Shepard at the Sundance Film Festival in 2014 for the opening of Cold in July. |
Special to the Midway Messenger
This week began on a sad note when it was announced Monday that Sam Shepard, noted Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright, author, screenwriter, director and Oscar-nominated actor, had passed away at his farm near Midway, just across South Elkhorn Creek in Scott County. The family waited five days before letting the public know that he died from complications related to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, commonly known as Lou Gehrig’s disease.
Samuel Shepard Rogers III was born in the town of Fort Sheridan,
Illinois, just north of Chicago, on Nov. 5, 1943. He died Thursday, July 27, at
the age of 73.
A close friend of
mine, after hearing of Shepard’s passing, sent me a text wanting to know if I
had heard the news. My friend, a Shepard admirer, author of several books, and a
filmmaker himself, knew that I often talked to Shepard, and on one occasion my
friend sat down with us and discussed the ins and outs of their trade for an
hour or two. I sent a text back saying I hadn’t heard that Sam had passed away.
However, the news did not surprise me, because I had seen him out just a couple of months ago on Main Street, and saw how much different he looked from
just a little over a year ago before he found out that he had ALS. Seeing him
in his wheelchair, it was easy to surmise that his days left on this earth were
few.
After seven years or so, it’s going to be a little bit different not seeing Shepard in town
anymore, hanging out on the downtown patios or squirreled away in back of one
of the Midway restaurants, writing notes in his notebook or reading a book as
he ate.
I met Sam like I have
met so many other people who have made their way through Midway. It was
several years ago when I was sitting at the bar at The Black Tulip, now the
Grey Goose, watching the women’s college fast-pitch playoffs on the TV above
the bar, when this guy came in wearing boots, blue jeans, and a wild head of
hair the wind had blown in every direction. He takes a seat beside me and
orders a shot of Patron Tequila, says “hi,” looks up at the screen and questions why I liked watching women play fast-pitch softball. When I told him that was
what was playing when I came in, he laughed. I said if he would rather watch
something else, we could get the bartender to change the channel. He gulped down
his shot of tequila and ordered another. I drank my Miller Lite, asked the
bartender if she would change the TV to the horse-racing channel, so we
watched races and talked about horses.
He said that he had some horses racing, but it was more like a hobby.
Shepard at Sundance, 2014 |
I soon learned that
this windswept, cowboy-looking fellow was actually a movie star who had
been nominated for an Academy Award for best supporting actor for playing test pilot Chuck
Yeager in The Right Stuff. I was also informed that he had bought a
farm and would be living just outside Midway. That was pretty neat, but I
didn’t really know that much about the movies he had been in, or anything
else about him, for that matter. To me, he was just somebody who had been in a
movie; no big deal. After all, Star Trek’s William Shatner came around town a
few times a year, so a movie person in Midway wasn’t unheard of. To me, people in movies and on TV were pretty
much like everyone else, except most of them had more money than they knew what
to do with. I was to find out later found out that Sam wasn’t like a lot of
other movie people and wasn’t the stereotype movie celebrity.
After seeing him
around town almost every day after our first meeting, I quickly discovered that
he was without a doubt a curiosity, and it was comical to sit back and watch
people’s reaction once they recognized who he was as he sat in corner booths of
Midway’s restaurants. It was interesting how far out of the way women would
walk to get a closer look, not looking where they were going, and bumping into
chairs as they stared at him while making their way to the bathroom.
Shepard at the back door of his home on now-closed Sharp Lane in Scott County |
Henry Wombles,
co-owner of the Heirloom at that time, and I sat at the bar laughing and
wondering what it would be like to garner that much attention. After a while
others in the restaurant recognized Sam, and the normal table chatter that
filled the room dropped to a steady murmur, fingers began to point as heads
shook in agreement, and people at the tables would wave their waitresses over to
have them confirm that the person sitting in the booth at the back of the
restaurant was indeed Sam Shepard. That’s when people would begin to get up
from their tables to head for the bathrooms, slowing down as they passed Sam’s
booth.
One night one lady, in a very nice-looking yellow dress, must have been on some serious diuretic pills or the Heirloom food was
seriously disagreeing with her. Henry and I sat at the bar and counted nine
round trips from her table to the bathroom and back again using the longest
route possible so that she could walk close to Sam’s booth. That’s the way people acted when they visited
Midway and recognized Sam Shepard at one of the restaurants in town and it
happened every time he came to town.
Shepard told the New
York Times in 1994, “I still haven’t gotten over this thing of walking down the
street and somebody recognizes you because you’ve been in a movie, there is an
illusion that movie stars only exist in a movie. And to see one live is like
seeing a leopard let out of the zoo.”
I think a lot of
people were intimidated by Shepard. Though they were excited to see him in the
flesh, it was very seldom that onlookers would actually stop to ask him for an
autograph; most would just stare at him. Midway residents would smile and speak
but, I only knew a few who ever bothered him for a picture or autograph.
Townspeople made it a point to respect his privacy, and I believe that is why
he liked Midway so much.
Shepard's home (Photos from www.sam-shepard.com) |
There is no doubt
that Sam Shepard was a very talented, complex and intelligent person. He could
be rude, he could be funny, he could be compassionate, and he had days that he
just didn’t give a damn. I liked him for a lot of reasons, but he won me over
because during one of our talks he once told me that he really did like Midway
and that it had such a quality that even he had a hard time finding the words
to describe the area around here. Maybe that’s why he chose to spend his last
days here.
John McDaniel, left, is a member of the Midway City Council, the Midway correspondent for The Woodford Sun, and a former Midway and Woodford County police officer. He wrote this expanded version of his weekly Sun column at the request of the Midway Messenger.
Tonight on Broadway in New York, marquee lights will go dark for one minute in memory of Sam Shepard. He is survived by three children: Jesse, his son by his marriage to O-Lan Jones, and Hannah and Walker, his children with actress Jessica Lange; and by two sisters, Sandy and Roxanne Rogers. Funeral arrangements are private, and no plans have been made yet for a public memorial, according to the website www.sam-shepard.com.
UPDATE, Aug. 3: Singer-songwriter Patti Smith writes in The New Yorker magazine about times spent with him on his Midway farm.
UPDATE, Aug. 3: Singer-songwriter Patti Smith writes in The New Yorker magazine about times spent with him on his Midway farm.
2 comments:
Patti Smith, writing in The New Yorker, remembers Shepard: https://www.newyorker.com/culture/culture-desk/my-buddy-sam-shepard
I didn't know he lived in midway. Many years ago he lived in Charlottesville Virginia with Jessica lange. I sold him equipment for their farm. We never became great friends or anything but did have a beer or two once in awhile at a local establishment. I always liked him because he was genuine and just wanted to be treated as one of the guys.
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