Very late the ‘Hero’

Drunk and disorderly, I burned bridges and killed valuable friendships with crazy attitudes, sharp words and harsh actions. (Don’t fret: I’ve been clean for over twenty years.) A casualty of the fallout, JR and I haven’t spoken or crossed paths since the early 80s, but I recently remembered him and Hero at Large. One of a handful of sleepy efforts that failed to elevate John Ritter from TV to movie star, it undoubtedly struck my optimistic friend with its Capra-esque story of a down-on-his-luck actor (Ritter) who disguises himself as a comic book superhero to stamp out crime and denounce cynical posturing in New York City.
It’s a modest feel-good movie steeped in the low rent district of late 70s American cinema. (The director was Martin Davidson, of the shrill Lords of Flatbush.) Poised somewhat awkwardly as cuddly beefcake, the frequently bare-chested Ritter doesn’t overplay things as he did on Three’s Company, and Anne Archer fits nicely into the Jean Arthur part. A soft-spoken and squinty-eyed beauty who should’ve been the next Angie Dickinson, Archer was 33-years-old at the time, a veteran of TV guest spots, Chuck Norris’s Good Guys Wear Black and Sylvester Stallone’s Paradise Alley (both in 1978). By 1987 she’d be in her first megahit, preposterously miscast as Michael Douglas’s wife in Fatal Attraction (1987). Why Douglas would cheat on her for the comparatively gamy Glenn Close remains a riddle of the ages.
The one bizarre aspect of Hero at Large is its sundry connections to Taxi Driver (!). Two radically different sides of the same coin, both pictures are about nobodies cleaning up the streets. However, I doubt that director Davidson or screenwriter A.J. Carothers (fresh off the Disney payroll) were responsible for inserting these scattered references to Schrader and Scorsese’s urban nightmare: Ritter is a part-time hack driving a Yellow Checker cab; both films have loving exterior shots of the late Belmore Cafeteria, a famous cabbie hangout (“I once went there at about 2am,” remembers Nelhydrea Paupér, “and suddenly felt like I was tripping…weird place”); street drummer Gene Palma — he of the slick, black-dyed hair and heavily-blushed cheeks — appears in both; as does Leonard Harris, then the movie critic on WCBS-TV in New York, who played Senator Palantine in Taxi Driver and the Mayor in Hero at Large, his only two acting credits.
Above all else, Hero at Large was filmed on the streets of the Manhattan that transfixed me throughout the 70s. Beginning in 1969, my older sister acclimated me to the place and had me stay at her apartment on weekends, away from our parent’s cushy Long Island digs. I was hitting the DVD freeze-frame to savor the storefronts and buildings long since hit by the wrecking ball, and to look at the occasional passerby staring directly into the camera. Plus, those fleeting shots of faces from long ago: Rolland Smith, Penny Crone, John Roland — mainstays on local TV before cable reformatted syndication into soulless superstations. The last time I was in New York was five years ago and, by and large, the place seemed colder, detached and beyond my comprehension — Blade Runner territory. I really have no interest is going back, whereas, thirty-five years ago, you couldn’t keep me away.
Update by Nelhydrea Paupér: Busker Do!
I used to see Gene Palma around on 6th Ave. He was a truly scary looking guy. Not only the pomade but also the tons of red stuff (rouge?) on his cheeks. He looked like he himself was a Travis Bickle waiting to explode.
There was also an old bearded, disheveled man — what we used to call a bum — on the lower east side near the Bowery, who slowly moved up and down the street (maybe east 3rd or 4th St?) with two sticks tapping them on the street, slowly waving his hands in the air, bringing one stick down at a time, as if in a dance. He would do it all day long. On one hand you could say he was just crazy. But it really seemed like it was his art form. He lived each day giving this performance for hours. It was quite remarkable. This was in the early '70s.
I remember the Flying Rabbi. He rolled his upright piano over to Washington Square, located himself under the arch and played glistening arpeggios (i.e. muzak). Some (all?) of the keys were covered with strips of red velvet.
One of the most famous was Moondog, who left NYC and moved to Germany where he became a very highly respected composer. He married a German woman who took care of him (he was blind) and helped create a career that allowed him to write and have his works performed by symphony orchestras. There's a recent bio of him I'd love to read.
A documentary on these guys would be wonderful. I would give anything to see them all again. But I doubt there's very much existing footage and I assume they're all dead now. A real shame.
Funny, I can relate to these guys better than just about anything I see going on today in the arts.
There was also an old bearded, disheveled man — what we used to call a bum — on the lower east side near the Bowery, who slowly moved up and down the street (maybe east 3rd or 4th St?) with two sticks tapping them on the street, slowly waving his hands in the air, bringing one stick down at a time, as if in a dance. He would do it all day long. On one hand you could say he was just crazy. But it really seemed like it was his art form. He lived each day giving this performance for hours. It was quite remarkable. This was in the early '70s.
I remember the Flying Rabbi. He rolled his upright piano over to Washington Square, located himself under the arch and played glistening arpeggios (i.e. muzak). Some (all?) of the keys were covered with strips of red velvet.
One of the most famous was Moondog, who left NYC and moved to Germany where he became a very highly respected composer. He married a German woman who took care of him (he was blind) and helped create a career that allowed him to write and have his works performed by symphony orchestras. There's a recent bio of him I'd love to read.
A documentary on these guys would be wonderful. I would give anything to see them all again. But I doubt there's very much existing footage and I assume they're all dead now. A real shame.
