JOSEPH N. BELL -- The Bell Curve
To a news junkie, the best thing about coming home from a long trip is
wallowing in the accumulated newsprint. Our house-sitter obligingly saved
three weeks of newspapers, and I’ve been spending far too much time since
I returned reading minutiae in the Pilot, Times and Register.
Somehow, it’s comforting to know that there are certain stable
elements in my world that will be waiting for me when I return, much as
they were when I left.
The El Toro airport, for example. The same arguments are being made by
the same people for the same reasons -- and our congressman is still mute
on the subject. But two misplaced efforts to find new ground during my
absence are worth noting.
First, the city of Newport Beach funded a phone survey of 250
residents, directed by a pro-El Toro group called Citizens for Jobs and
the Economy, which declined to identify the polling firm. Not very
surprisingly, some 80% of the respondents approved of the airport. The
remaining 20% puts me in mind of the token opposition allowed in Russian
elections during the heyday of Josef Stalin. The city of Irvine has been
running similar polls for several years, with about the same level of
credibility but a great deal more finesse.
On the creative side, Irvine has come up with a new non-airport use
for the El Toro property as a fitting complement to its Great Park. After
considerable study, a City Council committee has determined that even
Irvine residents die. And because there is currently no place to put them
in this condition, the committee is suggesting that a cemetery is a more
appropriate use for El Toro than an airport. Oh, yes, they also have a
survey to back this up.
Meanwhile, our neighboring town of Orange had an election while I was
gone, and the results should run up a warning flag in our own school
district. Three members of the Orange Unified school board were recalled
in a fight that has divided the city and will surely continue through the
next election in November.
The lessons, it seems to me, are twofold: When either a religious or a
political agenda motivates the workings of a school board, the result is
chaos; and the biggest problem in school board elections is apathy. In
spite of the intense, fractious campaign and the departure of droves of
teachers from the Orange system, only 20% of the voters turned out for
the election. And even a personal appeal to Republican voters for money
and support from county GOP Chairman Tom Fuentes in this “nonpolitical”
election couldn’t pull it out for the incumbents.
Some scattered bits and pieces:
* Even an official decision to deny Lodwrick Cook’s request to move
his pier so he could dock his 55-foot yacht off Balboa Island didn’t
settle the issue. He is now trying to nose the yacht in, which is rather
like docking the Queen Mary on Lake Elsinore.
* The imminent release of a new version of “Planet of the Apes”
reminded me of the months that the original was filming at UC Irvine when
I would frequently look up from my office desk to see a Hollywood ape
peering through my window.
* The failure of UCI basketball star Jerry Green -- who must have
gotten some very bad advice -- to be selected in the NBA draft means he
has lost his senior year of eligibility, and I’ll have to watch what
would have been the best UCI team in years struggle without him.
Finally, we lost some vital people in the last month. Frances
Robinson, who -- with her husband, Frank -- saved the Back Bay estuary
for all of us and proved that the determination and dedication of one
person can, indeed, make a difference. Carroll O’Connor, who showed up
bigotry as Archie Bunker, and Stanley Mosk, a tower of judicial strength
on the California Supreme Court during the John Birch years -- both of
whom I interviewed as a journalist.
And then there was Jack Lemmon, whom I was privileged to know well
enough that he came to UCI to show “Save the Tiger” and talk to my film
class, then invited us all to Paramount Studios for the same purpose the
following semester. One of the greatest pleasures of the years I covered
Hollywood was watching Lemmon and Walter Matthau play off each other.
I was doing a profile of Lemmon when he and Matthau were filming “The
Odd Couple” and was visiting the set when they did a scene in which the
Pigeon sisters arrived for cocktails. Lemmon, in his fussy role, told
them nervously: “Don’t sit in the hors d’oeuvres.” But he inadvertently
misspoke the line and totally broke up the company. For the rest of the
morning, every time they came to that line, the cast would disintegrate
in laughter, and the director finally gave up and called a lunch break.
It was the only unprofessional thing I ever saw Lemmon or Matthau do.
Jack Lemmon was real. What you saw was what you got. The Everyman
patina he wore so well and was so close to his skin sometimes obscured
his enormous skills as an actor. More than any other actor I was around
enough to see behind the facade, Lemmon was almost totally without guile.
It was strange -- but somehow appropriate -- that he followed his pal,
Matthau, so quickly to whatever place “grumpy old men” set up shop in the
afterlife.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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