Friday. I looked down at the pile of clothes on my
bed. What to wear? I held up a pair of dark green corduroy Levis
I hadn’t worn yet. They were the best
ones I owned. I lifted out a silk and
lace bedjacket I scored at my favorite thrift store in Long Beach and hunted
around for a pair of clean sox. Grateful
for my mother’s generosity, I zipped up the knee high Italian leather boots she
bought me for my birthday and threw on my suede jacket, a graduation gift. At the last minute I hung a couple of strands
of beads from Oaxaca around my neck. My gold hoops peeked out from my hair,
which I brushed out and left loose. I nodded
my head, smiling at the reflection of a girl with a purpose.
It took two bus transfers to
get downtown to the Avalon Ballroom. I
followed Jeffrey, listening carefully as he explained where we were going. “The Avalon is in Polk Gulch on Sutter Street. It was a dance hall in during World War II
but it’s been empty for a few years.
That’s why Chet got it so cheap.”
Down a side street, wide
stairs led up to tall, carved double doors.
At a small window, Jeffrey stopped and leaned in to talk to someone. He came over to me and pushed the doors
open. Plush red carpeting spread across
the lobby, stopping at the tall arched openings to the dance floor. Peering through one, I saw an elevated proscenium
style stage against the far wall, flanked by deep red velvet curtains. It was very elegant.
“I met Chet Helms when he
came out from Texas with his brothers.
They had a commune down at 1090 Page Street and some of us used to hang
out and listen to the bands in the basement.
After the Trips Festivals, he decided to rent this hall and hold dances.”
As we walked across the dance
floor Jeffrey turned to me and said, “I have to go backstage and talk to
Chet. If you can’t find me later, do you
think you can find your way back to the Haight?
“Oh, yeah, sure, it’s
cool. Don’t worry about me.”
“Cool. If you get confused, just ask someone and they’ll
tell you which bus to take.”
Jeffrey walked to the edge of
the stage and up a short stairway. As he
disappeared behind the curtains I mumbled, “Bummer,” and then looked around to
make sure no one heard me. I could get
back to Oak Street. I’d just follow
everyone else, but that wasn’t the point.
There was a flurry of
activity on the stage as the first band, Quicksilver Messenger Service, took up
their instruments. Suddenly music
blasted out from the speakers and people crowded onto the dance floor. The lead guitar player, tall and impossibly
thin with hair to his waist, stepped up to the microphone. John Cipollina’s voice filled the auditorium
and I moved to the music along with everyone else. Soon it was a sea of flailing arms and
whirling colors. Before we left the
Haight, Super had put a little tab of acid on my tongue whispering, “New batch,
Babe.” Stanley Owsley, the mad chemist, made
the purest most powerful acid on the street.
His name was synonymous with quality.
Now I felt waves of energy moving up and down and all around me as the
bodies on the dance floor melted into one.
The band played Mona and the
floor pulsed, breathing with the unified movement of hundreds of stomping
feet. Mona went on forever in wave after
wave of guitar breaks, the band in a contact high that culminated in a wild
drum solo and finally resolved into the first, simple opening bars. I could dance all night.
As Quicksilver left the stage
at the end of their set, several people in black gathered in the center and
began silent, measured, simultaneous movement, slowly turning clockwise on
themselves, swaying from side to side. I
was mesmerized. From behind me, over my
shoulder, someone whispered in my ear, “It’s called Tai Chi. It’s an ancient form of meditation and the
movements all have names. That’s Grasp
the Sparrow’s Tail, and now they are doing White Crane Spreads It’s Wings.” All of the dancers lifted their arms in unison
and I saw them turn into wings and flow into the next movement. Daisy’s kiss brushed my cheek in a whisper
sigh as she slipped into the sea of people behind me.
The Grateful Dead took the
stage. They tuned for a long time before
I realized they were actually playing something. As the crowd recognized the tune, they moved
as one. My hair spun around my face, blocking
out my vision and as I waved my hands above my head, cosmic light trails sped
off my fingertips. Yup, I was stoned
again.
I danced through another
round of music and then left the floor for the lobby. As I climbed the stairs to the balcony that
ran across the back of the auditorium, the sound from the floor below faded. At the concession stand I recognized the
people who owned the deli on Haight Street.
