Chapter 6 Charles
Keating written
Don’t get set for a big revelation – it was nothing but a
visit. But the fact that he took the time, effort to see me I find
remarkable; this is a distinguished actor, a type like Richard Burton, & he
visited me based on one thing, a picture I sent him of MY FACE. {So much for my family making me feel UGLY!}
That’s part of the phenomenon. Usually men went ga-ga over
my BODY as it was/is extraordinary, but this did not show it, only the face. If
I can conjure up where I put it, I will feature it here, but if I can’t find
that particular image & can find one facial shot from the same set, I’ll
substitute that.
It went like this. I was bored & downhearted. When that
happens I usually go on a binge watching something special on TV or when my
eyes were good {eventually I went half blind until I had surgery}, went binge
reading, hours a day.
At this time there was Brideshead revisited. Can’t recall
if I had VIDEOS or if it was on regular TV each day – Brideshead was first aired
in 1981 – was it then or were there reruns, because down this chapter I explain
talking to him about my mail-order business, & that didn’t start until
1987.
Why did I send Charles my 8X10 pic & a fan letter? I
was impressed by him & his portrayal of an American businessman married to
the female star. His character: Rex Mottram. Here’s a rundown of his career
from Wikipedia:
UK
career[edit]
He appeared
with the Royal Shakespeare Company at Stratford-upon-Avon before turning to
television (he was in the pilot episode of the long-running ITV series Crown Court in 1972), winning the
roles of Ernest Simpson in Edward & Mrs. Simpson and Rex
Mottram in ITV's Brideshead Revisited.[1] In
1978 on the BBC Shakespeare series, he played the role of
US career[edit]
Television/soap operas[edit]
He is best
known for his role as Carl Hutchins in the American soap opera Another World from 1983–85, and
again from 1991-98 with a final appearance in 1999. He played also Charles in
the satirical miniseries Fresno in 1986, which parodied the
prime-time soaps of the day such as Dynasty and Dallas.[citation needed]
After Another
World ended its run, he returned to stage acting and to Shakespeare in
a two-person show with former Another World co-star Victoria Wyndham.[5][6][7]
During 2001
and 2002, Charles played the part of James Richfield on Port Charles.
In between
stints on Another World, he played Dr. Damon Lazarre on All My Children,
and Niles Mason on As the World Turns. He also had a role as a
professor at a Caribbean medical school that catered to Americans in the
short-lived ABC sitcom Going to Extremes as well as a
guest role on Sex and the City.[citation needed]
Feature films[edit]
In 1992, he
appeared in The Bodyguard. In 2005, he had a
supporting role in Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo.[8]
Theatre[edit]
Broadway
roles include Loot by Joe Orton (1986),
for which he was nominated for a Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in
a Play,[citation needed] The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui (1968)
and The House of Atreus (1968), which comprised three
classics: Agamemnon, Choephori,
and Eumenides.[9]
In 2001, he
played the role of Carney/Oscar Wilde in the Lincoln Center performance
of A Man of No Importance.
In 2007, he played the role of Clement O'Donnell in the Guthrie Theater production
of Brian Friel's The Home Place.[10]
Awards[edit]
At the 23rd Daytime Emmy Awards, Keating won the
1995 Daytime Emmy
Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series for his
performance in the role of Carl Hutchins on Another World.[citation needed]
Death[edit]
Keating died
of lung cancer at the age of 72 on
For what it’s worth, I’ll tell my story. So I am interested
in this wonderful man & send him the parcel. He calls & tells me he
usually doesn’t respond to fan letters, but this was special!
I’m a nervous wreck. I make an appt to meet at ‘Kellogs
Diner,’ on the corner of
It was twilight, late afternoon. I put on my favorite
magenta soft knitted dress with the rhinestone clasp on the shoulder, the
material gathered there. Put on a good, long, wavy honey blonde wig, high heels
& voila. On the other side of the
I recall the meeting with a bit of embarrassment, as he did
not even TRY to make a play for me, in fact, he said,
“Don’t touch me - my wife can SMELL YOU”
as he sat on my fold-out couch/bed in my living room,
puffing grass. What was his wife, a
BLOODHOUND? Jeez, never heard of a wife
SMELLING another woman on her husband’s body!
I drank the champagne & we both talked – me & my
BIG MOUTH. All I did was BRAG about my business, how much money I was making,
how EASY it was for me to make a living from my fan base – men bought objects
from me like used clothing etc. {Mostly underwear, bras & panties, but I
didn’t tell him that.} Men bought my pictures – hundreds of them – for $5 each
& my videos, some cost $120. & they went like HOTCAKES!
But the reason I talked & bragged so much was nerves. I
knew I had to keep my celibacy, I promised it to Our Holy Mother. And what if
he tried something & I had to say no? And WTF did I invite him over for,
then? He was a sexy, handsome man - Stressful.
And besides that, he was a star of formidable talent – I felt insecure.
