Growing Up Fisher Read online




  DEDICATION

  This book is dedicated to my mother,

  my daughters, and my sisters.

  Carrie . . . my pavement

  Tricia Leigh . . . my true mirror

  and my “sistahs,”

  my girlfriends and the women of the world,

  for showing me what I can be and

  for letting me show you who

  I truly am.

  CONTENTS

  Cover

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Introduction

  Chapter 1: The Road Is My Middle Name

  Chapter 2: The Fishbowl

  Chapter 3: Hail Connie Full of Grace

  Chapter 4: Oh My Papa

  Chapter 5: Les Animaux: It’s a Zoo in Here

  Chapter 6: Mother . . . Daughter . . . Sister . . . Fisher

  Chapter 7: 243 Delfern

  Chapter 8: Always a Soubrette, Never an Ingénue

  Chapter 9: I’m Not a Lesbian . . . But I Play with One on TV

  Chapter 10: The Courtship of Eddie’s Daughter

  Chapter 11: The Apple Doesn’t Fall Apart Very Far from the Tree

  Chapter 12: Leading Lady Plays House

  Chapter 13: Blind Trust

  Chapter 14: Come Fly with Me

  Chapter 15: #CarrieOn

  Chapter 16: Home

  Chapter 17: After Thoughts

  Acknowledgments

  Photos Section

  About the Author

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  INTRODUCTION

  Dear Ones,

  My blood pressure is high, no, like legit . . . I’ve seen a cardiologist. A goddamned cardiologist . . . (no disrespect to doctors who take care of the literal drumbeats of life). You can imagine my dismay at my “numbers.” I checked . . . just for shits and giggles. Or that’s what I told myself. You know, Connie had a stroke last year and the Princess died at sixty. We have this “disease” in our hearts . . . the same one that makes fatherless children spend their lives replacing their nebulous patriarchal ideals with, thus far, a prescription of drugs, sex, shopping, fame, and people. As it turns out, the pharmacist has something for this (as opposed to the scripts I’ve written myself over the years). So, now, with lisinopril coursing through my veins . . . I’ve normalized my tempo and can rejoin the #Resistance.

  Carrie died again today . . . and once again the world is off its axis. This time she was taken from us at the Fisher-Reynolds public memorial at Forest Lawn, and it was live-streamed for the world. I have spoken repeatedly about the fact that my sister—nothing half about her—was my mirror . . . When we look into reflective glass, we don’t always like what we see. But we can’t deny the truth it reveals to us, and that’s the root of its power—or her power. What we’re all now missing.

  The sorrow is unparalleled, unimaginable, unenviable, undeniable . . . all the uns . . . without any of the fun. In this galaxy, not at all far away . . . I haven’t even gotten started honoring my sister Carrie. And the story is so much bigger than just one Princess, brilliant and irreplaceable as she was. Part of her I did idolize, and part of her I wanted to teach, to hold, and to save.

  I keep telling myself I’m not gonna cry anymore . . . that’s a lie . . . it doesn’t stop. I’ve made screenshots of our final, cross-Atlantic text exchange, saving it to multiple backup hard drives, and I continue to cling to it as the last vestige of a connection with her. It’s unfathomable—the idea that I can no longer reach her through the Twittersphere, or hear the dulcet tones we all shared on the other end, where she used to call me on the hell phone. That my not-so-smartphone serves me no longer in reaching the third member of our trio of Fish Girls. I am dying to—scratch that—I am living to report back on, well . . . everything, to the woman who spoke to so many. She made words dance. She made flawed a museum-quality art form. She made me feel triumphant and normal. No small feat.

  Here’s what I’ve decided. I cannot, nor would I ever attempt to, share intimate details of Carrie’s life. First, there are so many who knew her far better than I did. And, let’s face it, we have a lifetime of her own writings that are revelations. When you’re feeling like you need to spend some time with her, you’ve got those.

