Note:
I wrote this several years ago and have been rehashing it every holiday season. I've decided to post it again, because the humor will counteract my recent (many) gloomy posts.
BTW- - everything in this post is true.
Jon
I never look back on those events with undiluted fondness. Through the long distance of years I still regard them with a twinge of humiliating disdain. I'm talking about the obligatory school Christmas pageants. Where innocent children are compelled to make fools of themselves on stage in front of parents, classmates, and faculty.
The only positive aspect I can ascertain is that those childhood days were simple, uncomplicated days - - when no one was offended by saying "Merry Christmas", and front yard nativities were proudly displayed without any concern about being confiscated by the Neighborhood Manger Police.
It seemed to be a Norman Rockwell America.
Scene One:
Glendora, California. The Gordon Elementary School. Second Grade. I was six years old.
My teacher Mrs. Eisendise (whom I called Ice and Dice) came up with the grandiose idea of staging several scenes from Tchaikovsky's Nutcracker ballet. I wasn't in the least smitten by her plan, but I did fall in love with the music. In fact, I forced my mother to buy a recording of it. A double LP album in those primitive days.
For reasons unbeknownst to me, I was chosen to be one of the waltzing flowers in (of course) the Waltz of the Flowers. My humiliation was lessened only by the fact that numerous other boys were also sentenced to being flowers in Eisendise's delusional bouquet.
Jon
I never look back on those events with undiluted fondness. Through the long distance of years I still regard them with a twinge of humiliating disdain. I'm talking about the obligatory school Christmas pageants. Where innocent children are compelled to make fools of themselves on stage in front of parents, classmates, and faculty.
The only positive aspect I can ascertain is that those childhood days were simple, uncomplicated days - - when no one was offended by saying "Merry Christmas", and front yard nativities were proudly displayed without any concern about being confiscated by the Neighborhood Manger Police.
It seemed to be a Norman Rockwell America.
Scene One:
Glendora, California. The Gordon Elementary School. Second Grade. I was six years old.
My teacher Mrs. Eisendise (whom I called Ice and Dice) came up with the grandiose idea of staging several scenes from Tchaikovsky's Nutcracker ballet. I wasn't in the least smitten by her plan, but I did fall in love with the music. In fact, I forced my mother to buy a recording of it. A double LP album in those primitive days.
For reasons unbeknownst to me, I was chosen to be one of the waltzing flowers in (of course) the Waltz of the Flowers. My humiliation was lessened only by the fact that numerous other boys were also sentenced to being flowers in Eisendise's delusional bouquet.
Four boys who became unwilling participants in Mrs. Eisendise's flower bouquet. I'm the one in the striped shirt.
The stage scenery was quite elaborate for a less than minor production. A serene rural backdrop with cardboard trees and shrubs. I can't exactly remember the flower costume that I wore, which - from a Freudian point of view - is probably a good thing. I can't attribute it to any pansy complexes I might have acquired twenty years later.
It's a fleeting thought. Don't ponder it for too long.
The dance started out splendidly but rapidly deteriorated. The music somehow seemed to be going faster than our twirls and leaps. In time, it completely resisted our efforts. Disharmony and vertigo ensued and soon it was every flower for himself. We had completely abandoned the music and were simply fighting to stay alive. I'm not sure which flower knocked down a cardboard tree, but trees suddenly began toppling like dominoes. Petals were crushed and the curtain was mercifully pulled. We waltzing flowers were far from a success.
If nothing else, the entire ugly ordeal robbed me of any future desire to have a career on the stage.
Scene Two:
Covina, California. The Charter Oak School. Third Grade. I was seven years old.
My teacher Mrs. Rollins was unusually weird. She had heavily dyed black hair - parted severely in the middle - thick tortoise shell glasses, a generous application of rouge, and more red lipstick than Bette Davis wore on a bad day.
Mrs. Rollins also had a very strange habit. At the end of every school day, she had the class line up by her desk and would kiss each of us goodbye. Sometimes I was able to duck out and avoid being branded by her crimson lips.
