4
KARISSA
The move-in went smoothly. The furniture from the house Karissa had shared with Willy Puma—soon to be her ex- husband—was in storage. She wondered if she needed any of it. While the pieces in the house on Harvard Boulevard were decades old, they were still functional and went with the antiquity of the mansion. A new mattress was in order, for sure, but other items? Best to keep them stored until she’d lived in the place for a while. Was her residency in Sugar Hill only temporary? She didn’t know. She supposed that if she did decide to stay, then she would have to make the decision to modernize the entire place—or not.
There was a certain charm about the old house that was appealing. During her first day there, all Karissa could do was wander through and explore the many rooms. There were treasures to be opened and examined. Boxes, trunks, cabinets, and chests-of-drawers—all full of clothing and trinkets. The walk-in closet in the master bedroom contained vintage dresses, hats, and shoes. She had the frivolous idea of throwing a 1940s costume party for all her Hollywood friends.
Marcello Storm was also very impressed. Her colleague had come to help her move her things from the Executive Suites and the storage facility. A bulky weight lifter, he carried heavy boxes as if they were paper cups. When Karissa and Marcello were in college together, there were many who told him that he resembled a young Muhammad Ali.
“Girl, you’re going to get lost in this place,” he said, juggling some items while he ascended the stairs. “I hope you have a map.”
Karissa laughed and said, “Oh, I know my way around already. It isn’t that big.”
“It’s humongous. It’s a regular Taj Mahal! There are probably secret passages that lead to other dimensions.”
They reached the master bedroom. “Just put down the boxes anywhere.”
He did and then went over to look at some of the photographs on the dresser.
“Blair Kendrick. She was something else.”
“Do you know much about her? I was going to start googling her tonight once I settled in. She sounds fascinating.”
“I guess she was.”
“Did she really get killed by the mob?”
Marcello picked up another picture. “That’s what they say.”
“Who’s they?”
He pulled out his cell phone. “I guess you don’t have your Wi-Fi set up yet?”
“Not yet. I need to do all that. You’re going to help me, right? The landlord just got cable installed today.” She started opening the boxes and putting her clothing away. There was still plenty of room in the closet, despite the presence of the antique items.
He fiddled with his phone as he spoke. “Is that all I’m good for? A glorified IT guy? The hired help?”
“Yep, and he can also negotiate amazing movie deals—that’s what you are.”
“Ha! Yeah, well, I suppose it’s getting easier these days, but Hollywood still belongs to middle-aged white guys.”
Karissa laughed.
“It wasn’t that long ago that Hollywood didn’t make movies with or for black folks,” he continued. “In the early days, we had to create our own underground system to make what were actually called ‘race’ movies that played in churches and rented halls and such.”
“I remember my Film History class, Marcello. Thank God for Oscar Micheaux.”
Marcello raised his eyebrows and nodded at her comment. “Okay, look here at Wikipedia.” He indicated his phone. “Blair Kendrick. It says she was a movie star who perished in a suspicious automobile mishap after possibly witnessing the July 1949 murder of Eldon Hirsch, the president of Ultimate Pictures. Speculation is that the mob chased her from the studio after the hit, caught her, and did away with her, but the case was never closed.” He started reading silently.
“Tell me more,” Karissa said as she put her shoes away.
“It talks about her rise to fame in just two years, that she was under contract with Ultimate, and she made six movies. She was being groomed to be the next Barbara Stanwyck or Bette Davis, as she showed not only beauty but a talent for acting. Says that she started out playing femmes fatales in film noir pictures but that she might have elevated herself to A-level pictures in time.”
“Keep going.”
“Uh, she was born in 1928 in Chicago, Illinois, came to Hollywood when she was eighteen, and made her first picture in 1947. It was a supporting role in A Kiss in the Night. She was the bad girl.” Marcello paused and said, “Mmm-mmpf.”
“What?”
