The Limelight Shows

Untitled (1987). Oil and acrylic on linen. From my book Club Kids, available at Amazon Books. Artwork and text copyright Danny Grosso.

They let me transform the place back then, and I hung paintings on the rafters, and huge linen backdrops like boat sails along the stage. Tony and I choreographed the models and Richie gave them some cash. Stevie made a cassette tape of runway music. The first song was The Cure’s “Push”. It was 1987, after all.

In the vestibule, when the Limelight’s own models were twisting and pouting for the crowd trickling in, my old neighborhood friends repelled with confusion – or was it fright? In its first years, the club used to house the posers in glass boxes. The transparent cells fell prey to ridicule, but the over the top makeup and suggestive body language endured. Alarming stuff for some who rarely ventured into the city.

Before the show got started I had one more run through with the girls, on walking; one foot directly in front of the other; shoulders back; sway the hips. I checked each one of the outfits I had designed, for the second time. I had gone through them before the girls slipped them on but they always needed tinkering when worn. I reviewed the order of appearance once more, and changed a bit here and there, and then lined them up and waited. a few minutes later I popped my head from behind one of the painted sails and nodded up to the D.J. booth. He announced the name of the line, and me, and then they were off down the shiny white runway, skinny reindeer gliding over Christmas snow, complete with oversized eyes, thanks to our ambitious makeup artist.

Most of the shows proceeded just like this, excepting minor changes and occasional minor tragedies. Sometimes a model would show up too high to perform. Sometimes a model would faint during rehearsals. Making them eat was a battle. So dedicated they were to their wire hanger figures that stumbling off the runway in a daze was an acceptable risk. We coaxed them into eating a little something, we had Italian food standing by, and they confessed that they mostly got by on stimulants and cigarettes.

We all got by on a lot less back then. The lean hungry look was not a pose for us. We were in a moment, and then another, and then many more, fully engrossed, not thinking of eating, or sleeping, or anything but the creative orgy we’d engaged ourselves in.

The lights would come up and we’d go out for a bow. Throwing logo tees out to the cheering crowd, I’d reach down here and there and be handed flowers. As confetti fell about, I backed down the runway slowly, so I could take it all in. I’d learned in my neighborhood; in my house, that these moments are fleeting. Still, it was all very glorious. As close to being a rock star as I could get back then. At the curtain, I clicked my heel on the stage and pirouetted backstage. Some tees that were not tossed to the crowd were piled up on a chair. Everyone was rushing down the stairs and into the crowd where the dancing was starting. If anything the room was getting louder after the show, but back here around that chair, there was a capsule of quiet, for just a moment.

Someone slapped me on the back, another hugged me, and a third joined in to lead me out into the burgeoning party. A girl pulled a piece of pink confetti from my hair. She held it up to show me, and I took it from her a souvenir, and tucked it into my pocket. It was no longer there the next morning when I went through my pockets.

Danny Grosso

Instagram @artispolitics

Buy Books! My Amazon author’s page: amazon.com/author/dannygrosso

Out in the Street VI

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Untitled (State Street, 2007). Oil on canvas. Artwork and text copyright Danny Grosso. From my book, Out in the Street, available at Amazon Books.

In the springtime, the afternoon shadows would conspire with the lake breeze to divide State Street in two, with the shady side ten degrees colder. Prematurely optimistic girls in airy white blouses would navigate the hot-cold, hot-cold walk to the train beside guys in leather jackets, bundled up for the shadows and bounding out of the alleys. The boisterousness of the season would get the best of some of them, and they’d jump around on parked cars like children on playground sets. Unwittingly, they were creating diversions for the real shadow people of the city, who were filling white vans with burgled goods in quiet, workmanlike fashion. They’d finish quickly and dissolve into traffic, losing themselves within another hundred white vans, chasing the sunset down the Kennedy.

-Danny Grosso

Instagram @artispolitics

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Mud People, No. 24

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Hardie Boy- Mud People, No. 24 (2020). House paint mixed with mud, on paper. From my book, 37 Mud People, available at Amazon Books. Artwork and text copyright Danny Grosso.

The Hardie boy is waiting for me. It is 9:14 am and I am already late. The Hardie boy is waiting for me in a place he is sure will allow him to be the first to see me. Leaning against the wooden display case, he has an unobstructed view of the double front doors as I swing them both open and scurry into the foyer. He sort of slides, like a skinny snake, up to me, really up to me, his face a few inches from mine. “Um hmm!” he says, accenting the second syllable with vigor. I try to say “What!” but nothing comes out – my voice is hiding itself – I haven’t spoken since the night before, or rather a few hours before, when it was still dark, and I ran home from the clubs to change clothes.

He is staring at me, only for a second, so I will look at him – he needs me to look at him so he can complete the gag. I do look up, laboriously – I’m bloodshot from the smoke, the drink, the lack of sleep. His crows’ feet spread into his temples. “Close your eyes or you’ll bleed to death,” he says, and then turns on his heel to go fetch me some coffee.

His time on a Mekong River gunboat made him hate tardiness. His time with me made him more accepting of those whose lives sometimes overwhelmed the need for punctuality. He was regimented about everything but me, sort of, but then, he seemed to accept it as his duty to make me laugh, constantly, Reveille to Taps.

He left too early, like a lot of people back then, chasing some demon he had seen before, one that woke him up on that gunboat in the middle of dark and hot jungle night.

-Danny Grosso

Instagram@artispolitics

Author’s page: amazon.com/author/dannygrosso

Neighborhood Royalty, No. 1

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This Guy (1998). Oil on Canvas. From my Book, Trouble is Trouble, available at Amazon Books. Artwork and text copyright Danny Grosso.

Excerpt:  “This guy, this guy over there says this thing is gotta get done, and I mean gotta. You get me? This is no joke no more, everybody’s fed up and it’s not good for anyone when the old mustaches get fed up, or even when they hear that everyone around them is fed up. It’s just no good to make waves, and this could be an ocean of ’em if you don’t take care of this thing.” Vince was agitated, walking faster than his normal stroll. He was making his point, making his plan, appointing the contractor. His walking partner hesitated to respond, eyeing the parking meters, then the van on the corner before Vince ushered him around the corner and into a storefront vestibule. “Look at me, Charlie,” he said, and waited to catch his eye. Then Charlie nodded, turned, and walked back to his Seville. He pulled a u-turn into traffic and sped away.

-Danny Grosso

Instagram @artispolitics

Amazon.com/author/dannygrosso