Saturday, December 19, 2009

Rockin New Years Eve





Mammy has been pestering me; trying to get me to make plans for New Years Eve. She told me that we have to go out since there will be a blue moon. I always said that I go out on New Year’s Eve “only once in a blue moon.” She wants me to keep my promise and doesn’t want to sit at home watching Dick Clark’s Rockin’ New Year Eve.

Doesn’t she realize that the Pussycat Girls will be performing on the show this year?
Anyway, where would we go?
Mammy gave me an ultimatum. We go out or else.
I tried making reservations at “The Trolley Car,” a local bistro in Wadesville, where I squandered away so much of my youth. I got no answer. Not even a taped message or an answering machine. It would have been the perfect place for a romantic evening, high up on the mountain with a bird’s eye view of the blue moon and stripping pits.
The Trolley was noted for the friendliest bartenders in the greater St. Clair area and, more importantly, it was celebrated for its fine, eclectic menu of bar food – pickled eggs, beef jerky, and Lance crackers. If I am correct pistachio nuts were the signature mark of this mouthwatering bill of fare. Yes! Wadesville would be the perfect location to view the blue moon that would envelop Schuylkill County as we welcomed 2010.*
I remember many places from Schuylkill County’s past but I could not find any in the phone book. The Lame Goose. The SoHo. The Bur Ben Inn. The Gallery. The Con Ja Ka. Rokosz’s. All of these were now all closed.
I want to dance,” Mammy bellowed repeatedly. I tried to find a place that had music. I remembered a great place in Llewellyn - the Rhinoceros Room. I could not find a listing on SuperPages and I found no website. Panic soon set in. Where would we go?

I then tried contacting the Liederkrantz on Norwegian Street in Pottsville. Apparently that place went out of business when the German music craze in the county petered out.
Fertig! Getan! Geschlossen!
Longo’s, the great Italian Restaurant on Route 61, had also hit the dust. I remember the hours I spent in front of their lobster tank licking my lips trying to decide which crustacean I would eventually devour while the Tony Karpee band played in the background.
There was also no sense in dusting off my old leisure suit as the Disco Alley was caput.
I called the Visitors Bureau and was told that dancing was not popular anymore around here. Young people are too busy on Facebook and MySpace to move their feet. It was recommended that I book a table at the Garfield Diner near a window and watch the Yuengling bottle rise to the top of the city monument at midnight and then hop aboard the Molly Trolley for a ride to the Schuylkill Medical Center to await the announcement of the new year bastard with about five thousand other people under the glow of the blue moon.
I preferred heading to Wilkes-Barre to watch the next government official drop.
All of these festivities are on the internet and we could watch them from the comfort of our trailer, but we finally compromised and decided that we would Hosey Hop. That is, go from firehouse bar to firehouse bar, basking in the blue moonlight along the way.
Just in case there was no music available I told Mammy to bring along her Ipod so that she could dance. I had just downloaded some bootleg Jordan Brothers tunes for her. While she danced with a fireman, I would sit at the bar eat, some pickled eggs (with some horseradish) and watch Dick Clark drool in the new year. The Pussycat Girls are on, you know. But at midnight I will give Mammy a kiss and tell her that she is the best noisemaker I ever had. She loves compliments. I will then retake my bar seat, light up a cigarette, and finish off some more pickled eggs.
Happy rockin’ new years.


*Please refer to the new year as Twenty ten, not Two Thousand and Ten. Make that your new year resolution. Thank you.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I didn't think you were old enough to remember the Leidercranz. You must remember the U Bar then. Every new arrival stepped off the train, walked across the street to the U Bar and got sloshed so they could tolerate the Circle Bar across the street.

Jim Cerullo said...

Not living in Pottsville has cut down drastically on my hosy time.
In my high school years however I do remember spending time there with a dime Mt. Carbon and a hot bologna and some pretzels. Did hot bologna vanish when Legutko's did?
Or do you just prefer hard boiled eggs?