An eerily uncanny recollection of random memories, real and imagined. But mostly real.

Thursday, January 6, 2011

A Brush With Date-ness

Las Vegas in the Seventies was nothing like it is today. There were no hotel theme parks; in fact, most of the hotels and resorts that are on the strip today were not even in the idea stage. There was no Siegfried & Roy; we had Liberace. Elvis was alive and well and appearing twice nightly at the Hilton, and Howard Hughes was alive and, well, living in his apartment high atop the Desert Inn. Or maybe not; no one ever saw him. I was actually working for Howard Hughes, or at least my boss was.

At that time I was a back-up singer for Doc Severinsen, bandleader of “The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson.” This being the hip, happenin’ Seventies, our show was called “Doc Severinsen and his Now Generation Brass featuring Today’s Children” and yes, I was one of “Today’s Children.” So sue me. Doc was under contract to Hughes’ Summa Corporation, which owned and operated the Frontier, the Desert Inn and the Sands, and we performed at those hotels about sixteen weeks per year.

Often, we would share the bill with the likes of George Burns or Bob Newhart. Doc and the gang would perform a fifty-minute to one-hour opening act, and then the comedian would take over. I liked to sit backstage and listen (especially to Bob), or sometimes I would sneak out into the house and watch. What an education that was! Newhart could do the same show twice a night for six weeks, and still have me in hysterics at his delivery. Every time, the same jokes in the same order. Well, almost every time...



Bob’s routine usually would go on for an hour or so, and then he would tell a specific joke to cue the band behind the curtain that it was time for his first playoff. It was timed so that the audience would naturally want more of the show, and Bob would return for his “encore.” During the first hour, the band would leave the stage and hang out in the dressing room. I would usually sit at the piano behind the curtain, directly behind Bob. The connection with the audience was amazing, even sight unseen.

One night, the band had left the stage and I was sitting at the piano. Don, our roadie, was sitting at the drum set and one of the trombone players was cleaning his horn. Twenty minutes into the show, and for no apparent reason, Bob went into his playoff cue joke. It was not a long joke, and by the time the band (in the dressing room) realized what had happened, Bob was saying “Thanks everybody! Goodnight!”

Well, the roadie, the bone player and I looked at each other, shrugged, and started to play Bob’s theme music “Home to Emily” from his TV show. It was quite apparent to the audience and Bob that most of the band was not playing, so while the audience laughed, Bob hollered “Now wait a minute! Open the curtain!” The audience got one look at the deserted bandstand and roared even louder. I was mortified, but Bob, his back to the audience, just smiled and winked at me. The curtain closed as the rest of the band came running into the wings, and Bob went on with the show. He never “accidentally” cut short his show again, and the band never missed a cue again, either.



Bob’s wife Ginny was a voracious (if not accomplished) gambler, and could spend hours at the blackjack table. Bob, not so much. I recall making the rounds of the casino late one night and seeing Ginny at the tables on a hot streak. (I was just eighteen and not supposed to be there, but after the first couple of days nobody seemed to mind.) Bob was nowhere in sight, which was unusual for the two of them. I continued on around to the lobby and discovered Bob, fast asleep on a couch near the front desk. I can only assume Ginny found him...
           
Lodging at the Sands took two forms; the tower, where most of the high rollers and celebrities stayed, and the bungalows, a series of buildings suspiciously motel-like in nature which had been built around the swimming pool, each named for a different horse race track. Behind the bungalows (of which I became well-acquainted) were the tennis courts, and a large expanse of, well, nothing. Really. Acres and acres of undeveloped desert chaparral. One of the other singers, Brian, and I used to go out there and throw a football or baseball or Frisbee or whatever we could find to throw to each other. It passed the time.

One day Bob turned up out back with his son Timmy and a brand new kite, Timmy’s first. Bob was going to show him how to fly it. He laid the kite on the ground and unwound some of the string. “Now watch, Timmy,” he called. “All you have to do is run.”

Bob took off across the bit of lawn on the edge of the chaparral, and the kite grudgingly followed. It had no intention of taking flight, however, and seemed content to bounce jarringly on its topmost point. Brian and I moved closer.

Bob had an idea. He called Timmy over. “This time you hold the kite, and when I holler ‘Let go!’ you let go of the kite. Okay?” Timmy agreed excitedly. Bob handed Timmy the kite, moved off some distance and took off running again. As the string was about to draw taut he hollered “Let go!”

