Saturday, September 8, 2012

the virus is making its magic tonight





the virus is making its magic tonight...



the virus is making its magic tonight
huddled in this strained embrace
we try to love each other against all odds
resisting metaphors to war
attacking fear with love
rather than anger - not anger
entire patterns of kaleidoscopic organisms
composed by two strands of RNA
fifteen types of viral proteins
from the last host cell infected

entering immune system cells
building viral copies
each molecule playing
harmonic roles in this process
from the first steps of attachment
to the final process of budding

we have found a way to bloom
in these final diagnoses
the pain we feel is neither
sweet nor sour but both
the pain is lasting
and we find ways to endure
to create nostalgia for so many futures lost

there are no soldiers here
no weapons
just a body and its own private virus
un-camouflaged distinct
in some everlasting clutch
grabbed from a world
filled with worrisome warriors
wanting so desperately to name it out of timeworn kinship
into realms of scapegoating
and histrionic imperialism

begun as a massive strategy for the destruction of an identity
the dubious normalization of queer
that had been so hard won we cried in streets
rosy triangulations vigilant on thoroughfares
only to be harshly chaperoned by false scientific jargon - chat
herded along grid-like routes to the ridiculously sublime missteps of time

the absence of the truth
of tenderness and touch

and now we have it here
in a plethora of bodies
abundance with but one choice to love it and ourselves in and out of loss
to toss our sense of me and I in the end
without regretting middles and beginnings

yes, we huddle in this strained embrace
composing entire brilliant patterns of kaleidoscopic chaos
disseminating ordered mayhem we may one day conquer
free to make this choice on loving death
and the abject fear of isolating ourselves from our detractors
bending viral loads into symbolic signs swaddled and beheld - for bodies to enfold

yes, huddled herds - virions of valiant sympathy and hard won grace…


Saturday, September 1, 2012

FOUR LONG 'ISH POEMS




self-portrait of the artist as a middle-aged malcontent 
(a triptych)

           one
i sat on top of a mountain
            rejected manuscripts
            stuck up my ass
waiting to be included
            in a ‘best poems’  anthology
            i am still waiting
cold, wan, rash
            rolled, soiled pages
            weighing heavily
upon my urethra

two
            i committed myself
            to making a new piece of art
            every day
ended up with sore arms
and a very crowded apartment

         three
           through the threat of cataracts
     detached retinas, missed eye appointments 
           and intermittent dental care
i see every word as precious
            hanging on each syllabic turn
            white mice in peanut galleries
swinging softly by their tails
            in deluded fog           



‘the privileged poor’

my kitchen is the size of a large closet
my bathroom is the size of an impossible storage unit
my bedroom is an equity banned dressing room
I am subsidized to the tits
and have no more space for judgment
but I have enough room
for the hard won oxymoronic
identificatory praxis of the privileged poor
for what the supreme global dwelling place for colonizers call
their democratic right to shop and to be shopped for

so don’t cry for me Central America
let no country
that has been fucked by  North American complicity
shed a tear
for the tremulous fault line of rampant capitalism
as it fucks me
treats me like a well fed pig

apple in my mouth
skewer in spit
i spin and sizzle
awaiting, stinking, smug, impatient
for the well cooked
insatiable excremental excitement
of your gorgeous hard won
wrath





strolling shot/shouldering love

sitting in the front row alone
driving into film with a backseat lightly grazed by random cinephiles
he stretches one arm in a pink fleshy triangle over his head
fingertips resting lightly on the top of his right shoulder
soft tips sink nimbly into puffy skin
this faintly discernible intrusion into self
close to the bone

he gobbles devours endures celluloid moments
where he is safe outside the scene
someone onscreen  starts to cry
someone else onscreen puts their hand on the crying someone’s shoulder
then the crying someone turns to the consoling someone
resting his head so gently on their shoulder
as the tips of the spectators fingers sink further into the flesh of his own heart
skeletal blades and connecting tissue become crevasses of desire
his arm stretches toward some unattainable limb - some bodily matter
he is penetrated so tenderly
his hand is having sex with his shoulder

