Don't start with me!

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  • Butterfly Man
    Senior Member
    • Dec 2000
    • 1606

    Don't start with me!

    When he was four and I was three, my best friend was Rocky Stump. Once, when I was over at his house, I watched him put a towel around his neck like a cape and jump out of his bedroom window yelling “Up, up and away” ...he fell 2 stories, but he didn’t die.

    Another time, we both got caught tearing the windshield wipers off of parked cars. It wasn’t my idea, it was Rocky’s. I remember my mother making me wait by our front door until a man who owned one of the cars came back. It had started raining when she dragged me, screaming, off the front porch toward him. I don’t remember anything else that day.

    We moved to Europe when I was four. Even though we lived in Barcelona for almost a year, the only thing I remember is being bitten by a snapping turtle. I have a picture of me standing next to some stuff by Gaudi when I’m about 2 feet tall.

    I had my 5th birthday party on the tippity top of the Eiffel tower.
    I went to a kind of kindergarten school and got in a lot of fights. We had a landlord named Rogué, he hated my sister (she threw his hat out the window once) but he liked me. Our maid was named Chantel, her boyfriend pulled her around by her hair. I was given yogurt and told it was “French ice cream”. My father pushed me out a window once because I wouldn’t clean my plate. We had a small balcony of iron bars that kept me from falling to the ground.
    I remember my arms and legs falling through the bars and watching the broken glass fall around me.

    I started my formal schooling in Ilford, a suburb of London. It was called Beehive Preparatory School. I wore short pants and a yellow striped blazer and cap, Kathy had a bigger bonnet sized hat, we both carried satchels. We took elocution lessons after school. We had huge three wheeled tricycles. My father drove a Hillman. Our dog was named “Jackie”. We played “Snap” and “Farmyard Cries” with the Turner kids. I remember going door to door saying “Penny for the Guy.”

    We crossed the Atlantic on the S. S. America when I was eight. We moved to New Haven. I learned how to spell Connecticut by staring at the license plate of a police car. I took naked swimming lessons at Yale University. I got beat up because of my British accent by a kid named Eddie Ginty. I was kicked out of the cub scouts because I tried to pass off Hank Sugerman’s merit badge project as my own. I used to steal change off my parents bedside table and buy PEZ, before they had those fancy dispensers.

    We moved to West Haven a year or so later, to a house with pushbutton light switches. There was a forest behind our house where I made about a thousand forts. One day I put some toilet paper into the john and lit it on fire. As punishment, I carried rocks in my wagon every day at 5 o’clock from our front yard to the wire fence in our back yard. I used stuff called “hair trainer” to try and make my hair comb like my fathers. I had a sling shot and a leather jacket with a dorky fur collar.

    We moved to Florida in 1959. We drove the whole way in a brand new black Thunderbird. We moved into a beautiful house with a pool next to the 15th hole of the Biltmore golf course. I slept over at Chris Cloney’s house during hurricane Donna. I rode my Schwinn bike to St. Theresa’s, a parochial school run by nuns. I was caned and rulered until I finished the 8th grade. Billy Flanagan & Pat McGrawty threatened to beat me up almost every day. I went to South Beach in 1964 with my friend Ned who won a Hobie surfboard on WFUN (or was it WQAM?)

    We lived there for almost 6 years and I finished high school at Christopher Columbus, an all boys Catholic school run by the Marist Brothers, I had perfect attendance, I wore a tie and carried a bookbag. I was the worst swimmer on the swimming team. I was kicked out of the National Honor Society because of a bad attitude. I once got caught cheating on a Latin test. The girl I took to the prom became a nun.

    Even though Coral Gables High was only a few miles away from us, my sister went to Immaculatta, an all girls Catholic school. Except for Brownie Holland she was the prettiest girl in her school. Her boyfriend was Tommy Koziol, the star half back of LaSalle’s football team. She became a National Merit Scholar and applied to Vassar, Wellseley and Sarah Lawrence.

    I did my first 2 years undergraduate at FSU in Tallahassee. I joined the Flying High Circus but never could press into a handstand. I ate for free for almost 6 weeks when I pretended to be interested in joining several fraternities. The ?T?’s found me out and threatened to kick my ass. I transferred to Univ. of Florida in Gainesville after my sophomore year. I rode my Honda 305 all the way down there in the freezing rain. I got laid 6 days later by a go go dancer from “Dubs” named Michelle... she carried a 22 revolver in her purse and asked me “Is that it?” after I came. I worked in an Emergency Room at Alachua General Hospital during the “graveyard” shift 11-7. I juggled in front of 2000 people at the Great American Music Hall and did not attend my own graduation.

    I was accepted into a program in the Department of Clinical Pharmacology at Vanderbilt and caught a ride to Nashville with my sister’s drummer boyfriend named Louis. I lived on a 654 acre farm in Mt. Juliet where I read the Hobbitt and the Fellowship of the Ring trilogy while sunbathing nude.

    Several years later I auditioned as a clown/juggler at Opryland, I lost 23 pounds learning to ride a unicycle that summer.

    I moved to San Francisco in 1978 and took over the job as the entertainment coordinator of Pier 39 the same day Dan White killed supervisor Harvey Milk and Mayor George Moscone.

    I now live three blocks from Venice Beach in LA and have a lemon tree and an orange tree in my backyard.
  • JennyJuggs
    New Member
    • Dec 2000
    • 3

    #2
    Hi Robert:

    I just wanted you to know that one person actually read your "who's who" bio.

    Kisses and kicks in the nut...

    -jj

    Comment

    • DRaven
      Member
      • May 2001
      • 17

      #3
      This was actually very interesting. I hope to one day be able to finish the story of my life with "I have a lemon tree and an orange tree in my backyard." (I really mean this).
      Thanks for sharing it!

      [This message has been edited by DRaven (edited 05-07-2001).]

      Comment

      • Haggis McLeod
        New Member
        • Jun 2001
        • 7

        #4
        Greetings from a sticky hot Somerset.
        I hope you are all well good, It was great to see you this winter.
        This weekend would have been the big festival so we are doing as little as possible in an attempt to bring an overall balance into our normally hectic June lives.
        Bella has turned the garden into a backdrop for Eden 2 (Avalon Rising). I am hiding from the midday heat and have finally regestered to this funky site.( where has all the crap gone?)
        I just did a WILD gig in Sardinia with Amy (Miss Behave). It was so nice not to be seen as the weirdest one around, even when wearing a 100 year old horse's head, a big white dressing gown and carring a surfboard.Amys coming to stay this week and hopes to learn some whips and hats. I will not be asking for any tips on swallowing however!
        Then we are all of to Hat Fair where we will hook up with some more old faces ( no insult intended of course)
        I have just been asked to do the Hats at the E.J.A.fest in Rotterdam in August. Bella is going to try and make it over for a few days as well.
        It would be great to see you so do try and come over sometime.
        Best wishes
        Haggis.
        P.S. How is the book doing?

        Comment

        • GlassHarper
          Senior Member
          • May 2001
          • 174

          #5
          Hey, Butterfly Man --

          Patty Campbell's book helped me get started as a street performer. I tried to find a copy of my own when I learned about it, but ended up getting it thru inter-library loan. Clearly it is time for an update! Hope your work is going smoothly.

          If you want some notes on glass musicians I have found who busk drop me an e-mail.
          Jamie Turner mentioned by Patty, for example, seems to be largely retired now, but still plays from time-to-time in the Old Town of Alexandria, VA. I commandeered his pitch in New Orleans, which I've been working for about 8 years now. Brien Engle, past president of Glass Music International, largely limits himself to school and libraries now, but still plants his behind (and feet) on the street from time-to-time. I tell people there are about 40 serious glass players in the world today, ten of whom are Americans and only three of us are stupid enough to try to earn a living at it!

          Hey, break a leg!


          ------------------
          Peter (the New Orleans GlassHarper) Bennett
          glassharper@hotmail.com

          Comment

          • scot
            Senior Member
            • Dec 2000
            • 1169

            #6
            I would like to see the butterfly man do something that warrants adoration.

            Friend of H.P. Lovecraft. Son of Nobel Prize winner. Did a show involving riot gear on the streets. Found his long-lost son last year and disowned him. Criticizes those who have what he doesn't in order to make himself look better and defend his fragility. Became know for a sharp wit.

