New York Magazine Cover Story - June 22,
1998
Leo, Prince of the City
by Nancy Jo Sales
The hottest young actor in
America and his rowdy friends have made nighttime New York their playground,
creating havoc and leaving in their wake a trail of awestruck fans (and often,
no tip).
Hi Leonardo! You just seem to drain all my
worries out of me when I'm watching one of your movies. You are a hell of a
better actor than Brad Pitt and all those other shitty actors that some girls
love to death. All I want to say before I sign off is that I don't think you are
gay or bi and when some of my friends say they don't like you I am not ashamed
to say that I am deeply in love with you. (Oh, and by the way, I'm a Calvin
Kline [sic] model and I'm 21 years old!)
-- posted on the "Leonardo
DiCaprio Is a Hot Babe!" Website, May 31
The
furtive typing of teens in the Heartland is only the rawest expression of the
global passion focused on the 23-year-old Hollywood actor Leonardo DiCaprio
(named after Da Vinci, and with a Mona Lisa smile). What can Leo's life be like
at the center of this raging obsession? I went looking for Leo to find out -- on
the town in New York, where he can still be found most nights, as always, having
a hell of a time.
I didn't find Leo at Jet 19, reportedly one of his
hangouts, but I did meet a stockbroker named Ted who said he'd seen Leo at the
Bubble Lounge recently. "I literally bumped into him," said Ted, laughing
modestly. "I made a big impression on him."
Leo is six feet tall, according to the
best-selling Leonardo DiCaprio, Modern-Day Romeo -- Ted is five foot
three. But he was wearing a very expensive suit. "I know if he saw me again,
he'd remember me," he said, convinced. "I was like, 'Yo, Leo, dude, whassup?'
And he was, like, sooo down-to-earth. We talked about chicks, y'know? He was
just a regular guy, sipping Stoli-and-soda. Talking about chicks." Again he gave
a dry little laugh.
At Shine, the hot new club on West Broadway -- so
hot, Leo goes there -- I met a slinky 40-year-old woman in false eyelashes who
was dancing with a 24-year-old man. She told me, "I will have him, one day. I
will see him here, and he will make eye contact with me, and he will know that
we were meant to be together for a brief affair. Because he is so
sensitive."
The actress Susan Sarandon, who lives in New York,
recently pushed her way through hordes of Leomaniacs at the premiere of The
Man in the Iron Mask to get an audience with DiCaprio for her teenage
daughter, Eva, and seven of her closest school friends. "He was totally
adorable," said Sarandon. "I humiliated myself."
Leo's been making the scene in New York for so
long, he was already becoming a sort of tourist attraction, like South Street
Seaport; but it was never anything like it is now. "I remember him and Juliette
Lewis outside a Saturday Night Live party at Rockefeller Center a few
years ago, begging the clipboard troll-ettes, 'Come on, please let us in,' "
gossip columnist Anita Sarko says. "Even at the Basketball Diaries party
at the Hard Rock Cafe, no one was paying much attention to him."
But then came the billion-dollar-grossing movie,
the 500 Leo Websites, the plethora of hype and the attentions of the rich and
powerful ("Leonardo DiCaprio . . . is an androgynous wimp," Senator John McCain
grumbled recently), and Leo turned into "Leo." Now, venturing out at night with
him feels like climbing onto the set of the Jerry Springer Show, says one
of his close friends. "When he goes to a club, people start screaming and
jumping over the security guards and elbowing and pushing to get near
him."
And that's not just the civilians. "The models are
all over him," says Jeffrey Jah, director of the club Life. "He's got rock
stars, Puff Daddy, Donald Trump, going over to his table to sit with him. Leo
just comes in to hang out with his friends."
Jah adds, "They never act up in here."
The Posse
"They"
are the fun-lovin' guys you always see Leo around with. Even before there was
Leomania, Leo always traveled with his pack of devotees, known in Hollywood
circles as "The Pussy Posse." "They're all about seeing the girls," says a
magazine photographer in New York who once had to sneak Leo and his boys, then
the uninvited, into a Victoria's Secret event.
