Irvin Ashkenazy--Izzy Ashcan for short--was perhaps the hardest working press agent in show business, if not the most successful. He'd gotten some traction in Hollywood, but no big victories he could point to. His clients were professional and hard-working... they made their way up to a certain amount of standing in the industry... but they never seemed to blow up, to go from character actor or one-hit wonder to a real breakout.
And he wanted a breakout--a star, an idol. His plan was to make a girl into a sensation, a one-woman Spice Girls adored by millions... which would make
him
millions. A triple threat--singing, acting, and sex--that would crack the glass ceiling in Hollywood as well as dominating the New York-Chicago-Miami-Vegas scene he already swam in.
Izzy's clients were mainly singers, DJs, theater actors, and a few local TV personalities. He wanted this it-girl to break into prestige TV and blockbuster films. No more small-fry stuff to keep the bills under control; he wanted fuck-you money. He wanted a talent that could go from headlining a movie to going on tour to holding down a Vegas residency. He'd had enough of lounge acts and opening numbers. He wanted a moneymaker.
Bettie Page was a budding talent, destined to follow in her famous mentor's footsteps. So said one critic after she formed a double act with Old Hollywood talent Babs Mahoney. Shortly before her death, Bettie had backed Babs up at concert after concert as they sang about love and sisterhood, stressing their friendship until the two seemed inseparable... with Bettie a natural successor now that Mahoney was on the way out.
The truth was something else entirely: Babs Mahoney had been a pill-popping loon who had no time for friendship--barely had time to pose for paparazzi snaps of her and Bettie 'together.' The closest they came to really socializing was when Babs was in the hospital, drying out or recovering from another plastic surgery that, at her age, was just a layer of lipstick on a pig.
Bettie was nice enough to always put in an appearance and try to lift Babs' spirits, but she never got anything out of it but more of Babs' distaste for her. Hatred for her youth and beauty when Babs was running empty on both.
Bettie had tried to break free of her, headlining a Broadway show. She'd triumphed, according to all the critics, but the show had flopped. Now Izzy had her aimed at Vegas. Full time, big show, top money. With Babs finally in the ground, they were putting on a retrospective with Bettie redoing all her old hits. Izzy hoped that would keep her name in the papers until something really big opened up.
She was a sweet girl: pretty, slender, with some bodacious curves that seemed just the right amount for her gentle smile and sparkling eyes. Another girl might seem whorish with the figure Bettie had, but Page made it look like all her good looks were some happy accident. She was cute as any honey-haired baby girl, as wholesome as a kid sister, with just a touch of devilry when she made that happy smile slink and those heavy hips wag.
Izzy knew that the naughtiness was only for show. She was as hard-working a gal as any pilgrim could ask for. Bettie did nothing but rehearse-rehearse-rehearse even when her looks could have a dozen guys vying to take her out for steak dinner every night.
Izzy had known she was his golden ticket. He'd worked his buns off, hustling all over Vegas, Miami, and New York to strike while the iron was hot and cash in on any possible nostalgia cropping up from Babs Mahoney's funeral. And in the cash went. The director was hired, the dancers readied, the songs chosen, the date announced. Now all that was left was for Bettie to be perfect.
***
Bettie came home to her tiny, suitable apartment. She fed her cat, switched on the TV, and curled up on the couch with a bag of deli dinner. It'd been another rough day--no matter how much they told her that rehearsals were for ironing everything out, for learning and memorizing and getting comfortable with the steps in the back of her head--she still believed that by now, she should have everything down pat.
When she fell short of the unimpeachable perfection she knew she needed by opening night, she wondered if she wasn't another Babs Mahoney. Slacking off on the effort because she could rely instead on good looks and forgiving men.
Tomorrow. Tomorrow, she would be better. She'd be so good, she could do the part in a nun's habit and all the men in the audience would still applaud.
She ate her sandwich while watching a rerun of I Love Lucy. Watching Lucy's own foibles with fame and fortune relaxed her a bit. People still loved Lucy, no matter how much she screwed up. Maybe they could tell how much Mrs. Richardo simply wanted nice things for herself and her friends.
Just as the show gave way to closing credits, the phone rang. Bettie picked it up, making an "Mmmhmm?" sound before she resumed chewing with the mouthpiece away from her gnashing teeth.
"Bettie, it's Izzy. I got great news for you, doll, great news! You know Gordon Vought, the big movie producer? He's got a picture he's lensing this weekend--something about cavewomen and dinosaurs--but the co-lead dropped out. Suicide attempt or something. If you want the part, baby, it's yours!"
Bettie gulped her mouthful of sandwich. "A movie? Gordon Vought? Izzy, what about the show, Vegas..."
"It's shooting for less than a week, dollface, you'll be back with time to spare. You just show up, put on a little outfit, say your lines, and you're back home. They're paying a couple thou, you get your name in lights, you'll be right beside Elvira on the poster!"