            Comment

            • Jenny
              Member
              • Nov 2001
              • 67

              #7
              <font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" size="2">Originally posted by scot:
              I would like to see the butterfly man do something that warrants adoration.
              Yes i quite recommend it, Scotty-boop.
              Such an adoration-warranting essence is well worth the glimpse.
              Assuming, of course, you are so blessed with the Gift.

              What's the matter, Tiny Baby?
              No beauty of your own with which to behold?

              Poor Darling Amoeba, you.


              [This message has been edited by Jenny (edited 01-12-2002).]

              Comment

              • martin ewen
                Senior Member
                • Dec 2000
                • 1887

                #8
                Jesus, no-one adores robert (not even robert ) Thats the worst thing you can do.
                Scots on the right track, needle the bastard and see what he has to say for himself.

                Comment

                • Jenny
                  Member
                  • Nov 2001
                  • 67

                  #9
                  C'mon Mart!
                  Even a shriveled up incoherent geriatric riding the coattails of his long-past overblown reputation deserves a little love.
                  So what if he only has one testicle.

                  Comment

                  • Butterfly Man
                    Senior Member
                    • Dec 2000
                    • 1606

                    #10
                    Tonkah Truck

                    In 1981, my bastard son was born in Santa Cruz, California. His mother was married to a bad-ass Navajo. I, thankfully, never met the guy. She named our little boy “No Nukes.” It always made people laugh.

                    No Nuke's mom was my coke dealer; she always had the best flake, but never seemed to have much money. She spent all her profits on comic books. She showed me a #1 Donald Duck once, inside a cellophane wrapper, but she wouldn't let me touch it.

                    She had no car and lived in a dilapidated house. She was teaching our little boy to say “Mercedes, Daddy!” It always made people laugh.

                    I was no fool (yes, I was); I knew “Mercedes” was going to be too difficult for a baby to pronounce, so I bought her a Morris Minor instead.

                    Actually, I didn't know what it was. It was just a small shitty truck, in front of a small shitty house, in her small shitty neighborhood. The proverbial beaten, red-headed stepchild, except it was green and already dead.

                    Useless, yet pathetically cute, it lay dwarfed in the tall grass. Weeds were growing up through the inside floorboard. Rust splotches were bubbling up through what was left of the weathered paint. The fenders and body were riddled with volcanic dings and dents. “Perfect,” I thought, “its perfect!”

                    “Its a ’59 pickup,” the seller said. “Very rare, and I'm not sellin’ it for less than fifty bucks.”

                    I’m thinkin’: That’s only half a gram … “SOLD!”

                    All I had to do, I reasoned, was take the truck apart, clean it up, and put it back together before the coke ran out. I had an eightball and it looked like a small truck, so I borrowed some tools.

                    I never worked so hard on anything before in my life. Greasy, sweaty, and disgustingly dirty, I spent sometimes up to fourteen hours a day dismantling that thing. I was so high the whole time; I think I saw God on day 3. He looked like a crankshaft.

                    I was relentless. Every bolt, every nut and every piece that would or could come undone was undone. It all seemed especially frustrating that no wrenches or sockets I had seemed to fit any of the bolts. Many I had to pry off with pliers. What a bitch! Wentworth, my ass.

                    Eight days later, I ran out of coke. My hands were cut and bruised. I had banged my forehead so many times, it looked like a roadmap. A thin layer of filth had become permanently affixed to my dermis. I was thinking of tattooing WD-40 on my ass.

                    All my clothes were ruined, and I had never felt that level of frustration before in my life. It was worse than the time I had to learn to masturbate with my left hand.

                    In front of me, I now had a worthless piece-of-shit truck … literally in pieces.

                    I got some help and dragged the big pieces (like the engine, fenders, cab) into a dilapidated shed on the side of No Nuke's house. I then put all the little knobs, hinges, and assorted crap into cardboard boxes. Anything electronic-looking I put into plastic garbage bags. I felt no need to label anything; it was all so fresh in my mind.

                    I drove home to San Francisco.

                    The following day, I entered Jon Fox's SF Standup Comedy Competition, my first time working indoors, off the street. On my best night I came in sixth … didn't even make the top ten over-all. I wasn't an overnight success, but I did get a helluva lot of work for the next three years.

                    Fox booked me everywhere (even Canada) … so did NACA (college circuit) … I was touring almost nine months of the year. On those few days with no shows, I’d be on my way from someplace to somewhere. I hated almost every fuckin’ minute of it.

                    When I did get to return to the Bay Area, I would hurry down to visit No Nukes and, of course, score some more coke. Needless to say, I never did get around to working on that truck again.

                    In the spring of ’85, I got a call from No Nuke's mom, saying she had moved into a new place. Apparently, the people now living in her old place had thrown everything out of the shed into the weeds behind the house.

                    I freaked Big! All that hard work … eight days! All that coke, 9 grams! I made a vow, then and there: I’d put that truck back together, even if it was the last line I’d ever do.

                    I rented a U-Haul and asked my best friend, Patrick, to help pick up the pieces. Patrick was big, around 6’4, 280. How this big, dumb, black motherfucker got to be my best friend, I’ll never know. I met him years ago when he was a bouncer in one of the clubs where I had done some standup. I always picked on him mercilessly. That was almost thirty years ago. Today he is still my best friend, although much fatter and uglier.

                    We drove back down to Santa Cruz together. My heart was pounding as we pulled up to the shed … there was a strange car in it.

                    Unannounced, we blatantly walked into the new tenants’ backyard and, amongst the overgrown weeds, started picking up all the rusty pieces. I felt people staring out their windows at us. Patrick single-handily rolled the engine block onto a dolly and lifted it onto the back of the U-Haul. I had nothing to fear.

                    The cardboard boxes were wet and melted to the touch. Bolts, nuts, and screws fell from soggy paper bags. I picked up all kinds of plastic bags; most of them just had garbage in them. It took several hours, but we loaded up everything we could find that looked like part of a truck.

                    We drove back to San Francisco.

                    Over the next six years, I moved around the city three times. After the second move, Patrick told me to go fuck myself. I was forced to make new friends.

                    Not one of the places I rented had a garage. I kept rusty pieces of metal in all corners of every room. I slept with boxes of greasy, oily thingamabobs everywhere. I'm a Virgo, and the mess was driving me insane.

                    Thanks to a drug connection, Meridy, the Brownie Lady, I finally found a place of my own in Bernal Heights. Unbelievably, it had its own garage. I know it sounds impossible … my own place in San Francisco with my own garage. It was a dream come true. I paid $800 a month cash to the two Jewish stoners who declared it as a no income-producing property. Score.

                    I bought a grinder, a Bosch. Someone said it was the best … it was, I still use it today. Between gigs, I started to de-rust, clean, and polish every item I had carried around for the past seven years. Between gigs, it took me almost twenty months.

                    Being a Virgo, I took every little bit of rust and paint off of each fender … then both doors … then the cab ... the bed and even the frame. Every inch of everything, inside and out. I brought everything down to bare metal. Red dust became a part of my life. My stool looked like downtown Baltimore.

                    I then bondo’d and fiberglassed all the dents and put a coupla coats of red primer on everything. My lungs felt like I had inhaled Vesuvius. My skin looked like I lost at Wounded Knee.

                    But it was all clean.

                    Time to put it all back together.

                    (Thinking to myself: ) OK, I'm glad I got these new tires … they look great … they must attach to the frame … uh. Oh, I get it … they go on this axle thing first … right? Does that go on top or the bottom? The wheels should go on first, right? What about those circular things? What does that long thing do? This was all jacked up before … it looks different now … shit.

                    I didn't have a clue.

                    I called a bunch of British and import car places. Most said their rate was between $60 and $90 an hour. One guy offered to do it for a flat ten grand, if I paid for all the parts (what a guy). Most people, however, didn't bother to call me back.

                    It was all so depressing, I finally gave up.

                    I remember trying to sell all the parts to a mechanic for fifty bucks … he thought about it for a second. Then he turned me down.

                    About a month later, I got a call. Some guy said he heard I might need some help putting a car together. He had a British accent … it was a good sign.

                    His name was Nigel, but he introduced himself as Jim, which is much easier to type.

                    He drove over and opened the garage. He looked at all the car parts and pieces and said, “Oh, its a Morris Minor … my father had one of those. It's a pickup as well … quite rare, that is.”