this unbeatable trust between limb and body - body and limb

in middle age these seconds minutes hours matter
providing erotic detached filmic comfort
still reeling in his mind
all those distant lovers mourning a lack of sexual forgiveness
making love to their lost selves
fingertips on their shoulder blades
ready for their close-ups

mourning memories of tenderness clawing deep
absolving hollows from self-embargoed love


five reasons why I really hate my poetry today

one
I really hate my poetry today
I hate its lyric sadness and the way
it wanders with such pomp through come what may
declaring courage in the face of doom
detaching from humanity by describing all the stuff that fills a living room

two
I really hate the way I have with words
they tumble out in microscopic herds
rattling my teeth and sending shivers through my underwear
I really hate the way they seem to care
about what’s right and wrong and what seems so damned unfair
and how they always end up with some citation to some stranger’s pubic lair

three
but most of all I hate the rhyming couplets
thanking gods for a lack of exuberance over poetry in quintuplets
so I write in fives just to piss my sad self off
so I can look in mirrors and smirk then scowl then scoff
then covet some pricks hat I’d like to doff

or doff some prick who likes to covet dicks
but that was five and this is one past six

four
chairs and lamps and tables interest me
I should have been a carpenter like that stud from Galilee
I would have filled the world with furniture
Instead of furnishing the world with love
I would have tipped my cap to our Lord Jesus 
with one agnostic leather glove
I would have craved some godly wisdom when push came down to shove

five
but instead I’m here and hating my poetry so god damn much
just lifting my fingertips to the keypad is like poison to the touch
but yes, such pretty poison I can’t seem to get enough of
as one bard said, these are what make our lives
the stuff that dreams make muck of

p.s.
so let’s raise a toast to words and all they say

like shit! goddamn!

and

“kind sir, have you ever considered becoming, just long enough to kiss me, GAY !!! ? ”


photos, top to bottom; Madame X, Madame Recamier, Eleonora Duse, Martin Sheen, Rupert Brooke

MARTINI MEDITATIONS



Boston

                                                                   I like to have a martini,                                       
                                                                 Two at the very most.             
                                                                   After three I'm under the table,      
                                                                     After four I'm under my host.            
                                                                          ~ Dorothy Parker
   
                                                             For gin, in cruel
                                                          Sober truth,
                                                           Supplies the fuel
                                                              For flaming youth.
                                 Noel Coward

I'm sick sober and sorry
I'm broke disgusted and sad
I'm sick sober and sorry
but look at all the fun that I had
Tex Atchison & Eddie Hazelwood       

                         Venice                                    



I thank God for the
small but beautiful way
in which alcohol
has touched my life
today
                       David Bateman

CELEBRITY DELUSION


CELEBRITY DELUSIONS #1  
‘the mind & the heart’ 
 



                                                                  Hello? David? Are you there? Why won't you pick up? 
                                                                  I keep trying to call to get you to meet me at the beach. 
                                                                  Wear the  two piece pink bikini I like so much. 
                                                                  Please return my call or eventually I'll give up. 
                                                                  Why are you ignoring me? I just want to be friends...*



*fictional, needless to say...    


It’s not that conservatives don’t care. 
We do. We just have different answers than liberals do. It’s a difference of the mind, not of the heart. 
*
I live a pretty simple life. 
*
Son, never throw a punch at a redwood. 
actual Tom Selleck quotes from http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/t/tom_selleck.html              

