Once upon a time, I treated a friend to a Sunday matinee performance of a one-man play, an adaptation of P.G. Wodehouse stories called Jeeves Takes Charge, at Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C. I believe it was the last performance of the run.
As I settled into the second-to-last row of the balcony, I looked through the program to see who this guy is, Edward Duke. The bio indicated that he was about my brother's age. I looked at his picture. That is, I gazed, sort of dumb-struck, at his picture. Goggly-eyed, don't you know.
Only one word popped into my head as the lights dimmed. "Perfect." I was in love before he even set foot on the stage.
"Jeeves Takes Charge" program insert:
program page:
program page:
program page:
program page:
The show was promoted as a one-man, two-act, 12-character, award-winning comedy tour-de-force. How this actor could embody all of these characters was beyond comprehension, but his delivery of Wodehouse's words was a revelation. It was the characters and the words that I grew to love after the show was over.
As Jeeves, the brainy cove who eats fish ("from the collar upward, he stands alone") Edward must have been brainy himself, I reasoned. As Bertie, the fat-headed goof, always getting himself unfortunately engaged and wearing inappropriate socks, he was just plain adorable.
But back in the olden days, the 1980s, there was no Internet to help in chasing after an idol. Frankly, I don't know how I ever got tidbits about where he was or what he was doing. So I ended up concentrating mainly on P.G. Wodehouse and reading all of the Jeeves stories I could get my hands on.
When that was done, my mind kept turning to the man who embodied all the best of Bertie Wooster and his man Jeeves. I wrote short skits and scenarios of the characters, taking them to places of my own romantic invention.
And when I was done with that, I still needed to connect with the source of these inspirations: Edward Duke. In my most professional big-girl voice, I called a professional theater guild (it might have been Actor's Equity, but I don't remember now. Perhaps Screen Actor's Guild) and asked for the membership department. I asked for the mailing address of one of their members, Edward Duke, and received the information with professional courtesy. (I later learned that whoever gave me that information probably should have been fired. I tried asking the same question again another time and was rebuffed when I confessed I was not a member myself.)
So with an address to write to, I wrote my fan letters to Edward. I wrote about how he inspired me and how talented he was and all that. I don't know how many letters I wrote - enough to run out of topics, I'm sure! It was a little like writing to Santa Claus - since I didn't think he was really receiving the letters, I could say pretty much what I wanted. But after a year and a half, I gave up. It was rather silly, I knew.
But then, out of nowhere, I received this in the mail:
autographed publicity pic:
A simple autographed photo. My prized possession! I showed it to everyone I knew and laughed when they all asked me, "Which one is Edward Duke?" He's both, of course, My hero, my ideal man, with Jeeves's brains and Bertie's heart.
It was staggering to realize he must have actually read my fan letters - or some of them, anyway.
After I got his autographed picture, I was so thrilled and inspired, I wrote a novel "based" on what I thought he might be like (a romantic, wise, handsome hero, of course). I actually sent him the novel, and a year later, when he came back to D.C. in another show, he called me at work and invited me to attend that evening's performance as his guest!
I had heard from a friend that he was touring in a musical based on the strained relationship between Gilbert and Sullivan; Edward played the chowder-headed Alfred, son of Queen Victoria, who was enchanted by the theatre. His character gets to have a walk-on role in "The Mikado" and carries around an enormous bamboo parasol.
Sullivan and Gilbert handbill:
"Backstage, what? How very ... theatrical!"
After the show, I was to go backstage and meet Edward! Can you imagine how through-the-roof I was? In a daze, I wandered through the downstairs abyss that is the Opera House {correction: it was the Eisenhower. ~h} backstage at Kennedy Center, staggered through the dressing room areas, then saw my Edward, sitting on a bench and putting on his shoe.
Beside him were two young fan-boy boyfriends (stereotypically gay enough even to tip me off). Edward was gracious but flamboyant. Okay, I had to change my mind about who I thought he was! But I never stopped loving him.
After the run of Sullivan and Gilbert ended, Edward stayed on in D.C. to reprise Jeeves. ("My cheap little show," as he called it.) I met him in his dressing room each time I went - three or four times during that run. He gave me the window poster for Jeeves' limited engagement at Ford that year. He also gave me a publicity photo of himself taken at the age of 18. (Sorry, no scan of that. Personal treasure.)
