***Out In The Be-Bop Be-Bop 1950s
Night- Betsy And Earl’s Senior Prom Moment- With Vaughn Monroe In Mind
Scene: Brought to mind by one of the
snapshot photos that graced a 1950s rock and roll CD compilation that I
reviewed recently featuring a classic prom night scene that many will remember
from their youth.
The “Big” night, the night that
every school boy and girl has been waiting for, well, maybe not waiting for,
but hoping for, the night of their senior prom signifying the end of their days
at old North Adamsville High School. Of course being a Podunk town away from
the big city lights of Boston said senior prom, as has been a tradition since
who knows when is held in the school gymnasium. A school gymnasium that, from
long experience, has been turned into a faux-elegant hotel-style ballroom for
the occasion. No cheapjack bunting and streamers, a few garlands, and maybe a
couple of pieces of subdued lightning like at the ho-hum weekly school dances
this night. Today the place is filled with well-appointed tables set with the
best china and silverware, the bandstand is ablaze with decorations, and the
dance floor specially lit to create, well, to create that mood like you were
downtown at some swanky hotel. Even Podunk knows how to raise the bar for those
now leaving the North Adamsville High family nest and who will soon be facing
that hard 1958 Cold War world that keeps menacing everybody’s happiness.
In the middle of the festivities
standing, check to check, as they have since sophomore year, eighth grade if
you count the hemming and hawing that went on before the two became one, are
Betsy Binstock, resplendent in her chiffony, open shoulder mother-made gown,
complete with blue dahlia corsage (just what she wanted) and looking very
handsome in his rented tuxedo (from Mr. Tuxedos right up in Adamsville Square
as always since time immortal), Earl Avery. Children born and bred to rock ‘n’
roll they have just finished dancing up a storm to Robin Luke’s Susie
Darlin’, the latest “had to have” record in the 1958 teen be-bop night. Of
course this song, as all the music tonight, will be covered by the local rock
band sensations The Rockin’ Ramrods hired for the occasion by the Senior Prom
committee to keep their fellow seniors happy. As they release cheeks and head
for their table Betsy is beaming because Earl has just made his first,
tentative, maybe, kind of, move in the direction of asking her to marry him in
the not too distant future. And as if on cue Jack Scott’s My True Love
come forth from the bandstand and they shuffle back to the floor as if
mesmerized by the power of the song.
Of course, after coming off the
floor again to the sound of Tommy Edwards It’s All In The Game Betsy
cannot wait to get to the Ladies’ (yes, this night Ladies) Powder Room to tell
one and all of her conquest. (Really the “powder room” is the legendary Junior
and Senior Girls’ Lounge, looking very much the elegant hotel lounge, including
real hand towels, that has been the scene of more gossip about who did or did
not do what with whom, the what being, naturally “going all the way” than
Hollywood could ever conger up in its wildest dreams.) So Betsy excuses herself
from the table and starts picking up girlfriends to head to the lounge. Spunky
Betsy knows that in this wicked old world only the strong survive, even on the
question of marriage. Therefore her strategy is to spread Earl’s kind of, sort
of proposal into something like the granite from the quarry that the town was
known to produce in the old, old days. Maybe it has something to do with the
evening, maybe it was the Ramrods covering Ed Townsend’s For Your Love,
maybe it was just something in the early June air but Betsy went all out that
night in the lounge, even speculating that she and Earl would be marriage
within the year.
Meanwhile poor Earl, still shaky for
even going as timidly far as he did on the marriage question had to laugh as
the Ramrods played the Chantels Maybe. Earl nevertheless had a sense
that the die was cast as a glowing Betsy and her entourage came back into view.
As we leave this scene to the strands of Jimmy Clanton and His Rockets’ Just
A Dream Earl has shrugged off all evil thoughts for the night, for his
senior prom night and has decided to just go with the flow.
P.S. For those who can hardly wait
to know how Betsy and Earl made out here is the scoop. Well, yes they were
married in the summer of 1959 although not under the circumstances one would
have expected. Whether by design or just happenstance Betsy got pregnant and
honest and true Earl did the right thing. In the fall of 1959 Earl Avery,
Junior came. Betsy a little worn from her pregnancy seems a bit bewildered just
now. Earl on the other hand, with a raise and new job title to go with his
junior boy, couldn’t be happier. Go figure, right.
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