Kissed by Paul Simon
The beveled glass of an empty Yoo-Hoo bottle sparkled under the fluorescent lights, spinning wildly as the eighth graders held their breath.
Floorboards squeaked above us as we sat on cracked linoleum tile in the church rectory’s basement.
We weren’t supposed to be down there.
Our young Jesuit priest, Father Sweeney, fresh out of seminary, had organized a mixer of Catholic and Methodist junior high students. Vatican II declared that Protestants were not heretics, just separated brethren. Father Sweeney hoped a gathering might provide opportunities to better understand our new Christian friends.
During the party, eight of us sneaked down the stairs and started a game of Spin the Bottle. I had never played this game; I soon learned it was quite different from checkers.
Outside, budding daffodils shivered in the last Arctic wind. Two boys dusted off an abandoned 45-rpm record player. Mark Starkey, tall, lanky, and an eighth grader, placed a disc on the spindle.
The soft chords of Simon and Garfunkel’s newly released song “Bridge Over Troubled Water” filled the room. Mark spun the bottle. It stopped. He shook his head. Then he spun again. And again. Apparently, it was not landing where he wanted.
The girls giggled. The boys nudged each other. He gave up. Standing, he moved to the center of the circle, grasped the bottle, and pointed it in my direction.
Mark walked over and stood in front of me. My chest fluttered. He helped me off the floor, put his arm around my back, and guided me around a corner — out of view of our friends.
“I’ve had my eye on you,” he said.
I gulped.
He bent down, a shock of shaggy hair flopping in his eyes. His face was so close I could smell potato chips.
Music swelled as “Bridge” ended. Then he pressed his lips against mine.
Soft whiskers tickled my lip.
I sneezed.
My first kiss.
Knees shaking, heart galloping — in my thirteen years, I had never experienced a feeling like that.
I didn’t know that forty years later, I would meet the artist who penned that song.
My husband, Richard — sorry, Mark! —and I were offered tickets to attend a Paul Simon lecture at Emory University.
“Let’s go, Wendy,” Richard said excitedly. “We also have tickets to go to a VIP meet-and-greet afterwards. We can maybe shake hands with Paul Simon.”
Of course Richard wanted to go. Richard’s passion for music is woven through his life. Through his eyes, I experience music more meaningfully.
“You know I told you the story of my first kiss. ‘Bridge Over Troubled Water’ was playing,” I replied.
“Yes, I remember. Mark Starkey,” Richard said.
At the event, we found two vacant seats in the Glenn Memorial Auditorium.
Introduced by the lecture series director, seventy-one-year-old Paul Simon took the stage. The audience quieted. My leg started to jiggle.
During his lecture, Simon spun stories about his early beginnings and inspirations. And lessons learned. Strumming to familiar songs, he mingled music with his reflections.
“I wrote ‘The Sound of Silence’ while I was still living at home,” he said. “I would sit with my guitar in the tiled bathroom with the lights off and the tap running. ‘Hello darkness, my old friend’ was not a metaphor — I was literally sitting in the dark. That song was influenced by JFK’s assassination. I was 21 years old.”
Every story carried the audience into a deeper understanding of Simon’s intellect and creativity. As the lecture ended, I knew attending the VIP reception was not optional.
Taking the elevator to a spacious, ornately decorated room, we were greeted by the muffled tones of talking and laughter.
Grabbing a glass of cabernet, Richard and I leisurely strolled around the room, examining original art and first edition books.
As it became later in the evening, Richard said, “Let’s head to the elevator, Wendy.”
“Is it time to slip slide away?” I joked.
“Ha!” Richard said. “No, but if Paul Simon is coming, he can only get here one way. The elevator. We should really try to meet him.”
I followed Richard to the elevator foyer. My hands shook.
We finished our wine. A waiter noticed, circling near us with a tray of filled glasses.
We grabbed two more.
“Maybe he isn’t coming,” I said, feeling my face warm. “It’s getting late and we both have work tomorrow.”
“Let’s wait a little longer,” Richard insisted. “I’m sure he’ll be here.”
Just then, the elevator opened and Paul Simon and his assistant stepped out.
