My Friend JoAnne |
I’ll start there.
As the MC of an Anniversary Show last Saturday night for CSL-LA, I got the honor of introducing my friend Joanne Worley to those gathered. This is perhaps the easiest job any master of ceremonies could have. Everyone knows Joanne Worley, especially this audience. It happens to be the congregation of the church we both attend. Although I will claim to have known JoAnne several decades others have known her much longer than me. So I decide to tell the story of how Joanne and I met as part of her introduction.
I have told it many times since it happened in 1978 but I have never told it from stage before. I did write about it in this blog 7 years ago, here is a link to that story. My introductory version at the Anniversary Show was somewhat abbreviated.
You never forget a story when there is a foreign militiaman holding an automatic weapon on you and has taken possession of your passport. It was also the first time I had ever been on a cruise ship, and the first time I was cast in an actual film. I don’t remember much about the plot of the movie, nor much of the cruise itself, and I don’t think I even read the entire script. I was playing the part of a ship entertainer with a few scenes that connected my act to the mystery plot of the film. I have never seen it, if it was ever indeed released - even for television. There is a reference to the movie on my IMDB but it also says it was an animated feature with other actors that I have never met.
It was a somewhat hap hazzard production. They had not taken into account the electrical needs of all the lights and cameras which put a big strain on the aging ship. There was always the fear that the next take would blow up the ships generator. It was comforting to hear the director yell “cut” instead of hearing a loud explosion from the engine room.
All of that is really irrelevant to my meeting JoAnne that morning. She got the cruise director who eventually got me on the boat and released from dockside detainment. If I had never seen JoAnne again after that she would still be my nautical heroine forever.
So, I tell this story to introduce JoAnne and was pleased it got some laughs. JoAnne of course was her charming, bubbly self on stage, the night of out church show, singing parodies and yes even doing ventriloquism with a puppet chicken during her act. JoAnne can command a stage and control an audience in a way that only comes from her incredible talent and years of experience.
Ah, but every great story has an unexpected twist. Some twists take 40 years in the reveal.
At this show was the wife of a church member. She said she was a fan of JoAnne and me and had been for a very long time. She always wanted to tell us her story. This is what she said.
At this show was the wife of a church member. She said she was a fan of JoAnne and me and had been for a very long time. She always wanted to tell us her story. This is what she said.
At 12 years old her parents wanted to take her on vacation. They chose to join the passengers of the Marconi with an ocean cruise from New York to Santo Domingo and back. It just happened that this was the very cruise I would join mid way through to shoot the movie with JoAnne. She vaguely remembers a scuffle at the dock in Santo Domingo but didn’t realize I was the instigation of that affair.
When she figured out a movie was being made on the ship, she became fascinated by the process of film production. She followed the crew from set up to set up and watched every take. She lost interest in all the official ship board activities and preferred to spend the days at sea watching grips and electricians make movie magic. It was a turning point in her life. She said, “That is the moment I realized I wanted to be in that business.” She is now a successful union card holding movie crew member.
She said, “When I heard you and JoAnne were going to be here together, I wanted to tell you how much you changed my life.” Then she said, “I can’t believe you told that very story tonight.” To be perfectly honest, I can’t believe I told that particular story either. We took a picture of the three of us to commemorate the evening.
The legendary Marconi cruise proves:
Life is an Adventure and the definition of and Adventure is: An experience for which the outcome is unknown. We never know exactly what will happen at the next moment of our lives nor how it might change us forever. The moral here is, make every moment count.
As you were,
Jay
Great story and great flashback.
ReplyDeleteGreat memory! Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing this wonderful story! What a wonderful circle of life!
ReplyDelete