Locomotive to the Past - George Schultz (famous ebook reader .txt) š

- Author: George Schultz
Book online Ā«Locomotive to the Past - George Schultz (famous ebook reader .txt) šĀ». Author George Schultz
The star-struck young woman was able to learn her partāand movementsāwell enough, to appear, in the companyās final Detroit performance, at The Cass Theater!
From there, the troupe traveled onāto engage in over 250 performances, in two years! Playing every major cityāand more than a few āminorā onesāin the country. Eventually, sheād worked her way up to where sheād assumed the important roleāof āThe Madameā! The part gave her a swinging, up-tempo, solo numberācalled Diogenes! (She was looking for āan honest manā.) Jason had long-since found an old recording-studio-cast copy of the showāon 45s.
June 12, 1964: Mary Rose married Cletus Martināwhose parents had lived, for years, āacross the street⦠and down two housesā, from Susan and Eric. He was a seller of phonograph recordsāat The Boyerās Haunted Shack appliance store, on Oakman, close by Grand River. Mere blocks from the āsanctifiedā apartment, on Ohio Street. Jason had threatened to hold the receptionāat The Donut Hut. (In truth, he was able to do betterāa lot betterāthan that.)
November 3, 1964: LBJāas expectedādefeated Barry Goldwater, and was reelected president. This came three days after Vilia advised her parentsāthat she was thinking seriously, of applying, for novitiate statusāwith The Dominican Order Of Nuns, in Monroe, Michigan!
August 16, 1966: Mary Rose gave birth, to her first childāMark Martin. āHe is destined to be the greatest scholar⦠and have the most brilliant mind, known to manā (quoth the kidās maternal grandfather).
April 23, 1967: Silver Anniversaryāfor Jason and Valerie. They flew to Las Vegas! First timeāfor both. Neither, of the happy couple, were āinā to gamblingāalthough they did give the nickel slots a, slightly-more-than-passing-interest, āgoā. (āI figure we came out of there⦠a good three-and-a-half bucks ahead,ā mused the male half.)
In sixties-Vegas, one couldāvery judiciouslyāeat for ānext to nothingā. As a result, the ājudiciousā couple wound up spending little, on food. They got to see the very-talented Vic Damoneāin one of the big hotelās lounge. The cost? A two-drink minimum! Drinks were $1.25 each. The same held true, for the wonderful show put on, by Louie Prima (post-Keeley Smith), at another hotelās lounge.
Patti Page was a little more expensiveāat one of the downtown casinos. Her remarkable performance cost all of five dollarsāand the price did not include any of āthose buck-and-a-quarter drinksā. (Quoth Guess Who.)
The celebrants also took in the magnificence of the Steve Lawrence & Eydie Gorme performanceāat $7.50 a head. And the drinks were a little more expensive.
The most expensive show in townāāThe Biggieāāwas that, starring Wayne Newton. It was a dinner-theater performance. And it cost $35.00 each. But, āhe was greatā! And so was the lavish filet mignon!
September 7, 1967: Cynthia returned to Detroitāstarring, this time, as āSgt. Sarahā, in the companyās production, of Guys & Dolls. It was her first visit, to Detroit, in almost 18 months. Sheād not been able to come homeāāeven onceā! In 1965āwhen the entire cast had been given a two-week sabbatical, while the company prepared to perform the, highly-entertaining, Frank Loesser musicalāthe ābudding starā had (āfinallyā) made it home!
Fortunately, sheād been an inveterate letter-writer. Also fortunately, Valerieās and/or Jasonās, ever-so-frequent, letters usually managed to catch up with herāsooner or later.
November 5, 1968: Richard Nixon defeated Hubert Humphriesāto win āThe Presidencityā.
July 20, 1969: Neil Armstrong walked on the moon.
August 19, 1969: The day/eveningāof āThe Sharon Tate Murdersā. Everyone in the Rutkowski household was upsetāupon hearing the news. Jason tried to be as upset, as his wife. But, he knew that the LoBianco murdersāequally as hideousāwould occur, the following day. That fact threw a āsort of wet blanket, over thingsā. But, he did his best to be as outragedāas everybody else.
Deep within him, though, was the amazement, that he couldāpossiblyāhave considered such āobsceneā thoughts! Any sort of image, that his beautiful, loving, caring, unselfish, wife could have been, somehow, related to someoneālike Patricia Krenwinkleāwho was thought to have stabbed coffee heiress, Abigail Folger! Purported to have gored herāmultiple times! His spouse was not able to attribute all of those loving gazesāheād directed, at her. But, she was grateful, for them.
December 1, 1969: Mary Rose gives birth to her first daughter. She surprised both, of her parentsāas well as her husbandāby naming the little girl Amy. Sheād, ultimately, advised her fatherāat the Christeningāthat sheād been āexceptionally movedā! Movedāby Jasonās repeating (more often than heād remembered) the story of his grandfather being so taken, with the name. Well, thatāand the fact that sheād listened to Jasonās full-performance recording of The Most Happy Fella. Many times! And had always loved it.
April 11, 1970: Apollo 13 launches! āHouston, weāve got a problem!ā The craftāthankfullyāreturns to Earth, on April 17, 1970! The nation breathes a monumental sigh of relief!
August 9, 1974: Richard Nixon resignsāto be replaced by Gerald Ford. The latter was, almost-incredibly, the first unelected presidentāhaving replaced Spiro Agnew, whoād resigned as vice president, on October 10, 1973.
October 15, 1975: Cynthia returns to Detroitāstarring, in the role of āFionaā, in her companyās wonderful production, of Lerner & Loweās classic Brigadoon. āIt was better than the one we saw, on Broadway,ā expounded her proud father.
Her mother enjoyed the showābut, was becoming worried that her still-star-struck daughterās ābiological clockā was running out! (āAnd⦠no grandchildren!ā)
September 12, 1976: āSister Jason Ericā (once known as Vilia Rutkowski) organizes an all-nun choir. in Chicago. She has, also, āfinagledā a recording contract, with a burgeoning record labelāand has secured a weekly half-hour show, on one of the lesser-watched TV stations, in āChicagolandā!
The groupāāThe Singing Nunsā, succeeded in reviving fond memories of āSoeur Sourireā, the original āSinging Nunāāand her 1963, very-successful, recording, of Dominique. This, Chicago-based, group delvedāfrom
Comments (0)