***Out In The Be-Bop Be-Bop
1960s Night- Gary Ladd Danced The North Adamsville High School Dance Night Away-With
Chubby Checker In Mind
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
Scene: Brought to mind by one of the
pieces of teen life-driven artwork that graced a commercial classic roll and compilation
that I have recently reviewed where young boys and girls are setting up to dance (or not dance the high school night away) in some forsaken school gym festooned with the mandatory crepe and other decoration to signify the theme of the night:
Saturday night, any third Saturday
of the month from September to May, when every red-blooded teen boy and girl in
the 1961 North Adamsville High School be-bop, be-bop night could only be in one
locale, or want to be. That was the night of the monthly seasonally-themed high
school hop where anyone, even non-existent freshmen and lowly sophomores, could
ante up the dollar admission and dance the night away. Well, almost dance the
night away. And that is the dilemma confronting one freshman, Gary Ladd (he was
the “wallflower” way off to the side of the gym almost into the wall if you
didn’t think you saw him on one of the nights in question).
Gary, well, we might as well have
our moment of truth right up front, can’t dance. Can’t dance a damn, to hell,
heaven or any place in between. Two- left feet. Two left-feet despite the best
efforts of one Agnes Ladd, a senior in
the North Adamsville Class of 1961 and Vice President of the class, whose own
feet have taken a terrible beating trying to teach little brother Gary the
elements of the waltz, the fox trot, and hell, even the twist to no avail. But
Gary, no twerp under his two left-footed exterior, has always, as he put it,
exercised his democratic right to be at these universal dances, come hell or
high water.
But this night, this warm April
Springfest Dance night, things might just be a little different as Gary takes
his place against the far wall (the wall farthest away from the girl
“wallflowers” just in case you wanted an exact location. Mostly the wallflowers,
boy or girl, are keeping their respective distances on the odd chance that
someone may actually come up and ask them to dance). First off this month the
local craze rock band sensations, The Rockin’ Ramrods, are here live on the
makeshift bandstand. And just this minute they are tuning up with the
appropriately named Please Stay by the Drifters. Secondly, a new girl in
town, Elsie Mae Horton, is here. Naturally the mere fact that she is here is
added reason why Gary is here (and why he tortured his sister Agnes to try, try
in vain, to teach him some dance steps). See Gary has the “bug” for Elsie Mae,
yeah, he is smitten.
Now this Elsie Mae is maybe, on a
scale of one to ten, about a six so it is not looks that have Gary (and about
six other guys), well, smitten. But what Elsie Mae has is nothing but smarts,
book smarts, idea smarts, talk smarts you name it smarts and one of the
sweetest smiles this side of heaven. And, as Gary found out early on in one of
their shared classes, very easy to talk to about anything. Yes, he is smitten;
the only unknown is whether she can dance good enough to stay out of his way.
That is if he gets up the nerve to ask her.
As the Ramrods start their first set
with Gary Bonds’ School Is Out (praise be) he notices her coming in the
door. Heart pounding he starts sinking into the wall again. As they finish with
Brother Bonds the Ramrods start in on The Impressions’ Gypsy Woman
before Gary realizes that Elsie Mae has drawn a bee-line straight for him and
is standing right in front of him, turning a little red. “Oh, my god,” Gary
whispers under his breathe, “she is going to ask me to dance. No way.” The
usually easy to talk to Elsie Mae though says nothing, nothing but turns a
little redder as the Ramrods cover the Pips Every Beat Of My Heart
(nicely done too). She is waiting for Gary to ask her, if you can believe that.
Well, two-left feet or not, he does ask her. And she smiles a little smile as
she “accepts.” Relief.
Needless to say when they did their
dance, The Edsels’ Rama Lama Ding Dong, it was nothing but a disaster. A
Gary disaster? Yes. But here is the funny part. Elsie Mae Horton, formerly of
Gloversville and new to North Adamsville so of unknown dance quality, had
two-left feet too. Get this though. When the dance was mercifully finished, and
the two had actually survived, Elsie Mae thanked Gary and told him that he was
a wonderful dancer and she wished that she could dance like him. Whee! Here is
the real kicker though. Elsie Mae had also been taking dancing lessons,
unsuccessfully. Dancing lessons so that two-left feet Elsie Mae Horton could
dance with Gary Ladd. See, she was “smitten” too. And so if you did not see
Gary or Elsie Mae at the Mayfair Dance you have now solved that mystery. They
were sitting, sitting very close to each other, on the seawall down at
Adamsville Beach laughing about starting a “Two-Left Feet” Club. With just two
members.
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