The Vanity Fair article talks about the green card wedding.
When he first came to America, he stayed briefly in Meriden, Connecticut with the family he had first met (and charmed) in Europe. From there, he placed an ad for lodging and ended up with the Savio family in Berlin, Connecticut.
When they kicked him out, "He gave himself a new name. Hed become Chris Kenneth Gerhart by the time he left us, says Savio. Soon he was at the University of Wisconsin, on the Milwaukee campus, where he studied film, and where, he told the Savios in a phone call, he planned to vote for Ronald Reagan in the 1980 presidential election. But youre not an American citizen! one of them exclaimed. Not a problem, he said; he would soon have a green card and become a legal resident.
We were in a class together, studying film noir, remembers Todd Lassa, now a writer for Motor Trend, who was a witness at Chris Gerharts quickie courthouse wedding, in 1981, when they were both undergraduates. The bride was a woman Gerhart didnt know well, and they were divorced soon after he got his green card. Several weeks after the wedding, he stopped showing up for his classes. Soon his old friend Edward Savio, who was living in Los Angeles, got a phone call from the immigrant his family had kicked out of their house. He had just arrived in L.A., he said, and wanted to say hello. He was going into the film business."
When he first came to America, he stayed briefly in Meriden, Connecticut with the family he had first met (and charmed) in Europe. From there, he placed an ad for lodging and ended up with the Savio family in Berlin, Connecticut.
When they kicked him out, "He gave himself a new name. Hed become Chris Kenneth Gerhart by the time he left us, says Savio. Soon he was at the University of Wisconsin, on the Milwaukee campus, where he studied film, and where, he told the Savios in a phone call, he planned to vote for Ronald Reagan in the 1980 presidential election. But youre not an American citizen! one of them exclaimed. Not a problem, he said; he would soon have a green card and become a legal resident.
We were in a class together, studying film noir, remembers Todd Lassa, now a writer for Motor Trend, who was a witness at Chris Gerharts quickie courthouse wedding, in 1981, when they were both undergraduates. The bride was a woman Gerhart didnt know well, and they were divorced soon after he got his green card. Several weeks after the wedding, he stopped showing up for his classes. Soon his old friend Edward Savio, who was living in Los Angeles, got a phone call from the immigrant his family had kicked out of their house. He had just arrived in L.A., he said, and wanted to say hello. He was going into the film business."