Thursday, March 3, 2016

And after I am laid to rest


2 Nephi 31:20 --  Wherefore, if ye shall press forward, feasting upon the word of Christ, and endure to the end, behold, thus saith the Father: Ye shall have eternal life.

And after I am laid to rest, and after worms have chewed
Upon my idle carcass, will I then behold the rood
Upon which Savior, King, and Christ bore all for me alone?
O, how to understand this truth – so stark and yet keystone!

Eternal life, abiding joy, and love that has no term;
I am heir to all of it if I remain but firm.
So weak am I, so frail my faith – O God, your mercy spread
Over me that I may wake to Thee when I am dead!  

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

A Little Clown Music: Remembering Bill Pryne



One of the most beautiful aspects of starting my career as a clown with Ringling Brothers was to perform to the rousing strains of galops, marches and waltzes that conductor Bill Pryne arranged and conducted as accompaniment  for clowns.  It added a delicious fillip to each performance.  It was a pleasure missing on all other shows I played, where the music was always canned.
Pryne had a real feeling for just the right raucous tune for clown gags.  While he was obliged to crank out show tunes and top 40 covers for the production numbers and the regular acts, for the clowns he reached back into his generous repertoire of bouncing melodies from the 1900’s, giving us “Mosquito Parade” by Ruby Brooks, Henry Fillmore’s “Lassus Trombone”, “Nola” by Felix Arndt, and “Dizzy Fingers” by pianist Zez Confrey.  For Kochmanski and his dog Kropka, he did a lyrical treatment of Arthur Pryor’s “The Whistler and His Dog” that was nimble and large-hearted; the way he lingered over some of those notes was dulcet poetry.
Marching out into the arena with Swede Johnson to the strains of “Florentiner Marsch” by Julius Fucik, to perform the broom jump or bigger & bigger, would give me a kind of mad exultation – if it's possible to become intoxicated by mere notes, Bill Pryne was a master bartender!  Life seemed generous and uncomplicated at moments like that.
Mr. Pryne was not noticeably warm towards the clowns outside of the show – he was just a professional musician who knew  what melodies would work for the current crop of buffoons.  He did like to unwind by showing his collection of 16mm comedy shorts out in the parking lot after the last show, when the weather was nice.  He was particularly fond of Charlie Chase.  During one of these Pryne late-night film festivals I asked him why he never played “Entrance of the Gladiators”, by Fucik, which is the traditional march everyone associates with the circus.  He shrugged his shoulders and said that old man Feld didn’t like it, so it was never used.  On another occasion, after watching a few particularly good Charlie Chase shorts, Mr. Pryne loosened up and started talking about the music he’d LIKE to play for the clowns, but couldn’t.  He said he had always wanted to use the orchestral tone poems of Leroy Anderson – such as “The Typewriter” and “Matilda the Waltzing Cat”.  But ASCAP charged a friggin’ fortune for the right to play Anderson’s music, more than the circus budget could stand.
That first year I was delegated to run the skeleton chase. Mark Anthony had outdone himself with a set of foam rubber bones topped by a skull with the merriest leer this side of of the River Styx. Even for a 17-year old kid like me that mad dash around the entire arena with the skeleton attached to my back on a harness was exhausting. What kept me going was the wonderful 'chase' music that Bill Pryne chose -- from the overture to The Torments of Tantalus by Franz von Suppe. I knew that tune of old, because it was also featured in some of the best Daffy Duck cartoons of the early 40's. 
I was hospitalized for a bladder condition about a year ago, and it was touch and go for a while. As I lay there wondering if I was going to make it, I found myself trying to whistle some of Bill Pryne's merry music while recalling those old walk-arounds. Luckily the Fellow in the Bright Nightgown, as W.C. Fields liked to call Death, was not quite ready for me yet.
And so I get to write a little something about those deeply silly melodies that have sunk deeply into my bones.
  And I’ll be whistling one of Bill Pryne’s favorite galops, the “Tritsch-Tratsch Polka” by Johann Strauss whenever the Fellow in the Bright Nightgown comes calling again . . . 
(Sadly enough, I could not find a photograph of Mr. Pryne anywhere on Google to head up this reminiscence.)

A Great Noise is Coming!


2 Nephi 27:2 -- And when that day shall come they shall be visited of the Lord of Hosts, with thunder and with earthquake, and with a great noise, and with storm, and with tempest, and with the flame of devouring fire.

