Monday, 28 February 2011
Saturday, 5 February 2011
d.a. levy in A Certain Strange Memory
Larry Smith, Ohio poet and publisher relates:
"The story I heard about 8 years ago involved the
legal aid fund for levy...It was told to me by Dinsmoor
Wheeler, friend of James Lowell and the arts.
According to Dinsmoor, Jayne Mansfield came into
town for the defense fund reading...She did it as a
special thing for free speech." Further, "I once sat
with Dinsmoor Wheeler when he was in his 80's
and living at his family home in Milan, Ohio.
He was very cordial as we sat in his living room
with loads of wonderful old books on the shelf.
He told of starting the first foreign film series
in Cleveland, together with bookseller James
Lowell and others. They often were attacked by
censors. Then he recalled a time when Jayne
Mansfield came to town to speak for d.a. levy
and James Lowell's Defense Fund...He said
he drove out to the airport to pick up Jayne
Mansfield as part of the May 14th program.
He said he enjoyed the ride and that she was
a very bright person, unlike her film persona.
That's what I remember." (1)
Like Allen Ginsberg, Jayne Mansfield was
in the midst of a busy Spring tour that scheduled
her in Britain and Ireland. From her arrival in
England her troubles with authorities began.
Smuggling Chihuahuas was just the beginning.
Lasting only weeks overseas, on May 14th,
Mothers’ Day, aghast Roman Catholics
terminated her tour in Tralee.
So the question is, could she suddenly,
clandestinely, have flown back to the States,
to Cleveland, to witness the benefit for an
underground poet?
And why would she?
“naturally I became interested in the intellectual type”In 1963, the album Shakespeare, Tchaikovsky
and Me was recorded. Jayne Mansfield purrs over
her favorite poems and sonnets with lush
accompaniment. Her material includes selections
from Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Percy Shelley,
Marlowe, Yeats, Wordsworth and Tennyson as
well as Shakespeare and others. She had followed
in the footsteps of Dylan Thomas and
Caedmon Records.
So with an interest in poetry, and always
an eye on the papers, Mansfield would have read
about Allen Ginsberg. She would have taken
notice when Ginsberg praised harassed poet
d.a. levy, commending his poetry, “It has obvious
literary intent. I dig his poetry. He is learned
and sincere, but he is being made to suffer in
the classic American way.” (2)
Since d.a levy’s secret indictment by jury in(crowds of people shouting before giant
posters of jean harlow, marilyn Monroe,
jane mansfield, jane fonda & faye dunaway
—they are firing guns in the air & scream-
ing FREEDOM NOW)”
Footnotes:
1) Letter from Larry Smith, May 18, 2006, used with permission
2) Cleveland Press, April 12, 1967
3) In a 1993 episode of L.A Law entitled “Rhyme & Punishment,” Mamie Van Doren read from Allen Ginsberg’s “Howl,” while Jayne Mansfield’s daughter Mariska Hargitay can currently be seen on television’s Law and Order
4) Playing the Field: My Story; Mamie Van Doren; G P Putnam’s Sons; New York; 1987; p.226
5) Ibid; p.227
6) Ibid; p.231-32
7) The Buddhist Third Class Junkmail Oracle; Volume 2 #3; August-Sept 1968
8) I couldn’t have written about d.a. levy without the help of his friend, Tom Kryss. He provided me with the 1969 Open Skull Press Edition of The Beginning of Sunny Dawn & Red Lady with the note:
“This was the first printing of “Red Lady,” but the second appearance of “Sunny Dawn,” which was first published by levy in Cleveland, March, 1968, under the Ghostflower Press imprint…I do believe the “Sunny Dawn” story was written before “Red Lady” but not by more than a few months, and in both cases the stories seemed to have gone into print shortly after they were written…Neither story, to the best of my knowledge, has appeared in print since 1970. Just a hunch—“Red Lady” always strikes me as something he brought back in his head from Madison, Wisconsin, and I suspect someone he met there lies at the core.”
**Letter from Tom Kryss to author, May 25, 2006
9) My Story; Marilyn Monroe; Cooper Square Press; New York, New York; 1974/2000; p.19
10) Ibid; p.135
11) Author’s phone call conversation with George Fitzpatrick conducted 4:35 PM, June 14, 2006.