A True Partnership: Olympia Dukakis and Bonnie Low-Kramen
Bonnie Low-Kramen
Award-winning trainer of C-Suite Assistants | TEDx Speaker | 2023/24 Top 100 Global HR Influencer | Bestselling Author | 33K+ followers | Building a sustainable workplace for future staff | [email protected]
Note: Oscar winner Olympia Dukakis passed away on May 1, 2021. She was 89 years old.
“I just want to be a good plumber.”?This is how?Olympia Dukakis?approached her craft of acting. Her job was to put all the parts of a character together and to make it solid and strong. And, it wasn’t enough to give just one or two great performances a week. A “good plumber” delivers a great performance eight shows a week for the run of a show. That’s what good plumbers do. Her commitment to excellence in all details mattered. No leaks. Olympia thought of all professions like this.
As an assistant, I became a good plumber too. I worked to be as great an assistant as Olympia was an actress and I wanted to do it not just on some days, but every day. I realized that’s what “ultimate assistants” do.
For 25 years, I had a front-row seat supporting an extraordinary woman who powerfully touched millions of hearts and minds. Olympia Dukakis went from working as a respected New York City theatre actress whose name her agents advised her to change because it was too ethnic (she refused), to an internationally known and adored movie star who became an easily pronounced household name. Olympia catapulted to fame in a matter of months. I was by her side for all of it. And speaking of names, she was “Oly” and I was “Bons.”
Olympia’s life changed forever by her Academy Award for the film “Moonstruck,” and so did mine. What a ride. It is everything you think it would be and a whole lot more. And I learned. Wow, did I learn about show business, about being a working woman, about making hard choices, and about life. I wouldn’t have traded it for all the world.
When I started working with Olympia Dukakis at the Whole Theatre in January, 1986, I was hired as the PR Director. No one got hired without Olympia’s approval and so my interview was on a snowy night since that was the only time she had. We liked each other right away and she hired me on the spot. I was impressed by her obvious authority as Producing Artistic Director. She wore her power without apology which was a lesson right there. There was no question that she was?in charge?and I thought that was very cool as a woman running a theatre. I had no idea what would happen after she asked, “When can you start?”
My job was to write press releases about the plays we were presenting which included classics by Chekhov, Shakespeare, and Williams and musicals by Kander and Ebb. As an English and Theatre major at?Rutgers University, this job was perfect for me. This job also meant that I had to spend a lot of time with Olympia and the whole creative team. Perfect.
We began. Neither of us dared to think our work together would last for 25 years which leads me to one of the first lessons I learned.
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Olympia showed up for her family, her friends, her students, her fans, and for me. In 2004, I gave Olympia the final draft of?my book?“Be the Ultimate Assistant” to review and offered her free rein to take out anything she did not like. She called me two days later and said, “Bons, you really have something here.?Don’t change a word. Oh, and I’ll write the Foreword.” She did.
8. Everything is negotiable. Everything.?This includes salary but also having the contents of a hotel mini-bar removed and some of the excess furniture too. You don’t get if you don’t ask. I learned to say what I needed because other people were not mind-readers. I watched Olympia ask for what she needed to do her work and most of the time, she got it. She was able to quasi-patiently tolerate the negotiating process and “let it cook.”
9. Don’t read reviews.?Olympia was very focused on today and the future. She made it a practice to not read reviews and she didn’t want the rest of us to tell her about them – even when they were raves. She did not want her performances to be colored by these words no matter what they were. Her attitude for all of the reviews was to say, “See that newspaper? It is going to be wrapping up someone’s fish tomorrow.” How’s that for a way to handle the haters? Don’t get sucked in by anyone else’s opinion of you. Seriously consider the source.
10. Fear is boring.?I am grateful that I now know that most of the things we worry about turn out to be okay. So much time is wasted on worry and fear. It might be easier said than done, but I hold onto Olympia’s words. “Don’t waste time on fear, Bons. Fear is boring.” It was her way of telling me to take big, giant bites of life and to not be afraid to fall on my face. And what a role model for that!
Olympia Dukakis?may be gone but not really. Not for me and not for so many others. How do I know?
In the hundreds of emails I received after Olympia’s passing away on the morning of May 1, 2021, many of the messages said, “You and Olympia had something so special. You were very lucky.” The thing is that I don’t want our partnership to be a unicorn. We were tested many times along the way and we worked very hard to address the challenges and move on stronger.
If you are reading this, I hope you have a?partnership?that is mutually respectful and that you both feel truly supported. If you don’t, I hope some of these lessons will help you get there.
Thanks, Oly.
Executive Assistant, Chaos Coordinator and Culture Influencer at the Vacaville Police Department
3 年Wonderful tribute and great tips for life. You were truly blessed to have a boss, friend and mentor like Oly.
Founder of My Grads Get Jobs
3 年Beautiful thoughts, memories and advice ??
Managing Director, Champions for Success, LLC
3 年Bonnie, my friend... this is beautiful!
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3 年I am so sorry for the loss of this magical woman. Your dedication and respect is a wonderment in today's society. There are people we work for and there are people who we work with... those are the ones that change our lives. A beautiful tribute to your friend. Light and love.