A Memoir Finally Ready for the Page: Recalling My First Sisterhood

by marionroach on April 16, 2010

ONCE UPON A TIME there was no sisterhood. This is back when we were new to a school, or grade, the new kid in a neighborhood or a Brownie troop, back when no one seemed to like us. And then one day some kid passed us a pencil, or laughed at our joke, or slipped us a note. And soon there really was an “us,” and nothing seemed more important, or special, or forever.

And then one day someone else was singing a tune in the playground. It sounded like she was singing about the rain falling on a plane in Spain, and that was enough for you to ask her how a plane could get soggy. And she laughed, and said, “No silly, it’s a plain,” and you still didn’t get it, but you nodded like you did, and learned the song anyway.

And then there were three of you who sang the song with your whole little-girl hearts, and were overheard by another girl who knew the song, and next thing you knew, you were a small pack of girls sitting in Sayre Berman’s living room, overlooking Little Neck Parkway, planning to put on a musical. It was My Fair Lady, and you would do this despite the fact that none of you had yet seen the brand new movie, or the production running on Broadway. This was 1965, and all you had was the album, and you hunkered down around its tunes like they were a new faith in a crazy world. You listened to it on Sayre’s parents’ wood-cabinet Victrola, and then someone started doling out the parts.

That would be Gwen. She’s the director. And she is Eliza, and no other Eliza will ever do as long as you live, because she’s the first kid who befriended you and nothing in the brain or heart can ever be as sweet a hook as that. And anyway, no one else in the fourth grade of P.S. 94 in Little Neck Queens in 1965 could belt out a tune like Gwen. No one.

And soon you were meeting weekly, and in that time together more than music was transposed, as Gwedolyn Schneidkraut became Gwen Olicker, as her family circumstances changed, and right before your very eyes Gwen Olicker became an English flower girl, and you became Henry Higgins, and together you stepped through the looking glass for the first time, taking that leap of faith you can only when someone else has your back. She learned her lines, and stayed after school, and directed the play, and did not laugh at your costume that included your father’s Brooks Brother’s hat.

And then one afternoon she and you and Pamela Bacchi, Sayre Berman, Roberta Rubien, Barbara Sender, Ellen Wasserman, Marie Docekal and Renee Steinhagen stepped onto the stage as an all-girl cast of My Fair Lady and nothing would ever be the same.

Other than the biological one into which I was born, this was my first sisterhood, and the promise—and the fulfillment of that promise—continues to suffuse the expectations I have every time I enter into an agreement with other women. My first standard, it is my gold standard, below which I will not slip. Because we pulled it off. And people applauded, and we were a huge hit. Or so I remember it.

And I’ve told this story a million times in the memoir class I teach, using it as an example of a story I have that has never found a place to live. I’ve got a million of them—and so do you: rich, wonderful moments of our lives that just miss the mark of being publishable because we do not yet know what they illustrate, what they are about. And knowing the difference between those life tales that have a reason to be retold, and those that must wait until we know what they are about, is the difference between getting published and getting another rejection letter.

And I loved that little story about the girls with their decidedly New York names, and the production, and the transposition we underwent to make us a sisterhood. But what is the story about? I had no idea, though in the years since the experience, I have picked it up a thousand times and had a look at it, always using it as an illustration of something that must wait until I understand it, until I know what it illustrates, each time after the telling, putting it away again, though always with great tenderness. I couldn’t pitch it to an editor in one word or one sentence. And so it waits—a jewel in need of a setting.

And then about 2 months ago I got a Facebook friend request from Gwen Olicker. And before I replied, I ran down the stairs screaming to my husband, “Guess who’s on my Facebook page? Gwen Schneidkraut!” (which is how I always think of her), to which he replied, “Eliza?! Not Eliza!” That should give you an idea of how many times I’ve told the story of our all-girl production. Gwen and I had not seen each other, or spoken, in perhaps 40 years. Life can do that.