                                                                                                                            
On a bitter cold night in Calgary, just before the turn of the last century, I stood waiting for the number one Bowness bus to take me home to my damp basement apartment in a working class suburb on the edge of an oil rich city. The bus stop was right beside a posh Italian restaurant. As I stood shivering in the cold a white stretch limousine pulled up and Tom Selleck got out and went into the restaurant without even saying hello to me. Which was not in the least bit surprising because he had only met me once very briefly when I had been an extra in his film Three Men and a Baby several years before in Toronto, and we didn’t actually meet. He just cruised me as he went to his dressing room. I have no proof that he was in fact cruising me but it makes my life a little easier to bear if I tell myself, once every six to eight months, that I was once cruised by a handsome Hollywood star. He did look straight at me, but that may have been due to the fact that I couldn’t stop staring at him. Leonard Nimoy directed the film and spoke to me at one point. He told me to be more animated. I knew he wouldn’t have pointed ears but that didn’t stop me from staring at them. 
That second time Tom and I didn’t actually meet, in Calgary, in the winter, I tried not to stare into the restaurant window too often as I waited for the bus. But it just took so long to come and although I was certain it was Tom Selleck in there, warm and cozy and enjoying fine red wine and pasta or veal or something delicious, I just couldn’t stop looking to make sure it was really him. I knew he was in town making a film so it made sense that the tall handsome guy who got out of the limousine and looked just like him must be him. But that’s the thing about famous people. When I do see them I can’t quite believe that they really exist. Once I shook Pierre Eliot Trudeau’s hand in a crowd of people in my hometown and I wouldn’t let go until I was sure the hand I was clutching belonged to the body of the Prime Minister of Canada. A few more seconds and I might have been arrested. 
I have never had sex with a famous person, and this late in life I don’t expect to, unless I run into David Hyde Pierce or Nathan Lane or Brent Carver at a little fey bistro one foggy night, and they take pity on me and invite me to their place for some scotch and intimate foreplay. It strikes me as an incredible improbability that I would probably never recover from. How can one expect to ever fully recover from having had sex with a celebrity? I know I couldn’t. It would consume me for the rest of my life. For years I believed that a close friend had sexual relations with Tony Perkins when he was in Toronto playing the lead in Equus. It turned out that they had just cruised each other in Yorkville one afternoon. But somehow I managed to carry that bit of false information with me for years without realizing it was untrue. I guess I just wanted to believe it so badly. I would look at my friend and just marvel at how he could actually carry on with his life after having had sex with a movie star. I would probably have a t-shirt made and wear it constantly.  
My naïve, bordering on idiotic gullibility has never ceased to amaze me. I also believed until I was fifteen that a cousin fell into Niagara Falls on a family trip and survived. It turned out that he fell into the swimming pool at the hotel. Years later another cousin actually did jump into the falls. She didn’t make it. Needless to say, tragedy and comedy often occur at different times in the same place. 
The only thing that haunts me more than the possibility of having sex with a celebrity is the chance that perhaps I did have sex with a famous person once and didn’t realize it at the time. Could that have been Mel Gibson or Michel Foucault or John Travolta or Tom Cruise that giddy night at the bathhouse? With my luck it was probably Foucault. I am also probably connected to Nureyev in some way, but for the love of God, who isn’t! 
I did have sex with someone who had sex with someone who had sex with a character on my favourite soap opera. This person, who will remain nameless, took the soap star to his home on a reservation in a coastal Canadian city and his mother was scared the whole time because she thought the guys character on the soap was such an evil person. I was always very impressed that she let her son have sex with another man in her home. Over the years the character’s moral fibre has improved a great deal. Perhaps it was due in part to his experience on the reservation that night.  
The soap in question is made in Hollywood and if you believe in the whole six degrees of separation theory then I have had sex with every major Hollywood star from the past two to three decades and beyond. Rock Hudson tends to cover a lot of ground in the six degrees theory since he was a mid to late century Hollywood icon who slept around. I must be connected to him in some way, which of course means that I slept, by proxy, and only on film, with Doris Day and most of her immediate family. 
But it all just seems so unfair somehow. Once you have fucked the entire tinseltown A-list shouldn’t that exempt you from ever having to wait for public transit on a bitter cold night in an oil rich city while Tom Selleck sits in a warm expensive Italian restaurant trying to avoid eye contact with the delusional freak at the bus stop who keeps pressing his nose up against the window?  I really don’t know, and to use a popular phrase of the day - I’m just saying…

Friday, August 31, 2012

my mother's purse

My Mother's Purse




“Is that your man-purse?” 
“Yes. Are those your man boobs?” 
 