I wasn’t really hungry, but I bought some halvah, which set off
fireworks of images as the grainy combination of flavors rolled around my mouth. As I stared at the sticky confection in my
hand, I collided with a troll-like man in coveralls coming out of the door across
the hall.
“Do you want to work on the
light show?”
“Me?”
The
swarthy little man opened the door to a dark room. Inside the cave, overhead light projectors lined
a long table. Shallow bowls beneath each
projector held water on which a film of oil undulated. Next to the bowls an array of squeeze bottles
filled with pigments waited. The troll picked
up a dish and squirted some food coloring into it, and moved it around in the
shallow water.
“Just
move it around like this.”
I
handed him the halvah, wiping my hand on my pants.
“Look!” He pointed out the window of the light
booth.
“Freaky!” I lifted the dish and carefully put it back
down, reaching for more color.
A
giant movie screen hung behind the musicians on the stage. The colored blobs from the trays in front of
me grew and shrunk in time to the music as our movements were projected on the
screen. A clicking whir came from my
left as a projector reeled off an old black and white movie. When the song was over, I paused for a
moment, transfixed by the multitude of colors and lights, the heaving bodies on
the floor below. I slipped outside into
the corridor, breathless from the acid, the music and the light show.
My
body was saturated with acid. I leaned
against the wall, reduced to a non-verbal, throbbing organism, aware of my
breathing, aware of everything. I felt a
surge of panic. To my right the light
from a small room beckoned me. Peering
around the corner, I saw two comfy looking overstuffed chairs. In front of me stood a miniature stage. The purplish glow of black light seeped out
as the curtains opened to reveal an Egyptian dancer moving across the
stage. I sunk into a chair. As the dancer exited, Scheherazade sat down to
tell her tales to a magnificent prince with a turban topped by a perfectly
proportioned peacock feather. Aladdin
sat at the opposite side of the stage, rubbing a tiny golden lamp, and in a
flash of light, a genie appeared.
As
a voice spun a story from the Arabian Nights, the marionettes pranced across
the stage, turning their faces to address me when they spoke.
When
the show was done the puppeteer came out from behind his stage and sat down
next to me. His curly black hair and
sparkling eyes were as mysterious and exotic as his puppet show.
“I’m
Dimitri. Is this your first time here?”
As
he spoke, his hands moved with dazzling speed through a series of yo-yo tricks. I stared at the ball in his hands. When I looked up, he said, “I was the yo-yo
champion of Chicago for two years in a row.”
He
was familiar, funny and attractive. Mischief
wriggled all over his short muscular body.
He laid a hand on my arm.
“If you wait for me to finish, I’ll drive you
home?”
I settled back into the cozy loge seat and watched his
last show. People wandered in and out,
but few stayed for very long. When he
finally packed away his puppets, I followed him to his car.
Shelley you were at the epicentre of hippie evolution !
ReplyDeleteI love your memoirs of the cultural excitement of the 1960s
More please
Jeffrey just LEFT you and said find your own way home?!
ReplyDeleteIt's FICTION! Remember, I changed it from memoir to novel, with a main character who is me/not me and Jeff/not Jeff. I went forever without including him in the memoirs at all. When he passed, I figured it would be okay to use the name...he would never have done something like that...although there were other things...but its fiction, darlin'.
DeleteI didn't realize it was fiction, I thought it was mostly memoirs. I couldn't believe Jeff would ever do that! I'm sure it would have been okay to use his name even if he were still with us here. He would have been honored, I'm sure. Great story! <3
DeleteShelley, this is wonderful. I get that this is fiction but there's plenty of non-fiction. For instance, confusing the Grateful Dead tuning up with an actual Dead song is non-fiction. It made me chuckle. I'm salivating here at work, waiting for my next study participant to come in. Keep 'em coming. One.Dir.Full.
ReplyDeleteThanks Steven. I'm going to post some of the outtakes instead of stuff from the finished ms...gotta wait and see what happens.
DeleteWonderful flashbacks to those wild hippie days! I'm eager to read more.
ReplyDelete