                    He cautioned me that he charged fifteen bucks an hour.

                    I was so happy, I almost shit.

                    On and off, over the next six months, we would meet at 10am and work ‘til 2pm. Every day he'd tell me what to do. At the end of each day, he'd tell me what parts to go get.

                    I‘d go through junkyards, automotive shops, people’s back yards, anywhere that might have old Morris car parts.

                    We did it! In 167 days.

                    In January of 1992, with all my comedian friends around me, I drove it out of that garage.

                    I had spent exactly $17,253.47. Including the grinder.

                    This morning I saw some rust starting to bubble the paint on the back fender.

                    Anybody know where I can score some blow?
                    Last edited by Butterfly Man; Dec-31-2008, 02:26 PM.

                    Comment

                    • Julia
                      Member
                      • Nov 2001
                      • 54

                      #11
                      No Mothman, only in a metal bikini you fool!

                      J.

                      Comment

                      • Butterfly Man
                        Senior Member
                        • Dec 2000
                        • 1606

                        #12
                        Road Rage

                        ROAD RAGE

                        I hate airports, even nice ones. The same goes for hotels ... they all suck.

                        I never liked being on the road. Always traveling to some goddamn place to do some goddamn show. Just give me the goddam check and let me go home.

                        It’s particularly difficult for me to travel because I have a peculiar abrasive quality about me. I don’t get along well with people I first meet. They immediately don’t like me. My wife says I act as if I’m better than everyone else. I don’t think that's true, though in most cases I am.

                        I remember I once landed in Pittsburg (appropriately named) ... the airline, of course, lost my luggage. I do the wait wait wait, blah blah blah and the “It’s a big propcase with stickers all over it, you can’t miss it shit”. I got the same ol’, same ol’, “We’ll get it to you as soon as” and the “Here’s a number you can call that will always be busy or we’ll never answer”.

                        Problem was, the gig was several hours away at Grossingers up in the Catskills. I was showcasing for the east coast college circuit … which meant I was the one paying all the bills. Leaving the delivery of my prop case up to an airline delivery guy was like trusting Gazzo with your jokebook.

                        Reluctingly, I leave, propless, in a rental car.

                        Several hours later, I’m completely fucking lost going up and down dark unmarked roads in the Catskill mountains trying to find the goddamn hotel. I swear to God, in the middle of all that madness, I drove right onto a golf course. I turned around when I saw the flag for the 15th hole. Shit!

                        It’s way past 2 am when I finally find the hotel ...
                        they politely tell me there are no rooms available.
                        I show them my reservation and they say “check-in time is noon”. Fuck!

                        I sleep in the backseat of the rental car. I wake up freezing, aching. Nothing sums up the glamour of show business like watching the steam of your own urine as you pee in a parking lot at dawn.

                        My breakfast is a bag of peanuts from the vending machine.

                        I have no room, so I have to call the airlines from a payphone. Seventeen quarters, two hours and forty three minutes later, I find out they have my case! I beg them to leave now, my sound check is at 10. I’m first up.

                        I go back to the front desk and tell them where to send the delivery guy if he shows up and I’m not there. I threaten to sleep in the lobby and look like ten pounds of Young Raoul’s shit in a five pound bag. They offer me a storage room to just get rid of me … I accept.

                        I fall asleep hungry on a bare mattress and wake up in a panic just after 10.

                        I rush to the hall … on my way I see another juggling act warming up. They are the “All American Mini-Circus” from Baltimore … never heard of them, the girl juggler had a great ass though.

                        The sound guy pushes my sound check back … they always do that to jugglers, they think juggler’s don’t talk. They are serving box lunches back in the exhibit hall but I can’t go because I’m first up and I still don’t have MY GODDAMN CASE!

                        I pace back and forth backstage … once in awhile I go outside to stare at the parking lot. “I’ll bet it’s a white van … it’s always a white van. Is that a white van? Shit, no it’s just the greens keeper.” Apparently, some tire tracks over on the 15th hole were keeping him quite busy that morning.

                        No word … and it’s pushing noon.

                        I approach the Mini-circus jugglers and introduce myself. A very polite young man introduces himself as ‘something or other’ and then introduces his hot young girlfriend as Mardene.

                        I ask whatshisname if I could borrow some juggling stuff for the showcase while trying to figure out a way to look at Mardene’s butt again. They give me some balls, clubs and even a six foot unicycle … they save the day and I pull off a weak one, but better than nothing.

                        Coming out from backstage soaked with flop sweat, I see my prop case being delivered ... it has only 3 wheels. A guy is dragging it toward the stage.

                        I lug it shaking and rattling to the front desk to get a room. I’m so hungry I feel the amalgum ringing in my teeth. I just want to get rid of this fuckin’ box, eat and sleep.

                        As soon as I get in the room, my agent calls.

                        He’s booked a last minute show in St. Louis ... I have to leave immediately to make the plane back in Pittsburg.

                        Waaa? 2 hours back to the airport! … IF I don’t get lost! … IF!

                        I checkout and drag the crippled case back to the rental car.

                        No time to eat. I see a discarded box lunch in the lobby on my way out … it only has a bag of peanuts left. They tasted like bile … good though.

                        My brain is spinning … Gotta make the plane! ... Gotta make the plane!

                        Stomach growling, looking back and forth between the speedometer and my watch. I make some rough calculations.

                        I need to average 72mph …
                        It was gonna be close.
                        An hour passes … I know where I am. No cops yet.

                        I reached the city limits with 20 minutes left before my scheduled departure.
                        Traffic starts to slow … Oh No!

                        Jesus Cheerist ... they’re starting to board!
                        Sign says “Airport 3 miles” … All right, I’m close!

                        I screech up to curbside check-in and unload my (now considered overweight and oversize) 3 wheeled prop case. I hand the skycap a stack of tickets, “It’s in there somewhere”, I tell him, “I gotta go return the rental car, I’ll be back” ... 17 minutes left.

                        I drive to return the car to Avis … there is no one behind the counter … no airport return bus either!

                        I spy a guy washing cars at the end of the lot ...
                        I drive straight up to him and speak my over anxious unintelligababble. He jumps in the drivers seat. We speed back to the airport as I fill out a "Rapid Return" form for the first time.

                        We pull up to curbside with 7 minutes until takeoff.

                        I pull out my wallet, take out $10 and offer it as a tip.

                        He refuses saying “No problem man, it’s part of the service”. I guess they do try harder.

                        The skycaps sees me and is waving the tickets. I jump out.

                        Monitor says my flight leaves from Gate 25.
                        OK, Run!

                        Pre 9-11 security run ... whoosh!

                        Get to Gate 25 … nothing … no one! Whaaa?
                        Check monitors again ... Gate change to 26!
                        Agggh, Run!

                        One gate more ... door closing … Wait!!!!

                        Agent stops closing and opens the door. With a smirky smile he says, “No problem, plenty of time, sir!”

                        Breathing hard .... eyes wild … I get on.

                        I run the gauntlet of accusatory stares for my lack of punctuality as I find my seat.

                        I sit, start to relax … only an hour to Atlanta with plenty of time to eat before my connection.

                        Yeah, eat … (quick check for wallet) …

                        FUCK! it’s not there … PANIC… (look through everything at frantic pace).

                        Try to retrace my steps.

                        I remember the refused tip in the rental car. FUCK! FUCK-FUCK-FUCK …FUCK!

                        No money … no credit cards … no food!

                        Then, just when I’m down about as far as a juggler can go, a flight attendant offers me some peanuts! I gag reflexively but ask for 2.

                        I get to Atlanta but I have no way to buy food ... it’s all around me … a conglomerate of fast food franchises hearded together like the cattle they fed. I weigh the consequences of robbery vs. cannibalism.

                        Weakly, I pull out the contract info. on the gig my agent had given me ...the student activity office is closed, so I call the listed “home” number.

                        “Hello! My name is Robert Nelson, may I please talk to William Shitforbrains.”

                        “Oh, you must be looking for Billy ... he was here Thanksgiving and we expect to see him again @ Christmas but he goes to school in St.Louis.”

                        Whaaaa?
                        This kid gave his HOME# … his real Home! (as in where he grew up with his goddamn parents!) What a fuckin’ retard!

