[AGL] obit of Phyllis Cartwright
Michael Eisenstadt
michaele at ando.pair.com
Wed Jul 5 04:39:12 EDT 2006
Phyllis Cartwright One of Austin's great love affairs has been interrupted
for a while. Phyllis Cartwright passed away at the Christopher House on June
25 in the company of her best friends and soul mates, her husband Gary
Cartwright and mother Lucy Mae McCallie. Phyllis had struggled three months
with cancer. Phyllis's public persona was as the successful real estate
broker, a partner of the thriving firm Avenue One who had been honored and
inspired to serve on the board of the Austin Public Library Foundation. One
of her great pleasures was her Monday Morning Breakfast Club with several
close women friends. But Phyllis was never much of a joiner. Her front door
and her dazzling smile were open to many friends and associates in her
chosen hometown, but the most treasured part of her life was her private
partnership with just one - her husband of thirty years. Long ago in another
city, some crusty old newsroom hand branded an impetuous young reporter with
a nickname that grows more politically incorrect by the hour. Most people
call him Gary, but to Phyllis and a cadre of old friends, he would always
be- have to be - Jap. When he grew frisky or full of himself, Phyllis would
laugh and call him "Jappie." In 1998 the senior writer and editor of Texas
Monthly shared a glimpse of their marriage and love affair in a widely noted
article, "How to Have Great Sex Forever." "We made out on moonlit beaches,
in cornfields in the shadows of interstate highways, and in darkened 747s
over the Atlantic. We had been searching separately and shamelessly for
fulfillment all those years, and we found it in each other, as one finds an
answered prayer." A friend was in high political office at the time, and the
politician's response to reading about the fantasies of Frenchy and Monique
was guarded: "What are Phyllis's clients going to think?" If anything, the
essay added to the realtor's clientele some prospective homeowners who, in
the bargain, just wanted to meet her. Phyllis waved it off with her pealing
laugh, her wry purring drawl, and her trademark mysterious grin. Phyllis Ann
McCallie was born November 4, 1941, in Holdenville, Oklahoma, with enough
Creek in her ancestry that she was a registered member of the tribe. Her
father, Mike McCallie, was a pipe-fitter on industrial construction
projects, and Lucy Mae was a career-long elementary school teacher. Outside
the small town Wetumka, Phyllis grew up riding horses and was a
baton-twirling majorette in high school, then her parents' work took them to
Dumas, Texas, where she graduated. She majored in art at North Texas State
in Denton and befriended members of the school's famed lab jazz band. She
married one of them and in Dallas had two sons, Robert and Michael Sickles.
Phyllis worked for ad agencies that filmed commercials, was an animator and
production coordinator for film projects that included the "Bullwinkle"
cartoon series, and organized the office and schedule of the noted
photographer Shel Hershorn. During that period she met a stylish Morning
News sportswriter, Gary Cartwright, in a press tent at a Dallas Cowboy game.
In the early seventies Phyllis's second marriage brought her to Austin and a
job at the Point Venture real estate development. By 1976 she was a single
working mom, and Jap, also divorced for the second time, was living in New
York, writing books and magazine pieces. They met again at the press
gathering of Willie Nelson's Fourth of July Picnic - he scrapped his plans
to go back to New York, and that was their summer of love, nights of
honky-tonks and Austin music bacchanalia. At the urging and organization of
their friend Doatsy Shrake, they got married in a back room of the Texas
Chili Parlor the afternoon of October 20, 1976, vows performed by Jap's peer
and pal for decades, Bud Shrake, the author and licensed preacher of the
Universal Life Church. The storied rowdy event moved on that night to the
Bull Creek Party Barn, where Jap leaped onstage with Willie Nelson, started
batting chords on a guitar he had no idea how to play, and with backup by
the master Austin songwriter and his band composed and yowled an
extemporaneous song of love called "Main Squeeze Blues." A few years later a
book deal and cooler summer climes prompted them to move to Taos, New
Mexico, with their first pair of beloved Airedales. In 1982 they came back
to Austin, where Jap joined the staff of Texas Monthly and she launched her
remarkable career as a realtor. She entered the business when the market was
booming, weathered its plummet when the eighties economy went bust, and
within a progression of companies -Eden Box, West End Properties, and Avenue
One - she saw it boom again. She and Jap built a beautiful home on a
secluded block west of the Capitol. Doing business in a black Jaguar,
Phyllis was among the first in her social circle to master the cell phone;
her organizational talent and focus was extraordinary; she was forever
juggling Saturday night dinner parties with Sunday open houses, returning
dishes to friends' doorsteps with some small gift and a handwritten note.
Phyllis built an enviable record of selling upscale homes to entertainment
celebrities and beneficiaries of Austin's high-tech boom, but she never
forgot where she came from, or how long and hard her climb to the home of
her dreams had been. She guided young couples trying to break in the
difficult Austin market with the same care and patience as she provided
Dennis Hopper and Dianne Ladd. One young woman, who recalled that Phyllis
showed her eighty houses, said that she wore a necklace with a pendant that
was a compass. Phyllis's life had sorrow with the laughter. Her son Robert
fell ill and died young, as did Jap's son Mark and Mark's wife Helen, whom
they loved like a daughter. Her son Michael and his son Shea were often
separated from them by circumstance and geography, as were their
grandchildren. They doted on their Airedales and friendships and traveled as
far and as often as they could. One evening in 1996 on their first of
several jaunts with friends Dorothy Browne and Jan Reid, after immersion in
the fifth day of a four-day village festival in Oaxaca, Mexico, that was
awash with the local mezcal, Jap proposed that the four would henceforth
have travel personas: He was "Mean," Phyllis was "Cheerful," Jan was
"Steady," and Dorothy was "Reckless." Months later, when Jan proved none too
steady after a Mexico City robbery and shooting, Phyllis cheerfully took the
financial organizing in hand and helped raise over $100,000 for their
friends' crisis in a matter of days. On the inside of a cabinet door in
Phyllis's and Jap's kitchen is her typewritten list of their ten trips to
Europe together. The first, dated October 1987, reads "Germany, Paris,
London." The last, November 2005, is "Paris/Amsterdam." These two were made
to roam the streets of Paris. Phyllis was always the strongest one any of
her friends knew. After she fell so ill in March 2006, she was twice taken
into marvelous hospice care of the Christopher House. By chance and the
symmetry and faith that distinguished her life, she spent her last day in
the "Willie Nelson Room" - dedicated after Willie played a fundraiser for
the Christopher House in 1994. The first visit there, a friend called the
room to ask with apprehension how they were doing. The old rabble-rouser Jap
or Gary - take your pick - answered with a poet's heart: "We're making love
with our eyes." Phyllis is survived by her husband; her son Michael Sickles
of Duncanville; her mother Lucy Mae McCallie of Wetumka, Oklahoma; her
brother Jim McCallie of Wetumka; her grandson Matthew Sickles of
Duncanville; and her seventh and eighth Airedales Allie and Willie. A
memorial service for Phyllis is planned Friday at 4 p.m. at the University
Presbyterian Church, 2203 San Antonio St., Austin 78705. In lieu of flowers,
contributions in her memory can be sent to the Austin Public Library Foundat
Published in the Austin American-Statesman on 6/28/2006.
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