The group's core members constitute a frat house
of young men, some of whom are actually famous, like Leo. There's Lukas Haas,
who has not yet become Leo, and Tobey Maguire -- the pensive youth in The Ice
Storm -- who is, perhaps, waiting to. There's Harmony Korine, the
Gummo boy auteur, and David Blaine, the levitating magician, who was
recently spotted zipping around town on his new motorcycle with Leo -- they hit
Moomba, Chaos, Veruka, and NV, where Mariah Carey had to wait in line to
get a meeting. "I have fun with him, that's for sure," Leo said of Blaine two
years ago when I was doing a story on the magician. "He'll do some pretty
fucking crazy things. He's like a monkey with electrodes stuck to his
head!"
And then there are the other guys in Leo's pack,
who make up a kind of former-child-actor brigade: There's Jay Ferguson, once
Burt Reynolds's wisecracking son on Evening Shade; Josh Miller, who
played Keanu Reeves's little brother in River's Edge but never became
Keanu Reeves; Ethan Suplee, who appeared briefly in Chasing Amy; Kevin
Connelly, who has appeared on the WB; Scott Bloom, another aspiring actor;
Justin Herwick, with whom Leo almost got himself killed over the California
desert in 1996, when his parachute failed to open (his instructor released an
emergency cord). The Leo men seem to like to play rough. "I like to do things
that scare me," said DiCaprio.
An adjunct member of the pack is the heavy-haired
Sara Gilbert of Roseanne, who was starring in Poison Ivy when Leo
was just "Guy #1" in the script. "If they're a new Rat Pack, she's the Shirley
MacLaine figure," says a young actor who's hung out with the crowd in L.A. "A
lot of them have known each other a long time; they started out as child stars
together." (That was back in Leo's Growing Pains days, during which "he
was becoming a bit of a misfit in his classes," the best-selling Leonardo
DiCaprio, Romantic Hero reports gently. "Leonardo alarmed his
teachers . . . when he drew a swastika on his head as part of his improvised
imitation of mass murderer Charles Manson.")
The posse "used to see each other at auditions all
the time," says their young actor friend, "and a little competition rose up
between them." In fact, Haas lost out twice to DiCaprio for plum roles -- in
This Boy's Life and What's Eating Gilbert Grape, for which
DiCaprio won a Best Supporting Actor nomination. ("Why should I want to be him?"
Haas snapped to Texas Monthly in 1996.)
"They were always betting on who would blow up
first," says the actor friend. "Tobey was into more of a Tom Hanks track. Leo
was modeling his career after Nicholson and De Niro." ("Portraying emotionally
ill characters gives me the chance to really act," DiCaprio said in the
best-selling Leonardo DiCaprio Album, which also recounts an early Leo
memory -- killing a pigeon -- as well as the time his father, George, a
"bohemian" comic-book trader, urged his son to go off and lose his virginity.
Leo, then 6, declined.)
As the years went by, however, Leo was always the
one getting the best parts, the best reviews, the most heat in the teen
magazines. And now this. "The Titanic stuff has caused this big
identity crisis. Some of them have completely lost their careers," the young
actor says. "All they do now is hang out with Leo. If Leo wants to go to Paris,
it's let's go to Paris. Las Vegas? No problem." DiCaprio was heard exclaiming to
his table at Tomoe on Oscar night, "Let's rent a plane! I want to go to India!"
"The people closest to him have Leomania worse than anyone," the actor
says.
"They're like, 'How come he's getting all the
attention and no one's paying attention to me?' " says another member of the
group who's observed their "sibling rivalry" -- which he says Leomania has made
chronic. "They want to be with Leo like 24-7."