And guess who still has her program, a mimeographed, two-page, illustrated treasure, kept all these years? Me. And up it went on Facebook. And on the story goes.

But what is this story about? The essential question, and one I deal with in my new book on writing memoir, a topic I just discussed two nights ago in the new session of my new memoir class, and one I’ve written about before here on TSP.

I waited all these years to know, and then, after being reconnected, I knew. It is about that gold standard, and where, and when, we get it. And after I understood that, I could have danced all night.

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{ 8 comments… read them below or add one }

Maureen April 16, 2010 at 10:41 am

Dearest sister-friend-
Lovely (“lov-er-ly). Thank you. I’m misty remembering all my sisterhoods. So important to celebrate.

marionroach April 16, 2010 at 2:42 pm

Hello, Maureen. Many thanks for the kind words. I am so glad the post brought on happy sisterhood celebration thoughts. My advice is to dance all night. And come back soon.

Anne April 16, 2010 at 5:29 pm

Ah, my sister,

Such sweet memories this triggered of palling around with my young pal, Alison D., my next-door (shared wall) neighbor in the horseshoe of townhouses we inhabited … no running theatricals or singing, but much secret tapping on the walls at night … Hmmm . . . I believe that this would have been on the street where we lived? LOVED this, just loved it. Thank you for this day-brightener.

Barbara Caufield April 16, 2010 at 8:45 pm

Oh! How you touched a nerve and brought me to my knees! Did we lead parallel childhoods and have no idea? Jane Dickie and I would have loved to have been better aquainted with you and the stars of your youth. We were the stars of our own youth! Imagine, Marian, we were just 2 blocks away! We just needed direction!
Funny, this life! Just how small this world is always amazes me!
I love how you share yourselves, Sisters!

marionroach April 17, 2010 at 11:45 am

Hi, Anne. And welcome back to TSP. I am so grateful for this fond message, and so glad that we triggered sweet memories for you. Alison D was one lucky sister to have you in her early years, pulling her around. I bet she’s a great success today because of it. Come back soon, sister, for more.

Hello, Barbara. And welcome to TSP, where we find the common denominator to be the sweet spot of life. Ah, you too. How lovely. It’s one of those things I think that young girls do: we put on a musical, and in that, we make a sisterhood. So glad it struck a chord with you. So sorry I was not in one of your productions. But there’s always tomorrow! Please come back soon.

ann gorman April 23, 2010 at 5:34 pm

Marion, What memories your piece brought back! I fell in with a group of sisters in 9th grade of the brand new diocesan Catholic High School. By the end of the first week we became a pack of seven rebels, determined not to let the nuns who ran the school like a maximum prison,break our spirits. Our leader, Nancy was actually a double agent, using her wit and finesse to gain the trust of the holy sisters, and then bringing valuable information to us so that we could plan and carry out our pranks. I’ve maintained contact with Nancy over the years and we’re talking up next year’s 45th reunion. Again Marion, thanks for dredging up memories of these priceless days. Ann

Brenda from Flatbush May 18, 2010 at 7:17 pm

Holy Cow, Gwen was MY “big sister” too…the next-door-neighbor exotic dreamgirl in “Wonder Years”-era Little Neck, who played folk guitar and put up generously with my hanging around and wishing I was her. I was an eighth-grade pariah, a lonely oddball and only child, but wearing her long red prairie dress gave me the courage to attend our Graduation Dance, because it somehow wrapped me up in borrowed coolness. (And yes, a boy asked me to dance.) Shout-out to sisters, bio and otherwise!

marionroach May 18, 2010 at 7:24 pm

Hey, Brenda. Welcome to TSP. That sure sounds like Gwen. Have you reached out to her? I bet she’d love to hear from you. You are the second person to tell me that reading that story reconnected you to her, that sister-woman of ours, our Gwen. How wonderful. Well, please come back and read around the site. We’re delighted to have you here.

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