                        I scramble for my life:
                        “Ma'am, my name is Robert Nelson, your son hired me to perform tomorrow at his college… he is my only contact ... I have lost my wallet, all identification … I have no credit cards … I have no money ... I will be arriving in St. Louis at 11 on flight so and so this evening .. I have no place to stay … I have to go now they are boarding my flight.”

                        Another bag of peanuts later, I land in St. Louis.

                        I get off I see a sleepy eyed guy with his girlfriend … her hair is everywhere.

                        “Are you William Dumbfuck?”, I ask.

                        “No, I’m his Sigma Alpha Male roommate …
                        his mom called and woke us up.”

                        Cold stare from the girl.

                        “Billy's playing miniature golf and should be back by midnight or 1.”

                        We drive silently to the frat house … I’m in the back of a convertible with my three wheeled prop case. I watched as restaurants of all sizes and shapes fly by … I wonder if I could ask this guy for some money … just a hamburger maybe … see, there's a place right there ….

                        The hostile couple drop me off in the front of the frat house ... a keg party is underway.

                        I dump the box on the lawn and go inside … semi-drunk obnoxious males litter the place … I make my way surreptitiously toward the kitchen ... I’m thinking, FOOD!, FOOD!

                        I run inside … the refridgerator is full of beer … fucking beer!

                        What’s the only edible food they’ve got … You guessed it … peanuts!

                        A huge bowl of PEANUTS!

                        … this is where my story starts.
                        Last edited by Butterfly Man; Dec-31-2008, 02:43 PM.

                        Comment

                        • Butterfly Man
                          Senior Member
                          • Dec 2000
                          • 1606

                          #13
                          Road Rage: continued

                          There comes a time in everyone’s life when you just can’t take it anymore.

                          It’s a different situation for everyone, I’m sure.
                          Maybe it was that bully in grade school who did it to you … possibly, an angry parent pushed too much … perhaps it was a noisy neighbor or simply a nagging wife … whatever … you go just a little over the edge … and then you...

                          SNAP!

                          The chaos all around me … looking at that small round table … that huge bowl of peanuts ... that was MY moment. I just lost it.

                          The loud blaring music continued all around me but I heard nothing anymore. Drunken frat boys and their sycophantic pledges became like crickets in the background. I felt my coping composure collapse. My sanity imploded upon itself. I became socially numb.

                          More to avoid eye contact than anything, I opened the refrigerator door and pretended to look inside.

                          The stacks and stacks of horizontally placed beer stared back at me. There were no bottles … just those big 12-ounce cans. Individually balanced on top of one another so as to maximize beer storage capacity per cubic tallboy.

                          My options gone … I started to drink.

                          Quickly, I discovered that with my head tilted back, I wouldn’t have to look at anyone or anything, especially that bowel of peanuts.

                          I skulked backwards to the side of the fridge and wedged myself in a broom closet sized niche between it and the back door.

                          This became my womb for the next hour or so. I came out only to suckle more beer.

                          I don’t remember the actual time when Billy Alsodrunk showed up after his miniature golf game, but I do remember his surprise to find “The Butterfly Man” at his frat house. I kind of also remember him being even more astonished that I was even drunker than he was.


                          Him:

                          quote:Man, I thought you were coming in Tomorrow at 11am.



                          Me:

                          quote:Rebashlatz mick allen shuh!



                          Him:

                          quoteude, we got no room for you tonight.



                          Me:

                          quote:Waah! Shich me con beshsheet coroge bunshh.



                          Things got kind of blurry around this point.

                          I kinda remember a fight broke out … I’m pretty sure I started it.

                          Some big guy said something to me about my head while I was talking to Billy WhatthehellamIgonnadowiththisdudenow.

                          Honestly, I have no recollection of who he was or even what he looked like. I even don’t remember what exactly it was that he said to me. What I do remember is how unfortunate it was that he was so much bigger than me.

                          It had to be the way he said whatever it was, that made me take a long swig of beer, smile (grit my teeth really) and spit a mouthful of beer into his face. As his hands rushed up to wipe it off, I hit him in the gut.

                          I tried to run but apparently, I didn’t get very far. The next thing I remember it was dawn and awoke laying face down near a pool of vomit on the back porch of the frat house.

                          No worries though, the vomit was probably mine. It looked very peanuty.

                          It was very quiet; the loudest sound I heard was the pulsating in my own temples. I had a headache, sure, but I didn’t feel that bad really, considering someone had just beaten the crap out of me a few hours ago. Maybe it was because, at that point, there wasn’t much crap left in me.

                          I made my way indoors to find a bathroom and, hopefully, some aspirin or Tylenol. Cautiously, I tip toed to avoid empty beer cans. I certainly didn’t want to wakeup anyone up who might want to finish me off.

                          A door opened behind me causing me both mild heart failure and a slight loss of urine.

                          I whirled to find Billy Lookedworsethanme standing there in his underwear. I fear the worst and imagine a Lambda Theta Epsilon (whatever) gang rape. After all, it was pledge season.

                          He grabs some clothes and keys from his room and hustles me out of the frat house licitly split. We throw my abandoned 3-wheeled case into the back of his beater station wagon and head for the motel.

                          On the way, I beg him to stop for food … I’m ready to blow this motherfucker for a cheeseburger.

                          The golden arches of McShits appeared like Shangri-La in the distance. He graciously buys me several burgers & mcbreakfasts at the drive- through.

                          On the way to the hotel, I started to force feed myself and unluckily catch a glimpse of myself in the rear view mirror. Food was splayed all over my face, hands and lap. My loss of dignity was all too apparent. Ashamedly, I stuffed what was left of the half-eaten food back into the bag as we pull up to the motel.

                          It’s early am but Billy Ibegyouplease gets the clerk to allow me an early check–in. I look forward to gorging, being alone and getting some rest … in that order.

                          Billy You’vegottomekiddingme bids me adieu with a

                          quote:I’ll be back in 4 hours to pick you up for your sound-check.

                          Wow, a whole four fuckin’ hours... in a one star hotel ... with all this fine cuisine … all this … just for ME? What a privilege it was to have chosen such a rewarding profession.

                          But sometimes, it’s all about the show, isn’t it?

                          The show can make it all worthwhile. All the crap you have to go through, all the bullshit of traveling and lugging heavy shit everywhere … all of it can disappear when it’s “Showtime”.

                          I get only a few hours of gaseous bloated stomach slumber when Billy Ican’twaittogetridofthisguy picks me up from my fast-food franchise decored motel room. As he drives me away from the slowly decomposing stench of my own reality, he tells me the show’s in the cafeteria … big fuckin’ surprise.

                          College gigs seemed always to put my kind of act in the student cafeteria. I hated performing there but, in a way, I was also kind of grateful. Good jugglers had to be in the gym. Personally, during a show, I’d rather smell leftover meatloaf than the sweat of a jockstrap.

                          Towards the end of my college career something miraculous happened right around the $1750/show mark. It seems that, at that price, you get some sort of platform with curtains or, at least, plastic flags. Apparently, jugglers share the same career benchmark as used car lots.
                          As we carry my three-wheeled case inside, Billy I’mnotreadyforthis says he hopes it’s OK that a student film class uses my show as their mid-term video project.

                          Grimacing internally, I don’t complain, still needing Billy Gotthewallet to stay happy and food friendly.

                          For the next several hours adolescent would-be Altman’s and wanna-be Coppola’s cage me inside a full 3-camera, head-phoned electronic wire maze all connected to Herr teacher/director’s 18-wheeler size communications truck outside.

                          I tried everything to be left alone. I tried to look busy preparing for the show, stretching, even something I never did before … practicing.

                          Nothing worked, that is, until Dale Jones showed up. Dale was a young, very professional local juggler. He was also a good friend and while we spoke, they mercifully left us alone.

                          Dale was unique in the juggling world at the time because he had only one good arm. His other arm looked more like a fleshy, elongated lobster claw. He could juggle by grasping a small tennis racket in it and bounce the balls to his good hand … it was his hook, so to speak.

                          Like I said, Dale was a pro, so I asked for any local humor stuff … blah blah blah … at the end of which he quite unexpectedly says to me,

                          quote:Hey Robert, if you think you can work me into the show, I’ve got this new Christmas bit I just wrote for a big gig and I’d like to try it out before I do it for real … Whatdoyasay, it’s only about 4 minutes long?



