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Prince Reigns
Satyr or shy boy? Shaman or skilled
manipulator? The contradictions within rock's most controversial
superstar dominate his dazzling movie - and it seems, the artist
himself
PRINCE HAS COME. IT IS A WARM summer morning in the Minneapolis
suburb of Eden Prairie, and a black-clad rider on a purpie Honda
has just pulled up to a nondescript modem warehouse on Flying
Cloud Drive. Inside, a photographer is waiting. He has flown in
from Toronto with an assistant and most of the contents of his
stuaio to photograph Prince for the cover of this magazine. A
standard rock-star shoot, he figures, scoping out the
concert-size rehearsal stage, the costume room, the banks of
musical equipment. When Prince walks in, the first thing the
photographer notices is how small he is: he seems slight even in
his five-inch stiletto-heel boots. He is wearing a dramatic
black hat; a skintight black shirt open to the navel and tight
black trousers ringed ~th ruffles from the knees down. He is
carefully unshaven — only his cheekbones have been scraped
smooth, then caked with makeup - for that stylish New Wave-wino
look He seems to be saying something: Hi? He speaks so softly
that the photographer actually has to lean down to within
several inches of his Gice to hear him. He is making it quietly
clear that, while he has agreed to pose for the cover, he will
not pose for any photos for the magazine’s inside pages. To be
completely frank, he really doesn’t even want to do the cover,
but....
The photographer presses ahead, flourishing concepts and
asserting his magazine’s insistence on a white backdrop for the
photo. Ach! Prince had his heart set on hot pink. The session
gets off to an uneasy start. It is deci edto wheel in the purple
Honda, a perfect prop. The motorcycle is a central visual
ornament of Purple Rain, Prince’s custom-tailored movie debut —
a picture with so much prerelease “top spin:’ as they say in
Hollywood, that the media, anticipating a major sleeper, have
been abasing themselves for weeks in the hope of wangling
intetviews with the recalcitrant star. But Prince does not do
interviews anymore. He is, however, full of advice about camera
angles and poses, and the photographer fights back a gathering
urge to whack him with a light meter. Quiddy, he snaps off some
preliminary test shots with a Polaroid. Prince seems to approve
of the results, then slips away while the photographer makes
some final lighting adjusnnents. An assistant appears and
caretully confiscates the seven Polaroids. When Prince returns,
he seems restless and even more remote. He’s decided he doesn’t
like the angina setup, so they do another Polaroid, a
full-length shot Prince disappears again. The photographer hears
the sound of drums and cymbals being bashed in another room.
Then silence. After half an hour, the assistant reappears and
announces that he’s just driven his employer home. Prince, he
says, is extremely sensitive: “He actually gets physically ill
at having his picture taken.” On his way out, the photographer
can’t help but hurl a silent curse at the warehouse walls. They
are lined with photographs — blowups, big ones. All studies of
the same smooth unsmiling features, the same inscrutable
sensuality and unfathomable flamboyance. All of them dominated
by those liquid Keane-kid eyes. All of them pictures of Prince.
