Down And Out - Episode 3
Weather delays us another five days but helicopters are on standby, cameras loaded, every angle fixed, with all logistics figured to the minute. Meanwhile, journalists throughout Scandanavia have flocked to Andalsnes. The papers run full-page hyperbole hatched by a dogged group thirty strong, all vying for the scoop. Ever approached, pried, I point to Carl and Jean. Carl laughs, then lets fly his bedeviled babbling as journalists feign understanding but take no notes. Jean delivers in two sentences of cold, hard narative, and the journalists return to ask me what the hell Carl had said. One writer takes to quoting Carl directly but finds the translation to Norwegian impossible. A big-time Oslo stringer - a stunning virago who could challenge the Pope's vows - works a different line, citing previous jumping tragedies and questioning the viability of something authorities are already relunctant about. Everyone slinks around. Rain falls. Tension grows. We all wait. With all the media hoopla, all the delays, the story explodes to the national news. Norwegian television runs a nightly update that propels the jump into continental notice. The Oslo station has a video crew in town, so with a week's momentum, the whole production takes on the pomp and gossip of Hollywood - precisely what I'd hoped to avoid. The entire town stands by, anxious, this impatience a reminder to fretting producers that every day in limbo means thousands wasted. Suddenly there's a rush for what requires the most steadfast deliberation. Throughout, the Boenishes have been, and are, ready.
The weather breaks at 8:00 P.M., July 5, 1984, with everyone scrambling, desperate to shoot something, even in bad light. In two hours, cameramen are choppered into position. In a tricky piece of flying, the pilot deposits Carl, Jean, Fred, and me in a tight notch in the summit ridge, just forty feet from the launch site. This avoids the traverse and rappels; I shudder to think of having had to get the Boenishes across. Clad in a flaming red jumpsuit, Carl paces with energy enough to charge a power plant, while Jean, ever poised, begins assiduous study of the launch site. I pitch off a rock that whistles down into the night. Others follow to verify my estimates, but devulge another hazard. "Sure, they drop forever," laughs Carl, "but they're never more than ten feet from the wall!" That leaves no margin for error. Should they not stick the perfect, horizontal free-fall position, if they should carve the air even slightly back titled - head higher than feet- they will track backwards. Carl explains with his hands, one hand as the wall, the other for the jumper; and when his hands smack together, I cringe. Success will require the perfect jump. Such news sets me thinking, but this is a judgment call, and the decision is left to Carl and Jean. Jean seems confident but rolls more stones toward the lip. Approaching midnight, the light fades to dusk with the great stone amphitheatre stretching below, dark and foreboding. Suddenly, the radio coughs out: "Come on, Long, let's get on with it!" The crew is freezing and the director of photography has declared it almost too dark to film. "Hey," snaps Carl, momentarily lucid, "I'm in no hurry to jump off this cliff, screaming past those ledges at midnight!" I quote this verbatim into the radio, and people relax; we talk things over. Carl's gusto is undeniable - "I'm here, I'm jumping!" - so we go for Plan B. He'll make a practice jump while the cameramen preview and asses the angles. The sky is flawless, so we probably have at least another eight hours of good weather. After Carl's trial jump, we will reusme in a few hours when full light returns. As Carl dons his parachute, I try and capture his hyperactivity on film, but it's too dark to even pull a focus, though there's light enough to see fine with nkaed, though dilated eyes. I repack the Arriflex and turn to the drama before the jump.
"Ten minutes," says Carl, jaw working steadily, eyes bulbous, hands fidgety. Jean, ever relaxed, cinches the last straps. Cued by a week of front-page spreads, the road below is jammed with cars of the curious, headlights winking in 1:00 A.M. grayness, the concession shop a beehive. Everyone is looking a mile up except us, who peer a mile down into the vague contours of the valley. "Five minutes," squeaks Carl. He pulls some streamers from his pack, and leaning off the ropes, I lob them off. No wind. They fall straight down, shrinking to a blur after just clearing those ledges. Everything's set.
"One minute," says Carl in a pinched voice. He secures his helmet, then slides twitching fingers into white gloves. He follows a final pitched rock with porthole eyes, visualizing his line.
"Fifteen seconds," he gasps, unclipping the rope and stepping up to the lip. Horns sound below. I'm taut, tied off to four rops, feet on the edge, with a panoramic view of it all. Carl's shoes tap like rythm machine, eyes lost below. Carl start the countdown, which Fred mimics into the radio: "Four, three, two, one ...." He's away! Arms go out to stabilize, legs bend and straighten, and he plummets down, jumpsuit whipping like a sail. With roaring acceleration Carl passes the ledges with ten feet to spare, body wooooshing, ripping the air. At 1,000 feet his arms snap to his sides and he starts flying horizontally away from the wall, fifty, one hundred, one hundred and fifty feet, at one hundred and thirty miles an hour, now a red dot. Thirteen, fourteen, fifteen... Pop! His big yellow chute unfurls like circus tent for a causal glide down to the crowd. The picture-perfect jump. "Okay, Fred" I laugh, incredibly relieved, "You're next. Hurry and gear up!" We laugh at that one.
Back at the hotel at 3:30 A.M., it's madness among gnashing producers, frantic journalists, film loaders, battery chargers, pilots, and hangers-on, all guzzling tankards of Espresso (club soda for the Boenishes), checking for clouds by the minute. Everyone is anxious to get back to the Trolveggen, film the jump, and clear out. (A chartered jet is gassed and awaits the crew once the filming is over, hopefully by noon.) At 4:30 I lay down for a few Z's, but I'm so charged with coffee and expectations that it's hard to even lie still; sleep is impossible.