Maybe this was all a mistake. Maybe it didnโt mean anything had to change.
โOf course I can,โ I said.
The director ran back to the camera, and Don leaned back, taking his hands off our mics.
โAnd . . . action!โ
Don and I were both nominated for Academy Awards for One More Day. And I think the general consensus was that it didnโt matter how talented we were. People just loved seeing us together.
To this day, I have no idea if either of us is actually any good in it. It is the only movie Iโve ever shot that I cannot bring myself to watch.
A MAN HITS YOU ONCE and apologizes, and you think it will never happen again.
But then you tell him youโre not sure you ever want a family, and he hits you once more. You tell yourself itโs understandable, what he did. You were sort of rude, the way you said it. You do want a family someday. You truly do. Youโre just not sure how youโre going to manage it with your movies. But you should have been more clear.
The next morning, he apologizes and brings you flowers. He gets down on his knees.
The third time, itโs a disagreement about whether to go out to Romanoffโs or stay in. Which, you realize when he pushes you into the wall behind you, is actually about the image of your marriage to the public.
The fourth time, itโs after you both lose at the Oscars. You are in a silk, emerald-green, one-shoulder dress. Heโs in a tux with tails. He has too much to drink at the after-parties, trying to nurse his wounds. Youโre in the front seat of the car in your driveway, about to go inside. Heโs upset that he lost.
You tell him itโs OK.
He tells you that you donโt understand.
You remind him that you lost, too.
He says, โYeah, but your parents are trash from Long Island. No one expects anything from you.โ
You know you shouldnโt, but you say, โIโm from Hellโs Kitchen, you asshole.โ
He opens the parked carโs door and pushes you out.
When he comes crawling to you in tears the next morning, you donโt actually believe him anymore. But now this is just what you do.
The same way you fix the hole in your dress with a safety pin or tape up the crack in a window.
Thatโs the part I was stuck in, the part where you accept the apology because it?
?s easier than addressing the root of the problem, when Harry Cameron came to my dressing room and told me the good news. Little Women was getting the green light.
โItโs you as Jo, Ruby Reilly as Meg, Joy Nathan as Amy, and Celia St. James is playing Beth.โ
โCelia St. James? From Olympian Studios?โ
Harry nodded. โWhatโs with the frown? I thought youโd be thrilled.โ
โOh,โ I said, turning further toward him. โI am. I absolutely am.โ
โYou donโt like Celia St. James?โ
I smiled at him. โThat teenage bitch is gonna act me under the table.โ
Harry threw his head back and laughed.
Celia St. James had made headlines earlier in the year. At the age of nineteen, she played a young widowed mother in a war-period piece. Everyone said she was sure to be nominated next year. Exactly the sort of person the studio would want playing Beth.
And exactly the sort of person Ruby and I would hate.