had own story. 



https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/district-courts/FSupp/276/434/1461257/