jUST WHO IS THIS SELF-ENVELOPED STAR? HOW IS IT THAT he's se’s
outselling both Bruce
Spningsteen
and the mighty Jackions in the record racks? What sort of
monumental chutzpah’ nust it take to step away from rock videos
and make a featureength movie — one based on the hopes and
deepest fears of ~‘our own brief life? How accurate is the
portrait so exuberantly painted by Purple Rain? How much painful
truth remains hidden beneath its often dazzling exterior? The
picture one acquires of this twenty-six-year-old wonderkid from
scanning his songs and canvassing his colleagues md
acquaintances is murky and uncertain — which is the way ie wants
it As Owen Husney, his first manager, once advised iim,
“Controversy is press.” And Prince, for all his vaunted
“eclusiveness, has certainly been controversial Husney started
he mystique ball rolling in 1977, trimming two years off his
Srotégé’s age and obscuring his full name. But Prince - Prince
Rogers Nelson, actually, born in Minneapolis on June 7th, 1958 —
had his own ways of getting attention. Raised in an
overwhelmingly white environment, he became as adept at playing
hard, guitar-based rock & roll as he was at fuvlder black
styles. (In early intemews, he also emphasized a multira- aal
background — half-Italian father, mixed-blood mother -even
though, by most reports, both his parents are light skinned
blacks.) And then there was his frankly lubricious sexuality,
relatively subtle at first, but later leading him to perform in
hea~ makeup, bikini briel and thigh-hugging leg warmers singing
songs with such single-entendre tides as “Head.” These ploys got
him noticed, all right. But to most of the record-buyiuig public
- even as he began spinning off such provocative satellite
groups from his hometown as the Time (led by his favorite foil,
Morris Day) and the all-girl Vanity 6— Prince was, and remains,
essentially a myster~~ In fact, about the only thing on which
his friends - and even his foes - agree is that Prince appears
to be the genuine artide: a musical genius. And not since the
Fifties, when that accolade was applied to Ray Charles, has the
term seemed so attractively apt Signed by Warner Bros. Records
in 1977 on the basis of an astonishing one-man-band demo tape,
Prince was awarded what is said to be the most lucrative
contract ever ofl~red by the company to an unknown artist (“Well
over a million dollars,” claims Husney) and was granted
near-total creative leeway in the recording studio. He wrote all
the music, played practically evety instrument, produced all
nine tracks and delivered an album, For You, that kicked off
with an ethereal, gospel-drenched mélange ‘~f a cappella voices
(all Prince’s), concluded with a screaming rock-guitar feature,
touched down in between on a carnal classic called “Soft and
Wet” and was dedicated to “God.” But For You was not a
commercial tri- umph: six years after its release, that first
Prince LP has yet to sell 400,000 copies and remains his
least-known album. He’s been riding a rocket to the top ever
since, however. His next three records — Prince, the
groundbreaking Dirty Mind and the even more successful
Controveny — all went gold (sales of 500,000 copies). And then,
late in 1982, came the dazzling 1999, a double-record set that
has sold nearly 3 million copies and is still on the pop charts
more than ninety weeks after its release. The album fairly
brisded with hits - the tide trach, “Delirious,” the masterfully
metaphorical “Little Red Corvette.” In the view of Warner Bros.,
it marked the long-awaited point at which Prince’s seamless
fusion of white rock & roll and black dance-funk became
commercially undniable; and it was seen as setting the stage for
Prince’s next album to create the kind of cultural explosion
that traditionally heralds the arrival of a true superstar. But
there was one unknown and slightly troubling factor in this
commercial equation: along with his sixth album, to be titled
Purple Rain, Prince would deliver a feature-length movie of the
same name. Filming had begun in Minneapolis last November 1st,
and details of the project were not such as to excite keen
anticipation among music-biz moneymen. The director, Albert
Magnoli, had never been in charge of a feature before. The cast,
including all five members of Prince’s band in key roles, had,
with only two exceptions, no acting experience. The tight budget
($7 million) and rushed shooting schedule (seven weeks) did not
augur well for stellar production values. And, of course, who
ever heard of making a movie in Minneapolis? In the winter, yet?
In addition, the scnpt was said to be...autobiograpbical?
WILLIAM BLINN KNEW NOTHING ABOUT PRINCE, REALLY, when he was
approached roughly two years ago about writing the script for a
very vaguely conceived movie in which the singer would star. But
Blinn, a mild, middle-aged man who’d wntten such Emmy-winning
tube fare as Brian’s Song and a Roots segment, had reason to be
interested in the task, proffered by Prince’s management
company, Cavallo, Ruffalo and Fargnoli. At the time, Blinn was
executive producer of the Fame series, and there was some doubt
as to whether it would be renewed for a third season. A
screenplay would be a handy diversion. What did the managers
have in mind, exactly? That was unclear. Prince had been jotting
clown ideas in a purple notebook for some time, and one night
out on the road, he told Steve Fargnoli: this is great and all,
but there must be something else. He wanted to do a movie.