“I was just looking at her pictures here. She was one good-looking white lady, I got to say. You think she looks like Jean Harlow?”
“I don’t know,” Karissa said, emerging from the closet. “Blond and ivory skin.” She shrugged and joined him to look at his phone. “Nah, she doesn’t look like Jean Harlow. She’s pretty, though.”
“I don’t think I’ve seen any of her films. It says The Jazz Club is the one that made her an overnight star.”
“What year was that?”
“That was ’47, too. It had some black actors in it—jazz musicians and such.”
“I love film noir, but I don’t think I’ve seen that one, either.”
He scrolled down on his phone. “Okay, it says here that all her films were withdrawn from circulation after the murder. Huh. No wonder we haven’t seen ’em.”
“The studio did that?”
“I guess. Here’s the stuff about the murder. Says on July 1, 1949, Blair Kendrick was seen entering the Ultimate Pictures studio lot in the evening around eight o’clock. The guard on duty at the gate, Barney Johnson, claimed she drove through in her Oldsmobile and waved hello. Since she was under contract, he didn’t stop her, although he told the police that he hadn’t seen her for months. A few minutes later, Johnson claimed that another car, occupied by a man at the wheel and a woman passenger, approached the gate. The driver shot him. He survived and lived to give a statement to the police, but he really didn’t know anything. He couldn’t identify the shooter. Eldon Hirsch, the head of the studio, was found in his office, shot to death. He’d also been robbed of a prized coin collection that he kept in a safe.”
“Huh.”
“Blair Kendrick’s car and a car registered in Nevada were discovered the next morning all the way up on Mulholland Drive, where they had been involved in a bad accident. Both cars were burned up, charred to a crisp, and the Nevada one had an unidentified body at the wheel. Suspected arson on both cars. Blair was found on the road next to the Nevada car. Badly burned and unrecognizable. She was eventually identified and buried in Westwood Village Cemetery. God, she must have crawled away from the burning wreck and died right there on the highway.”
“Jesus.”
“Right? Look here. Says a studio executive, Buddy Franco, may have been involved. He went missing after the incident.” Marcello clicked on the Buddy Franco hyperlink and reached a shorter entry on Wikipedia. “Buddy Franco was an executive vice president and studio fixer for Ultimate Pictures between 1942 and 1949. Well, look at this. Says he was a suspect in the murder of his boss, Eldon Hirsch! He had connections to the Las Vegas mafia and mysteriously disappeared the night of Hirsch’s murder. No one heard from him for years until 1975, when he was discovered in a diner in Las Vegas—shot to death by an unknown assailant. Police chalked it up to a mob hit. Again, nothing was ever proven, but it’s suspected that Franco may have been responsible for what happened on Mulholland Drive.”
“Oh, wow. It’s ironic that she played femmes fatales in her pictures. Why the hell did she live in this house, though?”
He kept reading. “Says here that she was a controversial figure even before her death because she chose to live in West Adams Heights—called ‘Sugar Hill’—among mostly African American movie stars and celebrities. Hmm. Doesn’t say why. Did Stepin Fetchit live here?”
“I don’t know. I think his star stopped shining by the late forties. Besides, he represented a characterization of a black man that I find offensive.”
“That’s true. By then we had actors playing real roles and not just butlers and maids and Tarzan natives. Remember James Edwards?”
“Of course. The man who could have been Sidney Poitier if he hadn’t pissed off the studios.”
“Yeah, I guess he was deemed too ‘uppity.’ I think he also slapped a white woman in public. I’m sure that went over well in the early fifties, or whenever it was. What about Dorothy Dandridge?” Marcello suggested.
“I absolutely love her. I’m not sure if she lived in West Adams Heights. She was married to one of the Nicholas Brothers for a while.”
“Now they could throw a mean tap dance. Who were some of the others during that period? Lena Horne and Pearl Bailey?”
