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WILL BELLAMY REMEMBERS .......
The Century's story continues
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"The summer of 1963 The Centurys went to Chicago. One
our best pals and TAK drinking buddies, Chip Stokes got us a
job at Club Living in Mt. Prospect
just south of Chicago. It was a huge living complex with three
story apartments, indoor pool, sauna and complete with its own
bar and night club. Because it was very close to O'Hare International
Airport the complex was almost completely full of airline stewardesses.
In those days the "stews" had to look like Rachel Welch
or Brigitte Bardot lest they be grounded for excess baggage.
Well, you get the picture, it was our job during the day to perform
unspeakable labor driving the lawn tractor, hosing down the pool/sauna
area or doing minor repairs to the club if any damage occurred
the night before. For this we had our own three level townhouse
plus a modest wage and run of the place. At night we were the
house band reveling in a sea of airborn babeage while coaxing
drinks from a thoroughly saturated crowd. We soon learned that
because of airline scheduling, it was possible to have more than
one girlfriend. Wink, however pushed the envelope by juggling
three until a glitch caused overlap. The seriousness of this
was noted when Tony and I found girl #3 in the basement bedroom,
completely inebriated and totally disrobed on Wink's bed, with
he and Girl#1 expected any minute. Getting no cooperation from
girl #3, Tony and I did the only decent thing we could. We rolled
her up in the bed spread like a big tamale, each grabbing one
end and proceeded to carry her hammock style back to her apartment
just down the street. However it seems that the motion upset
her tummy and by the time we reached her door , we had some explaining
to do. Finding that impossible we beat a hasty retreat and took
heed of the perils of over scheduling.
The music in Chicago at that time was amazing. Just before
the Beatles, R&B was at a peak and the top band around was
Mitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels. Jenny, Jenny, Jenny and Devil
with the Blue Dress On was hot. We did some work downtown where
they played at a place called the Cellar also with the Shadows
of Night. Blues was king.
The people up there were obsessed with mooning. If you caught
somebody at a window, that was called a pressed ham, behind a
screen was called a grilled ham and modesty prevents me from
describing the winking red eye.
Chicago was ultimately cool and Mr. Stokes has my undying
gratitude
wherever you are. Also, hi to Rene Johnson the grossest girl
in thr world,
expletives unlimited."
_Will Bellamy, April 2002 |