Working Man Blues |
I was in my late teens the first time my dad told me this story, trying to teach me a lesson about work, I suppose, or maybe about not quitting. Of course, I’d heard the tale many times over the years, and it’s always stayed with me. In some ways, it’s helped me understand a lot about people, work, and culture, about looking toward the future instead of the past.
My dad and my
uncle, Aurelio, "Ted," for “Tetera,” in Spanish the nipple on a baby’s bottle, but nobody
knew exactly why he got stuck with the moniker, were doing a job in the
Hollywood Hills, remodeling a home for a well-known movie director, my dad and
Ted handling the interior stucco-work, and some other guys finishing up the
exterior.
It was a
modern home, flat, multi-leveled roofs, and large plate glass windows to look
out at the L.A. skyline, something along the lines of a Frank Lloyd Wright
design, the house and the environment working as one.
The
director, who was living upstairs during the remodel, came downstairs one
morning to see the progress. The cement, the undercoat on the walls in the den
had already dried. My dad, who carried the hod with stucco, and Ted, who did the plastering, had begun applying the stucco, the smooth
surface, to one interior wall. The director, in his robe, his hair mussed, told
them the flat stucco had no pizazz. He wanted a surface that would “pop,” something
unique, different, but he wasn’t quite sure what.
My dad and
Ted looked at each other. They weren’t designers but plasterers following the
blueprints. Most walls they completed had smooth surfaces, ready for the
painters’ rollers, where the colors gave the rooms character. The director said
he wanted something with texture but not the traditional Mexican texture he’d
seen in other homes. He asked if they could show him some samples. Stumped, Ted
my dad looked at each other. “What samples? It was either smooth or a slight texture.”
The
director got it. He knew he was asking for something he’d never even seen
before. My dad said the job was nearly complete. All they had to do was finish
the stucco, get the hell out, and start the next job. A lot of guys would have
left. Time was money, but my dad and Ted were interested in what the guy had in
mind. They started tossing around ideas. The stucco they’d already applied on
the wall was still soft, malleable, so Ted began experimenting, making
different designs with the trowel.
“No, that’s
not it,” the director would say after each attempt.
They were
in new territory here.
My dad and Ted would
go outside to the pickup, look around, and return with different trowels, ones used for
sidewalks, patios, and exterior walls, trowels with beveled or serrated edges,
but whatever they tried, the director would say, “Yeah, better, but that’s still
not it.”
My dad told
me, by this time, other plasterers would have gotten frustrated with the guy
because most of them were traditional, conservative, and always wanted to do it
the old-fashioned way, get in, get out, the way most clients wanted their
walls. But the director’s house wasn’t traditional, not colonial, ranch, or
English Tudor, more, an experimental structure, on stilts, built into the
mountainside.
For some reason, my uncle had some straw (as
in hay), along with a bunch of other junk, in the back of his pickup. He
brought in a handful and tossed it up and troweled it into a corner of the wall. “Oh, now
that’s interesting. I like that,” said the director, “but no, not quite it.”
After each
attempt, they had to apply fresh stucco to the wall to keep it soft and smooth.
The thing
about my uncle Ted was he approached his work like an artist. He liked the
challenge of creating something new instead of the same old thing, especially
in a house like this one, that begged for eccentricity, progressive thinking.
My dad could, well, let’s say, “take it or leave it.” But one thing he always
wanted was to please the client, especially Hollywood types, deep pockets, and
good, strong recommendations.
By this
time, Ted and my dad were “into it,” but they were just about out of ideas,
when Ted said, “Ray, we got that empty handy-six out there?” My dad nodded,
“yes,” in the affirmative. Ted went back to the pickup. My dad said he heard
glass breaking. When Ted returned, he was holding a broken beer bottle by the
neck, confusing both the director and my dad.
“Let me try
this,” Ted said.
Gently, and
with the care of Diego Rivera, he slowly raked the sharp, irregular edges
across the soft stucco, creating circles, ovals, waves, and squares. Softer and grittier than sculptor’s clay, stucco takes skill and
patience to manipulate. Too much pressure cuts too deep.
As the
designs emerged from the material, the director’s face brightened. He leaped up
and down, “That’s it! That’s it! Marvelous, genius, wonderful!”
My dad said
he went outside and grabbed another empty beer bottle from their handy-six. He broke the
bottle on rock and went back inside where he and Ted spent the rest of the
afternoon etching designs courtesy of Pabst Blue Ribbon, curiosity, and a little
Chicano ingenuity, a Labor Day, and a life's lesson.
2 comments:
Artistry comes in many forms. Great story, Daniel. - Nicki De Necochea
This was a great story I often recall all the cement slabs driveways patios foundations footings the hundreds of yards of concrete we pours and finish together me my dad and my three big brothers times never forgotten mornings getting up early on week ends to go with my dad and brothers to do side jobs fun fun fun
Post a Comment