At one point, he complained to me bitterly about the staid Washington audiences. "You have to jump through hoops for a standing ovation!" I then sent him this little doodle to cheer him up:
My cartoon for Edward:
After these encounters, and meeting him with yet another of his fan-boyfriends, I felt that I knew who Edward Duke really was, and loved him even more. I was inspired to write another play, this one about an actor dying of AIDS and the fan who loved and cared for him. I sent that to him too.
When I went to see him again a few years later, in another play (Private Lives, ironically, with Joan Collins), he gave me the biggest, warmest, lovingest hug. Then he said, "You wrote a play ... about me!!!" Since my hero dies of AIDS, I said, "I hope not!"
Edward Duke and Joan Collins, Private Lives:
I had sent him flowers backstage, and chocolates (which he gave to Joan, "she's mad about chocolate"), and he said I was the only one who remembered him. He seemed sad, or just tired. Then he invited me to hang out in his dressing room for the Saturday matinee, which I did. And after that show, I got to walk out of the stage door of the National Theatre (the same one Clay Aiken exited earlier this year after performing the song "Sarah" at the gala for Ford's), and was at his side when other fans begged for his autograph.... I felt so special to be his lady friend!
National Theatre backstage, Edward Duke dressing as "Victor" in Private Lives:
National Theatre, Edward Duke with fans:
Two years later, a friend called to tell me she just read his obituary in the New York Times. He'd died of AIDS at the age of 40. I never stopped loving him. He inspired me, and he genuinely seemed to love having me for a fan.
Edward Duke, February 1992:
This is how I respond to Clay Aiken's soul-baring experience. People need to get over the idea that only romantic love counts. Love is like water - it finds its own level and its own journey. My romantic fantasies, of course, will change. But my love for Edward, for Clay, and for anyone else who wiggles his way into my life for the better - that won't ever change. Not from this. Not even close.
Private Lives? Privacy? We wonder what those things are anymore. It was instructive for me to learn about my heroes' private lives; it allowed me to understand more about them. It makes me sad that Clay had to provide a glimpse of his private life in order for the rest of the world to achieve this understanding.
love, hosaa,
Not hero-worshipping. Hero-loving.
Wonderful blog hossa and what a wonderful loving memory!
ReplyDeletecaper
I absolutely loved this blog. How lucky you were to have met your hero. Thank you for sharing the story with us.
ReplyDeleteCindy
Terrific Blog hosaa.
ReplyDeleteWhat a lovely story - thank you for sharing it. I was lucky enough to be Edward's dresser in "Jeeves Takes Charge" (well, one of them, at any rate - I wasn't with the show for the entire tour, and in fact I was a replacement for someone else. Anyway....) For some reason I was thinking about him today, and that's how I stumbled on your blog. So glad you got to meet him and have a fan/friendship with him. He really was "all that."
ReplyDeleteDan, thank you for posting! Please check out my latest Edward Duke post (in honor of his birthday) at http://hosaasblog.blogspot.com/2012/06/as-read-by-edward-duke.html
ReplyDeleteI just found that - thank you SO much!! (I also found a used copy of the audiobook online - it's on its way to me!). I literally have tears streaming down my face at the sound of dear old friend's voice. It's funny, I only saw the show once from the audience's perspective - but I'd love to see it (and him) again. It was all very sudden and spontaneous how I got to be his dresser - but literally the first time I met him, I got to take his clothes off! Funny story for you: as kind and sweet and funny as he was, he could also be.....well, you might remember toward the end of the show, there was an insanely fast costume change which involved me changing his coat AND his shoes (switching them from regular shoed to his tap shoes). He was always stressed that it wouldn't happen fast enough, so he come off stage in character, immediately start cursing at me in ways I'd never heard before or since - really, really vulgar and nasty - then snap right back into character. After the first couple of performances he apologized but it was so clear that it was just the stress of the moment - life upon the wicked stage, and all - that it just became routine. Still, that man could CURSE!!
ReplyDeleteWow, I miss him.