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East is East
by
Harry Buschman
The Loewe’s Paradise Theater stood on the corner of Atlantic
and Nostrand Avenue. Every Saturday afternoon it showed silent movies, and
on Saturday night there was vaudeville. If you were light on your feet you could
pay to see the last movie of the afternoon and then see the first vaudeville
show of the evening. To do this you had to hide in the john after the last
movie until the crowd was seated. then make a dash for a seat when the usher
wasn’t looking.
On Saturdays the movies were silent Westerns or slapstick
comedies, accompanied by an old man at the piano. After each round of
feature films, followed by two short subjects, the piano player would have a beer or two
in the lobby, then he’d go to the bathroom. He’d linger there as long as he
could and then return in time for the new show. The projectionist would wait
until he was seated at the piano before pulling the curtain back and
turning on the projector. A music score of sorts came with the reels of film but the old
man couldn’t read music so he improvised his way through the movie. Every
pie in the face,
every gunshot and every posse galloping through the vast
wastelands of the west was all the inspiration he needed.
Silent movies were our ticket to a better world in the
twenties. One that fulfilled the dreams of people looking for romance and
adventure. There was no radio, TV, Stereo, DVD, Internet -- the tenements were dark
and cold and only a kerosene stove and the closeness of the family kept them warm.
The older folks got their kicks from Mary Pickford and Rudolph Valentino while
the kids reveled in the comedies of Charlie Chaplin and Fatty Arbuckle.
But on the serious side of every boy’s mind he held a vision
of the old west. He nurtured a secret ambition to be a range rider -- a cowboy
of unshakable honesty -- a knight of the purple sage, who preferred a horse
and six-guns to the chains of a wife and children. A quiet man, a man slow to
anger but relentless once provoked. Boys looked at their fathers
critically and vainly tried to find in them some of the grandeur of William S. Hart or Dustin
Farnum. They reluctantly reached the conclusion that the old man was not up
to it, he could not outdraw, outfight or outride anything; he was barely able
to make a living in the depression years of the thirties.
Cowboys were the only Americans. Drifters, fancy free. They
roamed the West, reading the trail as well as any Indian, but forever circling
aimlessly in the trackless waste. Each victory was short lived and only
promised an issue of greater danger just around the bend in the trail. Their
possessions were limited to a horse, a magnificent jewel encrusted saddle and
two enormous nickel plated six-guns that never seemed to need reloading, and
almost never needed aiming.
The Paradise Theater was “Dusty” Ryder territory. All his
films were shown there on Saturday afternoons and by the time the vaudeville
acts began in the evening the floor was ankle deep in peanut shells and candy
wrappers. The excitement stimulated a boy’s appetite and the more violent
the action, the more he ate. The pictures were grainy, traced with dark vertical
scratches and jerked wildly from frequent splices. Nevertheless, we watched them
spellbound and quietly fed ourselves peanut after peanut, as clean shaven
“Dusty” in his tall white hat had it out in the saloon with the bearded gamblers
and rustlers.
You can imagine the rapture that ran rampant through Crown
Heights, Bedford Stuyvesant and Park Slope when the kids got the news that
“Dusty” Ryder would appear in person at the Paradise Theater. It was a bombshell
that reverberated through every tenement in Brooklyn. The price of admission was
raised to 15 cents to cover Dusty’s expenses and to defray the cost of the
lavish presents every boy would receive. This meant each of us had to work
overtime collecting newspapers and bottles and running errands for old ladies.
Ernie and I decided to get to the Paradise early. There would
be two shows, the first at 1 p.m. and the second at three. “Dusty” would
appear between the shows so that the one o’clock kids could stay and meet him as
they left, and the three o’clock kids could meet him as they came in. Being
early was essential. We got there at nine o’clock in the morning and
there was already a line of kids ahead of us. I thanked my lucky stars I didn’t take my
mother’s advice and get there at noon. She had no idea what “Dusty” meant to
me, but you can bet your bottom dollar if Rudolph Valentino was going to be
there she would have camped out in the lobby for a week. I learned later there
were some kids on line with us who came for the three o’clock show.
The only problem was the weather. It was one of those gray
October days that promised an afternoon of rain and maybe a touch of snow by
nightfall. A good day for a movie, but not a good day for riding the range. It
occurred to my friend Ernie and me that we had never seen “Dusty” Ryder in
the rain.
