Read New York in the '50s Online

Authors: Dan Wakefield

New York in the '50s (50 page)

“That's right,” Art says. “Woody Allen played the Gate, but he never was a big draw. He doesn't want to be reminded now he once was a comic. Even then he was on his way, though. I had Dick Cavett, Mort Sahl, Jackie Mason, Redd Foxx. I mixed 'em up, and mixed up the kinds of music too—I had the Clancy Brothers, Leon Bibb, Erroll Garner.”

Art wanted Billie Holiday, but he couldn't have her at the Gate because, like many jazz musicians of the day, she had had her police ID card, commonly called a cabaret card, taken away. No one could work at a nightclub or cabaret—a place of entertainment where liquor is served—without such a card, issued by the New York City Police Department, and no one could have a card “who has been convicted of a felony or of any misdemeanor or offense, or is or pretends to be a homosexual or lesbian.” Leaving aside the constitutional rights of homosexuals and lesbians (essentially they had no rights then), the main effect was to bar people who had been convicted or even simply arrested for possession of narcotics, as
many jazz musicians had been. Thelonious Monk was unable to work in New York from 1951 to 1957 because his cabaret card was taken away.

For
The Nation
, I covered a test case on the issue, brought by J. J. Johnson, who in the five previous years, from 1954 to 1959, had led both critics' and readers' polls as the outstanding trombone player in the country. In 1946 he'd been given a suspended sentence on a narcotics charge, and because of that the police took away his cabaret card. Despite his clean record after that, the police would issue him only temporary cards, forcing him to reapply every time he got a club date.

Johnson, a most solid citizen, was able to prove he had been married since 1946, was the father of two children, owned his own home, and was a member in good standing of national fraternal organizations—a real sign of respectability in the fifties. He still hadn't been granted a permanent ID card, and the attorney Maxwell Cohen, who represented other jazz musicians on this issue as well, went to court in behalf of Johnson. In covering the court proceedings, I got to meet Johnson, another of my jazz idols, who held the extra fascination for me of being from Indianapolis (he composed and recorded a piece called “Naptown, USA”). I introduced myself to him and his wife, another Indianapolis native, who told me her sister was now attending my old high school, Shortridge, and I proudly wrote to my parents of how I had met and talked with this famous couple from Naptown.

Club owners later joined musicians in the battle to end cabaret card regulations. “We finally fought the ordinance,” Art d'Lugoff says, “and got the police to end the fingerprinting of nightclub performers in New York.” But that was not until after Art had tried to bring Billie Holiday to town in the summer of 1957.

For the previous ten years she had been banned from singing at any New York club by denial of her police ID card, based on previous narcotics arrests. But there was another way Art d'Lugoff could bring Billie Holiday to the Village: no edict prevented her from performing in a theater.

“I couldn't have her at the Gate,” d'Lugoff explains, “So I put her at the Loew's Sheridan.” He hands me a yellow leaflet announcing Billie Holiday's appearance at the 2,500-seat movie theater in the
Village. The concert was cosponsored by d'Lugoff and the
Village Voice
.

The afternoon before the night of the concert, Art called Jerry Tallmer, the theater critic of the
Voice
, and asked if he could pick up Billie in Philadelphia and drive her to the evening's event. Art explained she was working in a nightclub in Philly and the show wouldn't be over until eleven. Tallmer would have to get her to the Sheridan between one and two
A.M.
in order to beat a three
A.M.
entertainment curfew in New York.

The only car the
Voice
owned was a 1949 Olds that Tallmer doubted could make it to New York from Philadelphia in two hours. Tallmer was a great Billie Holiday fan who'd gone to hear her on 52nd Street when he and she were both twenty years old (compared to her, Tallmer felt as if he were ten), and he managed to commandeer a new, “powder-blue, push-button Chrysler” for the trip. Tallmer packed Billie, her husband and manager Louis McKay, her accompanist Mal Waldron, Waldron's girlfriend and future wife, Billie's evening dresses and portfolios of music, and assorted other bags into the car at about a quarter to twelve, with Billie holding her Chihuahua in one hand and a drink in the other, and they sped north. Billie insisted on stopping at a bar on the way, but they made it to the theater just before three for her first major appearance in New York City in over a decade.