                          I nod OK, just as my apathetic, white, urban middle-class, 18 to 22 year old crowd starts to filter in. Of all the audiences in the world, I don’t think you could find, in one place, a greater concentration of indifferent dipshits.

                          The student film crew all take their places and freeze.

                          I thank everyone for coming...

                          Right off the bat, some guy yells out,

                          “Gallagher was sold out”

                          It gets a laugh.

                          Great! All the shit I’ve been through … all the 3-wheeled, lost wallet, peanut beating crap I had to take to get here ... and NOW THIS!

                          I respond … foolish me.



                          Me: Oh yeah, How much did he cost?

                          Him: $17.50

                          Me: How much to get in here?

                          Him: .75 cents … and worth every penny!



                          Audience laughs again … the bastards!

                          OK!! … So you wanna play?!!! You want a piece of the Butterfly Man, eh?!!!

                          OK, kiddies … Let’s dance!!!

                          A vein in my forehead starts to bulge. I tell them what I really think of them … their fraternities … their college … and then … for some reason …

                          I say something to a guy in the front row who has purple socks. Everyone laughs … but … one woman’s laugh is way louder than the rest … it sounds more like a very amused hiccup.

                          “Whoop” … “Whoop” … “Whoop”

                          Her laugh makes everyone laugh.

                          Like a comedy virus, “funny” spreads throughout the room.

                          Everything in my act starts working better than usual.

                          They love everything I say and do … and then, I try a callback ... I mention the purple socks guy again.

                          Again … that peculiar laugh!

                          “Whoop” … “Whoop” … “Whoop”


                          The place goes berserk with delight.

                          I have so much confidence, I decide to find out who is laughing like that … make it part of the show, you know.

                          I stop ... listen intently... wait ‘til it’s silent then say,

                          “Can you believe it … purple socks!”?

                          Again, a big,

                          “Whoop” … “Whoop” … “Whoop”


                          I look around trying to find the laughing culprit …

                          I scan the audience … nothing …

                          Another purple socks comment, and I see why. The laugh is coming from behind the camera on my far right. When I move … she moves.

                          She’s slightly bent over, looking into the lens but I can see her lurching shoulders when she makes the sound.

                          “Whoop” … “Whoop” … “Whoop”


                          Then just before it actually happened … I felt it.

                          The energy in the whole room changes when … bang; the sound of the steel exit doors open the door to the parking lot and in bursts Herr director!!!

                          The truck and monitors are visible for a second … then SLAM the doors close behind him.

                          With a brisk walk and a stern look, the teacher-director crosses the entire length of the cafeteria and heads straight to Camera #1.

                          He bends over and whispers something to the girl. She stands up and hands him her headphones. He takes over behind the camera as she skulks away.

                          The audience & I watch this whole scene go down … nobody had made sound the entire time.

                          The comedy bubble just burst … the pin prick of reality had left everyone in a laugh-less void. The cameras were still rolling.

                          I guess it was up to me to bring it all back again.

                          Or was it?

                          Was I responsible for what just happened?

                          I stop the show and got serious.
                          It shocks me more than the crowd.


                          Me (talking to camera 1):
                          “Now wait a minute here, that young lady was simply enjoying herself … and all of us were enjoying her laughter with her.

                          Now, just because she enjoyed herself, you’re going to ruin her day, possibly her career and maybe even her entire life.

                          Well, I’ll tell you this …


                          Then thinking to myself:

                          Uh, Where do I go with this? … I got nothing.


                          I panic …

                          Then, out of nowhere, I pull something out of my butt.

                          “You know ladies and gentleman … about 10 years ago when I was just starting in this business, a little boy came up to me after a show and said “ Mister, when I grow up I want to be a juggler just like you.”
                          I smiled at the little boy and told him, “Son, when you grow up, you can be anything you want to be … just believe in yourself.”
                          But, then, as I reached down to shake the little boys hand, I noticed he had only one good arm … (deliberate pause here)…

                          Ladies and gentlemen, may I present to you tonight … that little boy 10 years later, doing his first performance in front of a live audience … please welcome … Dale Jones!”

                          I knew Dale was a pro and would be ready to go on … I figured I’d apologize for my fabricated intro. later.

                          Dale gives me a brief incredulous look as he takes the stage. I disappear into the back and watch. You could feel the emotional charge in the air. The audience had been way up … then totally bummed … now, thanks to me, they were supposed to be pulling for a cripple.

                          Me, I just felt relieved to be offstage.

                          Along with everyone, I watched as Dale masterfully executed a new routine. His discomfort with the new material made him look a little nervous and that just added credibility to my bullshit introduction.

                          His routine finishes and he gets a standing O.

                          I smile as I take the stage. I’m thinking maybe Dale won’t be pissed … after all; it’s kinda hard to be pissed when your getting a standing ovation, isn’t it?

                          Dale hustles his crap off but not without shooting me a semi-dirty look when his back is to the crowd.

                          Oh well, I think, there will be other crippled friends in my life.

                          The hard work over, I went back to playing funny man again … but the audience wasn’t going up as fast or as high as before … that laugh was missing. We all missed it.

                          Then, I don’t know why … maybe just to get back at Herr director for ruining my moment in the sun, I turn and face Camera #1,

                          I think you should give that girl her camera back.

                          What are you doing, Robert?
                          This guy’s the TEACHER!

                          Audience tentatively cheers but there’s no movement from Camera 1.

                          I move to the side … he follows me with the camera but does not respond.

                          Come on … she’s learned her lesson …how about it?

                          Damn, he’s not saying anything … I should’ve just finished the show.!

                          The audience gives a rather under enthusiastic applause, fearing another meltdown.

                          So you’re not gonna move, huh?

                          Man, I almost had THEM … Wha’ am I gonna do?
                          Wha’ am I gonna do?

                          The hunched shoulders show no emotion they just follow my every move behind the camera.

                          Trying to make a point are we?

                          Jesus! …Do SOMETHING … somebody, DO SOMETHING!

                          Motionless shoulders stare back at me.

                          OK, We’ll see about THAT!

                          Without really thinking, I grab an 8-foot bullwhip from my prop stand.

                          I walk around the back of hunched shoulders prancing, threatening, menacing.

                          Where is THIS going? …You have no fucking idea, do you?

                          I crack the whip in the air… KKKKERACK!

                          Herr teacher’s shoulders un-hunch and he shoots straight up to a standing position.

                          The crowd roars with pre-cripple enthusiasm.

                          Now what …?

                          With a look I usually get only from women, Herr director glares back at me.

                          I spy a cigarette pack in his shirt pocket. Thank God and cancer!

                          Ladies & Gentlemen … I’d like to show you how to quit smoking in just one move.

                          I take a cigarette out of his pack and stick it up my nose. It gets a decent laugh.

                          I take another and place it between his lips.

                          Whatever You Do … Don’t MOVE!

                          Herr director is petrified. So is the audience. So am I.

                          Just don’t hit him … remember that kid in Florida.

                          While pretending to be judging the distance, I step back and crack the whip twice.

                          My hands are shaking … I have no confidence. The audience senses my fear. A line of sweat appears above Herr director’s lip. The cigarette is shaking between his lips. We are all anxious to see how this is gonna end.

                          I go for it. I let fly. I pray for blind luck.

                          KKKKRRRRAAACCCKKK!

                          The cigarette flies out of his mouth.

                          I can’t believe it! The audience applauds wildly.

                          Then … from way in the back … like a laughing nightingale singing away all my fears … I hear,

                          “Whoop” … “Whoop” … “Whoop”



                          What a beautiful sound even an ugly laugh can make.

                          -The Butterfly Man -2006
                          Last edited by Butterfly Man; Dec-31-2008, 03:04 PM.

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                          • Butterfly Man
                            Senior Member
                            • Dec 2000
                            • 1606

                            #14
                            Doin' the Chinaman's Laundry

                            Doing the Chinaman's Laundry


                            I spent almost 30 years as a comic juggler. I wore a jesters costume most of my career and could even imitate a reasonable 16th century British accent. Yet curiously, I had never once performed at a Renaissance Faire.

                            I first heard about the Northern California Faire when I moved to San Francisco in the late ‘70’s. Several local juggling acts, “Fly-by Night”, “Shawn and Dave” and the infamous “Obscene Juggler”, Greg Dean had just been hired.

