Wide-eyed, the actress on the screen freezes for the camera. Faux-lashed eyes are framed by a black mask, as the tinny shriek of police sirens escalates.
Clad in black, a wide shot captures her – the shattered glass on the floor, the racks of brassieres and flimsy negligees. The sirens grow louder as she drops her carpet-bag, and uses her teeth to remove her gloves like a stripper, wriggling provocatively out of her turtleneck.
Through the torpid haze of cigarette smoke, suspended in the chiaroscuro flicker of projected images, the cinema screen is barely visible. Pamela sighs, and pulls her camel trench-coat collar closer.
The close-up cut to the burglars’ ample buttocks and waspy waist jolts noticeably. Pamela winces. The so-called editor of this film lived in a downtown flop-house, subsisting on burgers and bourbon. He couldn’t do a professional film-splice to save himself.
Muffled coughs. The incessant yet indistinct rustling of clothing, particular only to these kinds of cinemas, pervades the auditorium.
Glamour films, he’d said. For a very discerning audience.
On-screen, the screech of brakes. The sirens stop. Naked except for her mask, abundant but perky breasts fill the screen, jiggling as the actress grabs at the nearest negligee.Cat-like, she steps into the store window, shrugging on the transparent baby-doll negligee. The camera hones in on her hips and bared pussy, her curvy thighs, before the negligee froths around her torso. She freezes in a come-hither pose, as three cops burst in, wielding truncheons.
“Police! You’re surrounded!”
With no obvious offender in sight, they stand, bewildered and bug-eyed.
She sighs. His plots were always so ridiculous.
Images of Lauren Bacall in tennis whites and Audrey Hepburn in chic cocktail gowns flicker in her mind’s eye. Her desire to emulate them. She remembers her girlish excitement, meeting a film director. Harisson Marks. Her first film audition.
“Gonna make you a big star, baby. You’ll fill the cinemas.”
She looked around the half-empty auditorium. A few couples groped. Lone men slouched in their seats: always those furtive movements of arms and elbows. They weren’t digging in their laps for popcorn.
Since then, she’d seen too many stained audition couches, too many basement film studios, spreading her legs for all the wrong reasons.
Harrison hadn’t had been able to see her talent beyond her panoramic bustline. No director had.
“Get a lingering close-up of those tits, will ya’, George.”
She’d ricocheted from couch to couch, one hackneyed film to the next. If someone was getting rich, it wasn’t her.
“Hey.”
Tears fill her eyes. The screen blurs.
“Hey, sweetheart. I’m talkin’ to you.”
Pamela turns her head. A guy with oily hair, three seats away, whistles.
“Baby, you should be in pictures. You look just like that bird on the screen. What’s her name again? That’s it. Pamela. Pamela Green.”
Why had she come?
Gonna make you a big star, baby.
Her celluloid dreams of stardom – now worthless as cast-off scenes on the cutting-room floor.
© Adrea Kore, 2016
(This story is based on a little real porn-film history. Pamela Green was a “glamour-film” actress, who starred in several films made by Harrison Marks of Maximus Films. I loosely based the on-screen descriptions around a film she made with Marks called The Window Dresser (1961) She eventually dissolved their partnership. I started to imagine her reasons for doing so, and before I knew it, I had a story.)
Thanks, F Dot Leonora for the wonderful photo prompt.
For more wicked Friday Flash Fiction, click on the giant typewriter buttons.
racheldevineuk said:
Lovely. Full of atmosphere, with sadness woven through it.
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Adrea Kore said:
Thanks for reading, Rachel. This one didn’t end up being particularly sexy…
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F Dot Leonora said:
oh gosh, the end was heart-wrenching and i want to look up the bit of history you posted at the end too. such a good post and WELCOME TO FRIDAY FLASH!!! xxx
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Adrea Kore said:
Thankyou! It was a lot of fun to research and write. It’s a great meme, F. Leonora.I wrote a fair amount of flash fiction when I first started erotica writing – I don’t know why I stopped. Here’s to more flashy Fridays. 🙂 xo
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F Dot Leonora said:
i do not know why you stopped either! i have listed you as a contributor–so you are welcome any time!!!
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Adrea Kore said:
Awesome! ❤
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Emmanuelle de Maupassant said:
We definitely need a regular flash from you Adrea.
I love the flavour of this bittersweet coffee.
x
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melina greenport said:
Excellent flash story, Adrea. So poignant.
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Adrea Kore said:
Thankyou, Melina xo. I hope you’ll strut your flashing skills for this fab photo prompt too. 🙂
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Life of Elliott... said:
I like your story.
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