Viva
Deadlines at Dawn The many lives of Sidney Zion
By Jerry Tallmer
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Photo by Brett C Vermilyea
Sidney Zion at his Upper West Side home
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In the pitch black at 3 oclock in the morning of June 5, 1968, after Id been up most of the previous 24 hours putting together and writing a backgrounder on the Valerie Solanis who had shot Andy Warhol the day before, the telephone rang. It was Sid Zion. You better get your ass out of bed and go down to the paper, he said. Bobby Kennedys just been shot, out in Los Angeles.
This was printers-ink Sidney talking Sidney the newspaperman. There were and are, to this minute a large number of other Sidney Zions, well befitting Sidneys own large, joyous, explosive physical self. There is Sidney the lawyer, Sidney the reporter, Sidney the columnist, Sidney the sometime magazine editor, Sidney the novelist, Sidney the Roy Cohn autobiographer, Sidney the diehard New York Giants football nut, Sidney the jazz and Sinatra and Tony Bennett and any other uncrapped-up-music nut, Sidney the enthusiast of good food and good drink, Sidney the restaurateur (as owner/host briefly, in the early 1980s of Broadway Joes on 46th Streets Restaurant Row), Sidney the smoke-wreathed scorner of the Smoke Fascists, Sidney the man-about-town habitué of Gallaghers, Elaines. the Players Club, the Yale Club, etc., Sidney the possessor of a fine eye for female grace in any form, Sidney the to-the-death partisan of embattled Israel, Sidney the equal-opportunity pomposity piercer, Sidney the anecdotalist, Sidney the inside-story truth-teller and, of course, Sidney Zion, husband, father, grandfather, widower, bitter-end crusader for medical and hospital reform.
When Sidney, that 3 oclock in the morning, said Id better get my ass down to the paper, he didnt mean the good gray New York Times, where he had worked, mostly on the Supreme Court beat, until he went off in 1970 to help Warren Hinckley start a political-exposé magazine called Scanlans Monthly. He meant Dorothy Schiffs New York Post, where I worked had indeed been working since shortly before Sidney, changing careers 180-degrees from law to journalism, had broken in as a Post reporter on the legal beat in the early 1960s. It was from there that he had gone to The Times, but it was at the Post that he and I had become fast friends.
To Sidney, a story was a story, and if he, in the middle of that terrible night in 1968, didnt have an outlet in which to say something in print on the life and death of RFK, he wanted to make sure that I didnt sleep through that necessity. The irony, of course, was that Robert F. Kennedy under whom the pre-journalistic Sidney Zion had worked, as a young lawyer in the U.S. Attorneys office back in New Jersey was one of the people in this world Sid Zion most feared and detested. The further irony is that when, in 1971, three years after that assassination in Los Angeles, Sidney had a huge scoop on his hands the name of the person who had fed the Pentagon Papers to The New York Times he again had nowhere to break it.
Im home, and Libby is 5 years old, Sid said during a recent evening of interview and recollection Libby, the redheaded daughter of Elsa and Sidney Zion, restless, gifted Libby who would go into New York Hospital with a fever one night in 1984, when she was 18, and be dead, there in the hospital, by morning. I go to Gallaghers, and everybody is talking about who could it be that leaked that Pentagon stuff? I get a big list of possible names from the Washington Post, eliminate the faux guys, and center on a couple of Jews. In the center of that center: Daniel Ellsberg. I come home and say: Ive got the biggest story, but nobody wants to hear it. And Libby says: Ill hear it, Daddy. And Elsa says: Why dont you call up Barry Gray?
So he did, and on Barry Grays radio show Sid spills his scoop to all the world and the sky falls down. Everybodys there at the studio, 477 Madison Avenue. I see them [the press] all phoning. I see Murray Schumach [of The Times] smiling, and a few minutes later he tells me: Arthur Gelb [Times managing editor under terrible-tempered executive editor A.M. Rosenthal] says: You are never to show your face in The Times again. It went beyond that, far beyond that. In parts of this town newspaper hangouts Sid Zion for a great many months was treated as a pariah (unclean! unclean!) by various of his peers who would have murdered their mothers for just such a scoop. Blacklisted for six years because I broke a true story. So all those years I had to go back and practice law.
What finally breached the ban was New York Times Magazine editor Ed Klein asking if Sid would like to do some easy pieces. I was sitting in Elaines one night, listening to Bunny Berrigan on the jukebox and wondering: Why did it all go away? Americas great, poetic jazz and popular music. I told Ed Klein I thought I could knock something out in three weeks; it took a year and a half. To this day Sids June 1981 jaccuse on how disk jockey Alan Freed and the record companies and rock-and-roll and other noises have been destroying that heritage is one of the most provocative pieces the Times Mag has ever printed, likewise the one that stirred up the greatest tide of pro-and-con mail it ever received. The younger guys on the staff hated it, said they couldnt find a picture of Sinatra [!] to put on the cover but the printers loved it, it was their music.