                            Word was, you had to audition for the “Queen”, Phyllis Patterson. Her Northern and Southern California Faires were the beginnings of what soon would be called “the Ren Faire Circuit”. Apparently, she had stolen the idea from the Ashland, Oregon Shakespeare festival. Some of “her people” saw me on the street and invited me to come up to Novato to audition for the “Queen”, herself.

                            I did … it was horrible.

                            As soon as “Queen” Phyllis saw my head she said, “Tattoo’s aren’t period … you’ll have to wear a hat”.

                            I was so shocked I couldn’t think clearly.

                            Then I heard the words, “Fuck you bitch” come out of my mouth.

                            Needless to say, I didn’t get the gig.

                            Flash ahead 22 years… it’s 1999. I’m about to turn 50. Working the streets had taken its toll. My empty calendar stares back at me … I make some calls.

                            I get in touch with Master Lee in New York City. I met the “Kung Fu Comic” in Washington Square Park the early ‘80’s. He had developed his act alongside the famous asshole, Tony Vera aka “The Fireman”, Thien Phu, a very friendly and skilled Vietnamese juggler and the legendary Charley Barnett, the funniest black motherfucker to ever live (except Richard, of course).

                            Master Lee suggests I apply to the Baltimore Ren Faire. “Rowbert, I’ll set you up, but first, you wanna rent half my trailer for 200 (quickly adding)… US?”

                            Good money, cheap rent. Say no more, say no more.

                            I call the Faire; many of my lifelong friends (and also Gazzo) had already worked there. They offer me a 5-week, no travel, no accommodations deal. I accept, mentioning my plans to rent Master Lee’s trailer. I heard a long pause on the other end of the line. I didn’t think too much of it at the time.

                            Four festivals and three blown VW engines later, I arrive, at the end of a long arduous summer in Baltimore. Prophetically, during the worst rainstorm they’ve had in 50 years.

                            I drive into what looks like a cow pasture with a cheap, cereal box cutout castle in the middle. I am surrounded by a moat of filthy, muddy, pierced and tattooed hippie freaks. I guess that Elizabethan cunt I met 22 years ago had relaxed her standards a bit.

                            My old friends, sword-swallower Johnny Fox and magician Peter Gross, greet me in the muddy lot. Like the legendary “Puke & Snot”, Johnny had grown to be a star in the Ren-Faire world. Besides having an excellent comedy act, he was a master of sleight-of-hand (think Gazzo pre-stroke).

                            Like Johnny, Peter was (ahem) a good friend too. At least it seemed like he was a good friend because I had allowed him to annoy me for so many years. I’ll admit that if Peter wasn’t trying to molest some prepubescent adolescent, he could be surprisingly entertaining; in an irritating sort of way.

                            We had all performed together at numerous events together in the past and I never ceased to be amazed at how quickly Johnny could get women to sleep with him. Sort of the antithesis of Peter.

                            I’ll always be thankful to Peter for showing me how one might easily adapt one’s act to an Elizabethan theme. Evidently, green tights stretched over a pudgy frame do the trick. In all deference to Peter, I must admit, when I first heard his masterful impersonation of a overly enthusiastic, whiney, British Jew in 1563, I was … how can I say it? … awake.

                            Wet and exhausted, I follow Johnny and Peter to a tree-rutted angular patch of mud next to the Porto-Johns. They point out a 17 year old, 22 foot long corrugated, dried tobacco juice colored tin box on blocks. You can’t imagine my joy at the prospect that this was to be my home for the next 5 weeks. I anticipated being lulled to sleep with the incessant slamming of commode doors while peacefully inhaling the intoxicating aroma of human waste.

                            Johnny never gets closer than the 10-foot garbage infested walkway and bids us adieu. He had already stopped looking at me and gotten real quiet. I actually think I saw him shudder as he turned to leave.

                            Peter, however, like a perspiring gazelle, puddle jumps knowingly from mucky clump to muddy cluster of crap. He nimbly leaps over half eaten propane tanks and masterfully negotiates the one of three steps that hasn’t rusted out. He deftly opens a door with no handle, no doorknob and no lock leaving it wide open … calculatingly.

                            Words alone could never describe the putrid stench that enveloped me. It hit me like an imploded colostomy bag. I wanted to vomit but I couldn’t find a place clean enough.

                            In the dim light, a truly appalling scene unfolded before me. Filthy duct tape covering broken moldy jalousies made it thankfully hard to distinguish much. I imagined Peter, William and myself with flies in our eyes in Darfur standing behind Sally Struthers. Up to that moment my only real experience living with a pig was when I shared a room at the Denver Buskerfest with Young Raoul. Apparently, not everyone prefers to defecate in private. But, I digress; The Young One is better suited for a story of his own.

                            The only light came through the cheap little windup skylight in ceiling above. Brittle now, the plastic had crumbled like a used saltine atop what was left of the perforated rusted out screen. Brownish stains encircled the fissure chandelier-like in ever expanding concentric circles. The soaked plasterboard bubbled ominously overhead like a piñata of gunk and goo.

                            The rain had been pouring in for so many years that the carpet below had rotted away in almost a perfect circle. The mucous laden fiber would simply dissolve to the touch (I imagined). I guess William just walked around those holes like they were homeless people.

                            Only a ripped, torn, worn to shreds Naugahyde couch adorned the dark & dismal front room. It looked like a ninth grade science project gone bad. It had an oddly velour coating that on closer inspection revealed a layer of growing fur. I never saw multicolored mold before.

                            There was a can of Raid on the kitchen counter, empty, of course. The only chair, a greasy bucketseat. I half expected to see a NASCAR schedule poster somewhere.

                            Master Lee had bought the trailer 9 years ago from Johnny’s ex-wife (the 1st one). He had paid her $500 bucks Canadian after his first Halifax experience. Since that day, he had never bothered to fix anything. The electricity worked but nothing else, not even the water. All appliances had died and been left to rot. A corroded grease covered stove was now a nest for a family of mice (one of 5, I found). A hive of wasps lived in the exhaust fan above. Inside the rust pitted refrigerator lay a bug cemetery. They were the lucky ones.
                            I knew if I stayed in this ecological cesspit very long, I’d die as well. I bolted back to Johnny’s trailer and begged for a one-night stay. He acquiesced, I’ll be forever thankful for that.

                            For the rest of the evening, I watched in awe as William, Peter and the rest of the indigents slept wherever they fell. Most of these longhaired heathens, I was soon to find out, spent the week drinking and fornicating with whatever could provide friction. Rumor has it, the word “Skank” was coined right there at the Baltimore Re-Faire. It is unclear as to whether the speaker was referring to Master Lee, himself, or to the company he kept.

                            I had coupla days before shows started, so I blatantly told William my intent to disinfect the dump in lieu of rent. The first thing I did was to tack plastic sheets over the broken, cracked and split, plastic vents in the roof. It sealed the water out but the fetid air in, so I pried, pliered and wrenched the frozen gunk crusted jalousie windows open.

                            I then tried to focus on anything already decayed and decomposed. Rotting, unrecognizable items were tossed indiscriminately outdoors, simply adding into the already atrocious mess. Bags of garbage were intentionally left open to give anything still alive and ambulatory a chance to escape.

                            I held my cool pretty good the first night. I initially pondered getting some sleep on the foul mattress in the back, until I found a desiccated condom attached to its headboard. Six open packages littered on the floor around the bed. I never found the other 5.

                            Instead, I wrapped myself in a plastic parka and sat upright on the recently bleached couch. My eyes stinging from the fumes, I spent hours listening to rustling noises in the dark. Back and forth, up and down, I tried to follow them with my fading flashlight. Mercifully, the rain started pounding down so hard, I heard nothing else.

                            I was relentless the next few days. I sprayed, brushed, wiped and swept every inch of that hellhole. I even rented a steam cleaner and attacked what was left of the rug. Before I did my first show, I had spent $117 on cleaning products, traps and pesticides. Master Lee, rightly so, never said shit to me about rent.

                            What the Faire billed as “comic juggler Butterfly Man” became a 4 times a day, one-way vent of my personal frustrations. I simply couldn’t control it. I’d come out both rant barrels blazing. I might have done some juggling in there somewhere but I don’t remember any of that. I’m pretty sure anybody who saw me doesn’t either.

