***Out In The Be-Bop 1960s
Night- When "Stewball" Stu Stewart ’57 Chevy Ruled The “Chicken”
Roads
A YouTube film clip of Chuck
Berry performing his classic School Days to give a flavor of the times
to this piece
From The Pen Joshua Lawrence Breslin
Back in
the day, back in the 1960s be-bop night I was enamored of, dug, the guys who
could wheel around in cars like nothing. Guys who were handy with a wrench in
more ways than one, guys who could steer on a dime, guys who thought nothing of
going 100 miles an hour on some after midnight “chicken run” to prove, to prove
what, to prove they were the king of the hill in the burned-out Olde Saco Beach
night. Guys totally different from clumsy, non-mechanical, nerdy me who could
barely work the shifts on a car. Yeah, guys like “Stewball” Stu Stewart who
lived down at the end of my street and who I was thinking about recently. The
reason for that thought after so many years was that I had just then seen for
about the twelfth time James Dean’s Rebel
Without A Cause where cool car guys and chicken runs to prove manhood came
into play (and teen angst and alienation too but I had that part down already,
down big time). I was also at that time looking
at an old record cover from those days when everybody was glad to put a big old
“golden age of the automobile” young guy with a souped-up car on the album as a
lure to the guys. Come on, to the girls, silly. So there it was artfully done a
guy in full James Dean-imitation pout,
one good-looking, DA-quaffed, white muscle-shirted young man, an alienated
young man, no question, leaning, leaning gently, very gently, arms folded, on
the hood of his 1950’s classic automobile, clearly not his father’s car, but
also clearly for our purposes let us call it his “baby.”
And that car, that extension of his
young manhood, his young alienated manhood, is Friday night, Saturday night, or
maybe a weekday night if it is summer, parked directly in front of the local
teenage "hot spot." (Priority parked, meaning nobody with some Nash
Rambler, nobody with some foreign Volkswagen, no biker even, in short, nobody
except somebody who is tougher, a lot tougher, than our alienated young man
better breathe on the spot while he is within fifty miles of the place.) And in
1950s’ America, a teenage America with some disposal income (allowance, okay),
that hot spot is likely to be, as in that picture, the all-night Mel’s (or Joe’s,
Adventure Car-Hop, whatever) drive-in restaurant opened to cater to the hot
dog, hamburger, French fries, barbecued chicken cravings of exhausted youth.
Youth exhausted after a hard night of, well, let’s just call it a hard night
and leave the rest to your knowing imagination, or their parents’ evil
imaginations.
And in front of the restaurant, in
front of that leaned-on “boss” automobile stands one teenage girl vision. One
blondish, pony-tailed, midnight sun-glassed, must be a California great
American West night teeny-bopper girl holding an ice cream soda after her
night’s work. The work that we are leaving to fertile (or evil, as the case may
be) imaginations. Although from the pout on Johnny’s (of course he has to be a
Johnny, with that car) face maybe he “flunked out” but that is a story for
somebody else to tell. Here’s mine.
********
Not everybody, not everybody by a
long-shot, who had a “boss” ’57 cherry red Chevy was some kind of god’s gift to
the earth; good-looking, good clothes, dough in his pocket, money for gas and
extras, money for the inevitable end of the night stop at Jimmy John’s Drive-In
restaurant for burgers and fries (and Coke, with ice, of course) before taking
the date home after a hard night of tumbling and stumbling (mainly stumbling).
At least that is what one Joshua Breslin, Josh, me, freshly minted fifteen-
year old roadside philosopher thought as for the umpteenth time “Stewball” Stu
left me by the side of Albemarle Road and rode off into the Olde Saco night
with his latest “hot” honey, fifteen year old teen queen Sally Sullivan.
Yah, Stewball Stu was nothing but an
old rum-dum, a nineteen year old rum-dum, except he had that “boss” girl-magnet
’57 cherry red Chevy (painted that color by Stu himself) and he had his pick of
the litter in the Olde Saco, maybe all of Maine, night. By the way Stu’s
official name, was Stuart Stewart, go figure, but don’t call him Stuart and
definitely do not call him “Stewball” not if you want to live long enough not
to have the word teen as part of your age. The Stewball thing was strictly for
local boys, jealous local boys like me, who when around Stu always could detect
a whiff of liquor, usually cheap jack Southern Comfort, on his breathe, day or
night.
