Michael Sturges was my best friend in Charlottesville. He passed away this week.
Michael might have been mildly amused to hear that I thought of him as my best friend. We knew one another through work and our families only occasionally saw each other. Michael was much more social than I. He had a long trail of friends from everywhere he went. He was deeply involved in his church and his kid’s sports teams. He had people that he and his family regularly took vacations with. I was not one of those friends. I don’t really know who he considered his best friend, though I like to think that I was somewhere near the top of the list. But I knew he was mine.
When I met Michael, I had already lived as a transplanted Yankee in Virginia for about five years. I worked in the University Bookstore; he had just started at the University Computer Store. We worked on a sales project together and I knew immediately that I just clicked with this guy. That really doesn’t happen to me very often. After a few weeks, I asked him if, by any chance, he was related to John Sturges, the great Hollywood studio director of such classic films as Gunfight at the OK Corral, The Magnificent Seven, and The Great Escape. Michael actually looked a little shocked, then told me that his father was indeed the director John Sturges.
Michael had grown up in L.A. and labored in the film industry at the same time that I did. His mother had worked at MGM and to him it was just the family business. Like me, he got to a certain point where he realized that he needed to see life beyond L.A., so he headed north to Washington state (coincidentally, where I was born), where he met his wife. She is an Episcopal priest, and also like me, it was his wife’s career that brought them to Virginia.
Whenever possible, Michael and I would get together and talk about films, both of us grateful to have found someone who shared our passion for the history and culture of Hollywood. He had wonderful stories to tell about being on the set with his dad, for John Sturges had directed some of the biggest names in the business.
When Michael was getting ready to stop working at the computer store full time, he suggested me as his replacement. So for a few weeks, he was my boss as he trained to take his place. Then he quit, came back as a part-timer, and I was his boss. We worked together there for a few years, then I moved on to another series of jobs, until I found myself at the central computing department for the University hospital. Michael had tried his hand at a few private enterprises, but by the time his son was born, he was ready for the steady employment of another University job. I recommended him to my department and we found ourselves working together again. I eventually moved on from that job to a one in the University Central IT department, and after a year there when another position opened up, I recommended him again and once more we found ourselves working side by side.
We just always made a good team. Whether it was rolling boxes of computers through the halls of the hospital, working together to solve some technical problem, or organizing conferences for a hundred attendees, everything was just easier and more pleasurable with Michael at my side.
Those last few years were the best. By that time, Michael and I were just old friends, laughing at the same jokes and shared memories, and marvelling at the growth of our children.
For reasons that I never understood, people at work would sometimes call me Michael. This was doubly-confounding to me because Michael is both my middle name, and the name I was known by growing up. So when someone at work called me Michael, I’d have to stop and think “How did you know that … oh, you mean Michael Sturges!”
I never really thought that we looked much alike, but because Michael was a very good-looking man, I always took it as a compliment. I was never sure how he took it, though.
Several years ago, I introduced Michael to the music of Nick Lowe, and he also became a fan. When we learned that Nick was playing at a venue in Northern Virginia, Michael and I drove up and spent a memorable evening listening to music and swapping stories.
For many years, I have been a volunteer with the Virginia Film Festival. In 2008, at my suggestion, the Festival screened Bad Day at Black Rock, one of John Sturges’ most lauded films, to a theater full of high school students. After the screening, we came out on stage and I interviewed Michael. He enthralled the students, including my oldest daughter, with tales of his father and what it was like to grow up in Hollywood.
A little over two years ago, Michael started experiencing odd health problems, oddities that perplexed his doctors and confused him, for he always took good care of himself and was in excellent shape. When they could not come up with a diagnosis, his doctors suggested a full body scan. On that day, Michael was not supposed to eat or drink anything except a liquid that would make the scan work better. His wife drove him to work that morning and I went with him to the medical center.
When Michael learned that he had cancer, he was initially a little relieved. At least they knew what was causing his strange symptoms and could deal with it directly. Colon cancer is common and highly operable. Michael had the surgery and went on chemotherapy. He complained that the chemo wiped him out, but Michael was such an energetic guy that his version of being wiped out just meant that he missed a couple of days of work every other week.
A few months later, during a routine checkup, it was discovered that the cancer had returned and spread throughout Michael’s intestines. His doctor told him that aggressive therapy could slow it down, but that there really was no stopping it. Michael decided not to continue with the therapy. He chose quality of life over possibly living a little longer and being miserable. And at that point, for all the doctors knew, he could go on for several years more.
