The Other Side of Me. Sidney Sheldon

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to my parents and my brother, Richard. They were excited. There was one more thing I had to tell them. ‘I’m using a different name.’

      ‘What do you mean?’

      ‘Well, Schechtel is not a show business name. From now on, I’m Sidney Sheldon.’

      They looked at one another and then shrugged. ‘Okay.’

      I had difficulty sleeping for the next few nights. I knew that this finally was the beginning. I was going to win this contest. Paul Ash would give me a contract to travel around the country with him. Sidney Sheldon would travel around the country with him.

      When Saturday reluctantly dragged its way onto the calendar, I returned to the Chicago Theatre and was ushered into a small broadcast studio with several other young contestants. There was a comedian, a singer, a female pianist, and an accordion player.

      The director said to me, ‘Sheldon—’

      I felt a little thrill. It was the first time anyone had spoken my new name. ‘Yes, sir?’

      ‘When I point to you, you’ll step up to the microphone and start the show. You’ll say, ‘‘Good evening, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to the Paul Ash Amateur Contest. This is your announcer, Sidney Sheldon. We’re going to give you an exciting show, so stay tuned!’’ Got that?’

      ‘Yes, sir.’

      Fifteen minutes later, the director looked up at the studio clock on the wall and raised his arm. ‘Quiet, everyone.’ He began counting. He pointed to me and I was ready for show business. I had never been calmer in my life because I knew that this was the beginning of a wonderful career. And I was going to start under my new show business name.

      With great composure, I stepped up to the microphone, took a deep breath and said, in my best announcer’s voice, ‘Good evening, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to the Paul Ash Amateur Contest. This is your announcer—Sidney Schechtel.’

       SIX

      I recovered enough to introduce the other contestants. The show went well. The accordion player executed a foot-stomping tune, followed by the comedian, who did his bit like a seasoned pro. The singer sang beautifully. Nothing went wrong until the last contestant, the female pianist, was introduced. As soon as I announced her, she panicked, started to cry, and hurriedly fled from the room, leaving us with three minutes of empty air. I knew I had to fill it. I was the announcer.

      I stepped back up to the microphone. ‘Ladies and gentlemen, we all start out as amateurs in life, but as we go on we grow and become professionals.’ I got so caught up in my own words that I kept talking until finally the director signaled for me to shut up.

      We went off the air. I knew that I had saved the show and they would be grateful for that. Perhaps they would offer me a job as—

      The director came up to me. ‘What the hell’s the matter with you, whatever your name is?’ he yelled. ‘You went over by fifteen seconds.’

      My radio career was ended.

      Paul Ash did not invite me to travel around the country with him, but there was one interesting fallout from the Paul Ash Contest. Otto, Natalie, Richard, Seymour, Howard, Eddie, and Steve all changed their last names to ‘Sheldon.’ The only remaining ‘Schechtel’ was Uncle Harry.

      Early in May, my cousin Seymour stunned us all by announcing that he was getting married.

      Seymour was only nineteen, but it seemed to me that he had been an adult for most of his life.

      I had met his bride-to-be, Sydney Singer, when I lived in Denver. Sydney was a young, attractive secretary who had worked in Harry’s brokerage office, where Seymour met her. I found her to be warm and intelligent, with a nice sense of humor.

      The wedding was simple, with just the members of the family there. When the ceremony was over, I congratulated Seymour. ‘She’s a terrific girl,’ I told him. ‘Hang on to her.’

      ‘Don’t worry. I intend to.’

      Six months later, they went through a bitter divorce.

      ‘What happened?’ I asked Seymour.

      ‘She found out I was having an affair.’

      ‘And she asked for a divorce?’

      ‘No. She forgave me.’

      ‘Then why—?’

      ‘She caught me with someone else. That’s when she divorced me.’

      ‘Do you ever see her?’

      ‘No, she hates my guts. She told me she never wants to see me again. She went to Hollywood. She has a brother out there. She got a job as a secretary at MGM for a woman director. Dorothy Arzner.’

      My very brief foray into radio had given me a taste for it and I had become excited about its possibilities. Radio could well be the profession I was looking for. In every minute of my spare time, I haunted WBBM and other Chicago radio stations, looking for a job as an announcer. There were no jobs, period. I had to face the fact that I was back in the same deadly trap, with no prospects for the future.

      One Sunday afternoon when everyone was out of the apartment, I sat down at our little spinet piano. I sat there, creating a melody. I decided it was not bad and I put lyrics to it. I called it ‘My Silent Self.’ I looked at it and thought, Now what? I could either let it sit inside the piano bench, or I could try to do something with it.

      I decided to try to do something.

      In that year, 1936, the major hotels in the country had orchestras in their ballrooms that broadcast coast to coast. At the Bismarck Hotel the orchestra leader was an amiable young musician named Phil Levant. I had never spoken to him, but from time to time, when he passed the checkroom on his way to the ballroom, we would nod at each other.

      I resolved to show my song to him. As he passed the checkroom that evening, I said, ‘Excuse me, Mr. Levant. I’ve written a song and I wonder if you would mind taking a look at it.’

      The expression on his face gave me an idea of how many times he had heard that request, but he was very gracious.

      ‘Glad to,’ he said.

      I handed him a copy of the sheet music. He glanced at it and walked away. That’s the end of that, I thought.

      An hour later, Phil Levant was back at the checkroom.

      ‘That song of yours…’ he said.

      I was holding my breath. ‘Yes?’

      ‘I like it. It’s original. I think it could be a hit. Would you mind if I had an orchestration made, and we played it?’

      Mind? ‘No,’ I said. ‘That’s—that’s wonderful.’

      He liked my song.

      The

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