We are in a New York City recording studio, early one Sunday afternoon. Tony Bennett, the legendary and ageless pop singer, is rehearsing a duet of the Rodgers and Hart classic “The Lady Is a Tramp” with the flamboyant singer-songwriter Lady Gaga. The two performers are having fun—and flirting shamelessly. It’s a great scene:
Bennett is characteristically bronze, smiling and majestic in a Brioni tux with a red pocket square, a white shirt, and a black tie, and Gaga is in a long black lace see-through gown under a sleeveless black leather motorcycle jacket with studded lapels. She’s sipping whiskey and affecting a slight Southern redneck drawl, and she’s teasing Bennett about the way his mere presence captivates women. “Do they always get really nervous and stand there, sweating and blushing?” She herself is clearly not immune.
I will never forget this scene, which appeared in the New Yorker half a dozen years ago. I found it so authentic and affecting, these two legends from different generations coming together, the moment captured by a legend and superstar in his own right, Gay Talese. Since then, whenever I hear either Gaga or Bennett on the radio, I flash back to that studio in New York, and their charming connection.
This is what Gay Talese can do for a reader. Of course, his stories are all diligently reported and elegantly developed throughout, but in every piece there is also this “you are here” element, a brilliant flash that thoroughly illuminates the characters he profiles.
It happens when I hear a Frank Sinatra song—suddenly I am in a billiard room in a swank private club, as Ol’ Blue Eyes confronts a stranger wearing a green shaggy-dog Shetland sweater, a tan suede jacket, and Game Warden boots, and says: “I don’t like the way you’re dressed.” Or when I see an image of Charles Manson, and I am instantly visualizing the owner of the ranch where the Manson clan took refuge, George Spahn, old and blind, who is transfixed by the killer’s power over his disciples. These high notes sometimes make you uncomfortable, but they are Talese’s own elegant way of capturing the lifeblood of the people he is profiling.
That scene that so perfectly nails Sinatra’s arrogance is, of course, from “Frank Sinatra Has a Cold”—Talese’s seminal work and the one for which he is most acclaimed. And we connect with George Spahn, perplexed by the mysterious Manson, in “Charlie Manson’s Home on the Range,” first published in Esquire in 1971.
These articles, with their high notes, exemplify the enduring legacy of Gay Talese’s writing, how he informs his reader, brings to life a distinctive cast of characters, weaves a story through a montage of ideas and anecdotes, and establishes a cinematic impression that is unforgettable.
The longer pieces in this collection represent the best of Talese’s journalism for Esquire, a multilayered blend of history, anecdote, and scenes gathered during long stints of boots-on-the-ground contact with his subjects, an intensive approach for which Talese is rightfully celebrated. Talese called it “the art of hanging out,” and it’s the foundation of his work. He doesn’t parachute into a situation; rather, he lives in it and also, instinctively, on the edges of it, making himself available when he senses opportunity, and scarce when his presence becomes a distraction. In another of his more recent New Yorker profiles, “Travels with a Diva,” you can see Talese negotiating his involvement with the opera singer Marina Poplavskaya so that he is with her when she wants him and nearly invisible when she doesn’t. There’s a defining moment in that story when the diva complains that Talese’s attention is making her nervous—and he backs off while revealing the contradictions of her personality, and her complicated relationship to fame.
Similarly, Talese sometimes finds himself, without fanfare, at the center of a defining moment. In “The Kingdom and the Tower” we see Arthur Gelb, veteran managing editor of the New York Times, in a restaurant, commemorating his last day in the old Times headquarters before the move to their current location. Surprisingly, Gelb, leading his guests, reveals a key to a secret entrance to the building. Gelb observes that he has used this secret key a thousand times and the last time he will use it is now. This is how we enter the mayhem of the final celebratory night at 229 West Forty-third Street.
Whether he is part of the story—or not—his presence as the architect of the multidimensional world he recreates, and his mastery of intimate detail, is always apparent. You live inside every character and find a place for yourself in each venue because Talese puts you there. In “A Matter of Fantasy,” Harold Rubin, who was to become the king of Chicago pornography, leafing through a magazine, first sees the image that would change his life, and we see it as though through his eyes: “She wore no jewelry, no flowers in her hair; there were no footprints in the sand, nothing dated the day or spoiled the perfection of this photograph.” In “The Kingdoms, the Powers, and the Glories of the New York Times” the notorious New York Times editor Clifton Daniel remembers the day he met Margaret Truman, the woman who was to become his wife: “the way she wore her hair, her shoes, the dark blue Fontana dress with the plunging neckline.” And then Talese adds a memorable detail that Daniel had confided to a friend years later, “I looked down the neck of that dress, and I haven’t looked back since.”
As in the instance of Daniel’s friend, Talese’s journalistic tendrils extend beyond his subjects to characters at the edges of his stories. This, too, is a mark of his persistence as a reporter. His access to Sinatra’s milieu, we learn in “On Writing ‘Frank Sinatra Has a Cold,’” was, at first, stonewalled. Sinatra would not see him—because he had a cold. Faced with a seemingly insurmountable challenge, Talese worked around his subject, connecting with people who knew the best and the worst of the singer. Incredibly, he fashioned his enduring and revealing profile by following but never actually speaking to Sinatra.
On a more personal note, in “Wartime Sunday,” Talese leads the reader on an engaging journey from his own clumsy attempts to fulfill obligations as an altar boy at Sunday mass in Ocean City, New Jersey, through youthful baseball experiences, and continuing with a riff on the proper technique (according to Talese’s father, at least) for eating spaghetti. The personal story concludes with a wonderful high note: A young soldier in a restaurant, at a table not far from Talese and his family, eating spaghetti—the wrong way! Oh, and the soldier was Joe DiMaggio.
Extraordinary moments like these emerge throughout this collection, adding color and context to the stories Talese tells. Like the doorman in “The Kidnapping of Joe Bonnano,” who saw everything—and nothing—on the night the gangster was snatched.
Near the end of the studio session and the end of the article, an onlooker asks Gaga why the song was such a fitting tune for her to sing with Bennett, and Gaga replies, “Well, ’cause I am a tramp.” She then gestures to Bennett, and adds, “He knows it.”
But Bennett, cool and collected, shakes his head. “I know you’re a lady,” he replies emphatically. “Playing a tramp.”
The spontaneous and intimate interactions between Gaga and Bennett, which occur throughout the piece, are indicative of the way Gay Talese designs and times everything he writes. He brings to life the famous, the infamous, and the unknowns in a subtle series of evocative cinematic interactions. Long after you read Talese, the high notes ring on.