Some posse members even accompany DiCaprio on
movie sets. In New York, they act as unofficial bodyguards, although it's
unclear sometimes whether this is for his benefit or for theirs. "They get off
on protecting him -- they're always ready to start yelling and swinging,"
grouses paparazzo John Barrett, who admits to having chased Leo around town on
several occasions. "They were rushing me outside Moomba" on the night of James
Toback's after-party for the premiere of Two Girls and a Guy, says the
photographer, sighing, "Here I am at my age dealing with a pack of little brats
like that."
The posse even carries Leo's cash. Earlier this
year, when DiCaprio rented a house in South Beach, "he trusted his entourage of
friends to deal with his expenses, not carrying any money himself," confides
The Leonardo DiCaprio Album. "According to his pal Ethan Suplee, 'Leo's
cheap. . . . He'll look for a place in the street to park rather than use valet
parking.'"
"I'm the cheapest bastard in the world," the
ever-frank DiCaprio has said. "You never know, I may go bankrupt, or lose my
career, or have a Hugh Grant situation."
Leo Takes New York
Leo
discovered New York in 1994, when he came here to shoot The Basketball
Diaries. In New York, "you could sit in a corner all day and probably have a
more fulfilling time than traveling all over L.A. and seeing all the sights,"
said DiCaprio. How true. But Leo hardly sat watching the city pass him by; he
jumped right in, and the press followed, naturally. "He hits Manhattan clubs . .
. and brawls with the locals," said Rolling Stone. "He seldom sleeps, so
intense is his partying," Liz Smith wrote.
"We don't have gossip columns in L.A. watching
everybody's every move," complains DiCaprio's publicist, Cindy Guagenti. "If
people want to know something, they call the publicist."
"He started acting like an idiot," says one highly
placed New York publicist (who wouldn't allow me to use her name because, she
says, "everyone fears his power" -- as if Leo were Louis XIV, whom he recently
played). "He made a joke out of it, going to everything all over the place. He
was like Sylvia Miles, except young and beautiful and talented."
"New York is like Leo's playground, his
Disneyland," says an aspiring director who says he's frequented strip joints
with Leo's posse in L.A. "They used to set off stink bombs at Sky Bar. But Leo's
not going to act up out here now. Anyone in the [of course, movie] industry
could be sitting at the next table. No one in the industry cares what he does in
New York."
"They're kids. They act like kids," the redheaded
hostess at Moomba told me, with a curling little frown. At Spy, where Leo has
become what Liza once was to Studio 54, or Henny Youngman was to the Carnegie
Deli, the French bartender griped, "He does not teep! He gets his friends go to
the bar for his drinks. He was in here with Julie Delpy -- I could not
understand it. She's a very nice girl -- French. He is cheap."
Leo worries about his image: "I don't want to be
thought of as a party animal," he has said. Most of what gets reported about him
hardly rates as Rat Pack behavior, however; it's more like Romper Room
(which he appeared on at the age of 5). This March, Leo and the posse reportedly
bombarded paparazzi with grapes from upstairs at the Mercer Hotel. ("That
doesn't sound like Leonardo," Guagenti told the Daily News. "Does it?"
asked the paper.) And Leo was spotted throwing litter off the Brooklyn Promenade
onto cars traveling below on the BQE ("before speeding away in his
chauffeur-driven Mercedes," said the New York Post). In April, Leo was
seen sporting a shiner. "He got it horsing around with his friends," said a
beleaguered-sounding Guagenti.
But DiCaprio's reputation as a true bad boy has
become widespread enough for it to be made a joke of: Two weeks ago at the MTV
Movie Awards, DiCaprio accepted his honor for Best Male Performance by video;
the spoof that followed featured a crew swaddled in bandages, all saying
DiCaprio had freaked out and assaulted them. Uh, ha, ha. And DiCaprio has said
that in Celebrity, the next Woody Allen movie (where art always mocks
life), he plays "a cocky young Hollywood actor, the stereotype of what a
disgusting young actor should be."
The currently suppressed indie film Don's
Plum -- originally called Saturday Night Club -- may provide an
inadvertent glimpse behind the curtain shrouding the secret society of Leo and
his friends, mostly because it was made and largely ad-libbed by Leo and his
friends. The characters "sit around, smoke, talk, say 'bro' a lot, insult the
waitress, try to have sex with girls in the back room, fight," says one person
who has seen it.
