Tuesday, November 26, 2019

Remembering the White Guy in an All Black Band




(The great guitar player and teacher, Chet Krolewicz, -known profesionally as Chet Krully- passed away in Brockton, Mass Hospital on November 27, 2013. I was one of Chet's worst students - but he never held it against me. Hearing his stories of the big band days was the highlight of my lessons and a true bright spot in my life. Listening to him was like having my own time machine ! ! ! This story is based on real incidents that Chet told me about. R.I.P. Chet. You were a good guy. Bill Russo.)
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The crowded train chugged out of Penn Station on a freezing morning in the winter of 1942. The 'Silver Meteor' roared, and snorted hot steam; engulfing the dirty snow on either side of the tracks and melting it into rusty water.

Originating in icy New York city, the Sea Board Air Line Railroad’s flagship combination would travel 1382 miles, make more than two dozen stops, and still hit ninety degree Miami in its scheduled 25 hours.



“Don’t get your hopes up boy,” said the tall, spare black man with silvery hair on his chin, but none on his head. “The 12 of us in this band won’t be in Miami in no 25 hours. We be lucky to get there in 25 days. Maybe it might be 50 days.”

“What do you mean Mr. Sloane? I thought we were going to be playing in Miami,” questioned the green youngster who sat across from him, his hands grasping his guitar.”

“Call me 'Lucky' kid, like everybody else. They call me that cause I lucky to be alive. I been nearly lynched in a dozen towns and arrested in prolly a hundred. Ya see, I’ve always been uppity. It’s why I never made it big in the music bizness. I can play the trumpet way better than Cootie Williams, Hot Lips Paige or Satchelmouth Armstrong….but I never give in easy. I make it hard for myself.”

“You are the greatest player for sure,” said the young man. “That’s what I told Mr. Henderson when I joined the band. I want to play with the best.”

“Well boy, you got your wish. And I wish you ain’t gonna be sorry you got it.”

“So, how come we’re not going to Miami for a long time?”

“Kid. We colored. We a colored band. We don’t got a schedule like Benny Goodman or Paul Whiteman.

Whiteman….that’s a funny name. You think Paul Whiteman would be making so much money if he wasn’t?”

“Wasn’t what?”

“Wasn’t white, boy! He is a white man named Whiteman. That’s pretty funny.

But us. Like I said we a colored band.

What that mean? That means we sometimes play in the white clubs and sometimes we play in the black joints. But after the show in the white part of a city, we gots to go back to the other side of town. We gotta stay in cheap hotels, eat cheap food, go to colored only places. Hell we can’t even use their telephone?”

“What do you mean?”, asked the young guitar player.

“I mean that once you get in the South, boy, there’s separate everythings. …..hotels, bathrooms, restaurants, schools, and yes even telephone booths. We can’t use a white telephone booth. We gotta find one for usselves or we can’t make no call. If we gotta take a leak we gotta find a colored bathroom or don’t go at all.

One time I hadda go so bad I couldn’t hold it no more. I peed against the side of a building and some citizen put the police on me and they slammed my head on the side of that brick building till I passed out. Then they jus left me there lyin' in my own blood and a puddle of piddle.”

“They can’t do that,” said the guitarist who for the first time, was having doubts about his choice of jobs.

“Shit kid. They can do whatever they want. You a northern boy. I guess that’s why you don’t get it. In the North they do things like that but it’s a little more hidded. They still do it but not quite so much as you’d notice it.”

The train ground to a reluctant halt a few miles out of Washington to take on water and mail. The musicians stopped talking and opened the windows. They stuck their heads through. Hoping for maybe a smell of cherry blossoms - instead, they got their nostrils burned by smoke and steam. Their car was near the front of the train and got the smokestack snot, while the passengers in the 'white-only' cars further back had the luxury of the clear, crisp air.

When its tanks were full of water and its postal car stuffed with fresh mail, the Great Locomotive called “97” resumed its clanky run to Florida.

“Well anyways, getting back to when we going to be in Miami,” Lucky closed his window with a thud and began speaking again when their speed was back to forty, “ Fletch has a few bookings lined on up certain dates but mostly we try to pick up work along the route of the train. Usually we play a night or two in Wilmington. Then just like the trackage of the Seaboard Air Line Railroad, we go on to Baltimore and work a few days, then we get back on the train and head on down to Virginia and try to pick up a couple gigs in Alexandria and then Richmond. After Richmond it gets really tough as we go thru Rocky Mount and Fayetteville in North Carolina and then Charleston in South Carolina and so It goes until when we get to Savanna, Georgia where we will work for a couple of weeks. Then on to Jacksonville and maybe a week or two after that, after that we will be in Miami.”

“It sounds great to me,” said the young guitar player. “Ever since I first heard the Fletcher Henderson orchestra, I’ve wanted to be in it.

When I was in high school, I went to try out for band and the leader said ’what do you play?’ When I told him guitar he just laughed".

