September 14, 2009

Hee-Haw

Burro_Jim_Motel.jpg

Place: Southport, Connecticut. Time: Somewhere in the late 1980s. Status: Married. Mood: Pissed off.

It was one of those arguments that, if they don't end a marriage outright, threaten it with premature extinction. Like most, it was my fault. Like most, it probably started over a small thing in the way that explosions start with a spark in a primer. Whatever it was, like an explosion, it quickly escalated to the well-worn phrase that those who are wrong always use at the end, "Okay, that's it. I'm out of here!"

And out the door I went. Down to the driveway I went. Into the car I went. Out of the driveway and into the road I drove taking a hard left that would lead me down the right curve, then the left curve, then onto the main road. Halfway down this road I pulled the car over, turned off the engine and sat there listening to the crickets in the summer evening. Well, I thought, that'll show her. I'm gone.

At which point it dawned on my small reptile brain, as it must have to countless husbands, that although I was gone I had no place to go.

Of course that wasn't quite true. In theory I had everyplace to go. Everyplace except back to where I'd just left. I was parked close to the I-95 and the the Boston Post Road on coastal Connecticut. I could go west-north-south wherever.... but I couldn't go back. At least not right then. That would be too humiliating.... too much like a Monty Python sketch. So I chose the solution that countless husbands have taken, I headed to the nearest hotel/motel.

In this case the nearest hotel/motel was an extensive establishment just off the Post Road. I pulled in front of the entrance and went inside. The check-in clerk visibly brightened as I walked in and gave me an effusive welcome. It didn't really lighten my mood to be greeted so warmly. I just asked for a quiet room where I could relax and take stock.

"A quiet room? We have a fine quiet room for you just across the parking lot. I'm sure you'll find it most satisfactory."

If the word "Whatever" had been in use then, I'm sure I would have spoken it. As it was I wasn't paying that much attention. He took my registration and credit card information and passed me the key. "Just pull across the way. It's on the ground floor. Do you need any help with your luggage?"

I needed no help at all with my luggage since I didn't have any luggage. Storming out of a house loses its impact if you pause to do anything sane like, say, pack a bag. I took the key and paused a bit looking at the indoor swimming pool that was just off the lobby. I didn't note the clerk pick up the phone and mumble into it.

The exhaustion, the adrenaline jag, that sets in after anger passes was beginning to overwhelm me. I left the lobby and drove the car about twenty yards to park in front of the my room, my rented refuge. I was looking forward to the solace of television and a fully stocked mini-bar. If I got hungry later there was a Greek Diner about a hundred yards down the road with "Breakfast All Day." It was not a good plan but it was the only plan I had. Maybe later I'd admit I'd become an extraterrestrial in my own town and "Phone home" seeking forgiveness. Maybe.

Stupefied I walked up to the motel room door, put the key in the lock, turned it and opened the door.

There were dim lights on in the room so I stood in the doorway and scanned the room left to right for a moment. Wall, bathroom entrance, wall with flocked green wallpaper and bad seascape (at least it wasn't clowns), bed, night table, donkey eating a bale of hay.

"Hold it. Scan room again please," said brain.

Wall, bathroom, seascape, bed, table, donkey eating a bale of hay. A small donkey. A large bale of hay. In the night and in the dim hotel room in the corner. A calm and not too big donkey eating hay.

Check nose. Yup, smells like a fairly clean donkey in there.

One more time. Situation same. Wall, picture, bed, donkey.... wait.... wall.... slightly at an angle instead of flat a portion of the wall where there should have been a sharp corner. Look more closely and see a thin place in the wallpaper. Hear a soft whirring noise. Then the phone rings.

The phone is on the table next to the bed and the donkey. I am in the doorway. It rings and it rings. I do not move. It stops ringing and the door of the room next to mine opens and Alan Funt's son Peter walks over to me with a clip-board, a pasted on smile and his hand held out.

"Hi, I'm Peter Funt. Smile, you're on Candid Camera!"

Candid Camera was an ancient staple of TV running from 1948 until it petered out at the end of the 1980s with a few brief returns since then. It is now virtually extinct, but it was big "laff-riot" TV in its day.

"The premise of the show involved concealed cameras filming ordinary people being confronted with unusual situations, sometimes involving trick props, such as a desk with drawers that pop open when one is closed or a car with a hidden extra gas tank."
In my case, it would seem that the gag was that random travelers of the Boston Post Road who'd come to the hotel/motel for refuge would be treated to a donkey in their room and filmed from behind a blind next to the wall. It probably seemed like a fine premise for a gag show into it's fourth decade, but I -- for one -- was not exactly in the mood.

