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  • Wishing on a star

    San Francisco Chronicle, CA
    June 3 2006

    WISHING ON A STAR
    Channing brings melody, memories to severely ill Burlingame fan
    Mike Weiss, Chronicle Staff Writer

    Saturday, June 3, 2006


    After decades as a Broadway star, Carol Channing has transformed
    herself into something of an old-fashioned doctor, the kind who makes
    house calls. She does it because she believes that performance -- not
    least her own -- has healing effects.

    The star of "How to Marry a Millionaire" and "Hello, Dolly" and
    recipient of three honorary doctorates dropped in Friday at the
    Burlingame home of Gordon Cline, who is dying from chronic
    obstructive pulmonary disease.

    Cline, 77, who needs a constant supply of oxygen, and Channing, 85,
    who was raised in San Francisco, traveled the world and now lives in
    Modesto, immediately were on a first-name basis.

    Channing was barely in the door of Gordon and Billi Cline's yellow
    frame cottage -- wearing her signature oversize black-rimmed glasses
    and a shiny fire-engine-red jacket -- when she broke into her theme
    song, adapted to the circumstances:

    "Hell-o, Gordon, Hell-o, Gordon

    "So nice to have you here where you belong

    "You're looking swell, Gordon ... and you are."

    Beaming, Cline, who had shaved for the occasion -- there are days
    when he is too short of breath to make the effort -- exclaimed: "I
    didn't even have to ask!"

    Soon, to the delight of their adoring spouses -- Harry Kullijian,
    Channing's junior high sweetheart, whom she married recently, and
    Billi Cline, whom Cline met at a concert in 1995 after the deaths of
    their spouses -- the entertainer and the retired chemist were in a
    full flirt.

    "What's that for?" Channing asked, pointing at the tank that feeds
    Cline oxygen through a nasal tube.

    "That's my lifeblood," he answered.

    "I used to take oxygen between my afternoon and evening shows,"
    Channing said.

    And the mention of her shows reminded Cline what he wanted to see: "I
    want to see you do Marlene Dietrich."

    The spirited get-together was arranged by Pathways, a nonprofit, San
    Jose-based hospice that, since Cline's hospitalization, has provided
    the Clines with home nursing visits, spiritual counseling and a level
    of caring that Gordon calls "a godsend."

    Channing began to work with organizations like Pathways while
    recuperating from ovarian cancer when she discovered that performing
    did her more good than resting.

    "You reach to the heavens to get the show out," she said in her
    famously scratchy, baby-talk voice, "and the heavens somehow answer
    us. It heals my fellow actors, heals the audience, and it heals me."

    Cline has needed oxygen for four years. But his health took a turn
    for the worse in January, when he went out in a driving rain to sand
    a sticky gate leading to Billi's glory: a landscaped backyard, the
    crowning achievement of which is a two-tier pool stocked with carp.

    He was in an intensive-care unit for two weeks. Twice, Billi went to
    the hospital thinking her husband was about to expire.

    "He was so ill, it's almost like I've gone through his death already.
    And I don't mean that tritely," said Billi, a trim woman with a
    down-home style who shares a love of travel with Gordon. Four times
    they have hauled his oxygen to remote regions of Alaska that can be
    reached only by bush plane.

    In their own ways, and with help from Pathways, the Clines have come
    to terms with the inevitable. Her husband may have months left, Billi
    said, or he may have hours. Nonetheless, asked to sum up his life,
    Gordon said one word: "Happy."

    Cline has left his funeral arrangements entirely in Billi's hands.
    When Billi picked out their burial plots, she said, the man from the
    cemetery told her they were so full they had instituted a new system,
    double dips. She found that funny and shared a laugh with Gordon
    until she figured out the man had said double depths. And then they
    had an even better laugh.

    Billi sometimes cries when talking about what is coming. And she says
    angrily about her husband's lifelong smoking habit: "I have to admit
    that sometimes I wish some of the CEOs of tobacco companies could be
    hooked up to a respirator."

    After a while, the couples settled in the Clines' sunroom overlooking
    the pond. Channing and Gordon held hands. Her fingers are twisted
    with arthritis, his discolored because the steroids he needs for his
    illness also make him bruise easily.

    Channing said her late father still comes to her when she needs him
    most. "I know," she said, making a dismissive backhand gesture, "this
    is not the end of us. It is not."

    "We've been kind of wondering," Gordon Cline said, "what's going to
    happen with our previous spouses?"

    "Maybe we'll swap, huh?" his wife said, mischievously.

    Soon Cline needed a rest -- his breath was coming in gasps -- and
    while he regathered himself, the honorary doctor who made 5,000
    appearances in "Hello, Dolly" talked about why she likes to make
    house calls.

    "I want it on my tombstone: 'She Lifted Lives,' Channing said. "And
    what about Gordon? He's an inspiration. He knows he's going soon, and
    it doesn't frighten him. He has every will to live. And he is so in
    love with his wife."

    It is almost time to leave when the name of Marlene Dietrich, the
    Hollywood star with the head-turning legs, came up again. Cline still
    wanted to see the impersonation, so Channing lifted the leg of her
    black slacks and showed a bit of ankle.

    "Armenians are funny about their wives," Channing said about her
    watchful husband. "They won't let them take their pants off for
    friends." Big laugh all around.

    The goodbye took awhile, what with autographing photos and CDs, but
    in the end, the 85-year old diva blew the dying man a kiss.

    "You and I, Gordon, will be together again," she said, and left.
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