THE VERDICT
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Robert Gardner
Balboa’s Rendezvous Ballroom was huge. It was a block long, running
from Palm Street to Washington Street and from the boardwalk to the
alley. This was the swing era. The Rendezvous featured great swing bands
and played to packed crowds -- thousands. There was no public parking.
People parked from West Newport to the end of the peninsula to dance at
the Rendezvous. It was one of the most popular ballrooms in Southern
California.
However, for some unexplained reason, the Rendezvous died when Labor Day
came along. Other Southern California ballrooms went on all winter long.
Not the Rendezvous.
That first year the management tried to keep the place open with a full
orchestra and almost went bankrupt playing to a mere handful of dancers.
I guess the history of Balboa as a summer resort was too hard to break.
And so the management came up with one of the worst ideas in local
history -- the one-man band. Well, it wasn’t really a one-man band. It
was one man, a musician, one boy, me, and a jukebox.
When the Rendezvous first opened, I was a gate boy. That meant I was one
of seven young men who manned the gates through which the dancers
proceeded to the dance floor. Dances were a nickel, and we saw to it that
each couple deposited a nickel ticket in a box before they went out on
the dance floor. After each dance, we gate boys went out on the dance
floor with long ropes connected to the gates and pulled the dancers off
the floor in time for the next dance.
After that first summer, I graduated to the position of sound man. The
sound man played records over the PA system from the time the ballroom
opened until the band started playing. He also dimmed the lights for
waltzes and let down from the ceiling the round ball that turned slowly,
sending out shafts of lights from the little mirrors embedded in it. Very
romantic.
The sound man also had to go up on the bandstand whenever the microphone
went nuts and emitted a shrill squeal. He had to hit the mike with a soft
hammer which, for some reason, stopped the squeal.
As you can see, the position of sound man involved great
responsibilities. The strain was so great that after one year as sound
man, I quit and went to work at the Corona del Mar bath house.
With that labored explanation I go on with the story of the one-man
band.
After we couldn’t attract enough of a crowd to pay for a full band, the
management tried out the one-man band. The man was a trombone player from
one of the Hollywood studios. The procedure was that I, the sound man,
would play a number on the juke box, attach the juke box to the PA
system, then the trombone player would play along with the record. Pretty
snazzy, huh?
After a couple of weeks of that priceless entertainment, we were no
longer playing to small crowds. We were playing to no crowds at all. So
the trombone player went back to Hollywood, the jukebox went back to Gus
Tamplis, who had a bar across the alley from the Rendezvous, and I went
back to school, deprived of a hoped-for winter’s income.
And that is the story of Balboa’s one-man, or to be more accurate,
one-man, one-boy-and-a-jukebox band. I think the story must be told as an
essential part of any definitive history of Balboa.
JUDGE GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and former judge. His column
runs Tuesdays.
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