Timmy flung the kite into the air, where it remained briefly then returned to bouncing along the ground on its head. “I can’t understand it,” said Bob. “It should fly.”

“What you need,” offered Brian, “is some tail.”

“For the kite,” I added helpfully.

Bob agreed that this might do the trick (!), so Brian was dispatched to find something to tie to the end of the kite. He returned with what had once been a Sands hand towel, but which was now torn into strips. We fastened several together and to the kite and nodded to Bob.

“This’ll do it?” he asked. Brian nodded again. (Not much of a conversationalist, Brian.) “This will get the kite into the air?”

“And back,” I assured him. Timmy squirmed impatiently.

 “Okay then,” said Bob. “Here we go!” He took off running again (although not quite so fast) and hollered “Let it go!” The kite rose magnificently into the summer sky, its tail streaming down from the bottom. It hung in the air proudly as Bob stopped running and turned to look when a sudden gust of wind swept in from across the desert. The kite trembled momentarily, then burst into pieces in the sky. A total Charlie Brown. Fragments of paper, balsa wood and string whirled off across the chaparral. Timmy was ecstatic. “Can we do it again?” he asked, hopefully.                                                                   

“NO,” his father answered. Bob looked to the limp ball of string in his hands, then to Brian and me. “Thanks, guys,” he said, as he and Timmy returned to their room.

The Sands Hotel was the site of the best phone call of my life. During 1976 my road roommate was a fellow named Stan, who besides singing with us was a studio singer and musical arranger and who, at the time, was dating a certain singer from Australia named Olivia. Because of their wildly disparate touring schedules, she was apt to call most anytime, anywhere. After my initial disbelief I began to fight him to answer the phone, if only to hear that breathy “Is Stan there?” Eventually, we had entire conversations before I would grudgingly relinquish the phone to Stan.

I was finally going to meet her during a stint at the Sands; Olivia was coming to Vegas and would be staying at the MGM, but would be coming to our show to visit Stan. As the day drew near I positioned myself near the phone whenever possible. As fate would have it, Stan was out golfing one day when the phone rang. I answered it promptly.


“I have a long distance call for Livvy John,” said an operator. This was cool; Liv would often call person-to-person for herself to make sure someone was there and to save toll charges if not.

“I’m sorry, she’s not here, but we expect her tomorrow,” I answered, which was true. The operator thanked me and rang off. Moments later, the phone rang again. I answered, expecting Liv.

“Is Livvy there?” asked an unfamiliar voice. I explained again that no, she was not, but that she was expected the next day. “Is this Stan?” the caller continued.

“No,” I replied, “Stan is out right now. This is his roommate.”

“Oh,” said the voice. “This is Linda. Do you know when he’ll be back?”

“Not really,” I answered, trying to remember if Stan had ever told me about anyone in Livvy’s entourage named Linda. “Can I have him call you back?”

“Who did you say this is?” she asked again.

“This is Stan’s roommate, Don,” I replied.

“Hi Don, this is Linda Ronstadt.”

Gulp! Those were six words I never expected to hear in that order. “Stan not here. Play golf. Outside. Not here...” I responded helpfully. She laughed. “Can I have him call you?” I asked, trying to regain some dignity.

“Okay,” Linda agreed. “I’m at The Manila Hotel in the Philippines...”

“Maybe you should call back,” I suggested. She laughed again. Damn!

Then she asked me what I did and how I knew Stan, where I lived, and where I was from originally. We chatted for a few minutes, and I was feeling a lot more composed when she said “You sound really nice, Don. Maybe the four of us can get together back in L.A.” 

“That sounds enchanting,” I said. (Bond. James Bond.) “Meanwhile, I’ll tell Stan you’re looking for Livvy.” She thanked me and rang off.

Well, of course I never did get to go on a double date with Linda Ronstadt and Olivia Newton-John (and Stan); and Liv never did make it to Vegas, going instead to the Philippines to fill in for Linda on a concert gig; and when Stan and Liv broke up shortly thereafter, I was more upset than either of them.

Probably.


