Alter Boys

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Alter Boys Page 14

by Chuck Stepanek


  Ms. Bagner toyed with having Judy Zimmer stand in the little red headed girl position. She wondered what kind of reaction the sass-pot would have at the possibility of a role with no lines and limited stage presence. ‘No, best not to screw with daddy’s darling daughter.’ Judy had been holding fast in the Lucy spot going on 10 minutes now and was looking just a little too smug for the teachers liking. But working and drawing a paycheck is better than the alternative.

  “Now, the same group please stay there but could I have all of the Charlie Browns each take a turn.”

  Six Charlie Browns moved forward including Greaser. He had been directed to read for the part and he had read. He had been directed to move forward and so he did.

  Each Charlie Brown stood with the group, was scrutinized for a few moments, and then asked to re-take their seat. Greaser was last. He stood like the others and then waited to be dismissed.

  He stayed.

  A few cursory calls were made to individuals for a final appearance with the group. But the core group itself remained the same.

  Finally, Ms. Bagman fell silent. She made notes on a yellow legal pad, occasionally looking up to examine her cast and confirm that what she was seeing and writing were congruent. She listed 7 names next to seven characters. Had anyone seen one of the previous sheets of her legal pad, they would have discovered the same set of seven.

  The two minute charade was for the purpose of class edification. The cast would be officially posted tomorrow, but they knew today that unofficially, the decision had been made.

  No big surprise, no big disappointment.

  And for an astute few, there were no surprises. They knew that the Greaser kid was a shoo-in for the role. Many however thought that the kid was merely getting a little sympathy attention in front of the crowd; that it was cool of Ms. Bagner to help the kid feel like he fit in. Plus, it helped to add to the anticipation. The supporting cast members were all lined up in front of them, the announcement of the leading role would take place tomorrow.

  3

  If it is possible for a person to feel elated and mortified at the same moment, well that was how Judy Zimmer felt when she saw the cast list with her own two eyes. “Congratulations Judy, or should I say Lucy, you’re in the show.” Vicki Thiesen, her on-again, off-again friend since eighth grade had caught Judy between classes. “The cast list is on the wall outside Ms. Bagner’s room.”

  Judy was not at all surprised by the revelation, she knew that she had the part. She was twirked though that Ms. know-it-all Vicki spoiled the discovery of seeing it for herself. “Really? Moi? In a show?” She turned and darted off toward fine arts.

  Most of the crowd that had gathered for the posting had already drifted away, denying Judy of her highly-deserved applause and accolades. She was virtually alone as she quickly scanned the list.

  “Lucy Van Pelt – Judy Zimmer.” There, that made it official and she treated herself to a few moments of elation before scoping out the rest of the cast.

  The punch to her gut came hard and fast. “Charlie Brown -- …what, who is…? No. Nooo. That can’t be right! That Greaser kid?!

  Judy Zimmer looked at the list again. The list had not change. “Oh Gaaaawd! Fuck - Me - Sideways!” What a disaster.

  First, Vicki Thiesen steals her thunder. But it was more than that. Vicki Thiesen had known. She knew about the Greaser and had been oh so happy to share the news with Judy.

  “Meddling bitch.” Under her breath.

  Second, the stupid new drama teacher didn’t know shit about acting. You had to look like a star to be a star. The Greaser kid looked like filth with a capital “F.”

  The thought of declining the part and resigning her position as vice president of thespian troupe 87 crossed her mind. But then more sensible thoughts prevailed. She would not only be a star, she would be a hero. When the Greaser butchered his lines or froze in his shoes, it would be her, Lucy, who would ad-lib “What a blockhead!” or “If only you weren’t so wishy washy” to make the audience laugh and carry the show to the next scene.

  Yes, maybe this could work out after all.

  Then she panicked: “I don’t have to touch him do I?” It was a frightful concept that required pondering. She headed to the girls bathroom, sat on the toilet fully clothed and sucked down half a Winston. She scanned her mind through the script trying to think of any references to physical contact.

  ‘No, no touching.’ I think I’m safe.’

  Ssssssssss! The butt hit the water between her legs. She rose, waved away the evidence, and exited the bathroom in her new role as star and hero.

  4

  Greaser hadn’t anticipated the posting of the cast list. Had no need to. Mrs. Bagner had broke the news to him an hour ahead of time. Her reasons for doing so were completely selfish.

  Having observed the boy in the cast lineup, she began to speculate that the kid might get cold feet or totally freak out. She was sure of his presentation ability, what she was not so sure of was his emotional stability or maturity. During tryouts he hadn’t put a single ounce of interest into landing the role. He approached like a duty. As if he didn’t care.

  Breaking the news to him in advance would determine if he was the chosen one. If he took the news alarmingly, looked scared and wanted out, that would be fine. It would buy her an hour to re-type the cast list, and save a lot of potential future grief.

  But the kid had taken then news as flatly as if she had asked him to pick up a gum wrapper off the floor.