  But, since I’ve been given a whole book to air my filthy fluff-’n’-fold, I will tell the tale, not just of the ones who’ve left us, but of all the women in this unconventional un-family . . . tell how we all spent our lives living up to expectations, and living down the Fisher foibles and falls from grace . . . How about the man who gave us the Fisher moniker, the addicted playboy with the velvet voice, whom my mom still describes as “delicious” to this day? Let’s talk about the legacy he bequeathed to us: the fucking voice, but also the genetic predisposition for addiction, infidelity, and financial idiosyncrasy. Lucky us! And lucky me, I was able to take these gifts and actually use them to ride the ups and downs of a career of my own—in television, in film, and on the Broadway stage. In the late nineties, it was super generous of Ellen DeGeneres—and her sitcom alter ego, Ellen Morgan—to let me and my more self-assured, self-centered, selfie self, Paige Clarke, be an integral part of her in-tandem coming-out soiree. One hundred thirteen episodes, sharing the screen with the world’s most famous girl kisser . . . I mean, Medal of Freedom winner. I got to be the bestie!

  There is that something in our DNA, a gift with purchase, that links us, and makes us better able to navigate, with incredible candor and wit, the experience of growing up in the “Fishbowl.” Swimming through the constant deluge of questions, doing a full-time talk show, from the mall to the PTA:

  What’s it like to be the daughter of? What’s it like to have a sister who’s a Princess? What’s it like to be a working actress? What’s it like to balance marriage, career, parenting, and now, mothering your own mother?

  And since I only speak in sound bites, it’s incredibly—just as you would imagine—strenuous . . . lots of “heavy lifting.” It’s also much like your life, like anyone’s life. Same issues, different square footage.

  You can’t “right” this shit, but you can “write” it. So that’s what I’m going to do here. The loss of Sissy Fish and Mama Debs was the instigating factor for why I’ve invited you all in. But I’ve always written. All of us have. It’s a fundamental Fisher tool for processing life’s events.

  And I’d already been thinking about the “family business” and searching for Joely Fisher in the past few years. My own mother, Connie Stevens, suffered a stroke in January 2016, just as we were in the process of selling our estate on Delfern Drive, the house that had symbolized, for her, a lifetime of hard work and spectacular achievement. For me, it was more than that—it symbolized home. I white-knuckled these experiences with my sister Tricia Leigh. Especially as they happened in the midst of my own financial forensic fiasco. During which I was forced to confront another Fisher trait: giving away the milk (money) for free; trusting husbands, business mismanagers, and shady Hollywood types, and literally paying the price. Something like this has happened to all the ladies in this family, so you’d think we’d all have a black belt in rock bottom. And yes, being stripped down to studs, I learned how to rebuild and reinvent, in part, by watching the fortitude and resilience of these divas from an era in which “diva” actually meant something.

  But, still, I wake up in a perimenopausal sweat, in the middle of the night, thinking about my own mortality . . . and about legacy. And then, I was given the opportunity to express myself on the TED stage last year on my birthday. What an incredible honor. The whole idea of TED is ideas worth sharing. What ideas do I have worth sharing? With my daughters. With my sisters. With the women of the world—my sistahs.

&nbsp
; A great deal, it turns out. My black belt in rock bottom is actually rainbow colored and comes with wisdom and a treasure chest of material.

  Next up, the holiday season was upon us. I decided to shake my moneymaker and return to the stage after a sixteen-year absence. I was doing a play in Laguna. We were in celebration mode, and then, blindsided by unexpected tragedy and loss. I didn’t have an understudy (that’s not a metaphor, but it could be). So I wrestled with how to memorialize Carrie, a sister I’d treasured and turned to, on occasion, in times of my deepest personal doubt. Fittingly, in the wings of the stage on which I was performing. I acted like my heart wasn’t broken during the moments I was in the spotlight, and then retreated to the shadows to attempt to express a fraction of what I was feeling, of what I knew we were all feeling. In my piece, which was published by The Hollywood Reporter, I proclaimed that my mission moving forward—which I’ve chosen to accept—is to press through grief, for myself, and my whole family. And especially, to make sure my niece Billie . . . my sister’s self-proclaimed crowning achievement . . . is whole, which she’s already on the way to being. Whole, and a whole lot more.