'There’s no guitar in bands!,' he scorned.

“There’s going to be,” I told him. “I’m going to play for one of the great Big Bands,” I vowed. He just laughed some more.”

“Well boy", Lucky responded, "you are here now and you are really good. You drive that Stromberg 300 just like the steam engine pulls this ol’ train. You are about the first guitar man to have such a big chair in a Swing Band.
I gotta ask you again if you know what you are getting into.”

“I know Lucky. I know and I am ready. I know I’m going to be eating in all those ‘colored only’ places you told me about and sleeping in segregated hotels…..and......”

“.......And don’t forget about peeing in colored toilets,” Lucky chuckled.

“That too,” agreed the guitarist, “peeing in colored toilets.”



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He did it too. Until the aggregation broke up, about three years later, that determined young man's hot guitar drove the Fletcher Henderson orchestra and made it one of the country's finest swing bands.

He ate with the band, slept where they slept, drank from the colored-only fountains...and even called his Mom every Sunday, from the segregated telephones.

There’s a little more to the story.

He was not only one of the early great Jazz guitarists…but he also happened to be “white.”

Young Chet Krolewicz, barely out of high school, in late 1942 became one of the first (if not the first) to cross the reverse color line. He was the only white player in an all black band.

Chet was asked many times over the years, why he would endure the hardships he did in choosing to play with Henderson’s band when he could have signed on to any one of dozens of white bands.

His reply was always the same,

“I wanted to play with the best.”

Cape Cod Film-Maker in Clover, While Up to his Ears in Alligators.





 By Bill Russo 




Dan Adams of Cape Cod is considered a great ‘old school’ film director by a number of elite Hollywood actors, including the likes of Bruce Dern, Sandra Bullock, and Richard Dreyfus.  It was Adams of Barnstable Village, who gave Bullock her first shot at a starring role in his initial feature film, 1989’s A Fool and his Money.


Speaking of money, it probably should be pointed out that the real talent of the 60 year old Adams lies not in his film-making but in ‘G-OPM’ – as in “Getting Other Peoples’ Money”. It was this skill that netted him two years in prison after being convicted of bilking the Massachusetts Film Commission of 4.7 million dollars to finance his Cape Cod productions of The Golden Boys (2008) and The Lightkeepers (2009).



Adams claimed writing credits for the projects, yet old time Cape Codders recognized both films as reproductions of books by writer Joe Lincoln of Brewster on Cape Cod. The Golden Boys was based on Lincoln’s 1904 work – the Story of the Coast. His Lightkeepers was a reworking of Lincoln’s 1911 tale, The Woman Haters.
 
The pair of films taken from the highly successful Joe Lincoln books though well regarded, yielded scant box office returns. That was not a problem for Dan Adams however, because he was paid over $5,000,000 in film credits that could be used as cash.

He told the state film commission that he paid Richard Dreyfuss 2.5 million dollars to take the lead role in the Lightkeepers. Since he actually paid his star only 400 thousand, he put the extra 2.1 million in his own pocket. This was the most egregious overcharge to the state, but not the only one.


 
He admitted to the crimes at his trial and in 2012 was sentenced to serve two years. In late 2013 he emerged from jail and announced that he intended to resume his film career. 

After his release there was talk of him making a film version of “The Big Valley”, a very successful 1960s tv series starring Barbara Stanwyck. Though nothing ever came of that, Adams worked quietly to build up another stockpile of cash and in 2018 he directed a film called “An L.A. Minute” starring Gabriel Byrne and Kiersy Clemons. The film has only one star on Rotten Tomatoes and just 2 and a half on IMDB.



An L.A. Minute was released in just three theaters and generated merely $5000 in ticket revenues from the three theaters it played in. So how could Dan Adams make any money from such a colossal flop?

The answer to that question surfaced about five months after the release of the film. In February, 2019 the United States Securities and Exchange Commission charged Dan Adams with fraud, saying that he induced two investors to put $160,000.00 into the project, as part of a 50 million dollar fund he and a partner assembled to finance their films and music ventures. An L.A. Minute was their first production.

As of this date the status of the filing is uncertain. I haven’t been able to find any follow up stories, but I suspect another trial is in store for Mr. Adams. 

Okay, this brings us up to the end of November, 2019. What’s next for the intrepid Cape Cod film-maker who has been compared to the legendary Alfred Hitchcock?

THE WALK! 

It was announced this week  that Adams has been signed on to direct ‘The Walk’. The film will be produced by Micheal Mailer, whose last effort, The Ledge, with Liv Tyler among others, earned all of $8,000 in ticket money!

Don’t fear. Even if The Walk only picks up about $340 in box office dough, Dan Adams will find a way to make some cash from it. He always does.

By the way, Dan Adams is the co-writer of The Walk. The other writer? His name is George Powell. A convicted drug dealer who served time in Bay State pens with Adams.
 
Since earning his freedom, Mr. Powell has been earning his daily bread by script-writing. The Walk is his first effort, but it won’t be his last try – because one way or another, everybody is going to make big money from this film: with the probable exception of the investors!