Unfortunately, Fargnoli knew little about the moviemaldng
business. With his parmers, Bob Cavallo and Joe Ruffalo, he
managed music acts, including such major attractions as Weather
Report and Earth, Wind and Fire. But Prince was the one, they
all knew it Prince could do anything: why nota movie? Fargnoh
shopped the pitch around to some major studios — got a black kid
here who most ticket-buying citizens have never heard of who
wants to make a movie about himself with some friends in
Minneapolis - and got a lot of laughs. But he was unfazed. The
managers would finance the film themselves. But they needed a
script Blinn first met with Prince and Fargnoli at an Italian
restaurant in Hollywood. He immediately knew there’d be strange
days ahead. “1 never met anyone in the world who ordered
spaghetti with tomato sauce and orange juice to drink’ he
recalls. “He’s definitely got his own drummer going.” As they
talked about the movie, Blinn found that Prince was “not
conversationally accessible. He’s not purposefully face-to-the-
wall, but casual conversation is not w e’s ood at It was as ill
asked someone what they wanted for dinner, and they said they
weren’t sure, but they’d like it to have some tomatoes in it,
and some beef, and some onions. And ~d say, ‘I think we’re
talking about beef stew here.’” During a meeting at Pnnce’s home
— a purple but other- wise unremarkable two-story affair
situated on a lake in a well to-do suburb several miles
southwest of Minneapolis - Blinn realized that an important part
of the story Prince was trying to formulate concerned his
father, John L Nelson, a piano player who had led a Minneapolis
jazz trio in the Fifties under the name Prince Rogers. Nelson
had separated from his wife, a singer, when Prince was sewn,
leaving a piano behind for his san to learn to play. The father,
who reportedly still lived in Minneapolis, obviously remained a
troubling figure. “He was semicommunicative about his dad,” says
Blinn. “He played me some of his father’s music on the piano,
and when he played, and when he talked about his father’s life,
you could tell that his father is vety key in what he’s about It
was as if he were sorting out his own mystery — an honest quest
to figure himself out. He saved all the money on shrinks and put
it in the movie.” Blinn began pounding out a script called
Dreams, a dark story in which the parents of the Kid - the
character tobe played by Prince -were both dead, the mother
dispatched by the father, who in turn killed himself. Prince’s
Minneapolis music scene was in there, too, and so was the
beautiful Vanity lead crumpet with Vanity 6. Born in Ontario of
Scottish and Eurasian parents (her original name was Denise
Matthews), Vanity bad been a model and sometime nudie actress
who, under the name D.D. Winters, appeared in such Canadian-made
films of the early Eighties as Terror Train and Tanya's Island.
Vanity was also Prince’s girlfriend - or one of them - and in
Dreams, she was to play the stabilizing influence in the Kid’s
othetwise chaotic life. Blinn’s story was beginning to sound
very much like
Prince’s life. Following his parents’ breakup, Prince had been
bounced from mother to father to an aunt and finally, at age
thirteen, of his own volition, into the home of Mrs. Bernadette
Anderson, the mother of his best (and at the time, she says,
only) friend. Prince and André Anderson bad both attended a
local Seventh-Day Adventist church as young children, and they
shared a consuming interest in music. It was with André (and a
young drummer named Morris Day) that Prince organized his first
band, Grand Central. “Music is obviously a cloak and a shield
and a whole bunch of things for him,” says Blinn. “It’s a womb.”
Halfway through the second draft of Dreams, Prince told Blinn he
wanted the word purple in the title. “At first, I thought it was
a kind of strange request’ Blinn says. “But he really identifies
with purple. There’s a whole dark, passionate, foreboding
quality to the color and to what he does. Yet there’s a certain
royalty to it, too.” After finishing a second draft of the
script, Blinn got word that Fame had been renewed for a third
season, and so he returned to television-land, leaving the
Prince management team with a script of sorts, but no director.
After seeing a film called Reckless, they approached its young
director, James Foley, and asked if he’d be interested in Pwple
Rain. He wasn’t, but he
recommended his friend, Al Magnoli, who had edited Reckless. At
first, the thirty-one-year-old Magnoli wasn’t interested.
Nevertheless, he agreed to meet with Bob Cavallo for breakfast
one morning. Cavallo asked him what he thought the Prince team
should do~ Magnoli tried to be helpful. “I said, ‘This is what I
would do’ - and right there I told him the entire story. It just
came out I knew they had this character Prince, the script had
introduced me to this other character, Morris, and I knew that
there was a girl in the middle. So it was like: where do you go
with this? And I said Prince should do this, and Morris should
do this, and Vanity should be this kind of girl and not this
other thing in the script And then the mother and father - and
all of a sudden die world was shaped. And within ten minutes, I
had convinced myself that this would be an extremely exciting
film to make.”