Figure this too. How does a guy who
lives out on Tobacco Road in an old run-down trailer, half-trailer really, from
about World War II that looked like something out of some old-time Hooverville
scene, complete with scrawny dog, and tires and cannibalized car leavings every
which way have girls, and nothing but good-looking girls from twelve to twenty
(nothing older because as Stu says, anything older was a woman and he wanted
nothing to do with women, and their women’s needs, whatever they are). And the
rest of us get his leavings, or like tonight left on the side of Route One. And
get this, they, the girls from twelve to twenty actually walk over to Tobacco
Road from the nice across the other side of the tracks homes like on Atlantic
Avenue and Fifth Street, sometimes by themselves and sometime in packs just to
smell the grease, booze, burnt rubber, and assorted other odd-ball smells that
come for free at Stu’s so-called garage/trailer.
Let me tell you about Stu, Sally,
and me tonight and this will definitely clue you in to the Stu-madness of the
be-bop Olde Saco girl night. First of all, as usual, it is strictly Stu and me
starting out. Usually, like today, I hang around his garage on Saturdays to get
away from my own hell-house up the road and I am kind of Stu’s unofficial
mascot. Now Stu had been working all day on his dual-exhaust carburetor or
something, so his denims are greasy, his white tee-shirt (sic) is nothing but
wet with perspiration and oil stains, he hasn’t taken a bath since Tuesday (he
told me that himself with some sense of pride) and he was not planning to do so
this night, and of course, drinking all day from his silver Southern Comfort
flask he reeked of alcohol (but don’t tell him that if you read this and are
from Olde Saco because, honestly, I want to live to have twenty–something as my
age). About 7:00 PM he bellows out to me, cigarette hanging from his mouth, a
Lucky, let’s go cruising.
Well, cruising means nothing but
taking that be-bop ’57 cherry red Chevy out on East Grand and do the “look.”
Look for girls, look for boys from the sticks with bad-ass cars who want to
take a chance on beating Stu at the “chicken run” down at the flats on the far
end of Sagamore Beach, look for something to take the edge off the hunger to be
somebody number one. At least that last is what I figured after a few of these
cruises with Stu. Tonight it looks like girls from the way he put some of that
grease (no not car grease, hair-oil stuff) on his curly hair. Yes, I am
definitely looking forward to cruising tonight once I have that sign because,
usually whatever girl Stu might not want, or maybe there are a couple of
extras, or something I get first dibs. Yah, Stu is righteous like that.
So off we go, stopping at my house
first so I can get a little cleaned up and put on a new shirt and tell my
brother to tell our mother that I will be back later, maybe much later, if she
ever gets home herself before I do. The cruising routine in Olde Saco means up
and down Route One (okay, okay Main Street), checking out the lesser spots
(Darby’s Pizza Palace, Hank’s Ice Cream joint, the Colonial Donut Shoppe where
I hang during the week after school and which serves a lot more stuff than
donuts and coffee, sandwiches and stuff, and so on). Nothing much this
Saturday. So we head right away for the mecca, Jimmy John’s Diner. As we hit
Stu’s “saved” parking spot just in front I can see that several stray girls are
eyeing the old car, eyeing it like tonight is the night, tonight is the night
Stu, kind of, sort of, maybe notices them (and I, my heart starting to race a
little in anticipation and glad that I stopped off at my house, got a clean
shirt, and put some deodorant on and guzzled some mouthwash, am feeling tonight
is the night too).
But tonight is not the night, no
way. Not for me, not for those knees-trembling girls. Why? No sooner did we
park than Sally Sullivan came strolling (okay I don’t know if she was strolling
or doo-wopping but she was swaying in such a sexy way that I knew she meant
business, that she was looking for something in the Olde Saco night and that
she had “found” it) out to Stu’s Chevy and with no ifs, ands, or buts asked,
asked Stu straight if he was doing anything this night.
Let me explain before I tell you
what Stu’s answer was that this Sally Sullivan is nothing but a sex kitten,
maybe innocent-looking, but definitely has half the boys, hell maybe all the
boys at Olde Saco High, including a lot of the guys on the football team
drooling over her. I know, because I have had more than one sleepless night
over her. See, she is in my English class and because Mr. Murphy lets us sit
where we want I usually sit with a good view of her. So Stu says, kind of
off-handedly, like having the town teen fox come hinter on him was a daily
occurrence, says kind of lewdly, “Well, baby I am if you want to go down
Sagamore Rocks right now and look for dolphins?”
See, Sagamore Rocks is nothing but
the local lovers’ lane here and “looking for dolphins” is the way everybody,
every teenage everybody in town says “going all the way,” having sex for the
clueless. And Sally, as you can guess if you have been following my story said,
“Yes” just like that. At that is why I was dumped, unceremoniously dumped, at
my street while they roared off into the night. I said before not every “boss”
car owner is god’s gift to women, not by a long shot. Or maybe they are.
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