Fortunately this caused no known ill effects on my future psyche - - although to this day I still become completely impotent at the sight of tortoise shell rimmed glasses.
Mrs. Rollin's Christmas pageant was no less unnerving than Eisendise's waltzing flowers had been. I and two other boys were chosen to sing We Three Kings (I never figured out whether we were technically kings or wise men).
Rollins handed us the lyrics and demanded that we learn them within a week. I still don't know where the hell she got those lyrics, but I'd never seen so many pages for one Christmas song in my entire life. There were at least ten choruses.
We three boys wore cardboard crowns, makeshift capes, and had to carry empty gift boxes wrapped in Christmas paper. The pageant went off without a hitch, until we began singing....
We three kings of Orient are, bearing gifts we traverse afar...
we sang....and sang....one excruciatingly long chorus after another.....over and over.....and....over....
The audience would begin to applaud - hoping it was finally the end - and we'd suddenly sing another chorus.
It was the longest frickin' song in Christmas pageant history. I was seven years old when we started. I think I was pushing thirty by the time we finally finished.
Despite trying for years to expunge the event from my mind, I can still remember every chorus and every word from that ghastly song.
Jon
You were a cute little kid. Too bad that didn't last!
ReplyDeleteHey, I'm ancient but still cute *smile*
Delete
ReplyDelete"...and soon it was every flower for himself. We had completely abandoned the music and were simply fighting to stay alive."
😂
"We three boys"
I see what you did there!
👏🏻
Bravo!
This was funny, Jon. Thanks for the laughs!
Thanks, Sandi - - it's a pleasure to finally provide laughs instead of anguish..
DeleteI sorely needed to laugh tonight ... and here you are! I'm so glad you published this again, Jon. Hugs.
ReplyDeleteEvery time I post this I think of you. You've always appreciated this from the very beginning. I'm glad I provided some laughs.
DeleteI think I blocked out any grade school performances. All I remember is singing in the front line in front of bleachers because I was always one of the shortest kids in class. Singing with a big group didn't bother me. I wasn't in a play till senior high. Terrifying, but I guess I did okay. The school paper said I stole the show in my bit part as the town floozie--in Spanish, no less. The only way I could do it at all was without my glasses so I couldn't see the people in the crowd--just a big blur. LOL! Doesn't that seem like another lifetime? So long ago. We can chuckle about it now. :)
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing this, Rita. It provides another dimension of yourself - - I never imagioned you could be a Spanish floozie.
DeleteI'm myopic and have also occasionally taken my glasses off so I don't want to see what's going on.
Yes, we can chuckle about it now.
For some reason, my parochial elementary school never did pageants or holiday plays of any thpe, so no memories for me. Thanks, Jon, for reposting your own which I do remember and it was still fun to read again. I always wish people Merry Christmas, unkess I know their religious preference is different.
ReplyDeleteWell, you didn't miss anything having no holiday pageants. I remember numerous pageants in my California schools - many of which were fraught with unintentional humor.
DeleteI'm glad that "Merry Christmas" is still in vogue.
Thanks, Dorothy
Your post had me laughing...thanks! It was a welcome respite from the cold rain.
ReplyDeleteI was never in a school singing event of any kind, to the relief of anyone who's heard me sing when I am showering.
In 5th grade in parochial school, I remember we had a ribald version of 'We three kings'..it had a line about a exploding cigar, if memory serves.
Hope you're continuing to feel better, Jon.
Best,
Mike
I'm so glad this post made you laugh, Mike. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteIt's been raining here,too, but the temperature is eradic. 70 degrees yesterday - - 38 degrees today!
I'm feeling somewhat better, trying to be more mobile, and keeping as optimistic as possible.
What a sweetie, a writer and an actor, such talent !
ReplyDeleteI remember being in the Christmas play at church, I was Mary, but I wanted to be a donkey :)
Hope you are having kinder days dear friend.
Hugs,
Jo
I think I'd rather be a donkey than a waltzing flower (smile). So many memories from long ago.
DeleteI'm still struggling with my physical problems, but feel somewhat more optimistic.
Always good to hear from you, Jo.