SEX, DRUGS, ROCK & ROLL
(Lights go down.
An amplified voice is heard. A raucous deejay.)
Hey, youāre listening to WRXX, the home of hard rock and roll! I donāt know about you, but I want to party, I want to rock the house, I want to take care of business-if you know what I mean, and I hope you do! So buckle your belts, grab your hats, zip your pants, and hoist your batsāwe got some rockinā to do too-night!
(Amplified hard rock blasts at the audience.
A man appears in silhouette, holding a stick.
He begins a frenzied āair guitarā mime to the music.
The lights change. The man is hobbling toward the audience on the stick. . . .
Segue . . .)
GRACE OF GOD
(A man is revealed hobbling on a cane, holding an empty paper cup; he addresses the audience.)
Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. I only want a few minutes of your time. It doesnāt cost you anything to listen. Please be patient with me.
I just got released from Rikerās Island, where I was unjustly incarcerated for thirty days for acts I committed during a nervous breakdown due to a situation beyond my control. I am not a drug addict.
This is the situation: I need your money. I could be out robbing and stealing right now; I donāt want to be doing that. I could be holding a knife up to your throat right now; I donāt want to be doing that. . . . And Iām sure you donāt want that, either.
I didnāt choose this life. I want to work. But I canāt. My medication costs over two thousand dollars a week, of which Medicaid only pays one-third. I am forced to go down to the Lower East Side and buy illegal drugs to stop the pain. I am not a drug addict.
If you give me money, if you help me out, I might be able to find someplace to live. I might be able to get my life back together. Itās really all up to you.
Bad things happen to good people. Bad situations beyond my control forced me onto the streets into a life of crime. I wonāt bore you with the details right now. But if you donāt believe me, you can call my parole officer, Mr. Vincent Gardello. His home number is 555-1768.
The only difference between you and me is that youāre on the ups and Iām on the downs. Underneath it all, weāre exactly the same. Weāre both human beings. Iām a human being.
Iām a victim of a sick society. I come from a dysfunctional family. My father was an alcoholic. My mother tried to control me. My sister thinks sheās an actress. You wouldnāt want the childhood that I had.
The world is really screwed up. Things get worse every day. Now is your chance to do something about it . . . help out somebody standing right in front of you instead of worrying about South fuckinā Africa ten thousand miles away. Believe me when I tell you God is watching you when you help someone less fortunate than yourself, a human being, like me.
Iām sorry my clothes arenāt clean. Iām sorry Iām homeless. Iām sorry I donāt have a job. Iām sorry I have to interrupt your afternoon. But I have no choice, I have to ask for help. I canāt change my lifeāyou can. Please, please look into your hearts and do the right thing! . . . Thank you.
(He addresses people in the front row, begging to one or two while holding out his cup, saying āThank you very much, God bless youā repeatedly. If money is given, he says, āStay guilty. āIf money is withheld, he says, āI really feel sorry for you, man. āFinally, he leaves, repeating over and over again, āThank you, God bless youā . . . segueing into the āThank you ās that begin the next piece.)
BENEFIT
(The āthank you ās from the last segment introduce this segment as a man addresses an imaginary āhostā onstage, then seats himself in a chair stage left. His accent is āBritish.ā)
Thank you, Bill, thank you. . . .
(Sits, attaches lavaliere microphone to shirt)
Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes . . . weāre very excited about the success of the new album. Itās nice having a number-one album again, you know, considering the band really hasnāt done anything for about ten years . . . itās a real breath of fresh air. . . .
(Picks up a glass of water from a small table on his left, sips the water)
No . . . I donāt, Bill . . . and Iām glad you asked me that question. . . .
(Returns the glass of water and picks up a pack of cigarettes and a lighter; taps out a cigarette as he speaks)
I used to do quite a few drugs. . . . But you know, Bill, drugs are no good for anybody. Iāve seen a lot of people get really messed up on drugs, Iāve seen people die on drugs. . . .
(Lights cigarette, inhales deeply)
I was saying to Trevor just the other dayāI said, āTrevor, how is it that we managed to survive?ā After Jimi died and Janis died and John died, I said to myself, āWhy didnāt we die?ā We shoulda died. All the stuff we used to do.
Yes, Bill, I was. I was a bona fide drug addict. I used drugs every single day for five years.