Instead of being the good-sport the show depended on I gave Peter Funt a look that caused him to take two careful steps back and lower his hand. I reached forward and slowly closed the door to the donkey room noting that, across the way, the check-in clerk and others are in the entrance to the lobby watching what happens next. They were all, of course, in on the gag.

In the next minute or so, Peter Funt brings me into their little circle of funsters. I remember that he seemed most concerned I sign the release form he had on his clipboard. I refused and asked, "Am I going to be charged for this."

"No, of course not, the room's on us and we'll stand you for a new one for tonight with no donkey if you prefer, and dinner's on us. Just sign this and..."

He was talking to the air. I was in the car and out of the parking lot and gone up the Boston Post Road and home. Long before they'd reset the room and walked the donkey, I was softly knocking on my front door seeking forgiveness and a room for the night. Without farm animals. I was very tired. I was glad to be home.

Posted by Vanderleun at September 14, 2009 12:14 PM
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"It is impossible to speak in such a way that you cannot be misunderstood." -- Karl Popper N.B.: Comments are moderated and may not appear immediately. Comments that exceed the obscenity or stupidity limits will be either edited or expunged.

I'm checking my calendar here . . no, it's not April 1 . . . naw . . aw, c'mon . . no way!

Naw! Hee Haw! Hee Haw! Hee Haw!!!!

Posted by: Cathy at September 14, 2009 12:40 PM

I'm afaid I would have been on film stomping back to the office and smashing the hotel clerk in the face. But back then I was not so patient with a**holes. :-)

Posted by: Patvann at September 14, 2009 1:07 PM

It's a funny old world. I bet Peter Funt still shivers when he talks about the time the death angel passed over and let him be.

Posted by: Deborah at September 14, 2009 2:45 PM

Now this is funny, even if you missed the humor at the time, I'm sure your mate did not. Hee-Haw :).

I once stormed out back in the '70s, but I did stop to grab a bag. What I didn't do is grab the car. For some reason I walked, walked to the freeway entrance. An hour later, a CHP stopped by to ask why I was sitting on my suitcase by the side of the road and crying. My answer, "I have a full pack of cigarettes and no matches or lighter." Luckily, they laughed and offered me a ride the 2 blocks back home. At the door, they asked my husband, who they'd obviously awakened, why he would let me take off in the middle of the night and not come after me. He told them he didn't think I was planning to be gone long since I'd packed only 1 shoe and 1 pair of panties and forgot to take my purse. The moral of the story for me was never again drink Wild Turkey.

Posted by: Sara (Pal2Pal) at September 14, 2009 3:51 PM

Well THAT's something that doesn't happen every day.

Posted by: Jewel at September 15, 2009 12:51 AM

I know that diner, it's near Sherwood Island, right? --I used to get either the blintzes or the corned beef hash. I was writing a book with a local psychic who kept really weird hours and needed a lot of humoring.

Posted by: Lucy at September 15, 2009 6:34 AM

I'm willing to wager that Peter Funt had Exterminans pass over a number of times in his film career. In candid photography, you take your chances. If he'd pulled that stunt on me when I was in a similar state to Gerard, you better believe Peter would have been breathing through his ear afterward. The desk clerk, too. But I'm sure I would have found it funny sometime later.

Posted by: waltj at September 15, 2009 8:05 AM

Near Sherwood Island rings a bell, yes.

Posted by: vanderleun at September 15, 2009 9:43 AM

What is interesting is that in the late 1980's it would have been very difficult for an outraged hotel guest to complain - quickly - to the corporation that owns the hotel. Today, a very quick internet search would have located the hotel, the corporation, the names of the officers, and one thermonuclear bounce-the-rubble complaint would be launched.

I hope Mr. Funt made it very worthwhile to the hotel to do the stunt.

Posted by: Mikey NTH at September 15, 2009 2:39 PM

I remember watching the original show back in the 50's/60's when TV and I were both young (sigh), it was the America's Funniest Home Video of its day and very popular. Funny how the popular consensus on what's funny changes over time.

Posted by: Boots at September 15, 2009 7:46 PM

I feel bad they didn't let you keep the donkey.

Posted by: babka at September 18, 2009 8:44 PM
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