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- <text id=89TT1585>
- <title>
- June 19, 1989: A Long Way From The Rue De La Paix
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- June 19, 1989 Revolt Against Communism
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 70
- A Long Way from the Rue de la Paix
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Jordan Bonfante
- </p>
- <p> The dress code in Los Angeles is assuredly not strict. So
- the other customers at the shopping mall on Santa Monica
- Boulevard that evening scarcely noticed the newcomer in a tuxedo
- who had joined them in line at the flower stalls. Neither the
- young lady in the decal-covered bomber jacket nor the young
- gentleman with the sheepskin vest over his T-shirt and the pith
- helmet saw any reason to fuss over someone evidently doin' his
- thing in a tuxedo costume. No, what turned their heads was the
- new arrival's inquiry.
- </p>
- <p> "Say, what kind of corsage could you make up for me?" he
- asked of the clerk when his turn came. The other customers had
- no way of knowing that the newcomer needed the corsage for a
- high school father-daughter dance, a real treat for a returning
- expatriate. Ah, good old American sociability, he thought. What
- a relief after some of those gloomy European schools! "Wha?"
- said the clerk, a young man with a big mustache. "A wha?"
- </p>
- <p> "A corsage. You know . . ." the newcomer repeated,
- gesturing feebly toward his own chest and wrist. The clerk
- looked at him with new suspicion, consulted his superior by the
- back tulips and returned to announce through a curled lip, "We
- don't do corsages!"
- </p>
- <p> The newcomer should have known better, of course. He should
- have realized that the corsage is as dead as the darning egg.
- His excuse was that after seven years abroad he had moved from
- Paris to Los Angeles. And as everyone knows, the distance
- between the Rue de la Paix and the Pacific Coast Highway is
- measured not in flying hours but in light-years. Catapulted from
- the European fixation with the past into the Californian
- intoxication with the future, the returning expatriate felt he
- had been gone for half a century, and sometimes that he had been
- born yesterday.
- </p>
- <p> The newcomer felt time-warped, mired in a past age of LP
- records, the ERA and two-wheel drive. It wasn't the new lingo
- ("persona," "agenda," "biorhythms"), nor the acronyms ("EIS,"
- "CAD" and "MSG"). It wasn't the commercial wackiness of products
- like "gourmet dog food." It wasn't even the daily drive-by
- shootings -- talk about an automotive civilization -- in Los
- Angeles' gangland. Mayhem is not confined to the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> No, what made him feel like a retrograde stuffed shirt was
- less lethal but daunting things. Cacophonies of competing phone
- companies, and car and poolside cellulars, have not yet
- proliferated in Paris. It is in California, not the Dordogne,
- where your teenager phones you and then puts you on hold.
- Similarly, Europeans remember when their films were the risque
- ones. Hah! Now the show is on the other foot. Europeans at the
- TV children's hour would be aghast at the torrent of video
- violence, the Tampax-machine gags on Murphy Brown, or the 27 --
- count 'em -- condom jokes in a single segment of Kate & Allie.
- </p>
- <p> The time-warped expatriate was also struck by a sunbaked
- parochialism that is increasingly turned toward the Pacific
- rather than the Atlantic. No one asked him what was going on in
- Europe, only whether he liked it in California. Last month a
- television-news crew staked out the portals of the Beverly
- Hills Hotel as the visiting Jacques Chirac, the former French
- Premier and still well-known mayor of Paris, strode inside,
- trailing limousines and entourage. The TV crew failed to budge.
- Turns out it was there to cover a more important celebrity,
- wrestler Hulk Hogan.
- </p>
- <p> One of the most reassuring things was the rediscovery of a
- boundless first-name friendliness. In Los Angeles now his
- banker is Judy, his mortgage-loan officer Adam, and his
- used-auto dealer Gary. Restaurant tables are held under his
- first name, as are pizza orders. A TV skit conveys more
- documentary accuracy than comedy when it shows a couple sitting
- down in a restaurant and telling the waiter, "I'm Sheila, this
- is Bill. We're your customers this evening." Try that in Paris
- on that ornery waiter one is careful to call "Monsieur." In
- Paris the older generation -- not the younger -- can be so
- unfriendly that on Sunday at the big church of St. Philippe du
- Roule, one can witness a scene of uncommon standoffishness, even
- for Paris: at the point in the Mass when the priest says, "Now
- let us offer each other a sign of peace," nobody moves.
- </p>
- <p> It would thus take a Parisian time to get into the spirit
- of a Los Angeles traffic school where motorists ticketed for a
- moving violation may attend eight hours of driving instruction
- in lieu of court. At the newcomer's school in the San Fernando
- Valley, an actor named Dick Corbin provided diverting
- impersonations of a woman driver on the freeway talking on the
- car phone, eating lunch and doing her lashes in the visor mirror
- all at the same time.
- </p>
- <p> But the part the pupils like best is the confessional, when
- each participant recounts the details of his moving violation,
- whereupon his 40-odd classmates judge whether it was a mortal
- or just a venial infraction. "Thanks, David, for sharing that
- with us. I'm sure few of us were aware that you can actually
- purchase the STOP sign you've knocked over." So much emphasis
- is put on self-expression and broad-mindedness that at one point
- an instructor found himself equating drug taking with drinking,
- and upholding both. "You can do alcohol. You can do drugs," he
- admonished. "Just don't drive!" A stodgy European less
- accustomed to the same blase acceptance of drug taking -- and
- a good many citizens of Los Angeles for that matter -- would
- shudder to extend such logic much further.
- </p>
- <p> The newcomer doesn't wear a tuxedo anymore. He wears a
- necktie, though, and he mixes with the stars. While he was
- waiting to be seated for lunch at the Ivy in West Hollywood one
- day, Zsa-Zsa Gabor and her mother mistook him for the maitre d'
- and asked him to show them to their table. She called him
- "Darling." He still hasn't decided if he should have called her
- Miss Gabor, or just plain Zsa-Zsa.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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