  “I’ve cast you as Charlie Brown.”

  “Ok.”

  “Are you ok with that?”

  “Yes”

  “It’s going to mean memorizing a lot of lines. Like the playground scene you read yesterday.”

  Thinking it was a request, Greaser proceeded to recite the playground scene nearly verbatim. Even improving on the inflection and cadence from his scripted performance the day before.

  Ms. Bagner was awestruck.

  “Well then. Ok. I’m going to be posting the cast list in about an hour. Please don’t tell anyone that I told you ahead of time.”

  She didn’t think the boy had any friends to share the news with, but why take chances.

  Greaser’s silence conveyed his agreement.

  Ms. Bagner nodded him in dismissal. She watched as her Charlie Brown left the room-plaid pants, vertically striped green shirt. An easy fix for the stage via the costume department. However above the chameleon clothing was that ungodly matted mop dripping with Pennzoil.

  If she could only do something about that hair.

  5

  The direct approach. Janice Bagner thought it to be best. The first Parent teacher conferences of the year would take place two weeks before opening night.

  Everything about the play was going smoothly, except for the growing concern she could feel from the cast (and herself included) about Greaser’s hygiene. ‘I should have cast him as pigpen.’ She mused for about the hundredth time.

  But parent teacher conferences would give her the opportunity to resolve, if not a bit awkwardly, the dilemma.

  She couldn’t have been more wrong.

  By 10 p.m. she was alone in the teachers lounge, grimacing over the cup of sludge that had once been this morning’s coffee and lamenting the nights debacle. Mister Lamb, the History teacher, had been the last to go about twenty minutes earlier. He might still have been there but he had run out of conversational gambits; trying to engage the hot new staff member in pass/failure ratios.

  He was not referring to education. They both knew it. Finally he gave up and left, leaving her alone to puzzle out the bizarre encounter with Greaser’s mom.

  A lot of parents attended that night. The disdainful looks from the moms and the lurid drooling of the few dads who showed up, she expected.

  But oh my God. My God. What she hadn’t expected was that awful, disgusting woman. The one with whom she had hoped to have a gentle heart to heart with. She shuddered and turned back to h
er cup.

  It had been a complete train wreck.

  The woman had entered the classroom and flitted from side to side like a moth trapped under a lampshade. Lips stuttering a muted prayer commingled with some nursery rhyme, eyes rotating like ambulance lights. A garish satchel that would have looked better in the grip of a destitute hobo swung from one hand. The other hand was vigorously performing thee most disgusting of nasty habits.

  “Why don’t you take a seat and we’ll get started.” Janice Bagner gestured to one of the two office style chairs that had been delivered by the custodial staff for tonight’s festivities.

  The woman saw the chair as if for the first time. She took her place in the seat and dropped her purse unceremoniously to the floor.

  Now both hands were free.

  She sat across from her sons homeroom teacher and unabashedly crammed finger after finger into her nostrils, corkscrewing her hands back and forth, extracting chunks of varying sizes, shapes and consistencies.

  “Do you need a…” Kleenex was supposed to be the next word. But there were none at the desk. Besides, the woman appeared to have the situation well in hand (so to speak). The gritties and gooey’s were stuffed under yellowed fingernails that had clearly been the home to many previous nostril orphans.

  Ms. Bagner tried again. “Do you need a… cup of coffee?”

  Without waiting for a response she stood and filled a Styrofoam cup and retrieved an excessively large handful of paper napkins.

  “Oh coffee! …is it free?...and the wise men brought gifts…to Georgie Porgie girl…he’s the dumb one.”

  What the hell was all that?

  Disregarding the mumbo jumbo and taking control of the dialogue seemed best. Steadily: “So. Your sons grades are very good as you can see by the progress card.” She held it out to the woman.

  One hand had been mercifully occupied by the coffee cup. Any chance that the progress card would occupy the other one was too much to hope for. It remained busy with nasal extraction.

  “He has perfect attendance and his conduct is very good.” Ms. Bagner retrieved the card from its unclaimed state of suspension and pointed out the citizenship section.

  “To miss a day would be a sin…brewed, not instant…American Express progress card, don’t leave home without it…Jesus wept.”

  Was this woman nuts? Or maybe a religious fanatic?

  She parked the card on her desk and willed herself to learn forward.

  “I’m sure you’re proud that your son is in the school play. It opens in just two weeks and he knows all of his lines. But there’s something I’d like for you to talk to him about.”

  “He can’t read…not the calendar…he’s the dumb one…a lost cause St. Jude..so I drank the coffee.”

  As if to prove the point she noisily slurped from her cup, and then cupped a snot from her nose.

  Wise men. Jesus. St. Jude.

  It presented an angle. If Janice Bagner could use some kind of religious analogy, maybe she could get through to this woman. Yes, there was a religious thread to be played. Certainly not an intellectual one, but definitely a religious one. Janice Bagner scanned her mind and found what she was looking for.