Tuesday, January 4, 2011

It's A Glamour Profession


As a way of earning some extra money while touring with Doc, I accepted the role of wardrobe supervisor. This was a pretty easy gig, and consisted mostly of unpacking the trunks at the venue and helping schlep them around before and after the shows.
Schlepping them before was kind of fun; Rick the road manager would pick me up at my apartment, the we’d go to Doc’s manager Bud’s apartment in West Hollywood (although he insisted it was Beverly Hills) where the outfits were stored. The apartment doormen usually pulled the trunks out for us, and Rick and I would then load them into the limousine, a Cadillac station wagon purchased for the limo company by Elvis for his personal use while in L.A. (It was the only limo available that could haul our gear; a truck would have been gauche!) The Caddy had ELVIS license plates front and rear, and deeply tinted windows, and pretty much demanded that one had to wear dark glasses and avoid eye contact with other motorists en route to the airport.

It was always fun when we arrived at LAX, where a small crowd would gather and the Skycaps would come running to meet us. The disappointed groan when Rick and I emerged from the car did nothing to spoil our enjoyment. We would load the three trunks on the Skycap’s cart, Rick would tip him and I would sneer “Thank you very much,” and we would saunter into the terminal.


Often, but not always, we would be pre-boarded on our flight to make things less of a spectacle for Doc, but the pre-boarding announcement “We will now board the Doc Severinsen party” tended to negate the effort. Still, almost as much fun as the limo ride. Once on the plane, we again became anonymous except to the light attendants, who were always very, well, attentive. On one trip, I got to take a rather claustrophobic elevator ride on a Lockheed L-1011 jumbo jet down to the galley so the flight attendant could show me around.

When we arrived at our destination, Rick and I would go to baggage claim, hail a Skycap and have the trunks carted out to our bus to the venue or hotel. Doc almost always wanted to go to the venue for a sound check; the hotel could wait. If the trip was an out-and-back, there might not be a hotel anyway. After sound check, I would hang up the outfits in the dressing rooms, unless Rick had already done it. The three girls always got a separate dressing room, but I was permitted in and out as duties demanded. After a while, the girls said “Quit knocking all the time! Just come in and close the door.” This was not an invitation so much as exasperation.

Our outfits consisted of matching patchwork denim jeans and vests, with three shirt variations, and matching white boots and belt. The girls wore patchwork hot pants instead of jeans. At one point, the Brittania Jean Company offered to supply us with new jeans and vests for a TV appearance, and I had to measure everyone’s waist and inseam. When it came time to fit the girls, we were in San Francisco getting ready for a show. I needed to have them try on the jeans so I could make a soap mark where the cuffs needed to break at the boots. The girls NEVER had enough time to get ready (!), and asked if I would do it while they changed. Whatever. I gave them their jeans, and asked if they wanted me to leave. “No time for that. Just don’t stare” was the consensus.

About the time I was on my knees marking hems, Doc knocked on the door to borrow some hairspray. “Daddy, don’t come in! We’re dressing!” shrieked Nancy. She opened the door a crack and handed him the can. A few moments later Doc knocked again, saying “Here you go.” I opened the door a crack, took the can from him and said (sotto basso) “Thanks,” and shut the door. “Hey!” said Doc. We all laughed; inside the room, anyway.

After a performance, the costumes would be wadded up and stuffed back in the trunks (if it was a one-night trip), or hung up and re-packed for the next night. At the end of the “tour,” Rick and I would take the trunks back to Bud’s apartment building in West Hol- that is, Beverly Hills – and Rick would have the dry cleaners pick them up to get them ready for the next trip.

If we were in Vegas on an extended booking, I would have to drag myself out of bed at the crack of 8:00 AM to meet the dry cleaners at the dressing room a couple of times a week. Not a big deal at all, and I got paid quite a bit extra to do it. During the winter, that might be the only time I would see daylight during the entire engagement.

I would also sometimes steam the wrinkles out of Doc’s outfits. With all the rhinestones and studding, those jackets were heavy! Doc had well-developed forearms from holding up his trumpet while wearing those garments. It was sometimes said that Doc’s former wife made his outfits, but in reality they came from several different sources. Once, I accompanied Bud to pick up a new jacket at Bob Mackie’s workshop. Inside, Mackie and his staff were working on a number of projects, including costumes for Carol Burnett and Cher. Bud gushed and marveled at everything, and Mackie gushed back, and I stayed in the background. It was FABulous, but I survived.





