Tag Archives: Flint Center

1975

50 years ago . . . January 1975. I had just turned 21 the previous November.

I was living in the house on Bollinger with Tom, Bill and Nick. We had band gear set up in what would normally have been the dining room. None of us (evidently) knew anything about cleaning house so the place was filthy. Dirty dishes would stack up in the kitchen until someone – usually Nick – would crack and clean them up. Did we have a vacuum cleaner? Don’t remember.

Tom had brought his two cats over from his apartment in Sunnyvale but was concerned that they would run away so he kept them locked in the garage where they slowly went crazy. I only went out there a couple of times, but I remember seeing the exposed studs of the garage walls badly scratched all around up to a height of about 4 feet. I don’t know why we didn’t even let them in the house. Maybe we weren’t supposed to have pets.

I was in my third year at DeAnza. I had finished the requirements for a Music degree except for the Gen Ed stuff but stayed on the extra year so I could play bass in the #1 band. No question, that was a great experience. I had exited my old band, April, with Tom and Nick, in order to concentrate on jazz. They had reincarnated it with some new players and called it Dry Creek.

I don’t remember if Tim I and me had started Higher Ground yet. I was doing student setup work at Flint Center for a pittance. I had pretty much tapped out the classes available in the Theatre department so my only contact with them was when they came into Flint.

The four of us had moved into the Bollinger house a year earlier on a 14 month lease. The owner didn’t want to have to deal with finding tenants during the holidays again so he added two months to the standard 12. I wasn’t making enough money to continue and I’m pretty sure the owner wanted us out of there. (I’ve driven by that house recently and it looks just the same only rattier. I don’t think it has even been painted in all that time.)

There was drug use there. Mostly weed, but I remember seeing cocaine at least once. I never got into that and I was moving away from smoking already. Drinking. It was while I was living at that house that Tom’s mother got remarried and I got completely wasted on cheap champagne. I can still remember the spectacular hangover the next day.

It was probably around this time that I went to Dad and asked him if I could move back home. He said that was fine. It was a big deal for me because I was determined to be independent even though I really wasn’t. In hindsight, it is interesting that I went to Dad only. I think I even drove up to Menlo Park to talk to him at his office just so it would be him only. Maybe I was embarrassed to show up at his house and have to ask in front of everybody. I’m pretty sure I had stayed away as much as possible during the 1974 year. Mr Independent!

For income, besides working at Flint, I was playing music gigs on bass. I was in a quartet with some people (Susie, Greg and Tony) from the DeAnza band, We mostly did standards from fake books although I remember Susie wanting to branch out to more pop stuff. We didn’t really have a singer so that didn’t go very far. I was raw and learning fast but the others were good jazz players. I’m pretty sure I was the oldest. I also played in a big band run by a guy named Joe Doll. We did swing tunes from the 40s and some newer pop things (‘Tie a Yellow Ribbon’) for older audiences. I may or may not have date books from those years . . . (not looking now).

. . .

OK, I did some research. I did have Higher Ground so there was a little income from that as well. I think it wasn’t until later in the year that I started playing in the evening jazz band at DeAnza (technically it was a Music Department class). There was no money in that but another great experience. They called it the Daddy-o’s because most of the members were older and very experienced. Bass players were in short supply in those days! The Daddy-o’s were led by a pianist named Bob Russell.

With the death of Jimmy Carter recently, Sepi and I have talked a lot about the politics of those years. I’m sure I was aware of those things but it wasn’t important to me. Tom and I, in particular, were big Giants fans and we went to some games. How clueless we were going to a game in Candlestick at night in clothes we had worn that day in the South Bay! For those who don’t know, Candlestick was famously cold at night. Shorts and a light jacket didn’t cut it but we just didn’t think about it. We were in our little cocoon.

Later in the year I got a job at a department store called Mervyn’s working the stock room. I was able to move out again, this time to a room in a small house with Peter I in Mountain View. That’s a story for another day.

the theatre

Yesterday, after getting the news of Robin’s death, I did fairly normal things which you can read about in yesterday’s blog post. Even before getting the news, I had been determined to get out of the apartment and go for a walk somewhere, so I did that. Just south of Half Moon Bay is a parking lot for a trail that leads 1/2 mile straight through some fields to bluffs overlooking the ocean. On one end are stairs that go down to a beach; on the other a couple of benches where you can sit and look at another beach that is protected for the seals.