About this same time, in April of 2011, I left the job that I had held for five years and moved to the University Library. Michael joked that he would probably follow me in a few months, but it was not to be. In September, Michael was informed that the cancer had progressed, and he might have no more than a year.
Last Spring, I learned that Nick Lowe would be playing again in Northern Virginia. We decided to recreate our trip from a few years before and took the long drive up to Alexandria, talking on the way up mostly about family, work, mutual friends, and of course, old movies. Nick gave a great show that night and I took lots of pictures and videos, but I kick myself now that I did not hand my camera to someone and ask them to take a picture of Michael and I together.
Only on the way home did we start to talk about the cancer. Michael joked that, except for the cancer, he was in great shape. And he was right. The chemotherapy that he went through the first time really laid him low. Now that the cancer was back, by not choosing the aggressive therapy, he just felt better and had more time to spend with his kids. That was the most important thing to him.
That night, I got a little lost driving back home from Alexandria. That was okay, though, as it just gave us a little more time to talk, to listen to some music, and bask in each other’s company. When I finally dropped him off at his car, he said “That was fun. Let’s plan to do it again sometime.” Michael was always just so naturally optimistic that I believed him. I believed we’d have another chance to take a long drive and enjoy an evening of music together.
That was the last time that I saw Michael Sturges. We kept promising to get together, but our paths did not naturally cross at work any more. A month later, Michael tendered his resignation from the University and we all knew that the time was near. But I did speak to him one more time.
I produce a local weekly radio show, and one Sunday morning in early July, our scheduled guest did not show up, so at the last minute I jumped in front of the microphone to discuss events in the news that week. I didn’t have headphones on because I was still updating the weather and doing other producer things. About halfway through, the host of the show told me that someone on the phone had called in to say what a good job I was doing. I quickly put headphones on, but I didn’t recognize the voice, I just heard someone saying how nice it was to hear me and what a great job I always did. Only after the show when I went back to listen to the audio did I realize that it was Michael.
I am grateful that our last conversation was recorded, that I can go back anytime and hear a testimonial to the man’s respect for me, but how I wish I had known then who it was I was talking to. Michael is probably still laughing about that one.
And there it is: I just referred to Michael in the present tense. This touches on perhaps one of the most remarkable things about our friendship. Michael was a Christian. I am an atheist. But Michael wore his beliefs comfortably. He never judged anyone for believing differently than himself, and strove always to measure people by their deeds.
My rational self knows that he is truly gone, but we humans are just not wired that way. When someone is as important to you as Michael was … is … to me, you cannot easily accept that they are not in some way still present. I feel his presence constantly. It’s impossible for me to take a fifty steps around the grounds of the University without passing through some place that holds specific memories of Michael. More than once in the past few days, I thought for just a moment that I saw him, only to sadly realize that it was impossible. It’s a trick of the mind, a ghost image burned into the core of my brain, and I hope that it never fades away.
Last Fall, shortly after we learned that he might not have much time left, I took Michael to lunch and I made him an offer. I had always enjoyed his stories of growing up in Hollywood and the adventures he undertook after leaving L.A. I wanted to write his life story, to document for all time what a remarkable man he was. Michael thanked me for the offer, and declined. He told me that he was too mindful of his limited time, that he didn’t want to do anything that might take him away from time spent with his children. That was true, but I think it was also Michael’s modesty speaking. He never fully believed what we all knew: that he was a great man; that he had a life not just worth living, but worth telling.
And so, at last, I do the only thing I could ever have done, my final gift, to write as well as I can of my time with Michael Sturges. For those of you who knew him, I hope that I have done him justice. And for those who now shall never have the pleasure, know that you missed a fine man.
Goodbye, my friend, my brother. Though we are all poorer for having lost you, we are richer still for having had you in this world.
What a beautiful story of friendship. I loved hearing about Michael and the journey of your relationship. And, I think you’re right… he is still laughing.
I think you really captured his affability and modesty. He had many attributes worth aspiring to. We really have lost one of the special ones.
Beautifully written tribute to a friend and a fabulous gift to Michael’s wife and children. Although he is gone, this memory will last and grow with time. It is through the love we share that immortality is attained.