  The piece went viral. And so, in a way, other members of my royal family, falling on their proverbial sword, presented me with the most cathartic gift—the opportunity to speak my truth. (I can hear, in that Fisher gravel that we all know so well, the words “You’re welcome.”)

  So here we are. This is my story . . . well, my stories. A collection of musings, and memories, and misadventures, in a miraculous mash-up. See what I did there? I invite you to consume the selections on my menu. Take the journey through the delights, and the dark side, of Growing Up Fisher. Put together the puzzle that is formed from these pieces. The overall image is love.

  If, perchance, I’ve ever made you laugh with my interpretation of a broad on TV . . . If I’ve caused a stir when speaking passionately on things I care about . . . If you’ve heard me belt out a Broadway ballad and recognized, in the timbre, a comfortable old friend . . . If you dig the fact that I’ve made a silk purse out of a sow’s ear, while maintaining a two-decade marriage and creating a blended family with the precision of a chef du Cordon Bleu . . . If it impresses you that, as a family in a fishbowl, we Fishers manage to suffer through . . . I mean spend every holiday together . . . If you want to know the secret: I wanted to do it better, I wanted to give my children a present, caring father, and in turn, I got this great partnership (that’s what you get when you don’t marry Eddie Fisher). I had a baby on my bed, and then, being fortunate to have enough love to give, we added to the family by adopting our fifth child. (Oh, and did you know I am crafty, that I scrapbook, and make jewelry, and color-code my closet, and can cook a Thanksgiving turkey that would make Martha Stewart wet?) These all might be reasons for reading. I can tell you this, however. I am also desperately flawed (and desperately funny), and in the pages of this book I will show you that I am a cockeyed alchemist, with tense insensibility . . . and I’m forever straightening my crown. Welcome to the family.

  Love, Joely

  MARCH 2017

  Chapter 1

  The Road Is My Middle Name

  THIS IS MY CHURCH. THE audience is filtering in . . . it’s electric . . . Playbills in hand, we shuffle down the aisle and find our seats. Sliding into row F, folding down red velvet, pulling up a barstool, grabbing a folding chair, sinking into the crowd’s rhythm. At once the strains of an overture, tonight’s menu, the musical fare, or even just a universal A. We are in tune. I am already a mess. A spiritual hot mess. I know the lyrics to every song, much to the delight/dismay of my plus-one. “Sing it loud and there’s music playing, soft, and it’s almost like praying.” It has always been like this for me. Captivating. Compelling. My life force. The music, it’s thrilling from out here, from up there. My life has composition, a score, a soundtrack. Always.

  Inside the Music

  When I was not yet three years old, I disappeared from backstage at Harrah’s Casino in Reno, Nevada, while Connie was doing her thing onstage. This is among my earliest memories. As the story goes, my mom had taken her final bow after belting her guts out. She was wearing her sequined flame dress, and she was sexy and sweaty. These were the days of the Rat Pack, and headliners, and the showrooms, and she had a full orchestra onstage with her back then.

  Our Scottish governess, Christine, approached my mom right away.

  “I don’t want you to get alarmed, but we can’t find Joely,” she said.

  Of course my mom was alarmed. Very.

  “What?!” Mom said. “Oh my God.”

  Musicians and stagehands, backup singers and dancers, everyone was enlisted in the search for Joely. And soon enough, the police were there, too, but there was no sign of me. By this point, my mom was fully freaking out. And then, the concertmistress, who was the first-chair violin and was wearing a long black gown, emerged amid the melee. She was carrying me as I slumbered.

  “Shhhh,” she said, hushing all those around her. “She fell asleep.”

  I opened my eyes, and I saw this vision before me—this sparkly, beautiful creature with tears in her eyes. My mother.

  “Joely, where were you? You can’t disappear like that. You made everybody worry. You have to let someone know if you go somewhere. You’re just a little girl.”

  My response: “I wanted to hear the music from the inside.”

