Ron Silver |
I wish I could ask Ron
Silver what he thinks of the
AIG bonuses. He'd have some original take – maybe propose re-opening the
bonuses paid to Franklin Raines and Jamie Gorelick for their yeoman's
work running
Fannie
Mae into the ground and then
collecting bonuses of $90 million and $24.7 million, respectively. Or
maybe he'd just make a joke.
But I can't ask him anymore because Ron died of a rare esophageal
cancer last Sunday.
So now there is one less person in the world who never chooses his
positions to feed a pompous ego or to stroke his self-image as a
thinking person. There was no point to posturing for Ron: His social
standing in Hollywood was revoked the moment he supported Bush and the
Iraq war.
Perhaps Ron always spoke his mind, but I didn't know him when he was
"brave"; I only knew Ron when he was actually brave.
I've noticed that words like "brave" and "courageous" are mostly used
nowadays to mean "left-wing." We're constantly asked to admire the
monumental courage of Susan Sarandon, Tim Robbins, Sean Penn, Janeane
Garofalo and the Dixie Chicks – sometimes even by other people.
But for my younger readers, what courage traditionally meant was
risking the disapprobation of people you know. It was about losing
friends, losing work and losing status where you live – not alienating
people you will never meet. Insulting people in Kansas when you live in
Los Angeles is not speaking truth to power; it's speaking anything to
serve power.
One thing you cannot say about Ron's magnificent speech at the 2004
Republican National Convention is that he did it to go with the flow in
Hollywood, to take the path of least resistance, to win easy applause.
Ron did lose work, lose friends and lose his entire social apparatus.
Ron didn't say what he said to get any kind of reaction, but because
he believed it. He was an intellectual trapped in an actor's body.
Amid the antiques at his beautifully appointed Park Avenue home
prewar, there were piles and piles of magazines and newspaper articles
on topics ranging from Sunni Muslims to Darwinism. Nearly every room was
lined with books, most of them dog-eared.
When I needed to stay with Ron for a few weeks once, he'd get up
hours before I did, read all the major newspapers and leave the
interesting articles circled at the foot of my
bed.
This might be the nicest thing a man could ever do for me. Hey, skip
the bagel and fresh
coffee – bring me that op-ed
page and a pair of
scissors! It was like a
fabulous Park Avenue
hotel with a clipping
service.
During his long-shot chemo treatments at "the spa," as he called
Memorial Sloan-Kettering, Ron
turned his chemo rooms into Command Central. Most people doze off during
chemo; Ron would be sitting upright, watching the
news, checking his laptop and
making
cell
phone calls, seemingly
oblivious to the poison being injected into his arm.
He'd often come to church with me on Sundays – while insisting he
favored the "Original Testament," as if the New Testament were an act of
judicial activism. He just liked to hear an intellectual lecture on the
Bible – and always perked up when the minister began discussing the
"Original Testament."
On Sundays when we had communion, Ron would pop the host in his mouth
as soon as the tray passed him, approvingly observing that matzo was
served at church.
No ideas frightened him, which is part of the reason why we were
always laughing, even when we were arguing.
Ron sometimes told me of the cruelty directed at him by his former
friends, but never with bitterness or for publication – although I'm
tempted to get it off my chest even if he didn't want to get it off his
chest. You know who you are.
As with his impending death, Ron mostly joked about his banishment
from the plutocracy. When I off-handedly mentioned in December 2004 that
I had to get a Christmas tree, he told me he'd like to help, but having
recently spoken at the Republican National Convention, the last thing he
needed was to be seen walking through the streets of New York carrying a
Christmas tree.
After an aborted operation on his cancer in July 2007, as soon as I
saw Ron in his hospital bed, I told him I had Christians across the
country praying for him. He said, "That's good, because the Jews are
praying for me to die."
Here he was joking only hours after being told his cancer was
inoperable and he had mere months to live. Nearly two years later, he
was gone. Luckily for him, he now faces a Maker who rewards bravery, but
despises "bravery."