Sean Michael ~ I echo what Joan Cichon above me wrote: “This is a beautifully written tribute to a friend and a fabulous gift to Michael’s wife and children.” Not only was I introduced to your extraordinarily talented, giving, and loving friend, Michael Sturges, but I feel as though I was introduced to another part of Sean Michael McCord. I am so sorry for the loss of your friend, a remarkable man whose life was cut short but well lived nonetheless. Your description of Michael wearing his beliefs comfortably, never judging anyone for believing differently than himself, striving always to measure people by their deeds was encouraging in the current divisive climate in which our country finds itself. Just imagine if more people lived and loved as Michael did… does! Peace be with you and all of those touched by the life and presence on Earth of Michael Sturges. Thank you for taking the time to write and share such a meaningful and heartfelt tribute.
Dear Sean,
Beautifully written; obviously inspired by a wonderful person. I’m very sorry for your and his family’s loss; and of course his other friends.
You do have some truly beautiful phrases in this. Don’t forget that you and he shared a very important trait – one I don’t think you give yourself enough credit for – being a good father. There is little in the world (or elsewhere ?) that is more important than that.
Peace,
Michelle
Sean, well done. Thanks for sharing.
Thanks, Sean, for a fitting tribute to a really great guy. A few years ago, just after we’d first met at U.Va., I ran into Michael one evening at the store. When he spotted me, he got out of line and walked across the store to say hello and shake my hand. Of course, I was surprised Michael even remembered me, and much more so that he inconvenienced himself to come over and chat. I felt like a million bucks after that, and never missed an opportunity to interact with Michael thereafter. He was a real class act, and an example to follow in every regard.
This was a great read Sean. I have had the pleasure of working with both you and Michael, and I can certainly understand how easy it was to become friends with him. I didn’t see either one of you often after you moved on to ITS, but when I did, it was good doing so. I can go on with the cliche of him being in a better place, but no need to, we all know that. He was always pleasant to talk to, and is missed by many. Sorry for your loss, and hope the many memories wrap you and his family and friends with warmth and solace until you meet again. Take care.
Earl
Sean, thank you for writing this. I just heard this sad news and upon looking for more information was glad to find this tribute. Michael was such a kind man, a joy to work with and never failed to express appreciation for others, even those of us that he did not know so well or so long. I believe people live on by the impact on those they have known. I am sure he will be with you for a long time to come and hopefully for the rest of us for awhile.
Thank you to everyone who has posted a comment or a reflection here. I’m glad that you found this page and I appreciate you reaching out as you have. It is impossible for me to come back here without shedding a tear, but it helps me to know that others share in my loss. I received a very nice note from Kathleen Sturges last week. Someone had brought this page to her attention, and she wrote to thank me for this gift to her and their children. I hope that you will all continue to add your own memories of Michael.
I hope someday to earn such a eulogy from a friend, and trust the writing of this one has helped you bear the loss of yours.
Hi Sean,
I was one of those other friends. Michael and I would take off by ourselves usually for a day or sometimes for a few days and go exploring. Our last trip was Vegas and to hear him talk about what the town was like when, “The Boys,” ran it made me a little sad for what it has become.
Michael is the reason I’m a screenwriter, so when I say he changed my life, it’s not hyperbole. BTW, this is a great piece of writing, you captured the man well.
This is a bit I wrote on my last two trips down to see him, Kathleen and the kids. http://sabot03196.wordpress.com/2012/08/
If you’d like to chat more, drop me an email at the above address.
I’m devastated. Mike and I were fraternity brothers at Berkeley. I don’t think either of us really fit into the ‘frat mold’ and as it ended up we moved out of the fraternity and shared an apartment for our last year. My fondest memories of Mike were of the hours we spent just driving around the Bay Area exploring. I can’t count the number of nights we’d end up in iHop at 3AM planning out our lives. We promised to never wind up being ‘ordinary’. There were road trips, one to visit his father filming McQ up in Seattle. He moved in with my father and I following the death of my mother to help out for awhile….quit his job at the Eggshop and Apple Press to do so. The Mike I knew was the rough-cut version of the one described by the posting. I hadn’t seen Mike in probably 30 years although I often thought of him and made several unsuccessful rack him down. This evening was my last try. I googled Michael Eliot Sturgis and found his name on an obituary. Virginia? Devout Christian? This couldn’t be Mike. I always thought he was born a year or two before me. Say 1950 or 1951, not 1958. And we were at Berkeley together in 1974-75. But as I read the obit and comments I realized that all the elements I had known in him as a young man had budded and come to fruition through the passage of time. He was always a devoted friend…..that seems to have matured in to a devotion for family. And his sometimes hot headed response to what he perceived as affronts to his ideas of decency appears to have mellowed in to a devote faith. I could go on all night telling stories about the times we shared together on the sunny slopes of our youth. I just can’t fathom that I’ll never have the chance to sit down and share them with Mike.