Showing posts with label West End. Show all posts
Showing posts with label West End. Show all posts

Saturday, June 29, 2019

The Friendly City: No Vacancy

a poem by Charley Bruns,
featuring lyrics by David Castaño of Eastbourne

Don’t try to impress me 
by saying George Washington slept there.
We had seven presidents stay here
on vacation away from Washington.
Their names were Grant, Hayes, Harrison, 
Garfield, Arthur, McKinley and Wilson.

These presidents put Long Branch on the map,
and the crowds from New York did come.
Soon so did others in their carriages,
four-legged and iron horses to soak up the sun,
enjoy the summer breezes, walk the bluffs and just have fun.

Did I mention the Atlantic Ocean?
Not too many cities 
can call an ocean their backyard.

Among the visitors were the wealthy 
industrialists and bankers and the Bohemians.
They gambled, they drank, they ate,
and eventually most found their way home late.
But many never returned.

Others who came in their wake did decide to stay,
and formed a year-round community 
that included a main street called Broadway,
complete with stores and theaters.

Long Branch got so big and diverse
with Jewish folk, African-Americans and Catholics,
even the Ku Klux Klan came to march downtown.
Fortunately, the door hit their asses on the way out.

The Mafia treated the city like a playground and more,
playing in the Surf Lounge and paying for
the construction of the Harbour Towers high-rise.
One little pussy of a mobster bragged
on the pages of Life magazine,

“What we got in Long Branch is everything.
Police we got. Councilmen we got, too.
We’re gonna make millions.”

Pussy Russo was eventually found dead
with three bullets in his head 
in a Long Branch spa while on furlough from prison,
because his bosses feared he would talk too much
in order to stay and enjoy the friendly city.

We had a native son and LBHS grad
who was named poet laureate
of the entire U.S. of A.
You can read his poem “Long Branch, New Jersey,”
on a plaque in Pinsky Park on Broadway.

The pier beckoned more visitors with its
amusement rides, arcades, bars.
There were hot dogs and other kinds of matter to put down,
which many people from across the state in fact did
as other shore towns south lured pleasure seekers
with their siren song of more, newer, better attractions.

The city eventually became symbolized by the Haunted Mansion,
with fake ghouls and real rats on its aging pier.
It continued creating memories for more locals
but fewer visitors before finally feeding the appetite
of a hungry fire that left behind charred splinters.

“My city is burning down down down,
and you’re not around.
You’re paying attention to some other town,
you missed us burn to the ground.”*

From the ashes rose the entirely new Pier Village,
with its fine restaurants, cafes, boutiques,
to attract people from all around,
but not the nostalgia of many locals, once again proving:

“You can please some of the people all of the time, 
you can please all of the people some of the time, 
but you can’t please all the people all of the time.”

Did Abraham Lincoln say that
while Mary Ann Todd was staying in Long Branch?
In any case, enough local citizens welcomed the change
and re-elected Mayor Schneider six times.

Today we have Brazilians and Mexicans 
and lots of other Latinos
calling the city home, with their restaurants 
and various businesses on Broadway,
which still has a performing arts theater
and now even a microbrewery.

We’ve been made by these broken streets,
and now we make all these broken beats.
But we just dig it and we just dig it,
but a keep on moving on.
That’s why we’re fighting, that’s why we’re fighting,
for where we belong.”*

We still have Jewish folk a-courting 
on the boardwalk Thursdays and Sundays,
and Italians and African-Americans like always.
The city even has a Sicilian-born poet laureate, 
whose voice rises above the tongues of people 
from all around the world on our boardwalk
and promenade every Fourth of July.

The ghosts of writers and artists past
smile at names like di Pasquale, Castaño and Delima now.
What can they say, except
“Wow, how cool is this Long Branch?”

“Come with the stylee if you want 
to come find Long Branch rhythm.
You gotta love the way the sky looks,
when everyone lets it bring them down.
And though the sun ain’t coming out,
I see light around my home town.”**

The Ink Well and Brighton Bar,
home of original music,
stand alongside the Celtic Cottage
and some new Brazilian businesses,
as a synagogue is built in West End,  
which isn’t actually in the west end.

Did I mention the Atlantic Ocean?
Not too many cities 
can call an ocean their backyard.

Long Branch is indeed a friendly city, 
with no vacancy for those 
who want to bring it back down
from where it rose.

“So when these ashes turn to gold,
and when these pages start to unfold,
I have seen the best of my city, 
because I’ve seen the worst of my city.”*


*Copyright 2016 by David Castaño, “Burning City” as recorded and performed by Eastbourne
**Copyright 2016 by David Castaño, “LB Stylee” as recorded and performed by Eastbourne

Poem copyright 2019 by Charles A. Bruns

Thursday, October 4, 2012

The barber king


The second time I walked into his shop, he was sitting down, reading the New York Post, drinking coffee, smoking a cigarette.

"Hello, Charley," he said, with an Italian accent. It's an accent that has stayed with him for 50 years since he left Italy and settled in the West End section of Long Branch, New Jersey, where he opened his barber shop in 1964. He's kind of semi-retired these days, working only five mornings a week. He cuts hair by appointment, something I didn't realize the first time I walked off the street and into his shop.

"There's one ahead of you," he told me that first time, although there was no one waiting. A few minutes later, a gentleman even older than the barber walked in slowly, sat in the chair, and spoke softly while his hair was cut. When it was my turn and he began using his scissors on my graying scalp, I acknowledged the Yankees memorabilia in his shop and asked if he had been to the new Yankee Stadium yet.

"I'm a Mets fan," he replied. "I went to their new stadium once. My daughter drove me there. We got there so early, we didn't know what to do. So, we waited and then went inside. It's a nice park. But, the Mets lost."

The second time he cut my hair, we talked about the Jets, Mets and Ryder Cup.

"I got sick Sunday, with the Jets losing so bad, the Mets losing, and the US not winning the Ryder Cup," he moaned. "It made me sick to my stomach, really. And then the Giants lost."

Midway through my haircut, the barber noticed someone approaching his shop. He looked at me, paused briefly, and asked, "Did you make an appointment?"

"I did," I replied. "I called you yesterday morning."

The man the barber had spotted outside seconds earlier walked into the shop, said hello, then sat down to wait his turn. After my haircut was done, with no other customer visible, he got up.

"Not yet, Charlie," the barber told the other man. "There's one ahead of you."

As I walked out, I realized the barber may have double-booked 10:30 appointments for a "Charley" and was probably waiting for the next appointment to arrive. He likely had just enough time to finish his coffee and cigarette and, perhaps, scan a few pages of the newspaper or chat with Charlie.

The barber has not, after all, stayed in business for over 47 years by rushing through haircuts. He is his own boss, king of his castle, one with a red and white and blue striped poll that rolls only when he turns it on.