Cavallo liked what he heard, and Magnoli felt the stirrings of a
buzz. He agreed to fly to Minneapolis. “The minute I met Prince,
I realized that I hadn’t gone far~enough. That because of~
nature of this person, I could g&inuch further into the private
sort of area. We had dinner, and he let me speak for about
twenty-five minutes, and I began working off what was emanating
from him. And I got very involved with the parents at that
point: the father became a musician, the mother became sort of a
woman wandering the streets, things like that. I was just
basically watching the person in front of me, just feeling what
that was all about And at the end, he said okay, let’s take a
ride. So we took a ride, and he looked at me and he said, ‘I
don’t get it This is the first time rw met you, but you’ve told
me more about what rve experienced than anybody in my life.’”
Magnoli told Prince that if he was willing to reveal the
emotional truths of this material, of the character that they
would create, then the movie could be made. Prince agreed, so
Magnoli went to Minneapolis for a month and hung out with the
people who would populate the film: Prince and his band (now to
be called the Revolution), Morris Day and his group, the Time,
the women in Vanity 6. Then he locked himself in a room three
weeks and completely rewrote Burn’s script In the completed
Pwple Rain, the Kid is an up-and-coming attraction at the First
Avenue & 7th Street Entry Club, where he revels in his
burgeoning musical powers despite the derision of the dub’s
manager and the petty humiliations inflicted bya hilariously
snide headliner played (to near perfection) by Morris Day.
Offstage, though, the Kid is miserable, plagued by his parents’
incessant domestic rows, increasingly alienated from his own
band members (whose musical offerings he ignores) and awkward
and inarticulate in his pursuit of a beautiful new arrival on
the scene called Apollonia (the part originally in- tended for
Vanity). When Apollonia announces her intention of joining a
girl group being assembled by Day — for the ex press purpose of
dislodging the Kid from his slot at the club — the Kid, like his
bitterly abusive father, lashes out at the woman he loves.
Meanwhile, Morris Day and Billy, the club manager, keep up a
steady assault on the Kid’s fragile ego, chorusing just the sort
of criticisms that have been directed at Prince himself over the
years. (“Nobody digs your music but yourself~’ says Billy. “‘Ia
long-haired faggot!” screams Day.) Following an explosive
encounter with his father, the Kid redeems himself with
Apollonia and blows away all professional competition at a
climactic concert at the club. It’s not a happily-everafter
ending, exactly, but whe7n Prince and his band dig into the
luminous title tune at the end, a definite feeling of uplift is
imparted “We are now in an era where films should in a sense
have something uplifting going on,~’ says Magnok “We’ve gotten
away from the antihero of the Sixties and early Seventies, where
films ended sort of with a thought and a dismal aspect~ like:
Okay, we’re in the gutter. We wanted to say: Life’s a bitch, but
wow, if you can just get it together.
PATTY KOTERO — OR PATTY APOILONIA KOTERO, AS SHE CUR-rently
calls herself- is kneeling on the floor of her imniaculately
tidy West Hollywood aparnnen; picking through a pile of tape
cassettes. David Bowie, Eddie Murphy, Thomas Dolby - ah, there
it is. She reaches up toward a small stack of stereo equipment
arrayed against the wall, and suddenly the room is filled with
the sound of cool, autumnal piano chords. It is ‘Tather’s Song,”
a haunting instrumental piece composed by Prince's father and
performed by Prince~ In Mitmeapolis

during the hectic shooting of Pwple Rain, Patty had trouble
getting to sleep each night At five o’clock one morning, she
remembers, Prince appeared at her door. “He said, ‘rve got
something for you.’ I said, Yeah?’” She pops her eyes in mock
suspicion. “He said, You’ve been having trouble sleeping. Here.’
