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"You can't read this guy's life story, or talk to people who knew him, without coming away really impressed at his courage," says Laszewski, before doing a reading from Radical at Davidov's south Minneapolis pad. "Not many people ever put their lives on the line for anything. And he was doing it routinely. And quite frankly, his beliefs and his willingness to stand up for those beliefs made it impossible for him to come back to the U.S. You have to have admiration for people who take that kind of risk."
Reed was born in 1938 on a chicken farm outside of Denver, Colorado. He started playing guitar when he was 12 years old, and eventually ended up in Hollywood as a B-grade matinee idol and singer in the mold of Rickey Nelson. When Hollywood's star machine proved too stifling, Reed rolled a few hit songs into a career in South America before ultimately landing in East Germany, where he sold millions of records. In 1966, he became the first American rock star to perform in the Soviet Union. Meanwhile, his utopian vision of socialism kept him blacklisted and marginalized in the States.
In 1986, Mike Wallace and 60 Minutes lionized him in a piece called "The Defector" in which Reed compared Ronald Reagan to Stalin. Hate mail poured in from his home country, which stung the native son, because Reed's next plan of attack was to come home and run for the U.S. Senate. A few months later he was found dead, floating in a lake outside East Berlin. He was 47.
Laszewski first heard about Reed in 1978, when Davidov brought Reed and his film El Cantor to Minneapolis for a U Film Society-sponsored screening. Reed had written and directed this biopic about the murdered Chilean folk singer and revolutionary Victor Jara; he also starred in the title role. At the time, Laszewski was an editor at the Minnesota Daily. The day after the screening, the paper carried an interview with Reed in which he said, "I've crossed over the line. People will accept a Joan Baez or a Jane Fonda, even a Marlon Brando. But not a Marxist living in East Germany. I'll come to America when I can help fight for a movement that needs me. But I'm not going to come to the U.S. to sit on my ass. The FBI would love that."
Laszewski didn't know what to make of his story. "I thought, 'This is weird. Why would an American willingly live in a communist country?'" he recalls. "A couple days later, he went out on the power line protest with Marv and got arrested." (The demonstration pitted Minnesota farmers and activists against utility companies and government, and helped launch the career of Paul Wellstone.) "It turned into a big international affair," Laszewski continues. "A big media event."
"That's what I call the World Series of trespassing," cackles Davidov, tipping a glass of white wine.
Over the years, Laszewski kept an eye on Reed's adventures via newspaper and magazine clips. He spotted a four-paragraph obit for Reed in the Pioneer Press back in the '80s, but he couldn't get his hands on documents from Reed's later years until the Berlin Wall came down in 1991. He wrote a feature about Reed for the Pi Press in 1996. Soon after, he interviewed Reed's first wife Patricia, and embarked on what would become a 10-year "odyssey" of telling the tale. It's a great story, and a dramatic read for anyone interested in history, politics, activism, or rock. It also comes nearly 20 years after Reed's death, and to a public that very well may have forgotten the entertainer entirely.