When Chubby suggested the Twist, I did it
ROBERT GARDNER
The other day, I was playing bridge with my friends Cliff and Jill
Roberts.
One of the interesting things about old age is the inconsistency.
Some days, you wake up and can kid yourself that you’re a mere 50.
Other days, you assume you died during your sleep and were sent right
where your Aunt Charlotte predicted you’d go all those years ago. So
sometimes, I play a decent game of bridge, and other times, I play
like the 91-year-old man I am.
I had one of those latter days with the Roberts and finally quit
in disgust. Rather than holding my pique against me, they were most
considerate and even brought me a present to console me -- a portable
CD player so I can listen to music in any room in the house.
Blackie Gadarian, an old Newport Beach resident now living on
Maui, shares a passion for Dixieland with me, and he made me a CD
with all sorts of great music. I have no idea how one makes a CD.
Just putting one in the machine is a challenge for me.
But I put Blackie’s CD in, and it took me back to all those years
I spent working, and later hanging out, at the Rendezvous Ballroom.
There were a lot of great bands that came through there. Some of them
were big names -- Benny Goodman, Glen Miller, the Dorseys -- but
these were one-night stands. Mostly, it was the house bands we danced
to -- groups led by people such as Callie Holden, Everett Hoagland,
Gil Evans and Claude Thornhill.
I use the term dance rather loosely. I was a drummer in high
school, so I have a good sense of rhythm, but somehow that sense of
rhythm never extended to my feet. I could do a passable fox trot,
which is basically walking in time to the music, but anything much
more than that and it was time for me to get a drink.
The big dance at the Rendezvous was the Balboa, a fast dance. Most
people have probably never heard of it. For sure, they’ve never seen
it.
The Balboa was danced in the ballroom position. You held your
partner around the waist, and from the waist up, nothing moved. Below
the waist, the feet flew. You put out one foot and pulled it back,
put out the other foot and pulled it back, and then you did something
in the middle. It was that stuff in the middle that flummoxed me. I
became an ardent spectator when the tempo heated up.
Katie, my wife, was one of the best dancers I ever knew. There was
always a line of men wanting to dance with her, fortunately, because
if she’d had to dance with me all the time, she’d probably never have
married me. It was a frustration to me, too, because I really like
dancing. Fred Astaire is my definition of grace, and I can’t tell you
how many times I have watched “Chorus Line.” Forget the singing, just
let them dance.
After many years of frustration, however, I came into my own in
the 1960s with a dance called the Twist. With the Twist, your feet
pretty much stayed in one place, which solved my problem.
When we went out, I couldn’t wait for the Twist to be played. It
was just the opposite of all those years at the Rendezvous. When I
got on the dance floor, I was the center of attention.
It was gratifying to feel all those admiring glances. At least it
was until I overheard someone say I looked like Ichabod Crane fleeing
the Headless Horseman when I danced. Sour grapes, I’m sure.
Unfortunately for my dance career, the Twist fad was short lived,
and soon, I was back to where I had started, watching others dance.
Now, at least, it’s not a problem. At 91, no one expects you to
dance.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge.
His column runs Tuesdays.
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