And he gave methis tape~ It’s better than a glass of milk and
honey.” As the tape plays, Patt/s gaze drifts upward and fixes
on a large, framed promotional portrait of Prince that’s propped
atop the stereo. It’s enough to give one the feeling of having
wandered into a private prayer grotto, a tiny temple to the
Great Man. Until last summer, Kotero was just another young LA.
photo modeL Then, across the countty, in Minneapolis one day, a
woman named Vanity walked away from her projected part in Purple
Rain. No one will say why she left - rumors range around money,
ego and a faded relationship with the RIm’s diminutive star —
but it was Patty who was chosen as her replacement. A casting
call had gone out for a woman who met certain requirements, some
of them physical Through her agent, Patty obtained an audition
and quickly bied herself out to Minneapolis. Although her own
personality is sweeter and considerably more wholesome than that
projected by Vanity, the two women are obviously interchangeable
within the cartoon context of the character. Vanity/Apollonia is
a walking Penthouse wet dream of billowing breasts and plushly
upholstered contours,
her sultry face, framed by gleaming cascades of raven hair, a
frank invitanan to frolic One criticism of Purple Rain is that
it’s insufferably sexist. All of the young women in the picture
are inexplicably addicted to décolleté
and in many cases wear nothing but the skimpiest lingerie. In
one scene, Apolloma is subjected to considerable humiliation in
the course of a skinny-dipping interlude at a lake, and in
another sequence, Morris Day has a troublesome girlfriend
chucked into a trash dumpster by his fawning aide~ Jerome.
Though Prince’s female fantasies obviously run in the direction
of impossibly pliant sex cookies, in Purple Rain, this attitude
toward women is condemned through the character of Day, for whom
the women in Apollonia 6 (nee Vanity 6) are simply “the
bitches,” assttmed to be sexually available afrer taking a few
slugs from his silver hip flask. Since it was actually Prince
who invented and produced Vanity 6, the film indicates that he
is at least aware of his own worst concept of women. There are
also two women in Prince’s band, and while they too tend to hang
out of their dresses a lot (and Prince has concocted an oblique
lesbian aura around their relationship), their main purpose is
musical Keyboardist Lisa Coleman and guitarist Wendy Melvoin are
lifelong friends, the daughters of two veteran L.A. sessionrnen
(their fathers both played keyboards on the Beach Boys’ “Good
Vibrations”). Lisa is a classically trained pianist, and Wendy
is a longtime jazz student who first attracted Prince’s
attention when she peeled off an elaborate jazz chord in his
presence after a show one night and later won her funk wings
during an extended jam with the man on James Brown’s “Body
Heat.” “The idea of integration is important to Prince,” says
Lisa. “To meandtherestoftheband,too.It’s just good fate that
it’s worked out as well as it has — you know~ the perfect couple
of black people, the perfect couple of white people, couple of
girls, couple of Jews. Whatever. He’s chosen the people in his
band because of their musical abilities, but it does help to
have two female musicians who are competent.” In the past,
Prince has used his band largely to flesh out onstage the music
he wrote, played and produced on his own in the studio. Like the
Kid in Purple Rain, though, Prince is now allowing other
musicians to contribute to his music. Five of the nine songs on
the new album were recorded by the full band, and Lisa and Wendy
even get cowtitng credit— the ultimate rarity, even though it’s
noted only in the film credtts,not on the LP-for “Computer Bule
’ “He loves those people,” says Apolionia. “He cares for them,
and they care for him.” She crosses the a small couch. In her
black slacks and plain white top she seems prettier, her face
softer, than in the movie. But her dark beauty - both her
parents were born in Mexico, but she describes herself as “a
Latin-German Jew” - and extravagant figure would seem to suit
Prince just fine. Has she also replaced Vanity in the little
guy’s affections? “I don’t kiss and tell,” she says with
practiced coyness. “He loves his women~ but music comes first.
He is manied to his music. You can’t compete with it.” With
music, Prince seems to find his most perfect union. Apollonia
remembers seeing him in the studio, her oblivious mentor, lost
in sound. “It looks like he’s in there inhis own spaceship, his
own capsule, just taking off, and the sky’s the limit” he dasps
a hand to her heart “I still pinch myself every morning and say
my prayers at night, and thank the good Lord someone’s breathing
in my direction.”
