It’s May and summer is hiding just around the corner. Out of sight but not out of mind. In Wisconsin I imagine you’re probably putting up the screen windows and dropping the boat back into the lake. If you haven’t already done so. In L.A. we’re dusting off our ammo and grinding down the serial numbers on our handguns. Ain’t summer grand?
I don’t know about you people, but some of the best memories of my long life percolated out of a summer’s heat. A cherished childhood memory of stock car races out at the Chilton fairgrounds. My first job was selling soda in the stands. A demolition derby, to a child’s eyes, was far more exciting than anything Vegas could come up with today. Swimming at Koffer dam. Playing baseball with the Keuler family across the street, especially since I had a huge crush on Mary Kay Keuler for years and years. Bratwursts and corn on the cob on the grill. Eating with the family on our homemade picnic bench under the tree we tied a tire to for swinging in the shade. Soaking the lawn in late afternoon so we could gather night crawlers that night, armed with only a flashlight in one hand and a bucket of dirt in the other. Catching fire flies in a bottle. As I fondly remember it, Chilton summers were the stuff great dreams are made of. How do you remember summers in your home town?
The only fast food restaurant in Chilton back in my high school days was the A&W out towards the edge of town. I don’t even know if it’s still there but in the early 60’s that was the only place where all the kids could meet. The Youth Center on Main Street hadn’t opened yet. The really "hot" girls were cheerleaders during the day and car hops at the A&W after school. I believe at one time they even wore roller skates. Rosemary Pfeffer was tall, lean and one of the hottest cheerleaders to ever walk the halls of CHS. She also worked at the A&W and having her bring me a "Black Cow (Root beer & ice cream) and a burger was the closest I was ever going to get to Heaven. A deal at any price.
In L.A. fast food restaurants are where tomorrow’s famous actresses make a living today. There is a young blond, Amy Ball, who works at a local Del Taco. She eerily resembles Marylyn Monroe but has the attitude and free spirit of Jim Morrison. I mentioned her name so you can jot it down because there’s no doubt she’ll be famous. Then you can say you read it in "Hollywood Daze" first. When you’ve lived out here as long as I have you develop a strong sense of who has that winning combination of talent and moxie and who doesn’t. Now Rosemary Pfeffer might have stood a chance at fame but I don’t think she ever made it this far west. Sometimes I wish I hadn’t.
My grandparents owned a home on Big Island Lake halfway between Mountain and Lakewood, Wisconsin. The best summer vacations of my life were spent on a boat there fishing for Northern Pike and Muskies with my brother and cousins. The lakes are so toxically polluted around L.A. today that if you did catch anything odds are it would just glare at you through all three eyes and run away on its many legs. There was a log bunkhouse at my grandparents place where all of the boys slept in assigned bunk beds. Girls weren’t allowed. My grandfather carved a character’s name from the TV series,"Bonanza", at the head of each bed. I was the oldest cousin and so became "Adam". My brother was the only portly one so he was our de facto "Hoss".
Although we envied the kids living in Southern California at the time because they had Disneyland and the beaches, I learned once I moved out here that we indeed had it best growing up in Wisconsin. Sure we had the stifling humidity and mosquitoes the size of B1 bombers but the kids growing up in L.A. envied our warm summer nights fishing on Big Island Lake. How many of you, at a really stressful moment, have closed your eyes and gone back to your summer fishing days as a kid? Try it. It sure beats Prosaic.
I read in the Chilton Times-Journal that Sarah Campbell of Hilbert will be traveling to California this summer to participate in the 8th Annual World Championships of Performing Arts. According to the article the competition will be held in Hollywood, which to outsiders, sounds quite clamorous. But the truth is that even Compton in daylight hours is safer. I’ve managed three apartment buildings in Hollywood with one across the street from the Hollywood Bowl and another down the block from Paramount Studios and I can tell you Hollywood isn’t the Tinsel Town you might think it is. The LAPD considers Hollywood to be one of the most dangerous area in L.A., especially at night. That doesn’t stop millions of kids from all over the world pursuing their wildest dreams here. It didn’t stop me. If you do come out here you should always park your car in a well lit parking lot next to Hollywood Boulevard and avoid the side streets and alleys. Don’t talk to any strangers unless they’re wearing a Packer shirt, speak English and actually know who Brett Favre is.
Sarah Campbell sounds like she comes from a well-grounded family. Her father installs car upholstery, which out here, is done primarily in Tijuana by men in open, sweaty shirts with a cold Corona in one hand and a needle and thread in the other. Can you even buy Mexican beer at any of the liquor stores in your home town? If you look at some of the fathers of the stars who succumbed to tragic ends (Maryln Monroe, Jayne Mansfield, Natalie Wood, Dorothy Dandridge, Billie Holiday) you won’t find a single upholsterer in the lot. Maryln wasn’t even certain who her father was! There’s something priceless about being brought up in a well-grounded Wisconsin family. Even if it is in Hilbert. If you wonder how someone like Hilary Swank could win two Academy Awards for best actress and still maintain that small town charm it’s because she grew up in Bellingham, Washington. It’s a beautiful small town along Interstate 5, just 60 miles south of the Canadian border. (Think of Chilton with Duty-Free shops.) Even though Hilary lived in a trailer park, her mother assured her that she had the talent to pursue her dreams just as long as she didn’t forget where she came from. My guess is Deb and Pat Campbell are doing the same thing for Sarah.
If Sarah, who looks like a young Michelle Pfeiffer with a better nose, were to ask me for advice I would say that you shouldn’t dwell on any rejection coming your way but just enjoy the love of the art. Don’t expect fame but just appreciate every moment you’re allowed to practice your craft. And bring plenty of sunscreen. summer for dreamers. Our entire office complex here at Hollywood Daze is filled with dreamers. That and a sprinkling of illegals from Central America, South America, Argentina, the Ukaraine, Parts of France (The good parts) and Greenland.
Good luck to all of you from the entire staff at
Hollywood Daze
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Tom Neuhoff
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