  “Cleanliness is next to Godliness” she recited. “Even Mary Magdalene used her hair (she stressed the word) to wash the feet of Jesus. Your son is growing up. He needs to learn to wash his hair every day with shampoo.”

  Every word after ‘Magdalene’ fell on deaf ears.

  “The fornicator…temptress of the savoir…where’s my rosary!” The woman crossed herself with four striking blows, leaving a fresh green snot on her forehead and a stringer running across her chest.

  “No, don’t misunderstand me. What I’m trying to tell--, to suggest to you…”

  “You have pink underwear…I told him I would tell…forgive me Mrs. Folgers.” The half drank coffee cup was pitched into the garbage and the woman bolted out of the room reciting the first lines of the apostles creed as she pawed for her rosary.

  Class dismissed.

  Now, well after 10 o’clock, Janice Bagner startled herself from her memory of the encounter to realize that the custodian had been cleaning and re-cleaning the same section of the faculty lounge for far too long. It meant one of two things: Either a non verbal message to clear out of here lady, I want to go home, or damn, I’ll happily wipe this counter til Doomsday just to keep catching glances of that fantastic rack.

  Either way, it prompted her to her feet. The direct approached with the mother had failed. Badly. And the night had not gotten any better.

  She strode out of the lounge and offered a token ‘g’night’ as the custodians eyes crawled greedily over her body.

  6

  A direct approach with the kid could have been the next logical step, but logic along with hygiene were absent values in that bloodline. Besides, suppose she were to suggest shampoo to the boy and he were to look at her vacantly with a ‘what exactly is shampoo, we don’t have anything like that at our house’ expression.

  Luxuries such as shampoo, running water and toilet paper were likely devices of the devil in that dysfunctional household. Best that the situation be handled differently.

  The opening night of the play, first year instructor Janice Bagner arrived at the school with her clipboard of director’s notes, a box of 500 programs fresh from the print shop, and a bottle of Suave.

  She headed directly to the boys locker room that had been converted (temporarily and begrudgingly by Mr. Stonehoecker) into a costume and makeup area. The equipment cage had been partially cleared of football helmets and track cleats to accommodate a rack of costumes while three sets of folding tables and chairs served as makeup stations.

  “Thank God this isn’t War and Peace.” She said aloud for her own benefit. Charlie Brown was about as fundamental as they came and even it had been a pain in the ass to pull off. You had your cast but still you needed to recruit ticket takers and ushers and sound and lighting techs and on and on and on…

  “English lit. Just hang on to that thought. The right teaching job will come along.”

  Within a half an hour the entire cast, along with the makeup and costume mistresses, were present and excited to get started.

  “Alright, I know it’s not show time yet, but I want everyone to start getting in character. From this minute on, refer to each cast member by their character name. Snoopy and Lucy,” she nodded toward Chris Millen and Judy Zimmer, “makeup at station one. Linus and Peppermint Patty, station two.”

  The cast took their places and bibbed up to have their faces painted and powdered.

  “Sue Hespen and Charlie Brown, if you could come with me please.”

  Sue Hespen was a blond sophomore, a real catch for any guy who likes a girl who applies her makeup with a spatula. Years later she would be the proud owner of a pink Cadillac with plates reading “MERRY K”, but for now she was the head hairstyle and makeup mistress for the school play with her name printed prominently in the program at the bottom of page 3.

  “Sue, you’re the head of the department, so you get to work with the star of the show.” Sue was summarily honored and mortified.

  “And you’re going to start first with this.” Janice Bagner held up the new bottle of suave shampoo and nodded toward the row of sinks.

  “Eeeew! No! Gross! I’m not touching that Greaser’s hair!” More than half of the heads in the dressing room turned in their direction. The excited chatter muted to a few words uttered either by those who had missed the incident or by those highly skilled in filling awkward lapses in conversation.

  It was precisely how Janice Bagner had planned it. For weeks, the entire cast had voiced their concern about the appearance of their leading man. Now, something was to be done about it.

  “Head of hairstyle and makeup, that’s your duty. That’s how it’s printed in the program is it not?”

  Sue Hespen’s life was blond moments, one after the next. But on this point she was perfectly clea
r. She was the head hairstyle and makeup mistress. Her name was in the program. If the Greaser kid went on stage looking like that, it would be her name that everyone would be thumbing to in the program wondering what in God’s name she was thinking.

  “No, please…” she said the words softly, pleadingly, looking at the Greaser and back to Ms. Bagner. ‘A case of the clap would be better than touching that oil rag,’ her eyes conveyed.

  “Alright, we’ll do this. I’ll wash Charlie Browns hair.” She emphasized the name, subtly chastising Sue for using the ‘G’ word and scanned her gaze across the room to the 20 sets of eyes that were following the drama. “And then you will style Charlie Browns hair.”

 

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