Thursday, October 04, 2007

A NEW YORK NIGHT



Every blue moon, I have that perfect Manhattan night – I call it a “Carrie Bradshaw” moment - that reminds me of what a magical city I live in.


Let me explain:

Last evening, I attended a memorial service for downtown legend Dean Johnson. For those not in the know, Dean was a six-foot-six bald headed part-time club promoter, part-time prostitute, part- time rock star and full-time nice guy who died mysteriously from a drug overdose while trafficking a group of prostitute twinks to a wealthy closet case Saudi in Washington DC.

Yes, truth is stranger than fiction.

Dean would have been happy with the turn out. Past and present downtown royalty held court in his honor. Seen mingling were Rupaul, Lady Bunny, Debbie Harry, David Bowie, the cast of Shortbus.. .and a slew of aging club kids from my Limelight and Tunnel past. Oh, and a chubby and very aged Lady Miss Kier from Deelite.

Amidst all of this downtown glamour, I noticed a pudgy-faced sweat suit clad soccer mom yelling my name.

Who was this woman?

It was an old makeup artist nemesis from Minneapolis who I had not seen in years. Turns out she was in town shooting a catalog for Kohl’s. The stylist (a former go-go boy I knew from my Club USA days) had taken her to this event.

While I tried to listen to the many mourners who shared twisted tales of Dean’s infamous lifestyle, she bored me with pictures of her cross-eyed kid and tales of small town life. After a few beers, she suddenly turned ugly and accused me of sabotaging her career. Apparently, 14 years earlier I had called her clients in Minneapolis and had her blacklisted. My friends were rather shocked at her accusations and were anxious to hear my response. Now I had no memory of doing this, and quite frankly, I hate being blamed for things that I wish I had done in the first place.

I looked her dead in the eye and said: "Yeah, I did it and I'd do it again."

I guess it will be another 14 years before I talk to her again.

After a few more air kisses and stabs in the back, we headed to Mary Ann’s – a dive Mexican restaurant –and drank margs and nibbled nachos and talked about the good old bad days of clubbing in the East Village.

When my buddies taxied home, I was far from tired - and feeling fat from my Mexican feast - I decided to hit the gym. And yes, it was my lucky night – the kick boxer in all his muscled sweaty glory was pounding the bag, and, of course, he ignored me.

Oh, the magic of Manhattan.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

quite frankly, I hate being blamed for things that I wish I had done in the first place.



the bitch is back! excellent blog!

Anonymous said...

Love what the New York Times said about Dean and the memorial:

"Dean was part of the last hurrahs of reckless abandonment and fun before the scene turned into models and bottles."

THE ORAL REPORTER said...

Who would have guessed that Dean's death would make the New York Times!!

I agree, Dean was part of scene that no longer exists - freakish underground glamour has been replaced with boring models and wall-streeters and bottle service.

Anonymous said...

new york sucks now - all the jersey trash and tourists and the super rich have turned the city into a disney theme park. i miss the muggings, drugs and sense of style and adventure. you go MM.

THE ORAL REPORTER said...

I'm feeling ya - I hate the fat tourists and Jersey trash, too.

Anonymous said...

Honey, honey, honey.....about the kick-boxer: did ya try dropping your glove at his feet? Ya know what they say; sometimes the oldest tricks are the best. ;)