[This note dates from a month ago; I haven't been keeping up with this cross-posing business very well.]
My brushes with celebrities have been few and far between. We were on the East Side the other week, walking past the Campbell funeral home, and I thought someone hip must have died—I’ve never seen so many hipsters in ties smoking outside of here. And then, lo and behold as we turned onto Madison, there were Bruce Springsteen and Patti Scialfa loading themselves into a big black SUV, presumably for the ride back to New Jersey, or perhaps the interment.
The one that sticks in my mind happened in Orono, Maine, at the National Poetry Foundation “American Poetry in the Fifties” conference a bit over twenty years ago. I was in a crowded room, with far too many academics and poets and far too much booze, amusedly watching a Hugh MacDiarmid scholar hitting on an avant-garde poet, when someone poked me and said, “Look, there’s Becky!”
He pointed at a young blonde woman across the room, conversing intently with a knot of poet-types. Yes, I said, she looks exactly like Becky, the older daughter in Roseanne. “No,” said my friend, “that is Becky. That’s the actress. She’s in college now, and she’s interested in Beat Poetry. So she came up to Orono to hang out with Beat Poets, and learn stuff.”
So I looked things up (harder then in those pre-Wikipedia days), and found that Lecy Goranson was indeed an undergrad at Vassar, an English major no less. Good for her, I thought at the time—and a good choice of conferences to attend. The MLA, for instance, would be just the place to kill dead any young person’s passionate interest in contemporary writing.* But the Orono conferences—free-wheeling interactions of living poets, critics, theorists, places where at times one could see literary history actually in the making—that’s something else altogether.
Looking forward to being in Maine next week, in short. Keeping my eyes open for celebrities!
*I’ve been to plenty of MLAs, and had just wonderful (and abysmally awful) times—but the ambient job-market angst and savage careerism on display... well...
11 comments:
Very nice and informative post
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"I love how casual celebrity encounters can feel! It's funny how you never expect to see someone famous in everyday settings."
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I love how you described the hipster crowd outside the funeral home. That was a great observation. It really added a unique touch to the story!
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It’s fascinating how a chance encounter with celebrities can change the entire vibe of a place. Great storytelling!
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I was half-expecting a dramatic reveal of a celebrity, and you didn't disappoint! That moment with Bruce and Patti sounds like it was a film scene in real life.
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Orono, Maine? That sounds like a place where unexpected things happen! Meeting Becky there must have been a bit of a surprise, too.
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The way you describe the academic scene is spot on. It's funny how conferences like those can get so chaotic and strange!
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I really enjoyed the imagery of Bruce Springsteen and Patti Scialfa loading into the SUV. It paints such a vivid picture!
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This is a great example of how sometimes, celebrity moments aren’t as glamorous as we imagine, but they’re still memorable.
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I think we all have a celebrity encounter story like this hidden somewhere. I love the casual way you share your experience—it feels so relatable.
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It’s amazing how you captured the chaos and the charm of these random moments with celebrities. I would have loved to be there!
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