Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Red Tail


Red Tail


Amelia was not a classic beauty—
reed-thin Kansas lass, short, gap-toothed,
with an overbite, flaxen blond hair
shorn short in the style of the aviatrix,
wearing long pants fitted tightly
across her shapely bottom, and a man’s
aviator-style leather jacket—
slept in for weeks to give it authenticity;
she was however a real celebrity,
one who was dubbed “America’s Sweetheart”,
who was carefully managed as spokesperson
for AE clothing,
AE luggage,
AE kitchen designs,
breakfast cereal,
and Lucky Strikes.

Odd that Hollywood, always sniffing the wind
for the stuff of legend, for heroics,
for tales of mystery, took forty years
to bring her story to the screen;
in the form of an alright 1976 TV movie
starring Susan Clark & John Forsythe.
Two decades later, in 1994, Diane Keaton
donned the Earhart pants
and the leather jacket,
assisted by Bruce Dern,
in a poorly punctuated loosely-directed
Ted Turner opus for television.
Last year the perky Amy Adams
did her blond bobbed best
to impersonate Lady Lindy in a lame
Ben Stiller comedy; the laughs
and acting stilted and strained.
And now, in the waning months of 2009,
we are privy to a feature film
Earhart fans have waited so very long for;
AMELIA has sprung full-fleshed, high tech,
exciting, freckles, overbite and all
onto the big screen,
portrayed by the talented Hilary Swank,
who was able to completely inhabit
the Goddess of Light,
while keeping her eyes peeled
for her next Oscar nomination.

But for me the real star of all these films
was that shining silver bird,
the Lockheed L-10 Electra, with its
flamboyant twin red tails, and those
racy red stripes on the front of
its 55 foot wing span.
The very moment that plane is presented
on the wide screen, 38 feet long and sleek,
perching 10 feet above the tarmac,
rolling majestically
as one of only 149 built—
our hearts beat more rapidly,
pulsated with huge machine passion,
and we are in love;
easily stimulated by huge planes and ships
as the camera lens pans their sleek length,
smooth shoulders, and mechanical muscle.

And then God help me, when the Electra
is airborne, and we watch the sun shining
on its polished aluminum skin, watch the
sultry twitching of its twin ochre tails,
the sheer majesty of it hanging proud
in the infinite blueness, and follow it
into a tall white tower of clouds,
as it playfully plunges through the cumulus
like a great red-tailed hawk; diving,
soaring, climbing, then gliding at 19,800 feet;
we think surely it must be invincible—
and it will become our hubris,
as it was Amelia’s.

When looking at the particulars of her life,
I cannot help but believe that she failed
because she refused to heed
the angel’s alacrity,
failed to bend to
the synchronicity of spirit;
for during that first attempt
to get her Electra off the ground;
overloaded and cranky,
it got squirrely, causing her to panic
with poor judgment, resulting in
several heavy bounces, a wing tipping,
skidding, and the tearing off of the
landing gear—with her escaping alive;
this was nothing more than
the gods of the air sending her a message:
Stay on the ground this time, Amelia.
You are 40 years old—
do not tempt the fates yet again.
The Atlantic was a lark for you.
The Pacific will snare your soul,
steal your breath, crush your spirit!
There is a demon who awaits you,
a rainbow dragon hovering
in the darkness over the South Pacific.

She awoke from her nightmares, angry,
defiant, eager to prove the voices wrong,
anxious to show her detractors that
she had the right stuff to complete her mission;
soon her silver hawk was launched straight
southeast out over her sweet Atlantic,
sliding down over South America,
and across Africa, head-long into
the maelstrom over the Pacific—
hell-bent for a series of unfortunate events
that would catapult her and Fred Noonan,
plunging them deep and cold 18.000 feet
below the waves, into mythos and oblivion.

They say though on some hot July nights
off the western reef of Howland Island,
sometimes one can hear the strong purr
of twin Pratt & Whitney 450hp engines,
drawing ever closer, and then snap,
swish—silence reigns,
and the ghost plane slips back
into legend.

Glenn Buttkus November 2009

5 comments:

Cortney Bledsoe said...

Nice.

C.L.

Judy Maurer said...

Sweet. Thanks for sharing.
jkm

Guy Marsh said...

Well done!


Bud

Anonymous said...

I warn her.
Not fly upside down I say.
She no listen.

.....Confucious

Cherry Jensen said...

Good work, Glenn! Really captivating, just like your heroine.

Cheers,
Cherry