“Uh huh. Ray Charles—his studio is a few blocks away on Washington, isn’t it? The point is … why did Blair Kendrick live here?”
“I don’t know, Karissa.”
“Well, I’m going to find out, but not now. Come on, let’s set up the Wi-Fi. We need to get to work on our new project.”
It hadn’t taken long to unpack all her things. All she’d really needed was everything she’d had at Executive Suites—her clothes, some files, a few books and CDs, and some personal keepsakes.
She set Julia—a very old rag doll she’d owned since she was a child—on Blair’s dresser next to one of the glamour photos of the actress. The doll was a kind of good-luck charm for Karissa. It wore a simple dress with the name Julia sewn into the hem. Julia had come along with Karissa on every move she’d ever made in her life.
“We’re starting a new life, Julia,” she announced to the doll. She didn’t feel foolish at all, although she thought the occasion called for a couple of glasses of wine.
That night, Karissa stayed up way too late exploring the rooms upstairs, especially the one full of boxes and a trunk. According to Mr. Trundy, they contained personal items belonging to Blair Kendrick, packed away for safekeeping. Karissa wondered for whom they had been kept. From what she’d read so far on the Internet, Blair had left no family behind.
Her thoughts trailed to Trundy. A strange bird. Karissa figured him to be one of those old-fashioned black people who looked down on mixed-race men and women. She had found throughout her life that prejudice could come from unexpected places and ran both ways. It seemed that when it was convenient for someone to think of her as white, she was simply lumped in with the rest of the white population, but when that became inconvenient, then she became most definitely black, a token representation of the entire race. She’d felt the same thing in her conversation with Trundy.
Karissa thought about whether she should be snooping in the boxes. Mr. Trundy hadn’t told her the things were off-limits. In fact, he had encouraged her to have a look. Perhaps because she worked in Hollywood?
She went to the trunk first and wiped it off with a kitchen rag. She was going to have to do a lot of dusting around the house. The trunk was unlocked, so she sat on the Persian rug and opened it. Inside were some items of clothing, a few stationery boxes, a stack of copies of the studio publicity portrait of Blair wearing the pearl necklace, and a couple of photo albums. She flipped one of the albums open and began to peruse.
It was fascinating. The book was filled with black-and-white pictures from yesteryear. Some appeared to be professionally taken—studio shots, glamour and publicity stills, and the like—others were candid, probably shot with Blair’s own or someone else’s personal camera. Karissa recognized parts of the house in some of the pictures—Blair had thrown a party at some point and documented it in photographs.
But Karissa was most struck by the faces in the photos—nearly everyone was black, except for Blair and a few others.
As she flipped through the album, she began to see more pictures that featured Blair and a distinctive black man. She was a tall woman, but he was taller, broad-shouldered, and extremely handsome. There were a few shots of him sitting at a piano, with Blair draped over the edge as if she were about to sing. Other pictures were taken in public, possibly at a nightclub, where the clientele was all black. Blair Kendrick was the only white woman there.
One 8x10 showed the two of them cheek to cheek, looking at the camera, with huge smiles and stars in their eyes.
They were in love, Karissa thought immediately. Blair Kendrick was involved in an interracial romance.
She searched through the book for identifications of the subjects. Nothing. She carefully removed pictures from the leaves to look at the backs. Blair hadn’t written on them.
Who is this man?
These were taken in the late forties. An interracial romance would have been taboo. Karissa couldn’t remember when California’s “miscegenation” laws were changed. She pulled out her phone and looked up the date.
It was October 1948. California’s Supreme Court determined that anti-miscegenation laws violated the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution. Of course, it wasn’t until 1967 that the U.S. Supreme Court made interracial marriage legal nationally with the Loving case. But in California, it had been legal for nineteen years.
All the same, that didn’t mean it would have been readily accepted.
Karissa looked at the 8x10 again and stared at the beautiful black man with sparkling, kind eyes.
Who are you, mister?