She wouldn't have been allowed to sing after the three o'clock curfew, but the police had been greased, and Billie started on the dot of three. She sang to a wildly enthusiastic full house, and afterward went to a party at Tallmer's apartment on Christopher Street, and then he took her to the hotel where she was staying on Columbus Circle. Two years later, Tallmer wrote an account of the adventure as part of an impassioned tribute in
Evergreen Review
(“Bye Bye Blackbird”) after he heard on the radio that Billie Holiday was in Metropolitan Hospital with a guard posted in her room. She had been booked on a charge of possession of heroin, which the police found in her purse.

Early on a Saturday evening that summer of 1959, when I was at my typewriter trying to finish a piece that was due the following Monday at
Harper's Magazine
, I got a call from Billie Holiday's friend Maely Dufty. I had met Maely through the narcotics committee
of the East Harlem Protestant Parish, where she was one of a number of people from around the city who came to help addicts who were trying to get off heroin.

Maely asked if I would help her in an emergency. Billie Holiday was in the hospital, dying, and the police were stationed in her room. Maely and Louis McKay had written a petition asking the city to remove the police from her bedside and allow Billie to die in peace, without police harassment in her final days and hours. They wanted to get as many signatures as possible and present the petition the following day, while there was still time.

I said of course I would help. I took the subway uptown to Maely's, and she introduced me to McKay and gave me the petitions. Then I set out on Saturday night to get signatures. I thought it would be easy. I figured people would be lining up to sign for one of the great singers of our time.

I was wrong. The old McCarthyite fear of signing your name to anything was still alive in the land, even in New York. The attitude of many people I asked was summed up by a young man I encountered at a party at Ted the Horse's apartment who nervously refused on the grounds that “I'm not a signer.”

I figured my only hope was to find some politically aware citizens, so I hurried over to a meeting of the Young Socialist League and asked Mike Harrington if I could make an appeal for the petition. Mike sympathized at once. He signed it himself, then interrupted the debate going on at his meeting, introduced me, explained the petition, and urged everyone to sign it. Out of a crowd of about forty people, I got eight or nine signatures.

I hit the White Horse, the San Remo, Louis', and found more suspicious people unwilling to help. And this was the Village! Finally, around one o'clock in the morning I wearily took the IRT back uptown and handed over a sheet with about twenty names on it to Maely and Louis, and explained it was the best I could do. They thanked me.

Maely was doing everything she could think of to ease the pain of Billie's last days, and as part of that effort she called Reverend Norm Eddy of the East Harlem Protestant Parish. “Maely took me up to see her,” Norm recalls. “She was under guard, which was ridiculous
—there was no way she could leap out of that hospital bed and escape. Maely and I were among the few friends who came to visit. Maely asked me to come because she recognized that Billie had a deep faith. A priest had visited her, and Maely wanted to bring a minister. I felt different because I didn't know Billie Holiday, but I went.

“The first time I visited, Billie was fully conscious and we talked, but when she signed a paperback copy of her book for me,
Lady Sings the Blues
, she was so weak and out of it she couldn't spell her name [it is signed “Billie Holday”]. The next day she was in an oxygen tent, and she breathed in and out saying, ‘Oh God, oh God.' Three or four days later, people were lined up for three blocks at the funeral parlor, but she died alone.”

Frank O'Hara wrote a poem called “The Day Lady Died” that not only paid tribute to Billie Holiday but beautifully captured a feeling of those times.