Monday, December 20, 2010

Christmas, 1975

By December of 1975 I had already been touring with Doc for about nine months, and enjoyed flying out most Friday nights or Saturday mornings to do concerts somewhere to the east. (There isn’t much west of L.A.) We could do concerts on Saturday and Sunday nights, and fly back Monday in time for the band to make The Tonight Show. If Johnny was taking a day off and a “Best of Carson” was airing, we could also do a Monday night show. Usually three nights, three cities. Good thing I liked flying, and could snooze on airplanes, often with Nancy on one shoulder and Christine on the other.

Then word came down that we were going to be playing at the Frontier Hotel in Las Vegas for 2 weeks, starting December 16. If you do the math, you’ll realize that this brackets the Christmas holiday. Maybe the showroom would be dark? Surely there wouldn’t be shows on Christmas day…

Yeah, right. It turns out that Christmas is very popular in Vegas, so lots of junkets show up just in time for the holidays. This was going to be unsettling for me, as I am a big fan of Christmas from way back, and had never been away from my (entire) family during the holidays before. But if you ignored the fact that it was Christmas, it might have been any other two weeks in Las Vegas, winter or summer. If there were any seasonal decorations up, you couldn’t see them for all the neon on the Strip.

So it was business as usual, two shows a night at 8 and midnight. And the showroom was always packed. Doc was a very big draw, no matter whom we opened for. As Christmas approached, I began morphing into Peggy Lee (“Is that all there is to Christmas? Is that all there is?)

Then, on Christmas Eve day I was moping around the casino when Rick, the road manager spotted me. “I’m going out to find a Christmas tree for Doc – want to come along?”

This was fabulous news, and I eagerly accepted. By the time we set out, it was already dark, and there weren’t many tree lots visible, if there had been any to begin with. We drove north on the Strip, into downtown, and kept going. Bupkis. Finally, in a parking lot next to a bowling alley in North Las Vegas we found a lone Douglas fir, free for the taking. It wasn’t a Charlie Brown tree, though it was close. But it was real and green and smelled like Christmas! We tied it to the roof of the car and made our way back to the hotel, whereupon Rick took the tree up to Doc’s suite. I didn’t see it after that. Never saw Doc’s suite, either.

And so we did the shows. The early crowd was enthusiastic and festive (and likely inebriated), which made the show fun to do. Then again, it was always fun. After the first show was over, Doc’s manger Bud came to the dressing room with an armload of packages. “Presents from Doc!” he announced repeatedly. “Merry Christmas!” This was very nice, and unexpected. We all opened them at the same time, as they appeared to be identical. Which they were, mostly. We each received a yellow T-shirt with Doc’s picture and “Today’s Children and The Now Generation Brass” on the front, plus our own first names in block letters on the upper left breast. (Just a little bit like the “Mickey Mouse Club.”) We also each received a blue sweatshirt, similarly decorated. Bud was beaming; I think perhaps the shirts were his idea…

Realistically, there weren’t a lot of places you could wear either of these without seeming like a self-promoting doof, but we singers thought it would be fun to wear them for the finale (“Ease On Down The Road”) of the midnight show. We changed into them while Doc was playing “MalagueƱa,” and surprised him when we took the stage afterward. The shirts were snug, and my partner Nancy T. was delightfully proportioned, which was kind of distracting, even to Doc. As we kept time to the music, the eyes in the picture of Doc’s face on Nancy’s shirt seemed to roll around. Doc leaned over to me and said “How come yours doesn’t do that?”

I don’t recall what we all did after the show, and I think that was probably okay. Besides, we had two shows to do on Christmas Day, and the day after, and… Christmas with my family would have to wait. I flew home to my Dad’s house on the 30th and we had a gift exchange there, then I went to my Mom’s house in Gig Harbor for more celebrating.

My brother was a senior at Central Washington State College in 1975-76, majoring in music (trumpet.) Around about Thanksgiving I got the idea that it would be nice if he had a new trumpet for his senior recital, and talked to Doc about it. Doc was playing a Getzen Eterna trumpet at that time (the “Doc Severinsen” model), so I thought that would be an ideal Christmas gift for my brother. Doc called the Southern California distributor, asked them to pick out a horn as if they were selecting it for him, and had it sent to my Mom’s house. At cost, a fantastic deal. My Mom and I split the bill.

The look on my brother’s face when he opened the box was priceless and unforgettable, and for the only time in his life he was at a loss for words. I explained how it had been selected for him by Doc’s people, but he could exchange it if he wanted to. Yuk yuk. (He still has it.) And although I have no idea what I received that year, it will always be my favorite Christmas.