The movie itself was not one of his best. The cast was too big
and there were scenes that didn’t involve “Dusty” at all. He was involved
with a girl whose father had an incurable heart condition and was about to lose
the family ranch to a man with a beard and bad teeth -- that’s as much as
we got out of it. From experience we learned that the mere presence of a woman
in a Western was bad news -- you could be sure the hero would get soft and
mushy. Our attention wandered and we slumped in our seats, ate peanuts ravenously
and waited for the final shoot out. It was a lengthy one punctuated by bass
notes on the piano, and when it was over, the villain and his gang were stretched
out in the dusty street. Then the screen went dark and the house lights
came on!
Suddenly there HE was, blinking in the footlights! “Dusty”
Ryder himself -- “The Smiling Whirlwind!” He jingled as he strode across the
stage -- his spurs raising tufts of dust as they scraped the ancient carpeting
that, on vaudeville nights, had only borne the weight of the Pitkin
Girls and the accordionist, Carlo Marone. He wore a tall, dove gray ten-gallon hat, and to
see us better he pushed it slightly back on his head with the index finger
of his right hand.
When the hub-bub died down, he smiled and said, “Howdy, kids,”
in a disappointingly high-pitched voice, quite out of character
with his manly reputation. It was, of course, the first time we’d ever heard him speak.
Then he walked over to a chair and a bridge table someone had set up center
stage -- he took his hat off and looked for a place to put it. The table was
covered with small boxes and stacks of paper, so he put his hat back on his head
and sat down with one leg folded over the other -- the way girls sit. The
buttons on his spangled shirt were under great strain and two rolls of fat
could be seen bulging over the sides of his belt.
The manager, Mr. Benjamin had been checking his pocket watch
all the while and he was anxious to begin ....
“Line up to the right .... take it easy we gotta whole hour
before “Dusty” has to move on,” It had no effect, we pushed, punched and
shoved our way to the front. We somehow felt “Dusty” would get up and walk out even
if there were kids waiting on line when the hour was up. When a cowpoke has
gotta move on, he gets up and moves on.
“Each of ya’s gonna getta autographed pitcher and a little
momentum from “Dusty” fer just you kids here at the Paradise.” He held both
hands up high as though praising the Lord .... “But nobody’s gonna get nothin’
if y’don’t quiet down!”
Mr. Benjamin went on to explain that we were to climb the
stairs at the right of the stage and walk up and shake hands with “Dusty” ....
“But don’t crowd him. One at a time, one at a time. Then pick up y’pitcher and
your momentum.”
Small boyish voices piped up from the children waiting at the
bottom of the stairs, “Can we talk t’him? Can we ask him questions?”
Mr. Benjamin looked over to “Dusty” for a sign -- “Dusty”
shrugged his shoulders and scratched his armpit. Taking that to be a sign
of acceptance, he answered, “One question per kid -- that’s all. We ain’t got
all day.”
There’s a lot of questions I can think of today that I might
have asked “Dusty” back then, his life in the rodeo, his experiences in
World War I, his marital problems out in Hollywood .... but I was young and I
could only think of one thing to ask him when my turn came.
“Mr. “Dusty,” -- I began, “why don’t it ever rain out west?”
His eyes narrowed in concentration as he replied, “We don’t shoot
pitchers in the rain.” Well, maybe it was a question of semantics -- we were talking
at cross purposes and our points of view were miles apart.
My friend Ernie, being of the Jewish persuasion was of a more
practical state of mind, he asked “Dusty” if he cooked his own meals while he
was on the trail. “No,” he answered, “production sends out a chuck
wagon.”
One thing was for certain, Ernie and I were fast losing our
faith in “Dusty” Ryder and the authenticity of Hollywood Westerns in general.
Other kids we spoke to felt the same -- some of them asked “Dusty” how he
could plug a rustler between the eyes without aiming, why the six guns made
so much smoke and how come he never ran out of ammunition, and where did he go to
the bathroom. I think we all came away wiser in the western ways of Hollywood.
The “Momentums?” One of them was a photograph of “Dusty” in a
tall white hat with his signature on the bottom in a girlish hand, full
of curlicues and a finishing squiggle, the other was a key ring with a tin
medallion of “Dusty” sitting on his horse twirling a lariat. None of us had any use
for the key ring and the picture quickly faded on my bedroom wall
©Harry Buschman 1998
(1800)
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