What was it like? Well, I tell you, Bill. I used to get up every morning, before I even brushed my teeth, I would smoke a joint. While I was smoking the joint, Iād pop a beer. While I was sipping the beer, Iād cook up a spoon of cocaine, heroināwhatever was lying around. Shoot it right into my arm, get completely wasted. . . . Flip on the telly, get high some more . . . maybe order up some lunch . . . have some girls over, get high with them . . . fool around with the girls, get high some more.
I did that every single day for five years.
It was horrible . . . it was horrible. . . . I mean, it was wonderful too, in its own way. I wonāt lie to you, Billāmy life is based on honesty today.
Yes, we did . . . we saw many tragic consequences. People very close to us. We had a sound engineer who had major problems with drugs . . . Hoover, we called him. His problem was that he wasnāt just our sound engineer, he was also in charge of getting the drugs for the band, because we always used to get very high whenever we cut an album. And Iāll never forget, we were cutting the Wild Horses album, and Hoover shows upā
Oh, thank you, Bill . . . yes, it is a great album. A real rock classic.
āSo weāre cutting Wild Horses, and Hoover shows up with a coffee can full of the most amazing white flake Peruvian cocaine . . . absolutely pure, very wonderful. . . . I donāt know if youāve ever done white flake Peruvian, Bill, but itās an experience.
Wouldnāt mind having a little bit of it right now! (Laughs out loud, then remembers the audience) Just joking, just joking!
So we took that can of cocaine, dumped it onto a table in the middle of the studio, cut out some lines two, three feet long. . . . Hoover would do three or four in each nostril . . . what a beast. Donāt know where he had room in his skull for the stuff.
And we started to play. . . .
Of course, in those days we didnāt just do coke. We did everythingāit was heaven! Trevor was smoking Afghani hash round the clock. Nigel was in his crystal meth period, so we had that. Ronnie showed up with a large bottle of NyQuil. We were blind, we were so high . . . completely wasted.
And we started to play, and you know, Bill, we never played better. It was like we all had ESP; it was historic. . . . Myself, I looked down at my fingers and Iām thinking, āItās not me playing this guitar, itās not me playing this guitar. Itās God playing.ā . . . It was awe-inspiring.
(Long pause, loses his train of thought) What was I talking about? . . . Oh rightāHoover!
So weāre playing this brilliant music for about an hour, and I happened to look up and thereās Hoover in the sound booth, and well . . . he was smashing his head up against the glass. Blood is running down off his forehead all over his nose. His nose is all red with blood. Cocaine is shooting out of his nostrils onto his beard. His beard was all white. He looked like a deranged Sandy Claus.
Well, see, the thing is, the thing is, he forgot to push the ārecordā button. And he went completely stark raving mad. They had to take him away in a straitjacket. Took him to a sanitarium.
And the sad thing is, Bill, he was one of my closest friends in the whole world.
Whatās that? . . . No . . . no . . . I donāt know where he is today. I know heās somewhere. Probably still in an institution somewhere. . . . Maybe heās watching right now.
Hoover, if youāre watching . . . (Makes a thumbs-up gesture to an imaginary TV camera, then laughs)
You see, Bill, thatās the insidious thing about drugsāyou donāt realize . . . uh . . . I mean, youāre having such a good time, you donāt realize what a bad time youāre having.
I got straight while I was on tour. Woke up one morning . . . typical tour situation: luxury hotel room, I donāt even know where I am . . . beautiful naked girl lying next to me in the bed, I donāt know who she is, I donāt know how she got there . . . champagne bottles all over the floor, cocaine on every horizontal surface. I hardly have the strength to pick up my head. So I pick up the remote control and I flip on the telly.
And I was saved, Bill, I was saved.
You have a man on in this country, on TV all the time. Saved my life. White hair. A genius . . . Donahue, Donahue was on. . . . What he said really hit me. He said: āIf you havenāt met your full potential in this life, youāre not really alive.ā The profoundness struck me like a thunderbolt. I thought, āThat man is talking about me. Heās talking about me.ā
Because here I was, young, talented, intelligent, wealthy, good-looking, very intelligent . . . and what am I doing with my life? Iām on drugs, day and night. I mean, I can understand if youāre talking about some Negro guy or Puerto Rican guy in the ghetto on drugsāI can understand that. But in my case it was such a tragedy when you think about it. Such a waste of human potential. Such a waste.
Because, Bill, you can have your caviar breakfast, lunch, and dinner, you can have your stretch limousines, your Concorde flights back and...