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  • The Nut Lady Returns

    THE NUT LADY RETURNS

    The New Yorker
    Issue of 2005-04-18

    By Tad Friend

    Filbert by filbert, the Nut Museum is once more taking shape. For
    thirty years, Elizabeth Tashjian ran the museum out of her house, a
    Gothic Revival mansion in Old Lyme, Connecticut. Millions of Americans
    knew her as "the Nut Lady" from her periodic guest appearances on the
    "Tonight Show," where she would expound on the metaphysics of the
    nut. In both roles, she wore silk robes from her Armenian
    grandmother's trousseau, to underscore the point that many of the
    "popular" nuts originated near Armenia, in Asia Minor. (Not everyone
    made the connection.) At home, after pocketing the museum admission
    fee-three dollars and a nut-Tashjian would show visitors paintings
    she'd done of walnuts menaced by bullying nutcrackers and her "Mask of
    the Unknown Nut" sculpture. In an early visit to the "Tonight Show,"
    in 1981, she carried a thirty-five-pound coco-de-mer from the
    Seychelles that resembled a woman's buttocks. The existence of such a
    sexually provocative nut, she informed an enchanted Johnny Carson,
    utterly refuted Darwin. Away from the cameras, however, Tashjian, who
    never married, lived an increasingly reclusive life with her cats,
    Dinky and Pinky. By 2002, she was nearly indigent and quite frail. She
    fell into a coma, and awoke several weeks later in a hospital to find
    that the probate court had put her house on the market (it was later
    sold to pay her debts). Her nuts and paintings and pricky-burr
    sculptures, meanwhile, had been rescued by a sympathetic Connecticut
    College professor named Christopher Steiner, who purchased them from
    the town for the sum of zero dollars, but they were now the college's
    property. Worst of all, she herself had been declared incapable and
    was a ward of the State of Connecticut.

    Tashjian, who is now ninety-two, told a recent visitor to her room at
    the Gladeview nursing home, in Old Saybrook, that although she never
    liked being called the Nut Lady, it was vastly preferable to being a
    state-certified nut. A small, stooped woman, she has a habit of
    darting a shoulder forward to underline a point. "I'm in a
    predicament!" she said. Still, she has allies. Professor Steiner, a
    soft-spoken art historian who has featured Tashjian's work in his
    museum-studies classes, curated a show of her paintings last year. In
    March, he arranged for her to perform for a local Cub Scout troop with
    a few nuts he'd brought from the college's storage locker. Tashjian
    turned the scouts to making hazel-husk hats. She also told them about
    the little bearded dwarf that dwells within every peanut embryo.
    "There were some hardened kids there who wore black T-shirts and
    looked really irritated," Steiner said. "But after twenty minutes they
    were totally into it."

    Tashjian had just learned that Steiner was going to bring ten of her
    paintings to hang in her room at the nursing home. Buoyed, she was
    planning a new painting about Eden: "I'm saying Eve gave Adam a nut,
    and not an apple. Making a joke about sex and origin. Down with the
    apple and up with the nut!" She laughed. "It's a fresh idea, a
    newie. Gauguin was attracted to the nut, and he carved on nuts. But I
    use the form directly. Take this black walnut," she continued, holding
    one forward. "The fragrance of its shell would be a wonderful cologne
    for a man. It's very pungent, like Old Spice. So there's another new
    idea."

    Steiner is working on a book about unusual museums, titled "Performing
    the Nut Museum." He sometimes has difficulty discussing it with
    Tashjian, because, for one thing, it's not solely about her, and, for
    another, she would prefer to be writing it herself. Don Bernier, the
    director of a documentary called "In a Nutshell: A Portrait of
    Elizabeth Tashjian," which had its New York première last week,
    capitulated on a similar issue: he had planned to make a film about
    several roadside museums, but Tashjian insisted that he narrow his
    focus. Genius demands its due. Years ago, at a Christmas Eve lunch at
    the home of Katharine Hepburn, who was Tashjian's neighbor, Tashjian
    began to sing her composition "Nuts Are Beautiful." Before too long,
    "away flew Kate into the kitchen," she recalled. "It irked her that I
    was a polished artist-she didn't want the attention not on her."

    Tashjian is distressed that Bernier's film reveals the untidy state
    her house was found in while she was in the hospital. "Liz Taylor
    never showed you the interior of her house," she said. "Whereas
    showing the museum proper leaves a happy taste, showing those dirty
    dishes in disarray belittles me, as though I am"-her voice
    faltered-"insane. But it happened that my kitchen drainage was stopped
    up, and I was ill. I was dillydallying, let's say, gaining my poise to
    call a serviceman."

    In February, after a doctor examined her, the probate court declared
    Tashjian capable of managing her affairs. Next, if she can find an
    obliging attorney, she hopes to reclaim her home. The woman who bought
    it hired Martha Stewart's plasterers to spruce up the place, renamed
    it Garden Roads, then resold it. "She cut down all my nut trees,"
    Tashjian said. "Carpathian walnut, black walnut, chestnut, filbert-all
    gone. All." Tashjian also wants to sue the State of Connecticut. One
    of her planned causes of action is that while she was comatose the
    state's conservator took nearly six thousand dollars from her bank
    account to buy her a casket and a funeral policy. "They want to bury
    me in their plot," she said, "but I'm not allowing that." Her
    shoulder jumped. "I'm increasing my identity. I'm complicating the
    plot. I'm going just the other way. The Nut Museum marches on!"

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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