Don's Plum was directed by former posse
member R. D. Robb -- also a former child actor -- who has recently been
"expelled" from the group, according to someone still inside it, for attempting
to spin the film's straw into the Leo gold of a commercial release. DiCaprio and
Tobey Maguire, who in 1995 put up a scant amount of money to get the movie made,
said no way.
Maguire, according to the $10 million lawsuit
filed in L.A. Superior Court in April by David Stutman, the film's producer,
became concerned that "improvisational comments he had made during the Film
revealed personal experiences or tendencies that would undermine [his] public
image," and so he leaned on his "longtime friend," Leo, to block it, although
DiCaprio allegedly didn't much care whether anybody saw it or not. At one
screening, DiCaprio said he " 'really, really liked the film,'" says Stutman's
suit. "He jumped out of his seat several times, laughing, clapping, and
high-fiving his friends."
"Do you girls masturbate at all?" Leo asks in one
scene. "Stop looking at me like that -- I'll fucking throw a bottle at your
face, you goddamn whore."
The film was pulled from Sundance. Miramax is no
longer interested in investing. Maguire and DiCaprio's "campaign" against the
movie makes "potential buyers, distributors and others afraid to offend
DiCaprio," say court papers.
Leo and the Ladies
"The
pussy posse" didn't get its name for nothing. "When you're my age," DiCaprio
says in The Leonardo DiCaprio Album, "your hormones are just kicking in
and there's not much besides sex on your mind."
The gossip mill has produced a Cannonball Run
of beauties supposedly "linked" to Leo: Alicia Silverstone, Juliette Lewis,
Kate Moss, Kate Winslet (who said, "To me he's just smelly, farty Leo"), Demi
Moore (Bruce was in Delaware shooting a movie), Claire Danes (who called him
"immature"), Bridget Hall (who told me, "Nothing happened," refuting the
Globe, which quoted her as saying, "He was lousy in bed. The sex was
bad"), Sharon Stone (Leo said, of their screen kiss, "I was expecting a little
more from ol' Sharon, y'know? Actually, she hurt my lip").
And yet DiCaprio still can't seem to shake the
rumor he's less than interested in the company of women. "If I want to go to a
party with a few male friends, it doesn't mean I'm gay!" Leo has said. Totally,
dude. After all, Sinatra hung out with Don Rickles, but that doesn't mean he was
having sex with him, either. "Leo is not gay," laughs still another young L.A.
actor who has hung out with his crew. "Leo's all about girls."
But no wonder if Leo's had it with all the young
ladies trying to get their names in bold print next to his. Take the case of
Vanessa Haydon, the 20-year-old blonde Wilhelmina model and New York native who
caused a mini-sensation after she was seen nuzzling Leo at that premiere party
at Moomba for James Toback's Two Girls and a Guy, in May.
Star, May 26 (breathless): "Leonardo
DiCaprio has fallen hard for a stunning young model -- and pals say this time
it's love. The superstar is so smitten with blonde beauty Vanessa Haydon that
he's now a one-woman man."
"He never dated her," Cindy Guagenti says flatly.
At least one person saw DiCaprio walk out of an after-party for a Tony Shafrazi
Gallery opening at BondSt. just as Haydon was striking up a conversation with a
gossip columnist about how happy Leo was to finally be with someone as "down to
earth" as she.
"Vanessa played the media really well," says a
young man who has known Haydon since they were going to "teenyboppers" (or teen
nightclub events) together. "Now she's all dolled up and ladylike and shit, but
she used to be this hard-rock in leather and baggy jeans. She was a total
gangster bitch."
"She was an ill thug," says a girl who attended
the Dwight School with Haydon. "She went out with this Latin King for like three
years."
