Greg came back from
the lake to attend the Southern Stardust Big Band Valentine’s Dance last
night.
Dinner and Dance.
Tim Oldham plays in the band – the same band that played at Tim’s wedding.
Last night the food was good, but the band was the showcase for the evening. They played 3 sets, 13 songs each. Old tunes like “I’ve Got You Under My Skin”, “Ain’t That Kick in the Head”, “Call Me Irresponsible”, “The Way You Look Tonight”, and “This Guy’s in Love with You”. When they played “Jalousie” I couldn’t help leaning over and asking Lurene if she knew the alternate words for that tune. They are like the alternate words for Jingle Bells ... Batman smells, Robin laid an egg. No. Lurene didn’t know them, so I gave them to her. “Leprosy, oh I’ve got leprosy. There goes my eyeball, into your high ball.” I have no idea what decade I was in when I learned those words. I don’t know why that little ditty is on my list of memories that I keep, instead of the ones that fade for me.
Dinner and Dance.
Tim Oldham plays in the band – the same band that played at Tim’s wedding.
Last night the food was good, but the band was the showcase for the evening. They played 3 sets, 13 songs each. Old tunes like “I’ve Got You Under My Skin”, “Ain’t That Kick in the Head”, “Call Me Irresponsible”, “The Way You Look Tonight”, and “This Guy’s in Love with You”. When they played “Jalousie” I couldn’t help leaning over and asking Lurene if she knew the alternate words for that tune. They are like the alternate words for Jingle Bells ... Batman smells, Robin laid an egg. No. Lurene didn’t know them, so I gave them to her. “Leprosy, oh I’ve got leprosy. There goes my eyeball, into your high ball.” I have no idea what decade I was in when I learned those words. I don’t know why that little ditty is on my list of memories that I keep, instead of the ones that fade for me.
Tim’s Aunt Janet
had flown in from Toronto and was at the dance.
She has done community musical theatre all of her life, so she and
Lurene had lots to say to each other.
Lurene is the musical director for Legally
Blonde which is being produced this spring.
The female roles of the show are highly competed for. But Lurene is still out looking for male
voices to play some of the secondary roles.
Lurene made me laugh. She asked
me if I knew anyone who was interested? “Richard?”,
she asked. And then she would sing some
clips of the singing parts she still needs to fill. I have seen the show enough to remember the
tune from just a few words. She didn’t
have to sing all of the songs. I can see
Lurene has the whole score running in her head.
The wives of band
members only have the choice of listening to the music of the big band. But it seems everyone else there had come to
dance to big band music. The floor was
always full, and mostly of old couples though some might qualify as late
middle-aged. And could they dance! Wyona and Greg were once such couple. If they sat down for a rest, it was only for
the first 8 bars of a song and then they were back on the floor again. There was one young couple there who could
keep up with the rest of the oldies – two lindy hoppers and could they every
go! I whispered to Wyona, “Those
lindy-hoppers think every tune is a lindy hop. And they are so cute – even
dressed in costume with a short skirt on her that will twirl to more than a
full circle when she would twist. He was
a tall man, but when he begans to dance he was down low and those feet were
doing all the right steps.” I finally
stood up to watch and got a little closer during the third set when some of the
really older folks had gone home. The
floor had cleared out a bit. That couple
had more room to show their stuff. If I
were 50 years younger I would be out taking lessons every Friday night and then
dancing the rest of the night away – lindy hopping.
It wasn’t long
until I could see that the older couples, for the most part, had been serious
dancers for all of their lives. Their
moves were smooth and some of the couples, when they tired of holding their
arms up, could just dance along together, feet in time, no need to get any hand
signals from one another. Long time valentines. I imagined that the talk
between them was so much fun, for I could see one laugh and then the other – as
though they didn’t even see the 40 other couples of the floor who were doing
the same thing, talking and laughing together.
The dance was 3 ½ hours long. I
didn’t get bored watching.
When the last note
had been played and people were packing up to go home, I noticed the lindy-hop
couple had changed back into their regular clothes – t-shirts and a pair of
jeans. Older women were taking off their
dancing shoes – the sensible high heel with a strap across the instep, made for
ballroom dancing -- shoes that have the
perfect sole for gliding across the floor.
The only woman who didn’t need to change much was the one who had worn a
perfect black fascinator in her hair all evening – she still looked queenly, regal
as they walked out of the door.
The evening sky was
not quite black even though it was near midnight. The view from the Austrian Canadian Club was
perfect – across the valley, over the lights of the city, on to the foothills
and then the mountains lit up by all of the city light. Greg said, “Only in Calgary can you be in the
industrial section of the city and have the most amazing view of the mountains,
ever.”
A perfect end to a
perfect evening.
Arta
Arta
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