                            I ranted about mud, muck, rain and mold, all the things I had been swimming in for days. I did a whole show about a piece of pubic hair, peppered soap I found in the one and only shower available for the hundreds of grubby, muddy hippies that lived on-site. I took the audience on a journey uphill, through ankle deep mud, to a stained, non-shower curtained stall of pitted concrete encircled by a mucous membrane of sulfur. I told them what it was like to shower in cold water that was 13% rust, with your shoes on. I was closer to suicide than El Glenno Grande sharing a pitch with Bill Ferguson.

                            Then, just when I thought I couldn’t take it anymore … a goddamn hurricane hits.

                            Its name was “Floyd”. I don’t think it was named after that goofy barber on the Andy Griffith show. I don’t know anybody who thinks killing 77 people and making disaster areas out of 7 states is “goofy” … except maybe Hilby, but he has the luxury of being German.

                            Everyone bailed. I was left alone inside that place, alone I say, for three days.

                            I had to beg for food at what was left of the remaining hippie campsites. Something about being in a disaster brings people together. Either that, or I looked so disgusting and smelled so awful that they took me for one of their own. Their fashion trend seemed to favor grunge with accessories of muck and slime. I swear, neither Peter nor William washed their costumes the whole time I was there. In Master Lee’s case, the word “costume” meant the crusty, black, grimy, fake karate outfit he wore all the time.

                            Somehow, I survived.

                            William’s trailer started to become inhabitable by about the end of the third week. Everything had been disinfected, scrubbed, washed or painted. I even got the water going and the gas stove working but, alas, I never did get that goddamn refrigerator to work.

                            I guess having lost all hope and not giving a fuck any longer does have it’s advantages because my show started getting better and better. Those two days a week were my only outlet.
                            I remember having a strange experience that I’ve never had onstage before or after. I found myself doing three different shows at once. It seemed tri-leveled in a way. There was my act (to me, the most boring part), then the comments that I made about how I felt about doing it (got the most laughs), then a professional explanation of what I was doing (type of joke, reversal, understatement etc.). Must’ve been interesting, I would’ve liked to have been there.

                            I was exhausted and exasperated at the end of the run but I felt good about the shows I had done (surprisingly so did the owner). I felt even better that my friends William and Peter would now have a nice clean place to invite sluts over for Sunday brunch.

                            Master Lee thanked me profusely. To show his deep felt appreciation as a parting gift, he bought me a small amount of cheap marijuana.

                            The day after I left, I heard he sold the trailer to some hippie chick for $800 … US.
                            Last edited by Butterfly Man; Dec-31-2008, 03:01 PM.

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                            • Butterfly Man
                              Senior Member
                              • Dec 2000
                              • 1606

                              #15
                              Marcus Marconi tribute

                              The Infinite Crasher

                              In 1993, Markus Marconi had an asthma attack and died while sleeping inside his van near the pitch where he worked in Munich. In his seven short years as a street performer, he had become a star throughout Europe. In his honor, the "Markus Marconi Award" is given to the favorite busker in Holland's Orenjeboom Festival every year.

                              This story is for him...

                              In 1985 I was in Oahu on my way to the 1st Hawaiian Juggling Festival over here on the Big Island. Waldo (of the Waldo-Woodhead Show), Benji Marantz (Mountain Mime/One-Ring Circus), Dan “ The Piano Juggler” Menendez and myself were walking down Waikiki. There were no street acts out there at all but there was this kid selling balloons ... that kid was Markus Marconi.

                              As we were walking by this kid picks up 3 balls and juggles for just a second ... nothing fancy. I figure he recognizes one of us since we were all performers but it turned out he did the same thing for everybody who went by. I told Waldo & Benji to "watch this..." and I go up to this obviously local kid and say, "Wow, I always wanted to learn how to juggle ... can you teach me?"

                              So Markus starts to teach me the basic cascade while Dan, Benji & Waldo look on … I quickly realize that I am just being an asshole if I continue on with this sham so I decide to introduce the others and myself. Markus seems surprised … he says he has never met another juggler, let alone four professionals. As he is speaking his partner walks over … his name is John and he is really an amateur magician also raised in Hawaii ... together they scrape by on what they can make on Waikiki. I find out later, Markus uses his share to help support his aging grandmother.

                              In the course of the conversation I mention that we are all flying over to the Big Island for the 1st Hawaiian Juggling Convention and give him the contact info. @ Belly Acres.

                              Cut to the last day of the festival … one week later …Hilo side of the Big Island (lower Puna)… myself and seven other juggling acts have spent a glorious week swimming at the black sand beach, skinny dipping in the warm champagne ponds and taking midnight treks to the lava flow … I think we even juggled a bit … I was pretty stoned the whole time, so I don’t remember much.

                              What I do remember was Markus showing up on the last day. He walks up and does what becomes his signature greeting to me for the next 7 years. He gives me a slight nod up with ever widening eyes … he says nothing. Just the head nodding up once … not down … hmmm, I thought, interesting choice.

                              I was helping the convention director, Graham Ellis, prepare for the final event, an evening show for all the local people. We would all be leaving the following day; this was our way of saying “aloha”.

                              I was pretty busy with my emcee duties when Markus walked up giving me his signature nod and saying nothing. After a slightly less than an uncomfortable moment, I asked him if he would like to perform in the show. He says nothing but he nodded up, I took that as a “yes”.

                              He said he had never performed before so I suggested he eat an apple (a sure crowd pleaser) to Weird Al Yankovitch’s “Eat it” … he nodded up.

                              Well, for the first time ever in front of a big crowd, Markus killed … to be honest, we all did. The locals loved us. My god, how could they not! … seven professional acts and one local boy for the admission price of a coupla coconuts and some tea leaves. Dat Puna butter, brah? No act, da kine, for real?

                              After the show everything got cloudy quickly and I remember nothing much else except giving Markus my business card saying, “If you’re ever in San Francisco give me a call. “ … this was my mistake; I have no one to blame but myself.

                              Less than two weeks later there was a knock at my door at 210 Clayton Street in San Francisco. It was Markus … he gave me the nod up, so I invited him in.

                              He had not called… he didn’t say why he was there … he didn’t say anything about how long he was going to stay … he said almost nothing. He let me do most all the talking; occasionally throwing his head up slightly and bulging his already quite round eyes.

                              My life had turned hectic since my return from Hawaii. My landlady Bea Levine had decided to evict me because I had let a “teenager” (as she put it) stay in my flat while I was in Hawaii.

                              The old Victorian had creaky floors and she had lived underneath a crappy juggler already for 3 years, so I guess she was a bit skittish to begin with. So, when Dave Rave, the crazy new kid in town from Copenhagen, threw a wild ass party at my pad while I was away in Hawaii… well, it put the ol’ biddy right over the edge. She came out screaming everyday about that “teenager” and his party … ad nauseum.

                              In the middle of this Markus moved up into my attic … a space as big as my entire flat but with no walls … it’s only entrance a small closet with a wooden ladder.

                              Quietly, Markus settled in while my life became a whirlwind of legal preparation to prevent her from kicking me out. Since I was a street performer with no visible means of support, the American Civil Liberty Union decided to take my case under advisement. I represented myself “in pro per” in court… I ended up losing but it took the bitch 8 months and some legal fees to get me out.

                              Really the best part was that I didn’t have to pay rent the whole time … legally. When I lost, however, she won a “judgment” of 2 grand for back rent which I didn’t pay until I tried to buy a house many years later … that shit follows you around. Strange when I think back on it though… Markus … the judgment … both following me around for the next seven years … hmmm.

                              After I lost (of course) the case, I figured Markus would leave, but he went nowhere. I moved all my stuff out of there and into Wheeler Cole’s (High Street Circus) pad around the corner on the Panhandle of Golden Gate Park. Markus stayed … even when they turned the electricity off … Markus stayed.

                              This is just the beginning of the legacy of “The Infinite Crasher”… just the beginning.

                              During the eviction or “Unlawful Detainer” court case preparation, I had stumbled across the fact that my landlady was going to have to follow the same legal procedures to throw Markus out as she did me. I told him to give it a try … he did … he stayed 3 more months … serves the mustard seed eating old cunt right.