Robert F. Kennedy, remember him?
When I was in that U.S. Attorneys office in Newark, Sidney said as we shot the breeze in his Upper West Side Manhattan apartment a painfully hollow apartment, now that Elsa is gone and the two boys, Adam and Jed, are long off on their own no one butchered civil rights more than Bobby Kennedy. I know he was a hero to [leftish columnist} Jack Newfield and all these guys, but Bobby was terrible on civil liberties. Now its the terrorists, Sidney said dryly, then it was the Mafia. Bobby would call up a judge and tell him what to do [during the trial of a headlined Mafioso], but he wouldnt go after any [of New Jerseys] crooked politicians because they were for his brother Jack. He was a big phony, a crumb-bum.
He was also so says Sidney the miniature bulldog who, but for chance and fate and political circumstance, might have been at Senator Joseph McCarthys side and ear as majority counsel all through those tumultuous 1954 Army-McCarthy hearings. Which is to say that, if McCarthy hadnt blackballed RFK because of events in Massachusetts, Bobby Kennedy would have metamorphosed into the Roy Cohn of those proceedings; the Roy Cohn that so much of America but not Sid Zion still loves to hate.
And the great irony there, said Sidney, is that if Bobby had gotten that job instead of having to settle for minority counsel [to the Senate committee holding the hearings] he never would have been assassinated and his brother would never have got to be president. The tragedy of that family, all dying when they could have lived
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Right, Sidney and Elsa Zions wedding photo.
Below, Libby Zion. |
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By the time you read this, Sidney will have been without Elsa for something more than two years; without Libby for what is now 23 years, none of it made easier by the cruelly indecisive 1995 trial in the wrongful-death case of Zion v. New York Hospital. Still, the great plus that came out of the death of Libby Zion is the enforced reduction the Libby Zion law of the sleepless working hours of interns and residents at hospitals in New York State.
Elsa and Libby died on the same day of the same month the 5th of March 21 years apart. They sleep in the same ground in New Jersey, leaving a husband, a father, a joyous, furious, Rabelaisan-funny, deadly serious human being of unquenchable vitality and multiple talents a larger-than-life figure out of Saul Bellow or Philip Roth or Bernard Malamud to pull that life back together and go on.
When Elsa died, the Players Club on Gramercy Park South had a memorial evening during which many wonderful and true things were said about her. It was later, when the speeches and the dinner were over, that Sidney and I, he with drink in hand, were briefly thrown together by the crowd. I seized the moment to say: You know, Sid, I always just thought of her as a beautiful, bright, funny, sexy, gutsy Irish girl. Sidney, who is never soft, tossed me a glance and softly said: Thats the way I think of her.
There is, however, for the writer of this article, one other ineradicable memory of Elsa Zion: It is Elsa on the stand in New York Supreme Court, white-faced, courteous, even-voiced, in icy control, reliving how on the early morning of March 5, 1984, she had finally broken through the tangled verbiage coming over the phone from New York Hospital to say to ask Are you trying to tell me that my daughter is dead?
When Libby died I was 51, said Sidney Zion no, I had just turned 50 in November. Shed been at my 50th birthday party at the Players, and then she died. Nothing went on the same way after that. I was in the middle of writing Markers, his novel of New York City power and power brokers. It wiped me out for a long time. Libby was my editor on Markers. She used to come in and say: This was good, this was not so good. He laughed and added: She even edited my ties. Not laughing: After she died I couldnt do anything, sitting in that study. I dont know how I got through it. The worst thing to be as a writer is to sit there alone, thinking of it. Numb.
Then what happened, I got a call from this big editor at Random House. Yeah, Jason Epstein. Roy Cohn, who was dying, had submitted 700 pages of an autobiography. Epstein wanted me to fix it. I needed money now. I called Roy and said: Roy, theres nothing there, youre trying to be a nice guy, but its a bullshit book, it isnt you.
When Roy died I was able to tell some truth. Thats why its called The Autobiography of Roy Cohn, by Sidney Zion. Random House paid me a lot of money, twenty-five-thousand bucks, and two weeks later they knocked it off their list. My agent called and said: They canceled it, but they dont want the money back.
Sid pauses, then sourly adds: It made me out a writer for hire.
When The Autobiography of Roy Cohn, by Sidney Zion did come out, in 1988, the publisher was Lyle Stuart, a gentleman who did not spend money freely. He sent it to the West Coast and the reviewers out there by Pony Express well, by train to save $8,000, and then Nicholas Von Hoffmans Citizen Cohn came out, and I was dead in the water again.
Roy Cohn is, even now, hated by millions of Americans who remember the Army-McCarthy hearings and, before that, the prosecution and execution of Ethel and Julius Rosenberg. How about Mr. Cohn?
