(Camera: Follows Milligan inside. Then pans on individual items around the room.)
O. Henry was a two-pint-a-day whiskey man, you see, an he enjoyed frequenting San Antonio’s numerous “glittering palaces,” as he and others called them – the fancy saloons that doubled as gambling houses and, quite often, bordellos. At the time, San Antonio was supposed to have had more bordellos than any city between New Orleans and San Francisco. But he also liked holding court in the small neighborhood cantinas, and it is on the site of one his favorite cantinas that his house now sits.
(Camera: Settles on a copy of The Rolling Stone.)
This was where O. Henry edited and mostly wrote the tabloid magazine, “The Rolling Stone.” He was still Will Porter at this point, and he had been a cowboy, done some freelance journalism, worked as a draftsman for the Texas Land Office in Austin and as a bank teller, a job that eventually landed him in prison. He had even illustrated a book called “Indian Depredations in Texas,” but he had not published any short fiction. His first story, called “Bexar Scrip No 2692,” was published in “The Rolling Stone” on March 5, 1894. Quite possibly it was written in this house.
(Camera: continues to pan and focus on items in the office.)
“The Rolling Stone” was a real hoot, a literary and political gosssip rag that allowed O. Henry to write and publish his stories and poems, create imaginary interviews with everyone from himself to President Grover Cleveland. He draw some scandalous political cartoons and generally capture life as he saw it on the streets of San Antonio.