Funny, I can relate to these guys better than just about anything I see going on today in the arts.
Labels: Capsule reviews, Gene Palma, Une affaire de Flickhead



14 Comments:
I sure as hell never got the Glenn Close thing either in Fatal Attraction. I could see it if Close had been the wife and Archer the lover. But anyway...
I haven't been to New York in about two years but (and I didn't live there like you) all in all it had the same feel for me. I still think it's one of the great cities.
And I've never seen this whole movie. I remember watching parts of it here and there on cable and liking it enough but I don't think I ever caught it from beginning to end. Perhaps that will now change.
A few weeks ago I was compelled to take another look at HERO AT LARGE as well and it made me think about the NY that is no longer there, along with its surprising TAXI DRIVER connections. That old New York is definitely missed by me as well.
http://mrpeelsardineliqueur.blogspot.com/2008/08/sustaining-character.html
I grew up with New York movies like "Andy", and "You're a Big Boy Now", and those many, many, films that showed a kind of New York that maybe was, and probably is no longer. When I saw "Across 110th Street", I knew it was too late to catch the firefly, it was gone and wasn't coming back. Never have gotten out that way, so I prolly wouldn't recognize much from the films, other than large objects - the cabs are gone, the buses are gone, hell, the old pushcarts are gone, all replaced by "new and improved" specimens. Just where HAS Joe DiMaggio gone? Certainly not transposed into John Ritter. Anne Archer - she's approaching the cruelly wasted career level of Stella Stevens, sadly, 'cause even tho she's a kool-aid drinking candidate, she's always been a stylish and elegant addition to any film she's in - made Glenn Close look like gargoyle, that's a fact.
I look at the film artifacts of youth and I know how rapidly the decay of my imaged reality is - "Bus Stop", with poor Norma Jean, was filled with exteriors of the pseudo Vickys and Annies of the old downtown residential area of Phoenix; well do I remember the march of every year as a little boy, watching those very buildings vanish. When I finally watched "Bus Stop" some years later I was jolted by seeing those ghosts. My Dad said, "You don't know the half of it, son." I miss the clarity of those days, when I was sure every little thing would stay the same, and I'd be able to come back by and re-live 'em whenever I wanted. Oh, what the hell...it was only my whole past.
Thanks all. Van: beautifully put. Pair Across 110th Street with The Sweet Smell of Success for a double whammy. No Virgin Megastore or Hard Rock Cafes in those Manhattans. (And in our present, no Virgin Megastore, period: they're either closed or are closing.) James Wong Howe reminds me: NYC should never be in color.
"A cookie full of arsenic" and Tony Franciosa's grinning ghoul in one sitting? The top of your head might blow off. One was the Rock, and the other was what crawled out when you kicked it over, a nice example of the Big Apple dichotomy, your're right. I always viewed the New York of my mind in Cornell Woolrich terms, altho not quite as much black on the canvas, and I'm sure it's because of Howe and other imagers invaded my brain.
If you want to read a good story about returning to one's roots and finding they've gone to hell, altho it's not NYC, try "Briarpatch", by Ross Thomas.
Hmmm...I'm intrigued. I'll grab a copy of "Briarpatch" as I waltz into darkness...
"Gene Krupa!" "Louie Belson!" "Buddy Rich!" He'd call out the name of a famous drummer then play a signature lick.
I saw the drummer man many times on the streets of NYC, at the end he was drumming on a green mail box because someone had stolen his snare drum. The Drummer Man was homeless, wandering mid-town with a bunch of sticks.
Joe D
Thanks for posting my photo
You can see more images of Times Square and more here:
http://www.birchlane.net/NotThereAnymore.htm
Bruce
Bruce, endless thanks for the url. There are some extraordinary images of the New York I remember. Just twenty-five years ago, it seems (and looks) like a lifetime has gone by. There are dozens of memories in so many of your shots -- THANK YOU.
Gene Palma never wore rouge and he never hung around midtown. Gene lived on 8th ave in a group home and would not venture north of 23rd going only as far as the twin doughnut on 23rd and 8th. He used boot black on his hair and he was not scary at all. He was actually a nice man.
In the early 80's I worked around 57th an 8th, and always saw Gene Palma around lunchtime. And he did wear rouge.
I never knew who he was, and at one time thought he might be Gene Krupa himself. Wasn't till the internet did I find out it wasn't Gene Krupa LOL.
Do you suppose he's still alive ?
He was entertaining.
I too photographed Gene Palma in my bathroom at the Chelsea Hotel circa 1987/88.What a genuine
New York City character.He carried around his resume which consisted of a crooked beat up piece of cardboard with names of Talk shows and sessions he had done..written in magic marker.He lived at St.Francis House at the time..maybe some kind of a christian based shelter.He also used shoe polish in his hair...."like rudy Valentino" as he told me. How can i p[ost my image of him?
Blobs, you're more than welcome to post your image(s) of Gene on my blog. Please send jpegs to me at
flickhead@comcast.net
...or, if the images are already stored online, send me the url.
I can add your image(s) to this post; I can put up a new post with your image(s); or I can do both.
"A documentary on these guys would be wonderful. I would give anything to see them all again. But I doubt there's very much existing footage and I assume they're all dead now."
I don't agree with that...think of how many rolls of film were shot there, no to mention how many movies were filmed there. There has to be thousands of feet of footage of those guys. Question is, who the hell knows where it is? Was the Taxi Driver scene done in one shot, or is there tons of footage in the vaults? The world will never know...
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