                              It had been quite awhile since Markus had moved into my place. Whatever money he had brought with him had run out long ago.
                              He got a job working the late-late shift at McDonalds so he could eat for free. Markus started to gain weight … bigger and bigger each trans-fat laden week. I started to doubt the security of the rickety wooden ladder to the attic.

                              After packing all my crap into boxes (including a dismantled 1959 Morris Minor Pickup truck), and moving all of it into 2 rooms of a 7 room flat around the corner @ Wheeler’s, I went gallivanting off to Europe.

                              Markus continued to watch the crème de la crème of street performers down at the wharf while I was gone. I picture him now, upstairs in my attic, alone, in the dark, sitting on his ever-expanding semi-Hawaiian ass, dreaming about becoming a street performer.

                              When I returned, Markus had managed to move into my portion of Wheelers flat … it was nothing short of amazing the way people took care of that guy … at least me, anyway … and I hate everybody.

                              Shortly after I arrived, Markus told me he was ready to perform his first solo street show. He asked me to come watch his audition at the Cannery. All this time he had been writing notes to himself every day … sometimes jokes …sometimes ideas for bits … sometimes tricks he needed to learn … all in those cheap black & white speckled school notebooks.

                              Almost the first words out of my mouth when Markus arrived in the city had been, “the difference between an amateur and a professional is a dollar sixty-nine cent notebook” ... Markus might not have said much …but, apparently, he was listening.

                              His first show at the Cannery sucked … it was really awful considering all the thought he had put into it … I felt really bad for him when it was over. He looked like he was ready to cry. He had stolen bits from just about every act out there and tried to perform juggling feats onstage that had taken all of us years to achieve. It probably was slightly more devastating to perform than it was to watch.

                              Since we were mostly alone at the end anyway, I pulled Markus aside and sat slightly away from him. He looked like he was made out of water. I kept my distance because I feared, should he inadvertently nod, I would get pelleted with giant tears and flop sweat.

                              We talked … actually; I did most of the talking. I told him what I thought people wanted from him … “it wasn’t tricks”, I said (he had gotten pretty good at juggling). “Tricks”, I said, “get between you and the audience” … if you MUST do Something, then only do things you can do in your sleep … keep the connection.” What people WANT is for them to be able to see a piece of YOU in what you do … show them who YOU ARE!”

                              Given that he was much rounder now, I suggested he try being somewhat jolly, although I’m not sure exactly what jolly means … never having felt that particular emotion in my entire life.

                              He needed an act, I thought, that not only suited his look and quiet demeanor but also looked professional.

                              “We should make some prop cases together”, I offered.
                              I recommended we start working on his act by making (me) a “professional prop case”.

                              He worked, I talked.

                              I rambled on about what I had seen work on the streets here in the city. More importantly, I also told him what I had seen that didn’t work. Things like, “borrowing” another act’s material. Beginners seem to always make the mistake of thinking that material someone else does will work for them. The problem with that is that they don’t know yet who they 'appear to be' to the audience. They only know who they 'think they are' … good luck doing a show where you screw with peoples perceptions. It might be wise to save that shit for the seasoned professionals.

                              Sure, starting out, one might be tempted to grab somebody else’s lines because “they work for that person”. But, realistically, if you think about it, this is way dumb. Why? Because you are putting a whole layer of crap that isn’t you between you and THEM … that's why dumb ass.

                              Think about it … people are pretty stupid … they can’t figure out what you look like if you wear a mask, right? How can you expect them to figure out what they like or dislike about what you do up there on stage if you keep putting other peoples stuff in front of them to cloud their decision-making. In the beginning you are listening … the audience is doing most of the talking … with their hands.

                              At the time, I didn’t even know I had an opinion about performing and really this was the first time I tried to help anybody else out.
                              There wasn’t really anybody like me when I started, so I didn’t have anybody to copy. Funny thing about that … there still isn’t.

                              However, in just a few short years, I had seen so many newcomers to the street that I observed first hand the realities of street performing. The time I shared with Markus helped me help other people for many years to come.

                              The way I saw it, since Markus was pudgy and looked like a cuddly bear, why not play that card … I mean, I looked like a creepy insect and it worked for me.

                              Lucky for Markus, The Cannery, the Anchorage and even Ghirardelli (shopping centers) had lost most all their top acts to Pier 39. They were hungry, Markus was hungry. He was more than eager to fill any timeslot. He hit the streets hard. I heard somewhere that’s what it takes.

                              Life at Wheeler’s got too communal for my taste, so I rented a whole house for myself in Bernal Heights. It was great … a beautiful sunny backyard with an extra room with half a bath off the garage.
                              Yeah, I said it, a garage … in San Francisco… no shit? … mine? … No one else can park here? … really? Really!

                              As I was moving the last of my stuff out of Wheeler’s, Markus showed up right after a full day at the wharf. Wheeler was throwing me a small going away party and I was all excited about moving to new place. Markus seemed even more quiet than usual. I knew something was wrong when he didn’t give me the usual nod up. He looked weathered and worn. He had just pulled off ten shows that day.

                              Actually, beneath his shabby attire, Markus looked pretty good. He had lost the extra weight (6+ shows a day’ll do that). He might have been healthy but his costume was beat to shit. His “costume” was really whatever he was wearing and his red high-top converse sneakers. He did his 1st show in them and never performed without them.

                              It had been almost a year since Markus had been punching out shows down at the wharf and his sneakers showed it. What was once red was now barely pink. Thick ribbed soles had worn paper-thin. A long slice along each side threatened to release a flap of rubber at any minute.

                              I pulled Markus aside to see what was wrong. This quiet man, who had never said so much as a peep to me in almost 2 years, started to talk.

                              He told me about growing up with no parents in Hawaii, always moving from home to home. He told me about this old woman who took him in more than anyone else. He called her his “grandmother” though there was no blood relation. Markus had no idea where he came from. He had no one place he called home.

                              I know I am a self absorbed son-of-a-bitch. I’m sure I was even more of one then than I am now, but I was really touched by his story. Either that of I was just stunned to hear him say more than two words that were joined together before.

                              Markus told me about Hawaii and a thing called “ohana”. I think the closest word in English would be “family”. People, whether related or not, if they were close to you, they became your family, he explained. Houses, whether you owned them or not, he said, became your home.

                              He told growing up in Hawaii he never had (or needed) a pair of shoes. Then he looked down at the beat up sneakers on his feet. “These are my home”, he said, “I take them everywhere I go”.

                              I don’t know what came over me. I must have had more to drink than I thought or maybe all the drug taking I had been doing for so many years just caught up with me. The words, “I have an extra room in my new place”, drooled out from between my lips despite all my efforts to shut the fuck up for once in my life.

                              As we were getting in my van, Markus tied his beater red sneakers together and threw them over a lamp pole right outside of Wheelers pad. They were the first … the first of many to come.

                              Markus moved in before I even had a chance to memorize my address… he took the room next to the garage.

                              Markus’s act became unlike any other show on the wharf. His unique approach was to do kiddie humor. Targeting the children rather than the paying adults seemed to work well for him. He told me it made him feel safer too with all those kids all around him. Gee, that must be some feeling … all I ever think about is how to make them cry.

                              Those were good days for Markus, he gained the respect of all the acts in the city … everyone affectionately called him “Infinite” as a nickname… he even found love (and all the tangled webs involved).

                              The best thing that happened to him during this time was an offer from Japan. Six weeks in Osaka making balloons for some event company … I was extremely jealous. He took his new home with him. The old one he left dangling on a telephone wire in Bernal Heights.

                              I didn’t see Markus for sometime after that but I heard he was killing over in Europe. I even heard a great story about him performing in Russia that I’ll share with you all sometime.

                              I saw Markus last at a Thanksgiving Day party In San Francisco, it was just months before he died. As I walked into the living room Markus was sitting on an oversized sofa with a pretty girl on either side of him. I’ll always remember how I was shocked that he looked so different. He seemed so handsome and cool, but it was obviously the same guy.

                              I hadn’t seen him for quite awhile so I walked over to where he was sitting and stood right in front of him and the girls. He looked up at me, his eyes so confident, his manner so self-assured.

                              “I hear the money’s in Belgium & Bern”, I said.

                              Markus looked up. His big eyes widened, then, he gave me the nod.

                              I took that as a “Yes”.
                              Last edited by Butterfly Man; Dec-31-2008, 03:13 PM.

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