A great noise is coming to transform the earth,
to shake up the nations and give them rebirth.
Midst earthquake and thunder a tempest arises
that gives to the wicked unpleasant surprises.
Those who have boarded the Old Ship of Zion
will never be scattered like frail dandelion.
Those who refuse a safe passage to take
in bedlam will come to regret their mistake! 

Poetic Notes on the Provo Municipal Council Meeting: March 1, 2016.

The members of the council started late today, by gum;
and they were looking tired and perhaps a little glum.
The weight these city fathers (and a mother) carry round
are certainly enough to bring their knees down to the ground.

I'll skip the non essentials and go straight to radon's peril;
it can cause lung cancer, though you think your home is sterile.
The Mayor asked the council to remember that tidbit --
and then each member got a freebie radon testing kit.


Excuse my yada-yada, but poetic license should
let me glide right over to the Franklin Neighborhood.
This ate up quite a bit of time -- perhaps it's for the best;
cuz for the people who hung on twas an endurance test!

It's no exaggeration to say council members numbered
more than people looking on (some of whom just slumbered).
Mixed zoning and the LDR contributed, I fear,
to great botheration and a drowsy atmosphere.


And when 8:30 rolled around and still debate continued
time itself seemed frozen still as if to concrete twas glued.
But finally the councilors upended that dread trap,
and the meeting ended without further dull mishap.

Far be it from this humble pen to ever advocate
changes that would bring in lots more people through the gate.
But maybe if you offered popcorn free or held a drawing,
you'd have SRO with people for each seat a-clawing!

Tuesday, March 1, 2016

Neither hurt nor destroy


2 Nephi 21:9 -- "They shall not hurt nor destroy in all my holy mountain, for the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord, as the waters cover the sea."

Neither hurt nor destroy, neither chide nor complain;
yea, this is the promise the scriptures contain.
When the first shall be last and the last shall be first,
and for righteousness none will needlessly thirst.
 Am I bringing that day closer to its fruition,
or do I persist in the works of perdition?
Cover me, Lord, with the waters of insight,
that I may win when with fear I do sin fight!

Monday, February 29, 2016

Mammon walks besides the Saints


2 Nephi 24:32 -- "What shall then answer the messengers of the nations? That the Lord hath founded Zion, and the poor of his people shall trust in it."

Poverty's a gamble, and our wealth is but a dreaming;
vaults are full of nothing with the power of redeeming.
Mammon walks beside the Saints in Zion as reminders
that too much treasure acts upon a man as shabby blinders.

Our debt to God and Christ keeps us beholden evermore;
Bill Gates with all his gold could never even up the score.
I'll give away my sins, O Lord; but give away my wealth?
The law has taken it amain, with very little stealth . . . 

Sunday, February 28, 2016

Why I went to Clown College . . . Sort of.


The summer before I left home to attend the Ringling Clown College in Florida I rebelled against going to Mass on Sunday. I told my mother it was all a meaningless rigmarole in Latin. She gave me a glare that would've bored a hole through duranium, but didn't insist on my attendance. She must have realized that at 17 I was ready to make up my own mind about such things.

So every Sunday that summer I took a stack of books, a pitcher of lemonade, and some sandwiches out into the backyard, where I could lay in a hammock made of green canvas with dull brown tassels down each side and read to my heart's content.

Despite hormones, acne, angst, and bone-deep intellectual laziness, reading books was my biggest ambition as a teenager. I have since been told that that ain't right -- being a bookworm is a very unhealthy career choice for a strapping young man.

Faen du si, as they say in Norwegian.

A day spent in reading was a day spent in bliss. Now that I'm retired and in my own little apartment that is only four blocks away from the Provo Public Library that same happy obsession seems to be overtaking me once again.

I started my Sunday summer reading spree with Dickens' Pickwick Papers. I relished each page of sprawling nonsense and came to love the beautiful fools Dickens led about on an affectionate leash.

I positioned the hammock under our weeping willow for shade, where I constantly battled the wasps that liked to crawl mindlessly up and down the drooping willow branches and fall into my lemonade pitcher. Instead of being rendered speechless with joy at finding an ocean of sweet stuff to guzzle, the wasps would hum angrily while crawling out and then make a murderous attempt on my bare arms and legs. I kept an old splintered ping pong paddle handy for these attacks, sending the brutes off into left field (and kingdom come).

Next I almost got a hernia from trying to hold up and read The Complete Stories of Sherlock Holmes by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. It was about as big and heavy as the telephone directory. And that is where I got my first taste of Mormonism, from A Study in Scarlet -- wherein the brainy Holmes attempts to foil the sinister machinations of some Latter Day Saint vigilantes from Salt Lake City.