He asked me what I thought of the gay guy portrayal on
Brideshead – I thought he was great.
He spoke of his career & how when he had to do some
narrating on PBS there was no script & he had to ‘wing it.’ It seemed he
was used to scripts & this was a challenge.
Our conversation went on about two hours & he had to
go. I walked with him downstairs to wait for his car – it took quite a while.
He said the word ‘pissed’ a couple times it was taking so long. I felt he was
projecting, that he was actually pissed because we didn’t have sex – but that
could be my paranoia. It’s querulous.
And I can’t recall much else, just to this day amazed a
great man came all the way out to meet me from a picture of my FACE! {End Chapter 6}
Chapter 7
Robert Culp & Bill Cosby written
I wish I could remember how, when & where I met Robert
Culp but I can’t. All I remember is we had sex – and we never did sex again,
but for a short time communicated.
As I think back to those times, I neglected the guys that
were great & went out of my way for the trouble makers. Underneath my conscious mind I probably
wanted relationships to fail so I could be free & unattached for God – but
that’s easy to see now, not so then.
He
took me to a restaurant where the owner stood in front & decided who could
come in or not – he favored celebrities - called ‘Dominics.’ We went in &
Ben Gazzara came to talk to us & was impressed by my looks.
Robert
had a big house, & on the grounds was a guest house inhabited by Sammy
Davis Jr. My gf Tarita & visited– she had huge implants. Robert asked us
both to show Sammy our breasts – his jaw dropped.
That’s all I can recall except this:
It was
either 1968 or “69 while they were producing ‘Bob & Carol & Ted &
Alice.’ I called Bob & he invited me
to the set & talked a lot about his involvement. He was over the top with
this machine where you could put each day’s work into a small thingy with
screen & review it. You could then
see what was right or wrong & make corrections.
He
was disappointed that Natalie Wood wouldn’t go topless! I saw in the movie Dyan
Cannon did go topless – she had a great thin little body. But Natalie was
embarrassed for being flat chested or else thought she was too big a star.
Now
my part. Bob wanted me in the movie, he said, in a scene where I walk into a
Vegas Club on the arm of Bill Cosby. He introduced me to the producer or
casting man or whatever he was, a young whipper snapper, & suggested it,
but the guy turned me down.
Bob
said,
“Look
at her body!’
But
the youngster said,
‘We’re
looking for faces now.’
Here’s
the rub. I was then involved with that frightful Putz NutOn & he insisted I
WEAR NO MAKEUP. So I didn’t. And no woman looks her best without makeup! In
This
man could not see past a mask – he could not imagine that with grooming –
makeup I’d look as good as anyone for the movie.
But
in retrospect I am thinking,
“What
if I’d been in the movie on the arm of Bill Cosby? What if he had lured me to that room behind
the big hotel where he took many females, drugged me & had his way?”
Indeed,
Bill did see me & asked,
“Will
you go out with me?”
And
I turned him down because of Bob. If I’d
been ‘on his arm’ in a scene there could have been involvement, to my
detriment. God or my Guardian Angels might have been protecting me by keeping me
out of that movie.
I
believe so. Let me channel:
ME: Mother God, what would have happened had I
been in that scene, anything bad?
MG: There is a STRONG CHANCE something dire could have happened, we did not want you I harm’s way, so the best thing was for you to exit the scene.
Oh
yes, one more memory. Bob proved to me
that Bill was very generous. They were exchanging presents for Xmas or
something & Bill gave him a gold lighter. Bob wanted to reciprocate as to
how much he should spend on Bill & he went to the store it was bought –
Dunhills in Bevery Hills - & asked the price. It was $2,500. Yiikes!!
I
have another anecdote re Dunhills – which was/is a super exclusive store.
When
I left my Dad in B’klyn with just a note,
‘Going
modeling for the weekend, don’t worry about me.’
&
took off by car with a man to
I appeared
at Dunhills – they had a lunch counter where I used to stop once in a while, &
I wanted to buy Dad a gift. Dad used an old fashioned brush & face soap for
shaving – like they had in 1901, & it was worn out.
They
had those kind things at Dunhills, I bought him a set, & years later when I
went back to NY he was still using it & said when he received it,
‘I realized you weren’t so bad.’
This is re Robert Culp from Wikipedia:
Robert Martin Culp (August 16, 1930 – March 24, 2010) was an
American actor widely known for his work in television.[2] Culp earned an international reputation for
his role as Kelly Robinson on I Spy (1965–1968), the espionage television series in which co-star Bill Cosby and he played secret agents. Before this, he starred in the CBS/Four Star Western series Trackdown as Texas Ranger Hoby Gilman in 71 episodes from 1957 to 1959.
The 1980s brought him back to television as FBI Agent Bill Maxwell on The Greatest
American Hero. Later, he had a recurring role as Warren Whelan
on Everybody Loves
Raymond.[3] Culp gave hundreds of performances in a
career spanning more than 50 years. {End Chapter
7}