The
Dog Show & The Bike Show
by
Dennis Nyback
Click
here for
printable version
THE DOG SHOW
Sunday, July 27, was BRING YOUR DOGGIE
TO DOGGIE FILM SHOW DAY at the Clinton
St. Theater. Yes, doggie films for
an audience of at least forty-five
dogs and their owners. If you were
there you'd have been in dog heaven.
A very nice assemblage. big dogs,
small dogs, one in a doggie wheel
chair, and no un-attractive women
brought in as a joke. The dogs were
very well behaved. They were also
appreciative. During certain scenes
a bark of approval was heard. At least
I assume they were barking in approval.
Other than having several dogs around
while growing up, I don't know that
much about them. The house lights
were left up a little so the dears
wouldn't get confused in the dark.
The
program appropriately started with
Puddy the Pup (1936) in................................SCAT
CATS! Apparently most of the dogs
were illiterate as the title card
did not get the response it deserved.
The second film was Shep The Farm
Dog (1940) a nice black and white
oooold educational. This one elicited
barks when Shep would run directly
at the camera. That sort of action
seemed to draw most of the dog's attention.
The next film was Step Lively (1919)
starring Harold Lloyd and an un-credited
Boston Terrier. Harold tries to steal
a hot dog and the Terrier makes his
life miserable for the next ten minutes
of this one reel short. This one got
a big round of applause by the humans.
Then came Washee Ironee (1934) with
Pete the Our Gang dog (and the rest
of the cast). Too bad a lot of these
Our Gang shorts can no longer be seen
due to their suppression in the interest
of erasing evidence of America's past
stereotypical treatment of blacks.
There was then a ten minute break
in case anyone needed trip to the
toilet or the nearest tree.
The show resumed for the relieved
attendees with Tippy The Town Dog
(1957) an amazingly dumb and wonderful
educational, in Kodachrome. A not
too bright ten year old wheedles himself
into the ownership of a stray mutt.
The title character than runs off.
The suspense is incredible as we follow
the boy in search of Tippy and follow
Tippy's near misses with automobiles.
There is of course a happy reunion
at the end.
The
triumphant end of the show was provided
by Teddy At The Throttle (1916) starring
KEYSTONE TEDDY! Also in the cast were
Gloria Swanson, Bobby Vernon and Wallace
Beery. I'd call Teddy a Great Dane.
He absolutely steals the show when
he leaps from a second floor window,
dives from a cliff into a raging river,
and vaults into the cab of speeding
locomotive to save Gloria's life.
The audience erupted in barks, cheers
and applause at the end of the program.
The mess left behind was much lighter
than that left by the people who come
to Rocky Horror. The best thing was:
a good time was had by all.
BIKE NITE
In
the middle of July I was asked to
take part in an interesting event.
A rabid bicyclist named Gail Buteau
decided to have an outdoor circus
and film show. She rounded up a traveling
three person circus. They were from
New Orleans and were driving around
the country in a re-fitted bread truck.
It was kind of like an old time medicine
show. I would provide the films. They
would feature bicycles, circus acts,
jazz and dance. The electricity for
everything would be generated by seven
bicyclists pedaling like mad. A local
artisan who makes things out of junked
bicycles built the device. It involved
two automobile alternators, a car
battery, a thousand watt inverter,
and a bunch of bikes linked together
with chains and gears. To put on a
good show I decided to provide a twelve
foot pull down screen (no frame to
support it), a projector, films, a
1950 Bell and Howell Power Speaker
(c.1950 Bell and Howell with a built
in 25 watt tube amp), a standard speaker,
and everything needed to hook it all
up.
The
show was Thursday, August 22. I would
guess 300 in attendance. It was the
same night as the protest against
President Bush appearance in town,
which siphoned off a lot of the intended
crowd. No one at this event got pepper
sprayed. Most of them arrived on bikes.
Children arrived on foot and in strollers,
many clinging perilously to the seat
attached to their parent's Schwin.
A few had the temerity to arrive in
an automobile. They all loved the
films, the circus acts, and the vegetarian
food sold from a cart. I ended the
show with the finale from Stormy Weather,
the all-black Hollywood musical from
1943, in which the Nicholas Brothers
come down the huge stair steps landing
in the splits at each tier. No crowd
can resist going wild over that. It
is probably the single greatest thing
ever put on film.
I had arrived at the site at five
in the afternoon with no real plan
to hang the screen. I knew I would
use the truck that belonged to the
circus. I knew I would need something
to put on the roof of the truck to
add height. What that something would
be was the mystery. I thought I would
find something by walking around the
neighborhood. A couple of shopping
carts would have worked. There were
several construction sites, but everything
of use was locked up. The site was
a grassy, vacant lot at the corner
of 20th and Alberta in the slowly
gentrifying black section of town.
I finally found six milk crates that
I was allowed to borrow from a food
co-op five blocks away.
To set up, Ed, the owner of the circus
got up on the truck. I tossed up the
milk crates. I handed up the screen
and he set it across the milk crates.
He hung on to the screen frame while
I pulled the screen down and tied
it to the wheels. He then stretched
bungee cords from the top of the milk
crates to the edge of the trucks roof.
Voila! As long as the wind didn't
kick up it would be ok. The seven
bikes provided ample power. There
were plenty of riders, taking turns.
I would run a ten minute film, then
Ed or the girls would do an act, not
always involving fire, which gave
the pedalers a chance to rest and
change places. Other than the crowd
tromping over everything and accidentally
unplugging the power speaker once,
the show went smooth as silk.
Ed
was front man for the circus, assisted
by Rose and Mary. They were darn cute.
They did a few tricks, using fire,
hoola hoops, etc. The emcee for the
night was a man on very tall stilts.
He didn't fall over once. The most
popular event was bike jousting. Two
riders at each end of the arena were
mounted on ten foot tall bikes. They
brandished long, padded lances. They
sped toward each other and tried to
dismount the other. They did it several
times. No one was killed.
|