  In my quest to do just that, I had climbed into the orchestra and fallen asleep in the violin section, where the concertmistress had covered me with her dress until the end of the show.

  I got a minor scolding for disappearing, but also, the admiration of a mother who saw that I would have the confidence to be led by my curiosity and to take chances. She knew she didn’t have to worry about me. She realized in that moment: My path was clear. I was a seeker. And I would be that kind of artist, and human, for the rest of my life, like her. But that’s when the real worry began—this career, and this life, that all of us in our family were destined for was a mixed bag—for every time you come offstage triumphant, there’s a show that gets canceled. There’s always someone younger—with better tits—waiting to push you down the stairs. Oh, but that’s Showgirls. Back to me. Of course she was worried—I would be a risk taker, and sometimes I wouldn’t see the danger because I would be too focused on what I was trying to accomplish. ’Cause this wouldn’t be the last orchestra pit I’d climb into.

  That’s Entertainment

  There she was. Mom. Connie. Singing “Music and the Mirror.” She was wearing a black-and-white sequined gown with white marabou trim everywhere. And what she was doing onstage was as close to magic as a mere mortal could get.

  I wanted that.

  The faces of the audience members at their tables—men and women who were experiencing the delight of being brought inside, taken on a journey, teased. This was an intimate thing. Back then it was different. The venues where you got this kind of entertainment gave you dinner and a show, and you got to be up close. With all the spectacle today, there’s a distance between the performer and the crowd. Back then you didn’t wear shorts to go see the headline act in the ballrooms of these casinos. People got dressed up, had their dinner, and their two-drink-minimum Tom Collinses, and settled in for an evening of raucous entertainment, close up to the stage. And Connie made them all a part of it all. She was a wizard at this. The audience knew what they were coming for, and she always delivered.

  Now listen, I also saw what it did for her—to her. And I was like: I gotta get me some of that. ’Cause it was almost a sexual thing. It was definitely sensual. The song choices she made, which were very contemporary for that time. She always said: “I’m not nostalgic.” She was ahead of her time in her eclectic choices, which were sometimes met with criticism, because everyone wanted to hear her sing “Sixteen Reasons.” But she had sixteen reasons why she should sing songs by Billy Joel, the Eagles, the Doobie Brothers instead. She was a fan, and she wanted to curate a show filled with music that
inspired and moved her. It wasn’t always what the audience thought they wanted, but she wooed them, won them over with her set list, her sensibility, her sexual, sensual performance. It was electric.

  There was also the way she communicated with her band; the way she flirted . . . with everyone. I was enamored, immediately. And I definitely wanted to emulate her. That’s what I was after in my life, too. There was nothing else I wanted to do, ever. Well, I did want to be the cruise director for the Love Boat, like Julie McCoy, but come on, that’s show business.

  Even before I’d ever been onstage myself, I had the bug. It was partly a desire for what my mom created out there. And partly a desire just to be near her. On multiple occasions, I could be heard wailing through the halls of LAX as my mom boarded planes. It didn’t help that our governess for most of my childhood—nine years in all—was a Scottish woman named Helena. She was Mary Poppins meets Nurse Ratched. Let’s just say she had a heavy hand when it came to disciplining me, whether because she was jealous, or she thought I was getting away with more than I should have, or she was just a person with issues, or she preferred my sister. It may have been all of these things. It definitely didn’t make me eager to be left alone with her when Connie was on the road. And to this day, I still get PTSD flashbacks whenever I hear Sean Connery.

  As was our family ritual, Helena had brought Tricia and me to the airport so we could say our good-byes to Connie. You remember—people actually used to do that. When it was time for my mother to leave me behind, I couldn’t bear it. Distraught, I cried, hysterically. It worked. She crouched down and pulled me into her arms.

  “Come on,” she said. “You don’t have any stuff, but we’ll get you stuff there. Tricia, how do you feel about staying home? Are you going to be okay if Joely goes?”

  And the tiny little independent Capricorn soul that she was shrugged and nodded, and said, “It’s okay. I’ll be fine.”