RELIGIOUS IMPUlSES IN ROCK Usually have taken the form either of
woosy Easternalia or grating fonda-
mentahst harangues. The musicians in Prince’s orbit share an
unlabored, though still deeply felt faith in God. Prince himself
has dedicatd all six of his albums to the Deity; and out on the
road, before each show, he joins hands with his musicians in
prayer. There’s an instrumental “love theme” in Purple Rain
that’s simply titled “God” (it’s not on the LP), and the album
itself is rife with messianic overtones, from the opening sermon
of “Let’s Go Crazy” to the suggestively titled “1 Would Die 4
U,” in which Prince sings, “I’m not a human/I am a dove/I am
your conscious/I am love.” When the album appeared, Bill Aiken,
a production staff at MTV in New York, noticed a snippet of
backward dialogue tacked onto the end of the song “Darling
Nikki” — the record’s most brazenly salacious track. Reversing
it on tape, Aiken discovered a message from Prince: “Hello. ‘How
are ~,vu? I’m fine. Because I know the Lord is coming soon
coning soon.” The strange dichotomy between Prince’s compulsive
carnality and his spiritual yearnings apparently isn’t puzzling
to those who’ve gotten dose to him. “He’s a man apart in many
ways,” says William Blinn. “But his whole sexual attitude is
positive. It’s: This is good, this represents growth, life.” Not
everyone, however, is convinced that Prince is cognizant of his
own contradictions. One New York actress who auditioned for the
Apollonia role in Purple Rain (and who asked that her name not
be used — a common request in the Prince orbit) expressed shock
at the things she was asked to do. “I turned it down,” she says.
“It was way too pornographic for me. I mean, they had stuffin
the script that I wouldn’t even let my boyfriend do to me in my
own bedroom.” Prince looked the actress up dunng a subsequent
visit to Manhattan, and she found him alternately brilliant and
pathetic “He’s got a lot of hang-ups,” she says. “He means well,
and he’s genuinely talented, but he’s got a lot of problems.
He’s really hung up on God, for one thing. I think he thinks
he’s related to God in some way.” One day, the woman says, she
coerced Prince into accompanying her to the American Museum of
Natural History to see a celebrated exhibition called Ancestors.
“The show of the century7 she says. “All these Neanderthal
skulls, and how we evolved from apes and stuff, right? And he
just wouldn’t believe any of it. I said, ‘Come on, you don’t
believe in that Adam and Eve crap, do you?’ He just blankly
stared back at me. “There is a real dichotomy between his sexual
hang-ups and God and the Bible,” the woman concludes. “1 mean,
he’snot leading a godly life. At least I don’t pretend to lead
one. But that is the most unportant thing in his life, God.”
EVEN WITH GOD ON HIS SIDE, though, Prince seems a strangely
solitary figure. In his pursuit of the success his talents so
richly justify, he has ruptured a succession of once-important
personal relation- ships. Bassist André Anderson, his closest
boyhood friend, was the first to leave Prince’s band, followed
by guitarist Dez Dickerson. Prince fired bassist Terry Lewis and
key- boardist Jxmmy Jam from the Time, and keyboardist Monte
Moir soon left of his own accord to join them. Recently it’s
been rumored that Morris Day — whose wild comic persona is more
immediately charis- matic than Prince’s own - may be leaving the
Time. (Inquisitive ob- servers are told it’s not true, but Day,
for some reason, cannot be produced to confirm thatcontention.)
“1 maintain we came out better in the end, for all we went
through,” says former Minneapolis studio owner Chris Moon, who
started Prince off by giving the sixteen- year-old prodigy the
keys to Moon Sound studio and getting a manager for him. On the
other hand, Moon adds, “Prince may have come out worse off than
us. He’s gotta be one very lonely guy. I mean, he’s left a long
trail of broken hearts and broken egos behind him.” Unencumbered
by his problematic past, Prince rises higher and higher in the
pop-cultural firma- ment. Who’s to say the trade-off
hasn’t made him happy? For the Purple Rain premiere at LA.’s
Chi- nese Theatre last month, he personally summoned a swarm of
the superstars who are now his peers to come and pay homage. And
another time, after both Prince and Michael Jackson joined James
Brown for jams onstage at L.A.’s Beverly Theatre, the Godfather
of Soul was heard to exclaim, “Look out, Michael!” This is
what's called arriving. Whether or not that big limo in the sky
he’s pursued for so long has turned out to be otherwise empty is
a matter f& Prince to ponder in the splendid isolation to which
he’s now entitled. “It’s hard to have that much power and have
close friends7 William Blinn reflects. “It’s tough for him. But
if he does not have close friends, then neither do I feel that
his solitude is threatening or harm ful to him. Some
people......well, you know, the four-in-the-morning phone call:
‘I’m alone, what do I do?’ I think Prince is perfectly capable
of handling it. He might make that phone call, and he might be
alone. But he knows what to do.”

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