In her yearbook, Haydon was voted Most Likely to
Wind Up on Ricki Lake. Instead, she made it into "Page Six," which reported in
May that her handlers were charging Sydney newspapers $15,000 for advance
publicity stills while Haydon was Down Under shooting the cover of Australian
Harper's Bazaar. "Vanessa Haydon got game," says another former
schoolmate.
But no matter. Leo's supposedly on to an
18-year-old Russian modelette from Moscow, Alyssa Sourovova; or at least he was
for a night -- again, at Moomba. Later that same week, however, he was with
David Blaine at Ten's, the strip club on West 21st Street. I just missed them,
but a dancer whispered hotly in my ear: "He comes in here with all his friends
and sits back like the Mack Daddy -- he doesn't even tip!"
At Life, where I also did not find Leo, I talked
to a drag queen named Meeka who looked exactly like Naomi Campbell (with whom
Leo also reportedly had a dalliance this year). "He's cute! He's right now!"
Meeka shouted thoughtfully above the theme to Titanic, which had been set
to a pounding disco beat. "When all the 17-year-olds become 22-year-olds, he'll
have faded, but right now, he's right now."
"And that's," she added, "what it's all about."
One night when I got home after looking for Leo,
there was a message on my answering machine. A group of young guys -- they all
sounded drunk -- were laughing and cutting up in the background. It was kind of
strange. The speaker was telling me that if I wanted an interview with him, I'd
have to "make a deal" along the lines of doing something for him that Monica did
for Bill. "Then maybe we'll talk!" he laughed.
I'd been trying to get in touch with Leo.
But nah, I thought; it couldn't be Leo.
Leo and the Law
It was
the kind of night the posse should love: It was all about them -- or, that is,
Leo. The premiere of The Man in the Iron Mask was showing at the Ziegfeld
Theater; Leo entered to the tearful wailing and undergarment-pelting of hundreds
of teenage girls. The after-party at the New York Public Library was attended by
everyone who was anyone -- but even most of them couldn't get upstairs
into the extra-exclusive chamber where Leo and some of his entourage, which
included Jay Ferguson and David Blaine that night, puffed on imported cigars.
They'd just been down to Cuba.
Elizabeth Berkley made it into the upstairs party
on the invitation of an L.A. publicist named Karen Tenzer, a partner in the firm
Michaels, Wolf and Tenzer, which counts among its clients Gabriel Byrne, who
co-starred in Iron Mask as Leo's Musketeer. Not long after Berkley, best
known for her flashy role in Showgirls, started mingling, Tenzer took her
aside. "She said, 'Jay [Ferguson] and Leo are going crazy for you, and they want
you to come to Elaine's after this -- without Roger,'" says Berkley, whose
hapless boyfriend, actor-director-whatever Roger Wilson (he starred in
Porky's I and II), was nearby, getting some food.
Berkley asked, was this some kind of joke? Tenzer,
she says, knew she lived with Wilson here in New York; the couple had recently
had dinner with Tenzer and Byrne while in Utah for the Sundance Film Festival.
"'They're going nuts for you,'" Berkley says Tenzer laughed.
Berkley had also seen DiCaprio and Ferguson around
for years. When DiCaprio was on Growing Pains and Ferguson on Evening
Shade, Berkley was a Saved by the Bell cutie. "The last time I saw
Jay, I was probably 17," says Berkley. "In L.A., you just see everybody around
at events and auditions." However, she declined what seemed a rather odd
request. Berkley says, "I told Karen I'm in love with Roger."
But that, apparently, wasn't the end of it. "The
next morning on my voice mail," says Berkley, "there was a message from Jay,
saying, 'Hey, baby, Karen gave me your number, we're going to dinner later, we
want you to come.'" Throughout the day, Berkley says, she also received around
seven messages from Tenzer, which she ignored, until finally, around midnight,
there was one from Tenzer's assistant saying "Karen needs you immediately,"
giving Tenzer's cell-phone number, which she dialed.