I liked him. Everybody loathed him, but, said Sidney, I liked him. I first met him on the steps of the Federal Courthouse in 1964, my first year with Dolly [i.e., on The Post]. Cohn said: I like your stuff, lets go have a drink. I thought: This guy whos about to be convicted is so cool and collected. Hes a piece of work. Roy had one principle and one principle only: Be loyal to your friends. Even [radical New York politico] Paul ODwyer liked him.
Indeed, one of this writers own vivid memories is of a jam-packed party chez Zions with Paul ODwyer holding court on one end of a six-foot sofa, Roy Cohn holding court on the other end.
Roy was a very fast study. He understood the first time, and wouldnt listen to you the second time. Angels in America? Not only did I see it, I talked to [Tony] Kushner before he wrote it. He called me, to ask about Roy. In the play, all that crazy screaming and spitting and yelling, all over the place. The crazy fagele stuff. Mrs. Rosenberg coming down on him from heaven. A piece of shit show and a piece of shit movie.
Yes, Roy was gay, and yes, he denied it to everybody, would never, never have admitted his homosexuality. Im sitting with him at the end, and Roys boyfriend is there, putting unguentine on Roys lips. If Roy had ever admitted he had AIDS, he would have sued the hospital for giving him bad blood! Once a teacher who had been fired for being gay asked him to take his case. Roy said: I dont want your money Ill take the case against you because homosexuals are destroying this country.
If Sidney Zion liked Roy Cohn, he, all his life, has hero-worshipped another fairly controversial Jew the immensely prolific, hugely talented newsman, novelist, playwright, screenwriter, and pro-Israel militant Ben Hecht. Back in Sids New York Post days he had given columnist Leonard Lyons a scoop something about Jack Dempsey and in return, Lyons had fixed it up for Sid to visit the ailing, aging Ben Hecht.
It was on the day of Lyndon Johnsons first State of the Union address after the assassination of John F. Kennedy. Hecht, watching the TV, said: This is the most evil man Ive ever seen, and Ive seen evil men. Hes going to destroy this country. I wont live to see it, but you will. Imagine that! He also told me: Being a screenwriter is like being the plumber who fixes your toilet and then watches to see if it goes down. If you ever sell a book to Hollywood, dont go see the movie. You will have less to do with it than the usher.
Sidney E. Zion, who was born in Passaic, New Jersey, November 14, 1933 he shares November 14 as a birthday with Mamie Eisenhower, Prince Charles, and, guess who, Senator Joseph R. McCarthy was at Yale Law School a year or two behind a fellow named Victor Navasky. It was in fact Navasky founder, even then, of the satirical Monocle, future editor of radicalisms The Nation who (a) introduced Sidney Zion to Elsa Ruth Heister, (b) nudged Sidney into switching from law to journalism. He said it would change my life. I didnt want to change my life, but I think he knew that I did want to be Ben Hecht more than I wanted to be Clarence Darrow.
Elsa half Irish, half German, and a dab of Scottish, actually was a graduate of Bard College. She knew all about writers, from Bard. The first thing she ever said to me was: Thank God youre not a writer.
Of the final illness of his one and only wife, Sidney said now: We didnt know exactly when it started. Shed had a breast removed much earlier, with only a 10 percent chance of the cancer coming back and she got it back. Five years ago she had a heart thing, and a doctor had said: Shell probably never get out of the hospital. He said that in front of the kids [sons Adam and Jed, then in their 30s]. Adam nearly died on the spot. Then another doctor a great doctor, Howard Bruckner kept her alive for five years, but she never could survive the chemo. She did live to see Adams children.
A few weeks before she died a doctor in Mt. Sinai said to her again, right in front of the kids: Youd better make sure they dont keep you alive. She signed the [living will] paper. On one of the last days she looked scared and grabbed my hand. I knew she wasnt afraid to die; she was afraid to be kept alive. She fought as long as she could. Then everything started to break down. The doctors didnt tell me. A nurse told me
Some of Sids newspaper and magazine pieces over the years are gathered in Read All About It [Simon & Schuster] and Trust Your Mother but Cut the Cards [Barricade Books]. He has been a columnist for The New York Post, New York Magazine, the New York Daily News, the Post again, the News again
Once it was a piece about radical fugitive Kathy Boudin that somebody upstairs didnt like. More recently it was a piece about Connecticuts Joseph Lieberman. It has occurred to me, says Sidney Zion, that I am journalisms Billy Martin. I get hired and fired. I get fired for doing what they want me to do. The last person to fire him as of this writing was Daily News publisher Morton Zuckerman, winner of a Louis Brandeis Award. Its the first time in history, Sid notes, that the winner of the first Ben Hecht Award was fired by the winner of a Brandeis Award.