How well I remember starting a paperback copy of Cervantes' rollicking Don Quixote! Sometimes you can just feel the awesome imagination inside a book, even a shabby paperback like I had, and you can't wait to dive in. That first Sunday with the knight of the woeful countenance was all I had hoped for -- I wriggled with glee in my hammock.

But storm clouds were gathering about my literary Shangri-la. It started with a casual remark from my mother as I carried out a tray of pimento loaf sandwiches and a pitcher of lemonade to begin my second Sunday with Cervantes:

"Why don't you take an hour to mow the lawn first?"
  
I silently shook my head no; I was in a fever to find out what happened next to Quixote and his stooge Sancho Panza.

And so it began.

Mothers, I have since learned, are congenitally hostile to their offspring taking it easy in a hammock on a peaceful Sunday afternoon. They don't like it, and they intend to put a stop to it. And Catholics have no compunction about mowing lawns and painting fences and such like on Sundays. I imagine the Pope weeds his garden on Sundays over there in the Vatican.

My mother began to nag me every Sabbath:

"That lawn looks awful; it's an embarrassment to your father and I! The whole neighborhood's talking about it. Please, I'm begging you -- just leave those old books alone for an hour and give the lawn a quick going over. Is that too much to ask?"

"Can't it wait until tomorrow, mom? I'll do it then -- I promise!"

"Oh all right -- I'll put up with the humiliation one more day . . . somehow." This statement was followed by a martyred sigh that would have won her an Academy Award if we had lived in Hollywood.

One Sunday she actually came out and started doing the lawn herself, on the theory that it would shame me into taking over. It didn't. I simply waved my book at her in serene greeting.

Not a smart move on my part. She put the mower away with the lawn half-done and stomped back into the house, where I could hear her expostulating with my dad in ringing tones that shook leaves off the elm trees as far away as Como Avenue. By this time I was chuckling over the inspired inanities of P.G. Wodehouse in Carry On, Jeeves. Nothing in the world mattered to me except how Jeeves would extricate his master Bertie from the next contretemps.


Next Sunday when I went to make my sandwiches I was met with someone I dimly recognized as my so-called mother, in, as she would have put it, 'a snit', standing in front of the fridge with her arms akimbo.

"No you don't, buster!" she snarled. "First mow, then you can stuff your face."

I was stunned at her heartless determination to let her own son starve to death rather than allow him to cultivate his mind. As gracelessly as possible I slammed open the garage door, started the mower, and ran over all the lawn furniture and the little brown garden gnome statue by the rosebush in my sullen determination to get the damned work over with.

Had I been a weaker person the triumphant glare my mother gave me when I came back in to make my sandwiches would have stolen my appetite -- but the blood of a hundred blockheaded Norwegians ran thick in my veins, so I made double the amount of sandwiches and choked every last one down as I lay in the hammock, my stomach distending like a desert salt dome.

After that confrontation my Sunday reading marathons didn't have the same charm as before. The last book I read that summer of scintillating Sundays was John McCabe's Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy. 

It gave me very definite ideas -- and a few weeks later I was on my way to Venice, Florida to try my luck as a circus buffoon . . .


The Flame of Faith


2 Nephi 20:17 -- "And the light of Israel shall be for a fire, and his Holy One for a flame, and shall burn and shall devour his thorns and his briers in one day . . . " 

Some fires you don't want to douse or stop their spreading far;
the flame of faith a roaring blaze should reach each distant star.
Yet not by sword nor censure should the conflagration grow,
but by example we must kindle blazes here below.
He whose right it is to reign may physic fire send,
but you and I are not to judge, but try to be a friend.
We all have thorns and briers that delay our path to God,
and should pray that when they're burnt a better path can trod!

Saturday, February 27, 2016

The Longest Come In: Memories of Tim Holst.