"The first thing Karen said was, 'Why didn't you
call Jay back?'" says Berkley, with quiet outrage. "She said, 'Your presence is
requested here.' Her tone was very impatient. And I said, 'What, are you trying
to deliver me to these guys, Karen?' And she said, 'Well, you know.'"
"Really upset," Berkley went to Wilson, who was in
their living room watching sports. Hearing what had gone on, Wilson (who's from
Brooklyn) asked for Tenzer's cell number and got Jay Ferguson on the phone. "I
said, 'Look, Jay,'" says Wilson, "'I know you guys are having a great time and
the town is your apple -- but not this part of town. I don't know how this got
started, but I'm just asking you please not to call my home again, and Elizabeth
has asked please that you not call her again. . . . Okay?'"
"And then I heard a lot of profanity," says
Berkley.
"There was a two-second pause," Wilson says, "and
then it's, 'Fuck you, you fuckin' faggot, fuckin' motherfucker, we'll call
whoever we want and if you don't fuckin' like it, why don't you come down here
and tell us to our face?'"
"Thus," Wilson says with a sigh, "I put on my
shoes and went to the Morgans hotel," where Leo and friends were dining at the
restaurant Asia de Cuba.
The back table was full: DiCaprio was there (he
had nine rooms booked at the hotel), as were Ferguson, Tenzer, Julia Ormond,
Byrne, and about eight other posse members (no David Blaine that night). At the
appearance of Wilson, the table fell silent. Wilson demanded of Tenzer why she
was calling Berkley so late. "And then Jay Ferguson jumps up and says, 'I'm the
one who called you, fuckface, and it's time for you and me to go outside,' "
says Wilson. (Ferguson did not return phone calls from New
York.)
Wilson went. Ferguson went. And then, according to
a sworn statement reportedly given to police by the restaurant's chief of
security (who, three weeks later, was no longer employed there), DiCaprio said
to the others at the table: "Let's go kick his ass." And the rest of the table,
minus Byrne and Ormond, followed.
Wilson claims two hotel security guards stood on
either side of DiCaprio, who was smoking a cigarette, as he and Ferguson squared
off on the sidewalk outside the entrance. "I'm facing Jay Ferguson, two feet in
front of me," says Wilson. "The other guys are yelling at me, 'Fuck you, faggot!
Go home, you fuckin' wimp, you're pathetic.' You know, all this."
Tenzer was also outside, according to Wilson,
attempting to make peace; she held up her cell phone, saying, "I think this is
all my fault. I can explain." Just then, as Wilson was momentarily distracted,
someone -- not Ferguson -- punched him in the Adam's apple. He doubled over. And
suddenly, the posse "went crazy, saying, 'Oh, no, oh, no, this can't happen!'
And they jumped on the guy and threw him back in the hotel. They were protecting
him," says Wilson. "And I never saw the kid again."
Wilson's larynx was damaged. His attacker still
hasn't been identified. For now, the D.A.'s office isn't talking about the case,
but Roger Wilson "was definitely assaulted," says Detective George Wich of the
6th Precinct, who's heading the investigation. "We're taking it
seriously."
Karen Tenzer, contacted at her office in L.A.,
denied any involvement in the curious scenario. "I was just having dinner," she
said. "Leonardo DiCaprio is not my client." "I can't answer whether any of Leo's
friends called Elizabeth," Cindy Guagenti told me; elsewhere, Guagenti has said,
"Leo's friend did call Elizabeth, but it was to invite her to dinner with
them."
"That girl" -- meaning Berkley -- one of Leo's
friends says lightly, "would have come in a second if we'd wanted her to. Any
girl would."
Faux Leo
Was there
something about being Leo that attracted trouble? Do these sorts of things just
happen to you if you're the most sought-after young man in the world?
I was at Ñ on Crosby Street, not looking for Leo,
when I thought I saw him. I jumped out of my chair. "That guy doesn't look like
Leo," said my friend Greg, pushing me down. "Maybe Leonardo Smith."