It is 12:20 in New York a Friday

three days after Bastille day, yes

it is 1959 and I go get a shoeshine

because I will get off the 4:19 in Easthampton

at 7:15 and then go straight to dinner

and I don't know the people who will feed me

I walk up the muggy street beginning to sun

and have a hamburger and a malted and buy

an ugly NEW WORLD WRITING to see what the poets

in Ghana are doing these days

I go on to the bank

and Miss Stillwagon (first name Linda I once heard)

doesn't even look up my balance for once in her life

and in THE GOLDEN GRIFFIN I get a little Verlaine

for Patsy with drawings by Bonnard although I do

think of Hesiod, trans. Richard Lattimore or

Brendan Behan's new play or
Le Balcon
or
Les Negres

of Genet, but I don't, I stick with Verlaine

after practically going to sleep with quandarines

and for Mike I just stroll into the PARK LANE

Liquor Store and ask for a bottle of Strega and

then I go back where I came from to 6th Avenue

and the tobacconist in the Ziegfeld Theatre and

casually ask for a carton of Gauloises and a carton

of Picayunes and a NEW YORK POST with her face on it

and I am sweating a lot by now and thinking of

leaning on the john door in the 5 SPOT

while she whispered a song along the keyboard

to Mal Waldron and everyone and I stopped breathing

In the summer of 1962 the Five Spot moved three blocks north. As Hettie Jones, who lived across the street, explained, “To push out the poor it barely acknowledged, the city had condemned certain ‘slum areas.' One began just south of us, across Fifth Street, and included the Five Spot.” In
How I Became Hettie Jones
she remembered that summer also as the time Marilyn Monroe died and Martin Luther King was jailed in Albany, Georgia—and Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago became free nations.

Helen Tworkov recalls the following summer of 1963 as the last big time at the Five Spot, and by that fall “people weren't crowding in like they used to, and everyone seemed to be going to Gerde's Folk City.”

Ray Grist, who had worked as a bartender at the Five Spot, says of the new era, “The folk singers took over MacDougal Street. Cosby was the comedian at Gerde's Folk City, and Bob Dylan, Richie Havens, and Odetta were there, then the Beatles came, and after that it was all disco.”

David Amram played the Five Spot for the last time when it moved to St. Marks Place. “They were having a hard time, doing their best to hang in there,” he says. “Joe Termini was so generous, so bighearted, but he didn't really have a business sense. I played a benefit to help the Five Spot stay open, but finally it closed in the seventies. It couldn't survive the changing times in New York.”

TWELVE

In Exile Till We Come Again

One morning I awoke in my high-ceilinged, floor-through apartment on East 12th Street—the best apartment I'd ever had, wangled by getting a copy of the
Village Voice
classified ads before the paper hit the newsstand—and the high steel scream of garbage trucks devouring the city's waste like menacing mechanical dinosaurs crawling through the street below my third-floor window pierced my habitual hangover like a rusty kitchen knife thrust into the tenderest part of my brain, reaching even deeper, to something that seemed like my very soul. Feeling hot and in need of fresh air, I reeled to the living room and opened the window to one of those gray, anonymous days that could have been any season, since the smog was heavy and soot seemed to clog the nostrils. I blinked and saw small buds like dabs of pale green paint on the otherwise bare, scraggly tree whose skinny limbs reached awkwardly upward like pleading arms. It was spring of 1962, May, almost my birthday.
Thirty
.

The same scene would have looked different to me, more pleasing, less menacing, even a year before (in my twenties). Then the sight that would have secretly cheered me was of the office across the street—Fairchild Publications, home of
Women's Wear Daily
—where I could look down and see through its windows men and women in suits and ties, dresses and heels, moving efficiently between
desks like bees in a hive, regimented to a nine-to-five life. I'd managed to escape that life by virtue of living by the pen, no matter how hard or precarious it was to patch together the rent with checks from magazines and modest advances for books and maybe a grant—if not from Guggenheim, as Ivan Gold had gotten, then one from another foundation, the Ingram-Merrill perhaps, which bestowed something on my worthiest literary friend, Robert Phelps. Our highly irregular (in terms of timing) checks that were always “in the mail” from magazine and publisher were supplemented sometimes with a temporary research job for a good cause: Mike Harrington had once worked for the Fund for the Republic, on a study of blacklisting in movies and television. From time to time Seymour Krim did stints as an editor, lending literary class to the new girlie mags, where he could assign work to free-lance friends (like me) for a good fee—up to $500 a shot, enough to live on for a month.

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