A Rocking Time Machine

Angel Maria's rockerThis Cuban mahogany rocker is one of a pair that belonged to your great-great-grandfather Angel Maria Cremata. He had them in the front parlor of his colonial-style home in Santiago de las Vegas, Cuba. This chair has witnessed a great deal of paternal decrees, fraternal kerfuffles, political intrigue, and even survived a bombing by the minion of a partisan rival. (Fortunately Papa, as Mamita would call him, was not in the room at the time.) There is speculation as to who “done it,” but I will refrain from including the likely culprit here as there is the delicate situation of the rascal’s descendants getting upset. Mother (Belica) had the rockers in her house in Tampa and then in Miami. She sat in these until she got too sick to get out of bed at the very, very, very end. She knew I loved them and bequeathed them to me. In a burst of filial amity I gave one to Tia Adele, and thus one of Angel Maria’s rockers now resides in Chicago.

It’s said that a person is not truly dead until the last person who knows his name is also dead. In that case, Angel Maria is still very much alive (as are Mamita, Papito, and Mother). When you see this rocker, think of Angel Maria, his handsome face, the white suit, his stentorian tones and official proclamations and know that he lives still in my memories of someone else’s memories and now yours.

The formerly unwanted “Miller’s Chair”

When Dad and I got engaged back in 1981, he was attending the University of Miami, which had married housing on the Coral Gables campus. A semester before our wedding, we put our names on the waiting list (required a $5 deposit), and one month after we were married in July 1982, we moved into our one-bedroom, one-bath post-War, modernist beauty (designed by renowned Florida architect Marion Manley) —our rent was $285 a month including utilities. Sweet.

The apartment came furnished, and you could just pick out the pieces you wanted to use. The selection was a fairly motley collection of midcentury pieces that had suffered many college life indignities since they were originally purchased circa 1949. We already owned a lot of stuff thanks to our fabulous gift registry (and my pack rat-ness) so we only kept the vinyl covered armless sofa and what was labeled on the inventory as a “Miller’s Chair” (pictured below). These cute little chairs of bent plywood were scattered all around the housing quad—people left them by their front doors and put plants on them. They were clearly regarded as shabby “throwaways” by the University and its tenants.

When we moved out of the apartment the following year (alas Dad graduated and we were kicked out–Dad claims we’d still be living there if it were up to him*), we left behind the sofa but took the little chair with us. Nobody noticed.

Turns out the chair is an original Herman Miller Eames Plywood Lounge Chair—a midcentury and highly collectable design icon. We’ve joked that if we ever needed help paying the mortgage, we could always sell the chair on eBay. (Not a chance.) What I do know is that you both will fight over who gets to keep it. May I suggest you use a coin toss over verbal or physical combat? It will definitely come in handy if you’re ever short on your rent.

*By the way, the married dorms were torn down some time ago to make the Wellness Center. Our honeymoon cottage is now a parking lot-c’est la vie.

The unwanted "Miller's Chair"

The unwanted “Miller’s Chair”