The pounding in my ears silenced any sound. My fingers couldn’t feel the wine glass stem. Paul Simon!
Dressed in a black collarless shirt and black jeans, he had rosy cheeks and closely shaved graying hair. An ebony and ivory tweed fedora sat jauntily cocked on his head. Reading glasses hung around his neck on a dark cord.
Only a shadow remained of that long-haired boy peering out from decades-old album covers.
Paul had nowhere to go. We were blocking the entrance to the main room.
Richard took the lead. “Hi, that was a tremendous lecture,” Richard said. “I’m Richard Lenz, this is my wife, Wendy.”
Simon smiled broadly, “Glad you liked it,” he said. He turned to his assistant and said, “Get me that tequila I like, okay?”
Simon stood between Richard and me. I didn’t need to look up to peer into his eyes — he was my height. Short.
Richard chatted with him for a few minutes. I tried to wet my dry mouth with sips of wine, racking my brain to come up with something witty to say.
I finally spoke. “Paul, um, you talked about ‘Graceland’ and how some misunderstood it even though the critics loved it. Do you have songs that were used in a way you didn’t intend?”
Paul thought for a moment. “People played ‘Bridge Over Troubled Water’ at weddings,” he said. “Everyone thinks Artie wrote that song. He didn’t. I did. What surprised me about that song is that it started to be used for funerals. It’ll probably be used in my obituary,” he joked.
He continued, “As an artist, I write a song. I hope it connects with others. But if their meaning isn’t mine, that’s okay,” he said.
Paul Simon’s music offered passage, I thought. For however we needed it. Whenever we needed it.
Richard replied, “You know, ‘Bridge Over Troubled Water’ was playing when Wendy had her first kiss from some guy named Mark Starkey.”
I blushed. Not where I thought Richard was going to go with the conversation.
Paul smiled.
He stepped forward, looked me in the eyes, and lay his hand on my shoulder.
I could sense his warm breath on my cheek, sniffed a slight tang of alcohol on his breath, and then, without warning, felt his cool lips against mine.
My body felt like it was no longer in contact with the floor. For a moment, I was back on a dusty linoleum floor in a dimly lit basement.
Then Paul said wryly, “Now you can tell Mark Starkey you’ve been kissed by the guy who wrote the song.”
Richard’s jaw dropped. “Hey, that’s my wife!”
Simon chuckled. “Well, I can give you a kiss, too!” Richard waved his hands as Paul’s assistant suddenly appeared with a glass of tequila.
“We have other guests to greet,” he said to Paul.
“So sorry,” I said, trying to feel my feet. “Thank you so much for taking the time to talk with us. And your songs!”
“Thank you!” Simon said as he slipped into the main room and the waiting crowd.
Richard and I — speechless — walked into the elevator and turned around.
As the doors closed, I could have sworn I saw Paul Simon raise his glass, point it towards me, and wink.
The whole encounter still feels crazy after all these years.
Thanks for reading. Did this bring up any memories of a song that has followed you in your life? Would love to hear about it.
For more stories about celebrity “sightings” check out Tangled Up In Blues.
Discover more from BETWEEN BUSINESS CARDS™
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
4 Comments
John R. Lenz
Back in the day when I was 10 years old during the era of the Wayne Williams child murders in Atlanta, my parents thought it would be a good time to send me to see my brother Richard in Athens, as he was attending the University of Georgia, and was working and paying his way through school at the time.
Since Athens is roughly an hour away from Atlanta via car, and gasoline at the time was $1.27 per gallon, the “send me” I mention above involved them dropping me off at the Decatur Greyhound Bus Station (now Fellini’s Pizza) and buying a ticket for me to ride the bus to Athens by myself. Not only did this save them money, it reclaimed them roughly two hours out of the day so that they could start on their Bombay Sapphire martinis a little earlier than usual, with the luxury of an empty house without a whiny 10-year-old kid.
Editor’s note: Since I am writing this, thankfully you can deduce that Wayne Williams didn’t hang in Decatur that day and I made it to Athens and back to Decatur safely, a bit scarred but smarter.
