Back in 2018, I wrote a poem for each member of the Men’s Group that had been meeting since 1990. The eldest in our group was Bernie Weiner and at that time, at 78 years old, he had just gotten diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease. Here’s how I talked about it in my poem:
FOR BERNIE
We’re all suffering the diminishment
of our once strong and vibrant faculties,
but now yours has a name.
Yes, we all are biking towards our own mortality,
but you got given an electric bike
with that extra push each turn of the pedal.
Not what you needed and hoped for. Not what any of us
would need or hope for.
But the Crisis Paper author has weathered many a crisis,
kept a steadfast loyalty and commitment to the effort
that’s needed to both endure
and thrive.
Poem after poem,
Play after play
Photo after photo
And now step after step to brake the accelerating velocity
of what slows you down.
in company with the many who will adjust their pace
to stay by your side.
May the remedies prevail!
They didn’t. This morning, one week after his 86th birthday, Bernie passed away. In an hour, I’m going to the Redwoods, his Assisted Living home in Marin County, to play piano for and sing songs with the residents, a date I long had on my calendar. Knowing he was on the way out, I was hoping to see him one more time. Missed him by some five hours. But I’ll dedicate a song to him and hope the music will help him fly off into the next world wrapped in love and beauty.
I first met Bernie as the father of his two sons, Erik and Mark, who I taught at The San Francisco School, starting in the 1980’s. Bernie was a local legend, the drama critic of the San Francisco Chronicle. He retired at 50 years old and I went to his retirement/ birthday bash at Club Fugazi, where many Bay Area actors and actresses gathered to both celebrate and roast him. It was an impressive affair. He was a major force in supporting San Francisco’s experimental theater scene in the 70’s and 80’s. (The “Little Man Clapping” was the icon used in theater and movie reviews as a shorthand—off the seat and clapping was “fantastic!”, sitting up an clapping “Fine,” sleeping “Not so good” and the empty chair “Don’t bother.”
Right at the same time, the Men’s Group began, so I got to know him a bit more beyond our school contacts. Then his family and ours and two others began going to the Sierras every year on an annual snow trip, then to Calistoga Spa for an annual Spring vacation and later, changed out the Sierras for the West Point Inn on Mt. Tamalpais. Our kids grew up together over all these years, I came to readings of some plays he was always working on, he came to my music performances and I also took part in a concert of music set to his poetry, contributing two pieces. I was the officiant at his son Erik’s wedding and also helped lead the memorial service when his sister Roberta passed away. In short, a lot of shared life together.
Bernie self-published several books of his own poetry, co-founded an online political blog called The Crisis Papers during the Bush years and beyond, took up photography and won some acclaim at local shows. He finally finished his autobiography in 2020, titled “Little Man Clapping: A Critic's Search for Authenticity in Art, Love and Life.” It is an impressive portrait of this life as a Renaissance Man, joining poetry, plays, photography, fatherhood, friendship, family, and more.
And now he is with us no more. A long, rich life to be celebrated and remembered, but always the sadness of disappearance. R.I.P., Bernie—happy we got to be together for so much of the wild ride.
