| The Mardi Gras Underground Man
recalls dressing up in a strapless
blue chiffon dress, donning a blond
wig and belting out a song he'd
penned about sex-change operations:
"Reject Your Glands,"
played to the tune of Tammy Wynette's
"Stand By Your Man." "One
of the unfortunate things is I have
absolutely no musical talent whatsoever,"
he admits, "but that did not
stop me."
A local porno theater that billed
double features on its marquee
was a prime source of inspiration
for the young impressario. "I
had a band called Jail Bait and
the Young Squirts," he recalls.
" 'Jail Bait' was the first
film, 'The Young Squirts' was
the second. Great, great band."
Then there was Velvet Touch and
the Pleasure Masters, put together
for a Halloween party. "God,"
winces the Underground Man, "it
was awful." |
Elvis
sighting at Mardi Gras 1999:
The Underground Man
Wanting
to see friends in costume was
a key
motivation in starting what has
become the
Bacchanalia du jour for the Mardi
Gras
demimonde: M.O.M.s Ball. |
The
Underground Mana legendary mover
and shaker in the Mardi Gras underground,
he asked that his name not be usedis
nothing if not an inventive instigator.
Another case in point: M.O.M.s Ball,
an annual eventfeaturing "Fish
Head" music by The Radiators, costumed
antics and sensory indulgencethat
has become the Bacchanalia du jour for
the Mardi Gras demimonde. Much like
San Francisco's fabled Acid Teststhe
free-form gatherings hosted by novelist
Ken Kesey and his band of Merry Pranksters
back in the days when LSD was legalM.O.M.s
Ball is an eye-opener that takes on
a life of its own.
It
all started in 1974, when the Underground
Man was bar manager at Luigi's, a now-defunct
pizza joint in New Orleans' Gentilly
neighborhood. He recalls "looking
for something to do to entertain myself,
to have some fun."
In
the wake of the British Invasion, the
local music scene, so vibrant in the
late 1950s and early 1960s, had fallen
on hard times. "All of the clubs
that I went to in high school were all
gone," recalls the Underground
Man, "and no one is giving dances,
nothing is happening."
What to
do? The Underground Man hit upon the
idea of throwing a king cake party.
In New Orleans, king cake, a
coffee cake-type pastry jazzed up in
Mardi Gras colors, traditionally appears on feast of the Epiphany
(January 6)also known as King's
Day or Twelfth Night (it's the twelfth
day of Christmas, the day the gift-bearing
Magi visited the Christ child)and
disappears with the end of Carnival.
Popular custom holds that the finder
of the plastic baby (it used to be a
bean) hidden in the cake must purchase
the next cake and throw a party.
When the
Underground Man was growing up, all
of the things young Catholic New Orleanians
learned socially, such as dancing, drinking
and the niceties of mingling with the
opposite sex, occured at king cake parties.
When the time came for the girls to
choose dance partners, all of the guys,
dressed in sports coats and ties, would
be lined up on one side of the room.
The parents hung out in another room,
says the Underground Man, adding: "It's
all very awkward, like a mating ritual,
and everybody did it."
"So,
we decide we're going to have this king
cake party, hire a set of parentsfake
parents, you know, just to have them
there"and dust off some old
45s. There was just one problem: "Nobody's
dancing anymore, because everybody's
gone off to listen to Jefferson Airplane."
But the Underground Man had an older
sister who knew how to dance, as did
the older brother of one of his friends.
So, a month or so before the party,
everyone met at another friend's house
on Carrollton Avenue, which had a large
basement, to bone up on the Jitterbug.
Soon after,
a bartender at Luigi's piped up about
a Veterans of Foreign Wars hall on Franklin
Avenue in Gentilly: He'd been there
for fraternity theme parties. Cost to
rent: about $120. There were no neighbors
to worry about, and the place had custodians
who'd clean up at no extra cost.
The original
plan was to have the party at the house
on Carrollton. Switching to the VFW
hall, however, required outside financing.
Thus, in order to induce people to cough
up money, the original premise of the
king cake party gave way to something
more elaborate: a Mardi Gras ball with
live music.