As the only two Mormons on the Blue Unit in 1971, Tim Holst and I made a pact with each other that we would faithfully attend morning services each Sunday, no matter where we were or how tired we felt.
And we felt mighty tired after three shows on a Saturday; we never seemed to get to bed before one or two in the morning.  And Sunday was usually move out night, when we had to pack everything up so it could be put on the train for the next town.  Holst also helped roll up the two miles of green rubber matting for an extra $25.00 per week. He built up some good muscles that way, which is why we nicknamed him 'Bear'. 
 LDS Services generally started at seven in the morning on Sunday.  So the routine was either I would be banging at Bear’s door at 6am or he would be banging on my door at 6am, so we could get shaved, find some breakfast, and either call the local Mormon chapel to see if we could get a ride, or call a taxi to take us to services.
I remember in Baltimore, Maryland, we couldn’t raise anyone at the local chapel and we were too broke to afford a taxi.  I was all for giving up and going back to bed, but Bear insisted we board a local bus and see if it took us near the chapel.  The surly bus driver was of no help, so we sat, the only two on the bus, scanning each side of the street for the familiar LDS chapel outline.  Miraculously, we DID pass right by the chapel, and got off the bus just in time to attend Sacrament Meeting.  Afterwards I asked Bear if he had had a ‘revelation’ about taking the bus.  He thought a moment and then replied that no, not a revelation, but rather just a feeling that the chapel would be on a major bus line and if we just took the bus we stood a fair chance of finding it.  He was always that way – pragmatic and unemotional; he thought that if he could figure out a sensible plan, it stood a fair chance of working.  That’s why he never felt completely comfortable in clown alley.  The majority of clowns, like me, didn’t believe in a structured, sane universe; we felt in our bones that total chaos was only a stone’s throw away, and acted accordingly.  I guess that’s why Bear went up the corporate ladder so easily at Ringling.  He had a serene sense of the basic rightness of things, while I stayed a clown, which is the only thing I ever wanted, because I believed that there was very little to plan for beyond the next pie in the face.
Once we got to church it was no problem getting a ride back to the show in time to get made up for come in.  There was always an LDS family delighted to drive us right up to the back door of the arena, where Charlie Baumann would inevitably be waiting for us.  How he hungered to see us late, so he could fine us!  He did not approve of clowns going to church, and I suspect he had already guessed that Bear had his sights on Charlie’s job as Performance Director.  We got the better of him each week, and he would glance at his watch, then glare at us balefully while intoning:  “Okay, funnymen, be funny.”
The only time we came close to being late was up in Montreal, Canada.  We were there late in the fall.  Too late, as it turned out.  That icy Sunday morning Bear and I managed to get a ride to church from a local member who only spoke French.  Services were in French.  I started to get worried while the service was going on, because huge snowflakes were coming down thick and fast outside the chapel window.  By the time our new French-Canadian friend was ready to take us to the arena there was a full-blown blizzard going on.  Being a true Quebecois, this did not bother our driver.  He got us back to the building in time for the matinee.
But no one else was at the arena!  The show bus, and all private transportation at the circus train, was snowed in.  But the Quebecois audience showed up on time for the matinee, which meant that Bear and I had to slap on our makeup and do an hour-long come in, playing for time until some of the other clowns and cast could dig out and get to the arena.  We must have done Bigger and Bigger, and the Broom Jump, about twenty times.  Plus I got to try out my musical saw for the first time.
The show finally got started about an hour late.
By hook or by crook Tim Holst and I managed to make it to church every Sunday that season.  It’s a record I still look back on with pride, and amazement.  
The very last day of that season, as the clowns were shaking hands with each other after the last show, Swede Johnson sidled up to me with a wad of bills in his hand.  With a lopsided grin the old reprobate explained to me that at the beginning of that season the word had gone out that two First of Mays (Holst and I) had decided to go to church every Sunday, without fail.  No one believed we’d do it, except Swede.  So he started a betting pool, with odds three to one against us, and began taking in money.  We had been watched with keen interest every Sunday that season, to see if we would slack off.
Since we never did, Swede had collected a handsome bundle of mazuma.  In gratitude, Swede had already offered Tim Holst a slice of the winnings, but Bear had imperiously told him to take his filthy lucre and begone; he had not struggled all season just to satisfy some lurid betting instinct.  So Swede next came to me, offering me a sheaf of greenbacks as a way to say thanks for the killing he had made off of our piety.  
I glared at Swede; did he think I would stoop to taking his tainted cash, which looked to be about a hundred bucks?
You bet I would!

The Wizards That Peep and Mutter


2 Nephi 18:19 -- "And when they shall say unto you: Seek unto them that have familiar spirits, and unto wizards that peep and mutter—should not a people seek unto their God for the living to hear from the dead?"

The wizards that peep and mutter, the sages of wealth and prestige;
the counselors deep in delusion, the scribe that rejects his own liege.
These are the advocates paltry that all the world runs off to hear;
 back of them spirits indiff'rent, full of cheap thought and small beer.

Come to the mainspring of reason, enter the halls of the just;
quench all your doubts with the treasure that never reverts back to dust.
Flee not from Majesty awful, dare to look to the living Yahweh;
His counsel cannot be confounded, He'll befriend even those that do stray.

His waters are spacious and placid; they'll take you where you want to go.
So jettison wizards and mages; allow God your barky to tow!