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Tens of thousands of people have approached very famous men and women intending to brighten the lonely lives of the great with a few simple words of admiration, only to be rejected and abused for their thoughtfulness. To the stars, of course, such encounters are mere momentary irritations in their fast-paced sensational lives and are quickly forgotten, but for the sensitive fans personal rejection by an idol becomes a permanent scar. It could easily be avoided if, when approaching the celebrated, those who practically worship them would just use a little common sense:
1. Never grab or paw the famous. They will instantly recoil and you will never ever win their respect. Stand at least thirty-two inches away...
2. Don't gush, don't babble, don't grovel or fawn. Never snivel. Be tall. Bootlicking builds a wall you'll never break through. A simple pleasantry is enough: eg, "Like your work!" If you need to say more than that ("I think you're the most wonderful lyric poet in America today") try to modify your praise slightly ("...but your critical essays really suck.") Or cough hard, about five times. That relieves the celebrity of having to fawn back. The most wearisome aspect of fame is the obligation to look stunned by each compliment as though it were the first ever heard. That's why an odd remark ("Your last film gave me the sensation of being a horned toad lying on a hot highway") may secretly please the famous person more than a cliche ("I adore you and my family adores you and everyone I know in the entire world thinks you are a genius and with your permission I will fall down on the sidewalk and writhe for a while"). Be cool. Famous people much prefer a chummy insult to lavish nonsense: a little dig about the exorbitant price of tickets to the star's show, perhaps,or the cheesiness of the posters ("you design those yourself?"). Or a remark about the celebrity's pet (if any) like, "How much did you pay for that dog?" Personal dirt ("Do you have to shave twice a day? Do you use regular soap or what? What was it like when you found that out about her going out with him?") can wait for later. For now, limit yourself to the dog. As it gazes up in mealymouthed, brown-nosed lickspittle devotion, glance down and say "be cool."
3. Autographs are fine, photos are fine, but be cool. Don't truckle ("Oh please please, I'll do anything, anything at all") don't pander ("This is the high point of my life") and never cringe or kowtow ("I kjnow this is just about the tackiest thing a person can do and it makes me sick with shame but..") and never, never lie ("My mother, who is 87, is dying in CT and it would mean the world to her if..."). Hand the famous person the paper and simply say "I need you to sign this." Hand the camera to one of his hangers-on and say "Can you take a picture of us?"
Scale matters. If you’re accosted on average once a week, it’s charming. You can give a little time to the one who stopped you, be delighted by their knowing who you are and the whole thing can be a most pleasant and mutually satisfying interchange. If you are stopped every ten minutes then it’s a whole different deal. You keep your head down, pretend to be on the phone, wear dark glasses and generally hope to pass unnoticed. Or you get someone else to do your shopping, tube travelling and general street-using for you, sitting in the back of a Lexus most days and never interacting with the rest of the human race except when surrounded by burly security men who place their palms in the faces of anyone who dares to come near. Which is sad and can engender the reputation of being standoffish, grand and all the rest of it, but if the alternative is not being able to move around very easily, who can blame those afflicted with that level of fame?