After Richard picked me up at the bus station and drove me to his place, I remember vividly the 250 square foot apartment above the garage that he was staying in. It was tidy and well organized, though it was without central air conditioning, and I sweated like a you know what in church.
Richard told had to attend to a couple things for about 10 minutes, and he was going to trust me alone in his room. I remember a yellowish popcorn maker, a bed, a desk, a record player, and… a wood carton full of records.
As Richard left the room he turned to me and said “John, whatever you do, don’t touch any of my records.” I nodded my head because I knew that the level of trust that I had earned over my decade of decadent existence would continue, because I wasn’t gonna touch his records.
But his 10 minutes stretched to 15, then 20. What was he doing? I couldn’t tell but it had to do with work or his landlord. So I began to pace around his room, looking for something to do. It’s not like he had toys for me to play with.
It was then when his records in the wooden crate began to look appealing to me. He wouldn’t really mind if I just thumbed through them, right? No harm in doing that.
So it began. I started looking through his collection, which I remember as being in alpha order. So many cool covers, lots of different artwork. As I thumbed through, I kept my ear out for my brother, because he had been clear with me not to touch the records. But was he talking about the “insides” of the records? The vinyl? OR was he talking about the packaging. I gambled that he meant don’t touch the vinyl.
I was almost done with my thumbing, and I reached the R’s in the series. There was a dark bluish cover, and I pulled it out of the stack to look more closely. This cover was my favorite out of all of them–it had a monster looking thing on there, and it was from a band I had never heard of before—R.E.M.
I had been told a million times by my parents to “not judge a book by its cover” so I figured that I shouldn’t judge this record by its cover. My analytical skills have always been on point.
So I carried the record over to the door, opened it to listen for Richard, and all I heard was silence. This was my chance to sneak a listen to Chronic Town by R.E.M. and hopefully get it back in its sleeve before he came back. I rushed over to the record player, which was a bit intimidating, especially with the impending doom of him returning and possibly catching me.
I put the record on, turned on the player, put the needle down, and started to listen—at first, very quietly. Slowly I turned up the volume, and the song playing was Wolves, Lower. I really liked it. And really, the only reason I really liked it was because it was my Brother Richard’s album. What he listened to, I had to listen to, because he was older and of course cool (as he remains to this day, but I digress.)
I turned up the volume a little louder, then a little louder, and soon it was loud enough to be able to be heard outside his room (he had thin doors.) As I was enjoying the song and dancing a little, I had forgotten a couple of important things: Richard told me not to touch his records, and the volume I had it at would certainly cover up any evidence of him coming back to the room. That’s a double negative in my book.
“I thought I told you to not touch my records” I hear at a slightly elevated volume, as I then rushed over to try to rewind time and put the toothpaste back in the tube. But it was too late.
The next thing I heard was this:
“You made a great choice.”
I didn’t know if he was talking about me disobeying him or my choice of tunes.
“R.E.M. is great, I’ve seen them several times at the 40 Watt. I know the members of the band. They have a new record coming out soon.”
Whew. I was relieved, dodged a bullet. Good thing I didn’t have his Styx album playing.
After I bussed back to Atlanta from Athens, a few weeks later I hopped on my BMX bike and rode up to Turtles Records and Tapes in Chamblee Plaza. I walked in with my own money and looked for the Rs. I found the Rs and I found R.E.M. listed. Bingo, I’d get my own copy and listen.
So I grabbed Chronic Town, and there was a new record there as well—Murmur. So I got that one and went up to check out.
This teenage goddess was behind the counter, probably 17 years old. As she rang up my purchase and gave me Turtles Stamps to put on my little card, she looked at me and said “You must be cool, how did you know about R.E.M.?”
I blushed and said it was because of my brother Richard.
Wendy Lenz
OMG! What a fantastic story, Anonymous! This one goes in the archives!
Thank you for sharing. And at ten, I was still playing with Barbies, so you definitely have a head start on cool! (And did you know that our spices are in alpha order as well!). So appreciate the memory and your tuning in to my blog!
Anonymous
Cool stories John and Wendy! Both sweet and touching, thank you!
Wendy Lenz
Thanks for checking it out!