Someone stole my man-purse the other day. I was sitting on a red molded fiberglass bench in the subway, and I sat Pursey down beside me as I waited for the next train. I never do that, and must have been particularly distracted that day. There was nothing of value in it, just a faux leopard portable umbrella, a half filled bottle of spring water, and some leaky pens. Thank God the umbrella was faux leopard! Luckily I had my passport, keys, money, and other important documentation stuck up may ass. I only recall one occasion when someone stole some of my belongings from up there, and it was not an entirely unpleasant encounter. 
Within seconds of noticing it was missing, I thought of my mother’s purse. I had no desire to run screaming through a crowded subway, trying to find the assailant. Their disappointment must have been far greater than mine. 
Whenever something unpleasant happens to me that reminds me of my mother I always end up thinking it’s bad karma for giving her a hard time about superficial things. She never had anything of value in her purse, and although it was not fit to eat a meal out of, there were no cockroaches in it. I should have been more sensitive. But it drove me insane.  
Like me, she had many in her lifetime, but the one I remember most was her last purse. It was one of those mid-sized cheap Louis Vuitton knock-offs, and it was presentable on the outside but disgusting on the inside. I would clean it for her every few weeks, but always resented it, and argued with her many times on the state of its interior, and how she should carry it securely over her arm in order to avoid theft, and not like Desdemona’s hand me down handkerchief about to fall daintily into the hands of unprecedented doom. 
My biggest complaint about her purse had nothing to do with hygiene or the way she carried it in public places. It was when we were driving somewhere and she would constantly rummage through looking for the Holy Grail, I assume, because whenever I asked her what she was searching for, she would look at me with a strained, ethereal expression and say, “Nothing.”  
Once I shouted, in a very loud stage whisper, “Nothing? You’re looking for nothing? Well, Nothing will come of Nothing, Mother! Put the god damned purse away before I drive us into a ditch!”  Like some post-modern Cordelia stealing her father’s words from his mouth before he has a chance to speak them, I was a petulant child far too often in my mother’s presence. 
Once I was in a play I had written, and my mother planned to come. Curtain was at eight, and at eight fifteen she still hadn’t arrived. She was never late so I assumed she wasn’t coming. We locked the door to the tiny basement performance space and started the show. Not five minutes into the performance there was a very loud banging on the door.  
Once she had been let in she quietly took her seat in the front row, only a few feet away from the wooden lawn chair I was sitting in, delivering a brief monologue about something vulgar I am sure. Within seconds of taking her seat she picked her purse up off the floor in front of her and began to rifle through it.  
I could have employed any number of unprofessional strategies. I considered getting up out of my seat, walking over to her mid-monologue, kissing her on the cheek, and gently taking her purse away from her, carrying it securely over my arm for the rest of the performance. I am a cross-dressed performance artist after all. It would not have been out of keeping with the general mise en scene of the overall piece. But I didn’t. I ignored her. And I regret that deeply.  In life, and on the stage, I have always found improvised, meta-theatrical gestures very comforting. 
There was one thing of questionable value that she always carried in her purse. It was a copy of my first published solo performance piece entitled What Dreadful Things to Say About Someone who has just Paid for my Lunch. It was dog-eared, falling apart, and filthy. The odd time, she would look at me, and out of the blue, she would say, “How come I never knew about when they hurt you in your book.” The first time she asked, I had no idea what she was talking about, so she gently took her fragile copy out of her purse and turned to a page that she had folded at the corner, and explained. 
“See, here, where they hurt you.” 
I had been beaten up and robbed in a park in Athens in the mid-eighties by two men who befriended me, and asked me to go to a gay nightclub with them. Over the years some casual acquaintances (formerly close friends) have suggested that this was a foolish act. I do not share their opinion, but I try to respect their right to cruelly judge my misfortune. 
Whenever my mother would ask about this incident, I would carefully and gently explain to her that I didn’t tell her until years later, because I thought it would upset her. This was coming from a son who flew into a min-rage whenever she played in her purse, or asked me fifteen times over the course of an hour, how many times we had visited Disney World together. In my most bitter moments my mother’s life strikes me as a terrible distraction that occupied the first forty years of mine. When I am lucid I know that I was blessed by her bumbling presence, and her frequently conditional love, as she was by mine. Wherever the spirit world has taken her, I hope she remembers the good times. There were plenty. But there was also a lot of anger and betrayal on both our parts. Perhaps she is in heaven, looking down at me and saying, “You little bitch! It was just my goddamn purse. Leave me alone!” Or maybe she's in a bar in hell, having a good time, and too happy to care about how I felt about her purse.
She did swear at me many times, and I swore back. I admired her profanity. Once, sitting in an armchair in the lobby of the retirement home she lived in for the last five years of her life, a man came up to her and said, “That’s my chair.” My mother, a tiny, grey haired, sweet looking woman in her seventies, wearing a pale-orange, calve length cotton dress I had bought her at the Sally-Ann, and she hated, looked at him and said, “Fuck off.”  
God Bless her. 
Once, after a performance in a gallery in Ottawa, where I roller skated with a GI Joe Doll sewn into the nether regions of my bright red tights, my mother, after being kept awake during my show by frequent nudges by the curator, walked over to me and said, “Where do you get all your ideas?” I wanted to laugh, and say to her, with light but biting sarcasm, “I am an autobiographical performance artist mother. For the love of God, where on earth do you think I get them?” But I opted for kindness and simply said, “From life.” 
If the subject matter of my performance was a little risqué, and it often was, I would sit her down before a show and we would have a little talk where I would tell her that if she had any questions or concerns she could ask me about them – afterwards. Except for that one general query about where my ideas came from, and the story about my misfortune in Athens, she never did. She was a lifelong fan, and I miss her, fumbling in her purse, driving me insane, and unwittingly foreshadowing all of the things I would become once she was gone. 
 
