Yes, dear sweet, voluminous, voluptuous reader, I have once
again decided to peer into the murky depths of my factual inaccuracies and
reveal even more of my downright illustriously fabricated stagebound past. I am retreading the boards so to speak to use
a phrase per se and together we shall all grow as people, as carbon based
lifeforms, and as expert salesmen of vinyl all-weather siding. Well, perhaps I have exaggerated. We are definitely made up of more than just
carbon.
The year
was 1988 and my parents, determined to scar my fragile emotional make-up
decided to move from the “City of Brotherly Love” also known as Milwaukee, WI
to the “Biggest Moderately-Apportioned City in the World of Washington County”,
also known as Hartford, WI. Hartford is
of course known for three things: 1)
W.B. Place, where you can tan your hides, 2)
The Mineshaft restaurant and bar, where you can hide your tans, and 3) the ability to cruelly disprove the
comedy rule of threes.
Despite the
world weighing my little ten year old shoulders down, I could take comfort in a
tiny glimmer of hope. One infinitesimal
light in the gloomy darkness could lead me out of this doom and gloom. Peace Lutheran happened to have some really
cute girls in attendance. Now, I know
what you’re thinking: “Man, does this guy drone on in a shallow and sad way!” However I would counter with the clever bon
mot of “Oh, you think so?! Well, you
ain’t read nothing yet!”
Now did
this ever help me achieve a legendary reputation with the lovely ladies of the
stage? I can answer with a clever and
resounding “Nope!” Oh sure I gave some
wonderful backrubs to some very lovely shoulders indeed, but most if not all of
those ladies did in the end enjoy the company of those linebackers who ultimately
thought that Shakespeare was something you drank and Molière was something you had a dermatologist examine.
Ah but this
bitterness was the result of future dramatic enterprises on the stage, not necessarily
whilst in my remaining halcyon grade school years. In fact from fifth through eighth grade I
never was in a school production. Oh
sure there were many offers from all throughout the extensive Lutheran
parochial grade school drama circuits for me to return, but I declined all
offers, imagined or fictional. Why this
vacancy of my presence from the stage? I
like to think that as I was being mandatorily encouraged to take up a musical
instrument by my parents, my dedication to being a mediocre at best saxophone
player was my driving, albeit at slow to moderate speed, focus at the
time. However, upon some research I
discovered that this was hopelessly inaccurate and in fact libelous to me, whom
I didn’t want to sue in the first place.
Upon further review I believe that laziness combined with apathy made a
wonderful cocktail that I downed liberally at the time and this was in fact the
reason.
Yet I was
in two forensics competitions at the time of 7th and 8th
grade however, so my instincts remained sharpened by that experience. In 7th grade, I handpicked a
fellow student to give me straight lines as I delivered an Abbott and Costello
routine that I had transcribed from a worn cassette tape. This of course is shocking to most readers
that will grudgingly admit that I am their acquaintance. I of course have incredible disdain for Bud
& Lou. Sure, there are some funny
moments in Abbott & Costello Meet
Frankenstein and Who’s On First is a routine that if performed correctly
shows that you have incredible comic timing.
But beyond that, I have always viewed them as lower rung Three Stooges
mimics that appeal to the lowest common denominator, which is why their films
made money as brighter talents such as W.C. Fields and the Marx Brothers
withered and died, but not that I’m bitterly angry about that.
I had heard this routine on tape many times and as it wasn’t Who’s On First and as I knew it more or less from memory already, I could dazzle the judges and blow away the competition at the Lutheran grade school forensics meet with my mad verbiage skills. I handpicked my straight man Jeff from a literal crowd of 4 other guys in my class and after a smidgen of rehearsal and a practice run in front of the class, we went into the throng of competitors a few weeks later.
I don’t
know if you’ve ever had what some would call the agony of having to sit through
a classroom filled with grade school forensics presentations, but allow me to
dissuade your fears and apprehension and tell you the truth. It is appalling in its badly applied
mediocrity. Ye gods. Oh sure, the parents were gleaming with pride
for their little moppets that were all most certainly going to be the next lighting
stand-in for the next Haley Joel Osment, but for the rest of us it was a trial
by badly memorized fire.
However, I
knew that we were going to amaze with our shocking maturity and comic
timing. So the moment had come and we
proceeded to go through the routine, beat for beat, laugh for laugh. We followed the same technique that Bud &
Lou had and knew where the laughs were and it all fell into place. I thought we had a lock for a first place
blue ribbon of achievement and wonder.
And then the judges came back with their results and the red ribbon of a
second place, the first place for failures, was handed to us. I was stunned. My ego is not that terrific to begin with but
I thought we were a lock. When I asked a
judge what we could have done differently, she said “It was just great and
funny but then you swore, so I had to dock you.”
What? I swore?! When was that? She said that it was when I said someone did
something just for the “hell of it”. I
then reminded her that as the entire performed piece is a collection of bad
fish puns and fish-related jokes, I actually and truthfully did say the person
in question just did it for the halibut. HALIBUT!
A bad fish pun. Not a cuss, mild
as it would have been IF I actually
said it. So we weren’t being graded on performance
but on single misheard pun? Alas, she
couldn’t be swayed and as this was being held at a Lutheran grade school
forensics competition at a Lutheran high school, the self-righteous nonsense
from the religiously indignant cloth-eared buffoon judges held firm.
Did this setback set me back? Not at all!
For I knew I would be back that next year and perform yet again. I most certainly would show them and go out
in a blaze of glory that would rival anything that Jon Bon Jovi sang about Emilio Estevez playing a cowboy. But that is another story that I need time to
enhance with dramatic fiction. You’re
welcome as always and stay tuned for the thrilling penultimate conclusion!
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