THE AMAZING JOHNNY BODRONE (cymbal Clash!)
Johnny Budrone had been a promising rodeo bull rider in his youth until a particularly nasty throw crushed one of his vertebrae and tossed the muscles around it into a splintery mélange he called “crabmeat.” Peppy first saw him performing at the Lucky Seven club with his air gun act; with one in each hand, sporting a pair of yellow-tinted aviator-frame glasses, he would shoot a flurry of pellets into large, formless heaps of white balloons, loudly sculpting them into a kind of pneumatic topiary: rabbit heads, hearts, clubs, spades. The rest of the time he drank alone, a lot, to offset his constant back pain. Being another regular at Bil’s Red Turkey, the solitary woman at the other end of the bar, who sometimes had jet-black hair, sometimes auburn, became a compelling enigma. One night Johnny was drunk enough to approach Peppy, who was wearing her Natural Honey Blonde wig, and drawl, “So what’s your hair down there like, anyhow”—gesturing at her crotch with his Marlboro—“Neapolitan?”
It was not the best pickup line Peppy had ever heard, nor was it the worst. The worst was: “You wanna come in the john with me and put Bactine on my stump?” (Dan “Claw” Haverman, June 1974.) Johnny’s line, at least, suggested a sexually viable man with an active, if tasteless, sense of humor.
Apart from the exploded veins, bowlegs, psoriasis, and gangrenous-looking assortment of blurring tattoos, Johnny was a handsome man, and Peppy felt a warm twinkling in herself that had almost nothing to do with the four or seven Fuzzy Navels she had consumed. The subsequent affair with Johnny Budrone was actually the closest she’d ever come to the kind of ovary-squeezing, sublimely unbearable, ice-cream headache-y love she had imagined as a hormonally exhilarated teen.
“That Johnny knew how to treat a lady,” Peppy would sigh, later.
He would pick Peppy up at her mother’s house in a clean gingham cowboy shirt and his newest Wranglers. She would run giggling to the screen door in hanging earrings and a pair of beige high heels. He would smell of Mitchum deodorant and Wintergreen Skoal “chaw,” she of Jean Naté body spray and talc, with a hint of Wicked Wahine Eau de Toilette around the pulse points; a gambler’s whisper of hope for the jackpot honeymoon in beautiful Hawaii.
At around 5 a.m. his Falcon Ranchero would growl mufflerlessly up the street again and they would park carnally in the quiet, the sleeping residential block unaware of their hot bourbon tongues and denim-searing concupiscence.
Forty-five minutes later the car would start again, and the white-steamed windshield swabbed from the inside. Peppy would step out onto the lawn, kiss her fingers and wave, her wig askew, her shoes unstrapped, sighing deep pink sighs.
“That Johnny was a real man,” Peppy would say, later.
Johnny was a man of few words, but he made each child one sincere overture of friendship. Ned was twelve and already starting to display what would be a lifelong proclivity toward introverted lumpiness. Johnny bought him a Daisy air rifle and took him out in the desert to shoot cantaloupes; Ned fainted from the heat and wet himself while unconscious. Ned was profoundly embarrassed, but Johnny was understanding and friendly about it. He bought Ned a new pair of pants, a bag of pretzels, and a Gatorade, and never told Peppy about the mishap, but Ned had a shameful association with the gun afterward and stuck it in the back of his closet.
Johnny took Liza out for bubble-gum ice cream and was not angry when she picked all the gumballs out with her fingers and lined them up, mouth-sticky and bleeding primary colors, on the dashboard of the Ranchero, where the sun baked them into semipermanence; they could not be removed from the aged vinyl surface without ripping it down to the foam. After that, Johnny pretty much figured they were a family.
The children mostly loved Johnny for his gallery of smeared tattoos.
Johnny would lie on the brown and orange-striped couch with a burlap throw pillow embroidered with a yarn owl under his mangled middle-back, and the children would pry his sleeves up and gaze insatiably at the fading wonders: a horse head framed by a large horseshoe, with the name ZIPPO under it. A crudely wrought parrot with a long curlicued tail. A cowgirl in a skimpy fringe dress, with a gun and spurs. Yosemite Sam standing incongruously on a bed of roses. On special days in the summertime the children could see the bull that ended Johnny’s rodeo career—a large blue-black, bucking monster with the unlikely name FEELIN’ GROOVY written on a sash between Johnny’s shoulderblades, over his six-inch operation scar.
“You gotta give credit to the things that crush you,” Johnny explained when asked why he decorated his body with the bull that made him wince through the better part of every day. Ned and Liza were impressed by this philosophy.
The year 1978 was also when Ned and Liza took the bus to see a Saturday matinee and witnessed the cinema phenomenon Ice Castles. (“When Tragedy Struck, Love Came to the Rescue,” promised the movie poster.) This film would lodge itself firmly in Liza’s psyche; it was the pole around which the sprouting bean-plant of her mind would twist for years to come.
Ice Castles is a proto-Coming-of-Age movie featuring doe-eyed and growly-voiced Robby Benson (whose sexual appeal to the seven-to ten-year-old girl crowd invoked national epidemics of pillow kissing), paired up with Lynn-Holly Johnson who plays pretty, blonde figure skater Lexie, a simple country girl bursting with natural ice-talent.
Ice audiences adore Lexie, even though she lacks formal training; the audience is so moved by her rural pluck, they erupt into a standing ovations and hurl red carnations at her whilst Robby Benson swoons in a delirium of love and pride.
(Liza was already being Lexie, soul-crushingly in love with Robby Benson and feeling every double axel on-screen in the muscles of her own pelvis.)
Lexie’s curmudgeonly dad, after a few tearful door-slams, hard truths, and violin music, reluctantly agrees to let a top ice-coach transform diamond-in-the-rough Lexie into a polished Olympic contender in six months (introducing the Ticking Clock, Hollywood Formula Obstacle #1).
“You’ve got all the raw talent,” says the coldhearted new coach, “but you’re virtually untrained. I’m not sure we’ll be able to pull it off…. How much do you really want to win?”
(I want to win so bad I am wetting my pants because I do not want to miss one minute of this film, thought Liza.)
Right as Lexie wins the Big Preliminary Competition, Robby Benson busts her kissing a Fancy New Guy, and runs away from her; she is crushed. (Obstacle #2, plus Ironic Reversal: her Greatest Triumph comes at the same moment as her Greatest Loss—producers love that shit.)
Overnight, Lexie trades her blonde pigtails for a Sophisticated Hairstyle (Hollywood symbol of losing innocence and/or Coming-of-Age) and marvels at her own budding breasts in the mirror, touching her new chest tenderly (with blouse still on, natch, but this is very serious Girl-Becoming-Woman fodder, although no teen girl has ever done that, ever; it has only ever happened in the porn-infected male screenwriter mind).
Frustrated by the shallowness of the big-league skating world, Lexie slips out of a fancy party at the rink, puts on her skates, and attempts the forbidden triple axel. The Ice Castles theme song is played in a mordant, minor key (Warning!).
Lexie