Monday, March 4, 2024
B&W FLASHBACK: Dave's Pier Portfolio (1978)
Wednesday, January 19, 2022
FLASHBACK: March on Washington (1993)
I'd lost David, my only live-in boyfriend, to AIDS less than two years earlier. He was almost 39.
Tuesday, January 18, 2022
FLASHBACK: Dream House (1992)
David dreamed of owning a country home in upstate New York. He and Jeff bought this old farmhouse in Westtown, nearly two hours north of the apartment they shared in Manhattan.
David didn't have long to enjoy it. He died two months after this picture was taken.
But they both loved getting away from the city on weekends. I recall it as a time of death and blaring car sirens. Jeff grew up on a farm in Iowa, so it felt like coming home to him.
They welcomed the Pines gang and Barnet, too. There was great antiquing in the area.
Dear James—
I told you I was mean. I didn’t mention I was chicken too.
Things between us have been moving too quickly. I’m just not ready to spend as much time with you as it seems you would like. Many people would be delighted to find five messages on their answering machine when they return home for a long day at work. I was so annoyed that I unplugged my phone and have left it that way because I don’t want to feel pressured again if you decide to call again this evening.
Perhaps, as my friend the psychiatrist suggested, I sent the wrong signal by taking you away this weekend. I thought we would have a good time and we did but I also was glad to spend Sunday evening by myself. I’m a creature of habit and solitude is an important part of my routine.
James the nights I spent holding and sleeping with you were among the best I’ve had in a long time. You’re a nice guy but you want something different than I do. Let’s put an end to this before things sour, so I can remember you always as my sweet baby James.
Jeff
FLASHBACK: The Muller Cottage (1989 - 1995)
Nostalgia colors my affection for the Muller Cottage. From the exterior, it didn't look like much but inside, you felt as if time had stopped in the early 60s when George and Isabelle Muller, the original owners, purchased a home construction kit from a catalog. Very DIY.
I organized it with David & Jeff, no mean feat coming off the complete dissolution of the TV House.
When they wore matching bathing suits, I knew it must be love. It was. They left after a single season to start saving money for a country house where they could grow things. Their corn plantings did not thrive on the Great South Bay.
Their relationship lasted only a little longer than the summer, but they both took shares the next season anyway, a development that resulted in flung forks one lubricated evening. I lived for Anthony's meals. He once made gnocchi without consulting a cookbook. I'd never even heard of gnocchi!
I bought a boogie board.
We still had shares available early in the season. Would you believe I posted this custom-made flier on telephone poles throughout the Pines? Nobody called.
Of course there's another interpretation of this picture. To use a bread making analogy, these guys were the starter dough for a conceptualized "house" that has lasted a very long time, longer than many of the participants and their relationships.
Thom, Gustavo's boss, took a share the second season after guesting the first. I always gave good guests a hard sell. Thom never looked back.
Thom worked with Mario, a snooty pattern maker, who joined the house on the hunt for a boyfriend. Romance bloomed with Anthony's friend Ted, and while the couple rented the master bedroom the following season, they quickly fled the Muller Cottage and bought their own home in more fashionable Bellport. The move the surprised no one. After attending a party at Calvin Klein's house with hundreds of other hangers on, Mario bragged that "faces you've never seen before" had been at the exclusive A-list soiree.
When Thom took over responsibility for the lease toward the end of our tenure in the Muller Cottage, he scraped the bottom of the barrel for new housemates, narrowing his criteria to anyone who could write a check. Stanley, a garmento, claimed to be dieting and started every day with an enormous smoothie. That didn't stop him from chowing down on everyone else's meals.
Chris, through his DC connections, delivered Brad, a Holly Golightly type, who would be gone by the end of the summer. I'm not proud to admit I was a little annoyed when we scheduled the same vacation week at the house in August, but he proved that joie de vivre can get you through almost anything, even HIV-related blindness.
Through Brad, Chris got to know Jamie. They stayed in touch after we lost Brad.
AIDS cast such a long shadow in the Pines but the community rose to the moment in style. We could see the Pink Umbrellas benefit next door from our deck in 1995. I later discovered that the poster commemorating the DIFFA event, which listed deceased residents, included Paul Wilson, the Irish hunk who introduced David and I to the Pines in 1983.
Keith, a trusts and estates attorney, came aboard via more classified advertising. He and Chris quickly became besties. Jerry said Keith gave "ready to wear" a whole new meaning. He literally never removed his Bowdoin sweatshirt, even when he slept.
We used to run as far as Davis Park on the beach and play kidema. He belonged to a sister house where Chris knew people, too.
Including Randy, then known as the "Mayor of the Pines," because he gave "good dock" and knew EVERYBODY. We eventually poached him for our house. He did more than anyone to fill future vacancies.
A changing cast of boyfriends also helped keep the house full. Thom and Mark, for example.
And then Thom and Joe who HATED the Pines but who loved Thom enough to allow him to spend all his summers there without him.
John burned like a Roman candle with Anthony but he didn't last much longer. I will never forget what a homeless man said when I met them outside the Felt Forum for a Cher concert: "He sucks on that cigarette just like a woman!"
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Ron, Rob & Harley |
There were other guests, too. Inviting straight friends and colleagues to the Pines reduced the awkwardness of coming out. Christine stopped by on her way to the 1992 Democratic Convention. We worked together at the National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, where she lobbied Congress.