It turned out the young man's name was Troy Allen,
and he was a recruit from Detroit for a large brokerage firm. He was the same
age and height as Leo, had the same paleness, the same loose-limbed, lanky look.
The fires of Leomania licked at my brain. "How'd you like to be Leo for a
night?" I asked him.
"Well, sure!" he said.
My worst fear for this experiment was that nothing
would happen, and I'd have wasted everyone's time on a harebrained scheme. Quite
the opposite occurred, which turned out to be much scarier.
I brought along a photographer (Catherine McGann)
and a bodyguard (a large fellow who goes by "Brick"), and I rented a limo, white
stretch, from the Yellow Pages. It was all at the last minute, and the car was
not exactly prime; it looked like the limo of losers.
The driver, Raymond, had a long shiny ponytail
under his shiny black cap and a Pancho Villa mustache. He was told we were
picking up "Leo," to which he stammered, "Oh! I will drive very
carefully!"
It was a Friday night. We picked "Leo" up around
ten. I'd told him to wear sunglasses. "Welcome to my limousine!" Raymond said
nervously, throwing open the back door.
"Gee, thanks!" Troy said.
Three of Troy's friends -- Kara, Lee Ann, and
Steve -- came along for the ride. They were all in their early twenties, all in
marketing and the financial sector, all quite giddy at being part of the stunt.
Troy confessed he had never been in a limousine before.
"How does it feel to be so famous?" I asked him.
"It's awesome!" he said, fiddling with the power
windows.
He was taking to his role with alacrity. "What's
Kate Moss like?" I probed.
"She's gorgeous," said Troy. "And she's a really
nice person."
Our first stop was the Virgin Megastore in Times
Square. There was a small crowd on the sidewalk surrounding a woman holding a
large Gila monster on her shoulder -- you could touch it for a fee. When the
limo pulled up, Catherine jumped out, snapping pictures of "Leo" emerging; the
onlookers rushed over, leaving the Gila monster in the dust.
"Who's that?" they demanded. "Out the way!"
ordered Brick.
Some of them zoomed after us into the store, where
"Leo" pretended to shop for CDs; it was a bit difficult for him to concentrate,
however, as a gaggle of teenage girls and so-excited-they-could-burst tourists
were shamelessly scrutinizing his every move. Security guards were suddenly
appearing, hissing at one another on walkie-talkies. "Gosh," Troy whispered,
growing paler, "they really think I'm him! Let's get outta here!"
Back outside, as we moved down the street, the
number of fans trailing us had tripled; some were running around in front of
"Leo" taking pictures of him with disposable cameras and then dashing away, as
if they had gotten away with something. Brick pretended to order back the limo
driver on a cell phone. "Where's the limo at?" he barked. "We can't leave Leo
out here on the street!"
While Raymond was circling the block -- perhaps
nervous about his precious cargo -- he had gotten into an accident; a tow truck
had hit the limousine. We were now driving "Leo" around in a dented limo. "Once
you go down with the Titanic," "Leo" said magnanimously, "you can deal
with just about anything."
But "Leo" was getting antsy; he decided he had to
have something to eat. "I'm hungry!" he moaned, at which we all jumped, making
suggestions. After all, he was the star. "I wanna go to Planet Hollywood!" he
said.
Troy was not aware of it, but the real Leo has
been talking to the owners of the wildly popular snack joint (Schwarzenegger,
Bruce and Demi, et al.) about becoming a shareholder. I didn't think this would
be a problem; in fact, I thought it might be a good cover for why "Leo" would
have nothing better to do on a Friday night than go check out the movie-star
tchotchkes at Planet Hollywood. I called ahead: "We're coming with Leo," I said.
"Oh, okay!" said the maître d', Kathy, her voice
taking on a solicitous tone. Would Leo be comfortable in the main dining room --
or would he like them to set up the function room? "Leo" said to tell her he
wanted to eat with everybody else, just like "regular people. Just because I'm a
star, I don't think I'm better than anybody," Troy said sincerely.