Before
long, the Underground Man and his cohorts
had rallied about 30 people to kick
in $20 apiece. They had the hall lined
up, but still needed a name for the
shindig. It so happened that the year
before, two of the Underground Man's
friends"serious reprobates,"
as he describes themhad undertaken
a lark, showing up unannounced at a
Gentilly barroom on Christmas night
with a turkey to feed whoever happened
to be on hand. Figuring that anyone
who didn't get invited somewhere on
Christmas had to be either an orphan
or a misfit, they waggishly dubbed it
"The Orphans and Misfits Christmas
Dinner."
The duo
had boasted about their exploit, but
blew off doing it again the following
Christmas. Someone had a flash of inspiration:
Why not appropriate the name for the
Mardi Gras ball? The Krewe of Mystic
Ophans & Misfits was born.
In its
early years, M.O.M.s Ball was open to
anyone who showed up in costume. "Invitations"
were printed up, but they weren't required
to get in the door. A core group of
revelers, most of whom hung out at Luigi's,
footed the bill. Admission was free
to everyone else.
"I
just decided that the deal with this
party is going to be that you got to
wear a costume to get in," recalls
the Underground Man, "because nobody's
wearing costumes for Mardi Gras anymore,
because everybody's too terminally hip."
The first
M.O.Ms Ball featured Paul Varisco &
the Milestones, a white R&B band
with Ed Volker (now of The Radiators)
on keyboards. A few hundred people showed
up, and the party was a hit.
While not
consciously setting out to spoof the
courtly traditions of mainstream Carnival
krewes, whose faux royalty tend to be
pillars of respectability, the Underground
Man hit upon the idea of having Quasimodo,
King of Fools, reign over M.O.M.s Ball.
In the early years, in order to be chosen
king, you basically had to have been
out of work for at least half a year
and owe Luigi's $100-plus in bar tabs.
In other words, says the Underground
Man, "you had to be of a very questionable
moral and ethical background."
Originally,
the Underground Man had wanted to go
down to Camp Street (which at the time
was skid row), find a wino, present
him with a crown and say, " 'Look,
how would you like to be king of this
party? You get to chase women and drink
all you want.' Then throw him back out
on the street the next day. But,"
he adds, "it was thought to be
too cruel by people who have greater
sensitivity than me."
The Underground
Man, who may be the only person to have
attended every M.O.M.s Ball, emphasizes
the collaborative, seat-of-the-pants
nature of the whole enterprise. "This
party, and most everything that I was
involved in at the time, came from the
collective unconsciousness at Luigi's,"
he explains. "I just happened to
be the bar manager."
The Underground
Man gave up his self-described role
as Krewe of M.O.M.'s "front man"
about 11 years ago, and credits two
friends, Woody Penouilh and Michelle
Mahar, with having done the heavy lifting
behind the scenes. Under different leadership,
the bash has steadily grown in popularity.
As a result, whereas the krewe once
embraced what the Underground Man calls
a "shitloose," anything-goes
ethos, it now imposes rules and has
a long waiting list to join. And the
ball is now an invitation-only affair.
| "It has almost become the thing it sought
to satirize," observes the
Underground Man. "I mean, a
ticket to the M.O.M.s Ball is as
hard to get for the hip intelligentsia
as a ticket to [the] Rex [Ball].
You know, it's just a different
society. It ain't what it was."
These days, the Underground Man's
main connection to Mardi Gras
is through The Storyville Stompers
New Orleans Brass Band, an offshoot
of another marching ensemble he
founded, The Pair-A-Dice Tumblers.
He's grand marshal of the Stompers,
whose annual Carnival gigs include
Phunny Phorty Phellows, a group
of maskers who ride a streetcar
on Twelfth Night; Krewe of Louisianians,
which puts on a high-profile Mardi
Gras gala in Washington, D.C.;
and Society of St. Ann. |
Underground
Man leading the Storyville
Stompers in the Society of St.
Ann's
Mardi Gras 2000 march
Assuming
the role of grand marshall
comes naturally to this
flamboyant reveler. |
Says the
Underground Man of the Mardi Gras march
with Society of St. Ann, a mysterious
troupe whose costumes are always among
the most surreal of the day: "I
wouldn't trade that for the world." |