There were no seals, and very few people. In two hours there, I saw five people (and one dog, which wasn’t supposed to be there, but that’s another story).

On the way back, I walked down Main Street and looked in the cute little shops. There is a nice card store there where I bought some cards, including a sympathy one for Kris. I was going to have lunch there but the cuteness of the street was bugging me. For that, I went back north of town to the Cafe 3-0 at the airport. Just your basic, no bullshit, greasy spoon.

I got home about 1 and was pretty pooped so I laid down and picked up a book I had gotten at the library last week. I’m not sure why I got it because I didn’t recognize the name of the actor who wrote it, even though he was evidently successful. He had grown up in San Francisco. I think that’s why I picked it up.

I never did sleep. I read that book from cover to cover. It’s called Are You Anybody? by Jeffery Tambor. When I was done, I just started sobbing. For Robin, for Zach, I don’t know, but it hit me somewhere deep.

I got involved in the theatre at DeAnza College when I was 18. I don’t know why I insist on spelling it that way. The spell checker says it’s wrong. I think I do it to differentiate between live theatre and the movie theater. Live theatre is just the best. Sort of like live music. It’s an activity that a group of humans take on for the purpose of presenting something to other humans in a communal setting. I’m sure there were aspects of theatre in caves thousands of years ago. I think it’s one of the most beautiful things that a human can do.

Anyway, I was at DeAnza, my local community college, because I had quit being a math major at UC Santa Cruz in favor of playing in my rock band in Cupertino. After six months of flailing around, my parents said that if I wanted to live at home I had to go to school. So, I went to DeAnza as a music major.

Literally my first quarter there I was just looking for a class to fill out my schedule and my eye fell on Stagecraft. I thought, ‘I’m going to be on stages for the rest of my life, I’ll take a class in stagecraft.’ I had never been particularly interested in theatre. I don’t think I’d ever even been to a play. I had no idea what stagecraft really meant.

The purpose of the class was basically to build sets and run the technical end of the play which the department was doing. My first theatre job was taking care of props for the play that fall. It was called Marathon 33, about marathon dancing during the 1930s depression.

Theatre at DeAnza was done in a facility then called the Box Theatre. It was a room roughly 60′ square which included the shop area. The was a grid for hanging lighting instruments over most of it at 16′ high and a lighting and sound booth overlooking the whole thing. Seating risers got pushed around to suit the configurations of what ever performance was being done.

Abutting the Box Theatre, touching but not really connected, was a 2,500 seat auditorium called The Flint Center for the Performing Arts. Actually, the Calvin C. Flint Center, named after the man who who had been the first Superintendent of the school district. After being in the school theatre for a while, I got to know the people running it and discovered they had student help for setting up community shows. Pushing the shell towers around and setting up risers and chairs, mostly. Incredibly (in my mind), rather than look to the drama department for workers, they had felt that strength was more important so they had football players working there. Oh, and the football players’ girlfriends . . .

Long story short, I eventually got on their list and joined the crew doing risers and chairs. That eventually led to a staff position and, later, getting overhire jobs with the union for the professional shows and, still later, joining the union and making theatre my career.

In all this time, I’ve done relatively little in what I would call real theatre. Plays. I worked at SF Opera for 13 years. I worked on lots of traveling musicals in Sacramento for ten years. The last five or six years I’ve been working pretty steadily for the SF Symphony. All worthy communal human activities. Just not really theatre.

In the relatively few times I’ve gotten involved in actual plays, it always felt like home. There is a certain kind of bonding that takes place with theatre people that I really enjoy.

Robin and Kris are theatre people to the bone. And Jeffery Tambor’s book is about theatre people. And maybe I have some regrets that I took the jobs that paid better and didn’t get so much of real theatre. And I thought of Robin being dead and how vibrant she had been, and how dedicated she was to real theatre, and how she was gone too soon, and Zach was gone too soon. So I was crying.

I eventually calmed down enough to go over and sit with Rose for a few minutes. She doesn’t get the theatre stuff but she gets everything else better than anyone. She had a lumpectomy and radiation treatment three years ago. We cried a little together, then I came home and ate some dinner and went to bed. I was beat but I ended up laying there reading posts on the guitar and bass forums until midnight.

Susie texted me last night that Kris is in assisted living because the left side of her body doesn’t work any more. Susie is another real theatre person. Today I hope to be making a call to Susie and perhaps to Kris. I couldn’t face it last night.