Outside Planet Hollywood, a wait staff of about
seven was waiting for us on the sidewalk. "They look like they should be holding
up swords," Lee Ann observed. We all peered out the windows timorously.
"Uh, this looks serious," Troy said.
Raymond flung opened the door. "Come on,
Leo!" Brick boomed. Catherine started snapping pictures. "Leo" climbed
out, baseball hat pulled down low.
They'd arranged for us to enter through a side
door. Maître d' Kathy and Brett, the night manager, were following along behind
us, peppering me with questions about Leo's visit. "Well, frankly, I was
surprised he wanted to eat at Planet Hollywood," I said fishily. "Well, frankly,
so were we," Kathy said.
As soon as we were in the main dining room --
packed with patrons devouring mounds of fried food -- heads began swiveling
around; people were talking through their hands, mouthing "Lee-Oh," eyes wide,
mouths full. Waiters from all over the restaurant were rushing into the room to
get a look. "They on him," whispered Brick.
It all felt very dicey. I began to panic. "What do
we do?"
"Talk to me. I'm the star!" hissed
"Leo."
We sat down. I pretended to conduct an interview.
"Uh, so you're thinking about becoming a shareholder of Planet Hollywood?" I
asked.
"I don't want to disclose anything right now,"
muttered "Leo," sinking down behind his menu.
We had sent Kara and Lee Ann to the front to take
the temperature (where, little did we know, Leo's tuxedo from Titanic is
hanging in a large glass case; apparently, his legs are several inches shorter
than Troy's). Later on, they told us that just then, a waiter passed by them
announcing: "You girls are gonna pass out in a few seconds -- I'm gonna pass
out, too!"
On our side, the room had become strangely loud
and animated, everyone showing off the way people do when they feel they're in
the presence of someone known. "They on him," Brick said again, in
disbelief.
"Can I get a picture?" said a portly woman who had
appeared beside our table, flashing us with a disposable camera before we could
answer.
A sweet-sixteen birthday party was already in
progress. Long Island girls in short, sleeveless dresses and chunky heels were
whipping out cell phones, mouthing "Lee-Oh!" excitedly into receivers.
Two 12-year-old girls in jeans came right up to
us, arms crossed, faces drenched with disgust. "That's not Leo!" one
said, turning on her heel.
But others weren't sure; a line of maidens was now
circling the room like little Nerf sharks, in Gap shirts.
Brett was back. "Can you come with me?" he asked,
in a high, pinched voice. Uh-oh, I thought; I telegraphed alarm to my
tablemates, but they were transfixed by the weird swelling of the room. "Don't
let them tear my hair out or anything," Troy was imploring Brick.
Brett and Kathy led me to an empty back office,
where I expected to be dipped in batter and fried.
Instead, I was handed a telephone. Patty Caruso,
the publicist of Planet Hollywood, had been called on Long Island (it was
midnight). "How long is he going to be there?" she asked urgently. "Because I
know Keith Barish" -- the principal owner of Planet Hollywood -- "will want to
come down and meet with him. Would that be all right? He could be there in
fifteen minutes -- "
"Uh, I'll have to ask," I said, handing back the
phone.
"We have to go," I told our party through clenched
teeth.
Things were getting out of control. We got up.
Brick had to wave people out of the way. "Leo just wanted to come down here and
have a few drinks, get something to eat," he was shouting, "and look what y'all
did! Y'all fucked up! We outta here! Come on, Leo, let's go!"
"Just let him know Eric took care of him," the
waiter informed me politely.
We ran out to the limo. People were running after
us, smashing their faces against the windows after "Leo" climbed in. "It's her
16th birthday; can't we get a picture?" People were taking pictures -- of the
car.
Back inside the car, Troy said, bewildered, "I'm a
superstar. I can't believe what they did to me."
We took off into the night. The limo phone rang.
Brick informed "Leo" that Raymond wanted his autograph.
Troy took off his sunglasses; he looked dazed.
"Being in that situation is really stressful," he said unhappily. "I don't like
being Leo anymore."
******
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