This happened back in the late eighties when I was performing to try and make ends meet while I slaved away in university. (As opposed to now, where I perform to try and make ends overlap while I slave away at my desk.)
I was hired to perform at a company Xmas show. I don't recall the company, but it was some sort of blue-collar affair. I get there and meet the manager who hired me. It's a plain 'banquet room', filled with some 300 workers in rows of tables and chairs packed in as tightly as possible. There's a small stage and microphone set up at one end of the room, near the entrance.
I can deal with this. The lighting and staging is a little less than I had hoped and the crowd a little bigger, but what the heck - I'd been paid up front, when I got the contract. I hang out at the bar while some awards are given out, after which I'll be on. There's a constant line-up at the bar. As far as I can tell, the workers have decided to bilk the company as much as possible in free booze. I figure having the crowd as liquored up as possible can only help (can you hear the ominous music playing...?).
The awards are done, I'm introduced and I go on. I'm about 10 minutes into my act when I see a fellow near the back fall off his seat. The only people who have seemed to notice are the people around him, and they put him back on his chair, so fine.
Two minutes later, he falls off his seat again. There seems to be a bit of a commotion, but it's near the back and I can't really tell, and besides, I'm trying to keep going. Halfway through the next trick, I hear sirens outside.
Paramedics rush in with a stretcher. They leave the stretcher near the entrance and work their way through the tight-packed tables to the fallen guy. They strap him to a board, but there's a debate between the paramedics about whether or not he'll make it back to the hospital. One paramedic rushes out to the ambulance for a medical kit.
I'm still trying to keep the audience's focus. I'm shouting into the mike to be heard over the sirens, and it's starting to feed back. The paramedics decide they have to work on this guy right now, but because the place is so full of tables and chairs they choose the only open space - right in front of the stage.
So I'm on stage, there's an ambulance with sirens wailing right outside the window, and three paramedics trying to save the life of a drunk lying on the ground two feet in front of me.
I look over at the manager, and he makes the universal gesture for 'keep going' (finger-pointed hands moved in a circle). I ask, "Is anyone still paying attention to me?"
No response from the crowd, who are (not surprisingly) watching the paramedics.
"Thank-you, good night, have a great holiday and don't drive drunk!"
I was glad I had been paid in advance.
I was hired to perform at a company Xmas show. I don't recall the company, but it was some sort of blue-collar affair. I get there and meet the manager who hired me. It's a plain 'banquet room', filled with some 300 workers in rows of tables and chairs packed in as tightly as possible. There's a small stage and microphone set up at one end of the room, near the entrance.
I can deal with this. The lighting and staging is a little less than I had hoped and the crowd a little bigger, but what the heck - I'd been paid up front, when I got the contract. I hang out at the bar while some awards are given out, after which I'll be on. There's a constant line-up at the bar. As far as I can tell, the workers have decided to bilk the company as much as possible in free booze. I figure having the crowd as liquored up as possible can only help (can you hear the ominous music playing...?).
The awards are done, I'm introduced and I go on. I'm about 10 minutes into my act when I see a fellow near the back fall off his seat. The only people who have seemed to notice are the people around him, and they put him back on his chair, so fine.
Two minutes later, he falls off his seat again. There seems to be a bit of a commotion, but it's near the back and I can't really tell, and besides, I'm trying to keep going. Halfway through the next trick, I hear sirens outside.
Paramedics rush in with a stretcher. They leave the stretcher near the entrance and work their way through the tight-packed tables to the fallen guy. They strap him to a board, but there's a debate between the paramedics about whether or not he'll make it back to the hospital. One paramedic rushes out to the ambulance for a medical kit.
I'm still trying to keep the audience's focus. I'm shouting into the mike to be heard over the sirens, and it's starting to feed back. The paramedics decide they have to work on this guy right now, but because the place is so full of tables and chairs they choose the only open space - right in front of the stage.
So I'm on stage, there's an ambulance with sirens wailing right outside the window, and three paramedics trying to save the life of a drunk lying on the ground two feet in front of me.
I look over at the manager, and he makes the universal gesture for 'keep going' (finger-pointed hands moved in a circle). I ask, "Is anyone still paying attention to me?"
No response from the crowd, who are (not surprisingly) watching the paramedics.
"Thank-you, good night, have a great holiday and don't drive drunk!"
I was glad I had been paid in advance.

Comment