Imagine my surprise. I recall composing that little speech one Friday
afternoon while high on coffee and M&M's. It appeared in this space on
June 1. It included such deep thoughts as "Sing," "Floss," and "Don't mess
too much with your hair." It was not art.
But out in the cyberswamp, truth is whatever you say it is, and my simple
thoughts on floss and sunscreen were being passed around as Kurt
Vonnegut's eternal wisdom.
Poor man. He didn't deserve to have his reputation sullied in this way.
So I called a Los Angles book reviewer, with whom I'd never spoken, hoping
he could help me find Mr. Vonnegut.
"You mean that thing about sunscreen?" he said when I explained the
situation. "I got that. It was brilliant. He didn't write that?"
He didn't know how to find Mr. Vonnegut. I tried MIT.
"You wrote that?" said Lisa Damtoft in the news office. She said MIT had
received many calls and e-mails on this year's "sunscreen" commencement
speech. But not everyone was sure: Who had been the speaker?
The speaker on June 6 was Kofi Annan, secretary general of the United
Nations, who did not, as Mr. Vonnegut and I did in our speech, urge his
graduates to "dance, even if you have nowhere to do it but your living
room." He didn't mention sunscreen.
As I continued my quest for Mr. Vonnegut -- his publisher had taken the
afternoon off, his agent didn't answer -- reports of his "sunscreen"
speech kept pouring in.
A friend called from Michigan. He'd read my column several weeks ago.
Friday morning he received it again -- in an e-mail from his boss. This
time it was not an ordinary column by an ordinary columnist. Now it was
literature by Kurt Vonnegut.
Fortunately, not everyone who read the speech believed it was Mr.
Vonnegut's.
"The voice wasn't quite his," sniffed one doubting contributor to a
Vonnegut chat group on the Internet. "It was slightly off -- a little too
jokey, a little too cute . . . a little too `Seinfeld.' "
Hoping to find the source of this prank, I traced one e-mail backward from
its last recipient, Hank De Zutter, a professor at Malcolm X College in
Chicago. He received it from a relative in New York, who received it from
a film producer in New York, who received it from a TV producer in Denver,
who received it from his sister, who received it. . . .
I realized the pursuit of culprit zero would be endless. I gave up.
I did, however, finally track down Mr. Vonnegut. He picked up his own
phone. He'd heard about the sunscreen speech from his lawyer, from
friends, from a women's magazine that wanted to reprint it until he denied
he wrote it.
"It was very witty, but it wasn't my wittiness," he generously said.
Reams could be written on the lessons in this episode. Space confines me
to two.
One: I should put Kurt Vonnegut's name on my column. It would be like
sticking a Calvin Klein label on a pair of K-Mart jeans.
Two: Cyberspace, in Mr. Vonnegut's word, is "spooky."
E-mail Mary Schmich at mschmich@tribune.com