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Monday, November 25, 2019

Struck by a Meteor - The True Story




65 years ago in late November, the Sky Fell on Alabama - when 10 pounds of space rock plummeted towards the home of Mrs. Ann Hodges.  Seconds later she became the only person in the history of the world to be struck by a rock from outer space - this is her true story, dramatized by Short Story Theater. Click the link to be taken to the video...…..  https://youtu.be/MwI3o31FLng











Saturday, November 23, 2019

What Happened in the U.S. on 11-23-1954?





On this day, November 23, 1954. the Dow Jones Industrial Average hit a new high of 383 - the highest mark since the 'Great' Depression. On this day in 2019 the DJ will close at around 28,000 dollars! This fact comes into play in "The Sky Fell on Alabama". It's Episode 14 of Short Story Theater - coming this week to all major podcast platforms and YouTube. It's a 15 minute, full cast true story of the only person to be struck by a space rock, and live to tell about it!





Coming to Short Story Theater


The true story of the nightmare life of Mrs. Ann Hodges
who survived being struck by a six pound
 meteor from outer space.....

Coming the week of November 23, 2019 
to all major podcast platforms as well as Youtube

Friday, November 15, 2019

When the Neighborhood Knights Ran the Numbers




Back in the days when gambling wasn't run by crooked politicians,  the 'Knights of the Neighborhood', the local bookies ran the show...and the police looked the other way, except for this one cop who didn't.....'Ten Dollars on the Nose', Episode 12 of Season One of Short Story Theater, now available - free to listen to this ten minute drama base on a real life incident in Massachusetts (click the link) .....https://www.spreaker.com/episode/20038849

Thursday, November 14, 2019

Please Bring Back the Good Old Days!


Memories of the horrible events of 2019 jarred me awake this morning with nightmares of mass shootings, killings, devastating cyclones, wildfires in California, an inferno in Australia....

"ENOUGH!, 'ENOUGH!" I said to myself. "Please bring back the good old days when I was a child...in the 1940s".

But then I remembered that we lived every day in the shadow of a war that killed untold millions of warriors and civilians. In addition, more than six million people, mostly of the Jewish faith, were heartlessly exterminated in the death camps. 

I quickly realized that the good old days were not so good. We haven't fixed all our problems, but on the fourth Thursday of this month, November; we do have much to be thankful for. 

The picture below is the New England Holocaust Memorial near South Station in Boston. I had the honor of being one of the workers to build the massive stainless steel columns, covered in glass with the tattoo numbers of victims etched into the outside walls and quotes from camp survivors engraved on the inside. 

Ryan Iron of Raynham, Mass built it but it was conceived and created by Holocaust survivor Stephen Ross.


At the entrance to the death camps, the Nazis erected signs above the entrance saying 'Arbeit Macht Frei' - "Work Makes Us Free".

I think that now, more than ever, we need to keep the horrific memories of the World War fresh in our minds because 
"For as long as we remember this, we shall stay free."

(C) 2019 Bill Russo 

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Wednesday, November 13, 2019

Pushing Karma on Cape Cod



A fisherman’s life on Cape Cod is never easy, but the Christmas season is especially rough for Cisco DaSilva. His young daughter Maria has plans to solve the family’s troubles by doing battle with the town’s richest man. Listen to the 15 minute  free, full-cast production of Karma and the Little Girl From Provincetown on Short Story Theater.




Click the link - free to listen -  https://www.spreaker.com/episode/19284095



Monday, November 11, 2019

Construction Has Begun on the New Earth






Except at a few towns on Cape Cod, 'Constitution Day' is rarely celebrated in the United States. On 'Constitution Day 2019' in a place called Pleasant Lake, construction began on The New Earth. 

It's Episode 11 of Season One of 'Short Story Theater'  - now live and free on multiple platforms.. click the link to hear the 12 minute report on Spreaker. https://www.spreaker.com/episode/19970333

Sunday, November 3, 2019

A Different Route to the Beach


A Different Route to the Beach

by Bill Russo (C) 2019



I couldn't get to the beach today, so I took another route.  Perhaps you too have gone this way......



To be on the shoreline at the dawn of day
and walk a mile among the shells and sand.
To hear the roar of whitecap waves that play
music sounding far better than any band.


To see fluffy cloud pillows play hide and seek
and block the golden sun for a while from view
until nature's breath sends them off in a streak.
It's only real in my mind, but I can see it. Can you?

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Bill is a retired broadcaster and newspaper editor who splits his time between Cape Cod and South Florida.  Bill is featured in the documentary film "The Bridgewater Triangle" as well as on Monsters and Mysteries in America on Dicscovery's Destination American Channel. He's the author of several books including Ghosts of Cape Cod, a #1 best seller on Amazon in the travel niche of Kindle Books.
Bill answers all emails.

Billrrrrr@yahoo.oom 

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