| Back Room Clown |
| Christopher Street and Hudson |
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by Jay Blotcher
It is the dulled, flat end of the summer; a warm Saturday night in the West
Village, September, 1982. It is 4 a.m. We who had fawned and flounced and
guzzled and still received no takers in the gay bars this evening have resigned
ourselves to last-minute comfort in the bowels of the Christopher Street
Bookstore, a grotto at the corner of Hudson and Christopher where men cavort,
mingle and spew.
I am watching porn film (still the era of good ol' scratchy celluloid) being
projected on the stone wall of the grotto. At my side is my Syracuse University
college pal Mike, a career pessimist with ringed, tired eyes and a love for the
absurd. He, too, has given up on romance this evening. The men around us are
panting and loving with impunity. Eternal romances are igniting and sputtering
out in the space of minutes. We are fighting the twin demons of alcohol and
boredom. At one point, Mike breaks with backroom etiquette and says
not-so-sotto-voce, "Look over there". He points impertinently and I look through
the gloom to see a dark beauty sitting in the corner. Caucasian,
broad-shouldered, silky curls hanging to his shoulders. A regal savage with a
hairy chest, bare save for a leather vest. I am just out of college and still
think in terms of archetypes. I am intrigued. This is pure evil, I think to
myself; I feel the need to embrace it.
I saunter over. He looks even more menacing and sexy in satanic goatee. I notice
a thick, leather wristband on his arm, blooming with spikes. I reach out to
touch the fur on his muscled chest. He looks at me with opaque eyes and a low,
steady growl rumbles up from within his sculpted chest. I back off. He reaches
for my fly and fumbles with my manhood. His intensity intimidates. I am unable
to harden. Sheepishly, I disengage and slink back to Mike, still watching the
scratchy footage of men having pre-AIDS sex. Unable to convey what has happened
in just a few words, I opt for silence.
Perhaps fifteen minutes have passed. Mike suddenly breaks the dull silence by
nudging me again. "Look over there," he says, disbelief spiking his voice. "Do
you see what I see?" I sigh and look again past his pointing finger. There in
the gloom sits a man with a full bush of red hair, dressed in a white suit with
multi-colored polka dots. It looks as if a Ringling Brothers denizen has lost
his way. I am suddenly stone sober.
"Hey," Mike coaxes me, "Go over to him."
"And what the hell should I say," I spit back incredulously.
"Uh - ask him what time it is," Mike responds, displaying that brand of Syracuse
pragmatism for which I love him.
Summoning my counterfeit nonchalance, I approach this clown in the corner of
the gay peep show store backroom. "Hi," I say jauntily, "Do you know what time
it is?" The man in white greasepaint shakes his head and gestures with his left
hand to his right-hand wrist, to indicate that he is not wearing a watch. I
follow his hand to peer at his watchless wrist -- and espy the aforementioned
studded leather wristband.
I walk briskly back to Mike, grab him by the lapels and announce it is time
to leave. He follows me as I clamber up the stone steps to the front desk.
There the manager stands, neglected teeth clenched around a big, wet cheroot.
He stares us down.
I decide to go for understatement.
"Uh, pal... you have a clown down there," I say.
"Oh yeah," he shoots back with unfeigned disinterest, "We get a lot of clowns
down there." He gets paternal on me, adding, "No sweat. Just tell him
you're not interested."
"No," I yell back. All pretenses for calm are discarded. "I'm talking about
a real clown... like in the circus."
He gapes at me for a few seconds, appraising my credibility, then turns to
his assistant, a dim short man and barks, "Will you go down there and see what
he's talking about."
The lackey, all stoop-shouldered, descends the stairs to the basement. When
he returns, the occupational confusion on his face has deepened tenfold.
He looks at the manager and nods slowly, "He's right; there is a clown down there."
"And what did you tell him?" the manager says, now visibly flustered.
"I told him we had a dress code and that he had to leave," he beams, proud for
having come up with his alibi on the spot.
At this point, Mike and I expect Rod Serling to walk in and give his typical
epilogue to the surreal scene. But we have had enough heebie-jeebies for even a
typical Christopher Street evening.
(All events recounted actually happened to me and Mike. Mike passed in 1992, so, alas, I have no corroboration.)
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