Every Christmas season brings me back to a decisive moment in my career.
After
Peter O’Toole died in December, The
New York Times gave him a
worthy sendoff. The marvelous English actor’s obituary, which began on the
front page, ran several thousand words.
At the
conclusion of its online version the Times ran this addendum:
“An
earlier version of a slide show caption with this article misstated the title
of release date of one of the films in which Peter O’Toole starred. It was ‘How
to Steal a Million,’ not ‘How to Steal a Million Dollars,’ and it was released
in 1966, not 1965.”
Then:
“An
earlier version of this obituary misstated the number of times Mr. O’Toole had
been unsuccessfully nominated for an acting Oscar in 2003, when he received his
honorary award. At that time, he had been nominated seven times; his eighth
unsuccessful nomination came in 2007.”
And
then:
“An
earlier version also stated in error that he ended his honorary Oscar acceptance
speech with the words, ‘Always a bridesmaid, never a bride — my foot.’ He began
the speech with those words.”
And:
“It
also misspelled the name of the film actor Errol Flynn; it is Errol, not
Erroll. It also misspelled the name of the director of the 2004 film ‘Troy.’ He
is Wolfgang Petersen, not Peterson.”
That’s a
masterpiece of deadpan contrition — an admission of error without the slightest
suggestion of apology. It reminds me of a Christmas season 50 years ago when I
was a young reporter for the now-defunct Des
Moines Tribune.
I wasn’t
doing well. It seems I was having trouble mastering certain journalistic
principles — like getting names and addresses right.
So this
particular Christmas I was assigned to the journalistic equivalent of Hell —
the Christmas beat, all treacle and sentimental claptrap.
On
Monday, I was sent to a local department store where they were giving a party
and presents to poor kids from around the city. A sure winner.
I wrote
it pretty well, except for the fact that somewhere along the way I switched the
quotes of the store manager with the cab driver who’d driven me over. The cab
driver complained. Not a good thing.
Later
that week I was sent to cover a fire in which a Christmas tree and all the
presents of the four children of the house had been destroyed.
To an
old-fashioned newspaper, a story like that was solid gold. Not only did it
thrum heartstrings, it gave the paper a chance to call on the generosity of
readers to send in money and toys for the children, making the paper seem
generous at practically no cost. Win-win.
Except
that I used one name for the father in the body of the story and an entirely
different one in the caption under the accompanying photo. And the address I
listed turned out to be near miss, rather than a direct hit.
I’d
saved the best for last, however, confusing a manger scene, a contestant in the
Chamber of Commerce Christmas contest, with a picture of Santa on a roof.
(Don’t ask how.)
By which
point it was Christmas Eve. My city editor came over and said: “You know Kaul,
I don’t think you’re going to make it.” And then, with exquisite cruelty: “Oh,
it’s Christmas Eve. Go home and enjoy yourself.”
I was 27
years old. I had a wife, two kids, and I’d just signed a lease on my house. I
went home, sat in front of the fireplace, and didn’t move — for a long time.
Finally
my wife said: “What’s wrong?”
“The
city editor told me I’m not going to make it,” I said.
Her
response was instantaneous. “Oh, what does he know? He looks as though his
mother dresses him. You’re going to make it.”
It’s at
times like that when you know you’ve married the right person. And for the past
five decades, in good times and bad, that person, that moment, has been the
light on my personal Christmas tree.
OtherWords columnist
Donald Kaul lives in Ann Arbor, Michigan. OtherWords.org