Everyone knew it
would be epic. The union of Ira S. Murfin a/k/a The Last Bohemian, writer, performance
art personage, and raconteur extraordinary and the estimable Emmy Bean, the elfin
actress/singer/puppeteer/Jill-of-all performance could be nothing less. Produced as a cooperative venture by the
supremely energetic Arlene Brennan,
mother of the Groom and her husband Michael; Holly and Reathal Bean,
she a minister and he a working New York
actor; and the couple’s legions of
artist, performer, musician friends it could be nothing less.
And it exceeded
every expectation. This was like no
wedding you have ever been to. A wedding
ceremony reconceived from scratch as a communal event, spiritual in a dozen
different, surprising ways.
To begin with
the location—The Bridgeport Arts Center
located in a hulking relic of America’s
Industrial Age that by turns was a coffin factory and the Spiegel Catalog warehouse. Arriving guests were herded into a freight
elevator large to commodiously accommodate three 1960 Lincoln Continental laid end to end. It ground its way to the fourth floor where
we spilled into an enormous space with exposed rafters, a saw-tooth skylight,
and wrap around windows exposing a wide vista of Chicago, the Loop towers in the distance and the
green dome of some impressive church in the middle distance.
To the left rows
of folding chairs were set up facing an area under a white canopy which hung
like an inverted dome and was created and constructed by Collective Magpie, artists Melinda
Barnadas and Tae Hwang.
When the two
hundred or so guests were finally assembled, the wedding party made their gay
entrance, the bride in a gown with a white top and short pale green skirt, the
groom in a sort of copper brown suit and green tie. Six members of the wedding
party occupied an arc of chairs to the front as John Szymanski sang and played guitar. Ira and Emmy briefly disappeared and returned
caring between them a large wooden table laden with mysterious objects
including a pitcher, bottle, bowl, and a blue glass jar.
Emmy seated herself
at the table to the left facing Ira. Between
them a third chair was soon occupied by Chloe
Johnson who welcomed us and explained the ceremony’s unique spontaneous and
communal nature, explained in the wedding program thusly:
We will be using
a chance procedure to determine the order of the ceremony. When a name is pulled from the blue glass jar
during the ceremony, that person will come sit in the empty chair at the table,
perform a task or a reading, and then pull the next name. At the end, you, our guests will be called to
read the text on the reverse side of this page out loud to us, Emmy and
Ira. You will marry us.
If this seems anarchistic and subversive, it was. If this
seems chaotic, it was not. One by one or
in pairs the participants came up as called.
They read, they sang, told stories, explained the canopy, and performed
certain rituals. There was something
that resembled a communion between the two.
Emmy’s mom, an ordained minister came up in her turn not to officiate but
to participate.
I wish I could
explain how movingly and articulately it all came together. It climaxed as Ira and Emmy exchanged their
personal vows sitting across the table from one another. Each was brilliant, personal, and heartfelt. Ira choked up. So did Emmy.
So did we all.
They reached
across the table and exchanged rings. Then
we were all called upon to read the following:
By the
collective power of our presence
and the wisdom of
our cumulative centuries of acquaintance
we affirm the
love and joy you have found with each other
and wish to
share with your many communities.
We assent to
your understanding of yourselves as married
and will share
in that reality
for as long as
you wish it to be so.
After mutually
crushing a glass underfoot in the Jewish
tradition, the ceremony concluded.
But not the festivities. To the delightful roots and folk music of Mr. Mayor and the Highlanders, guest
moved to a wine, chees, bread, and pickles reception as the ceremonial space
was reconfigured as a banquet hall. There
was much merriment and conviviality.
As the dinner
was drawing to a close, there was the traditional round of toast, naturally all
totally untraditional. One highlight was
the two elder males of the newlyweds.
Reathel Bean played and sang (some of the lyrics) of the Carter Family’s Wildwood Flower in honor of Emmy’s recent appearance as Mother Maybelle Carter, while Michael
Brennan tap danced. Eventually they even
called on me. This was my contribution
to the evening.
The Union of
Forces of Nature
A Toast for the
Wedding of Emmy and Ira
August 31, 2013
They tell me
that when the placid brown of waters of the Ohio
flow into the Mississippi, recently
refreshed
by the crystal Missouri,
the two great rivers run side by side
within the same banks for many
miles.
You can see it
from space or in a color photo
in the National Geographic.
They even have a
name for it—confluence.
Somewhere north
of Memphis where mere humans
invented the blues,
the waters have finally mingled
and spread wide and inexorable
over the vast valley they have
carved
in eons of meandering passage.
Passed the
bluffs at Vicksburg they proceed
where, as Mr. Lincoln once said,
“The Father of Waters rolls unvexed
to the Sea.”
Whatever the
gender it is so.
Let not the
foolish old poet belabor the metaphor.
Confluences
occur with more or less pageantry
a thousand times a day
and doddering old uncles are
appointed
certain minor roles in the rituals.
But most
confluences are like the one
where Crow Creek wanders into
the South Platte back where I came
from,
you can wade
across the joined waters
without getting your ankles wet this
time of year.
But this
confluence is different.
I give you Emmy
and Ira—Forces of Nature
—Patrick Murfin
Patrick,,,I thank you so much for your description of the wedding. We were unable to attend and were so sorry to miss Emmy's and Ira's wedding. I appreciate this post so much. Thank you, thank you, thank you.
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Wow, now THAT was a wedding! We were really sad to miss it and are very thankful to you for writing this. Friends- Carlo and Linda
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