 
 
 
 
 


Thursday, August 30, 2012

central park & all that

Tony Kushner, Central Park, and a recent batch of haiku


This recent burst of haiku began in Provincetown last week when I recognized Tony Kushner on the street but was too shy to say hello, ask for his autograph, have a photo taken, and behave like a starstruck tourist. A tanned, scantily clad young man sitting on a street corner, and talking loudly on his cell phone, as I shyly walked along the street toward The Red Inn cocktail bar, with Tony just yards ahead of me, hollered audibly to his phone mate, "and Tony Kushner just walked by!!!" And then the young man, with what appeared to be an open bottle of rum at his side said to Tony, "Oh, I'm sorry. That was probably kind of rude." Tony seemed amused, smiled at the gushing, apologetic fellow, and just kept walking, as he chatted to a friend walking with him.

Later in the week, when I was in Central Park, I took out my map as I wandered toward the Bethesda Fountain, where Tony Kushner sets one of the final scenes in Angels In America. 

                Jed & Greg kissing in front of the Bethesda Fountain - summer of 2011

me and Marie-Claude not kissing in front of the Bethesda Fountain last summer - we like open displays of affection in public, but only when it does not include us

Strolling through the park, as I drew closer to the beautiful iconic fountain I like to visit each time I go to Manhattan, I was suddenly possessed by the spirit of haiku and out came these five new haiku about Tony, Esther, Julie, Tammy and Marilyn. I think Tony is in good company here.

   the Jacqueline Kennedy Reservoir in Central Park

I scribbled them on my map of Central Park, with the first haiku printed in the middle of the Jacqueline Kennedy Reservoir. Here they are, transcribed for your reading pleasure, or lack thereof...

and i must thank my traveling companion Jonathan Chandler (in very small print of course), for contributing his knowledge of the Ukraine to the Julie London haiku, as well as his quick witted construction of the last line of the Kushner haiku (damn, I should have thought of it first!)



synchronized swimming haiku

you have never heard
of Esther Williams? get out
of my pool right now!!!


starstruck name dropping haiku

saw Tony Kushner
in Provincetown, had cocktails
but not with Tony


sex symbol haiku

you think Marilyn
Monroe was over rated
I want a divorce


queen of country music haiku

Tammy Wynette not 
a feminist? you are a 
complete idiot


wishful thinking

Julie London bridge
does not cross the Crimea 
River, wish it did