Updated: 12/1/05; 14:03:35


pedantic nuthatch
Life in a Northern Virginia suburb of Washington, D.C. Books, movies, art, theater, conservation, and Etruscan typewriter erasers. Blogged by David Gorsline.  Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.  Click to see the XML version of this web page.

Friday, 11 November 2005

So I'm sitting there in Wendy's munching on my sandwich and the 50's loop is playing on the muzak and I hear this record that I'm sure I've never heard before but it sounds familiar. A guy is singing, and the verse begins, "There's a dance you should know," very syncopated with an elongated "there's" and a bump-bump for the last two syllables.

Now, a long time ago there was an episode of "The Honeymooners" in which Ed tries to teach Ralph one of the new dances the teen-agers are doing. (Why?) It's a set piece for Ed to do that geeky-cool thing that he does and for Ralph to do that slow-volcano-graceful-buffalo thing that he does. Now the song which is also the dance that Ed is teaching is the Huckabuck Hucklebuck, and we hear a record with a Teresa Brewer type singing. The music and the choreography are so preposterous—sort of a Twist/Mashed Potato thing—that I always figured that the writers of the episode had invented the dance themselves to further their comic ends.

But no, the Hucklebuck is a real song from the era, and 50 years later it's playing in the fast food joint where you get your chicken strips.

The episode is "Young at Heart."

 posted: 11:53:51 PM  Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.     




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