essaysbysean.blogspot.com
Every city should
have a faded old family café. When the Lido—offering Chinese and western food—was
open, rock star Robert Plant was quoted as raving over it; when the Lido
closed, the local TV, radio, newspaper and two magazines all lamented the
passing. On the final night, it was standing room only, and the walls were
covered with paintings of the café: The paintings sold out. Some of those
paintings were of the view from the crumbling alley, for the old Lido was loved
from all directions. To feel like a cool regular, you came through the back
hall, stepping up a big ledge from the days before wheelchairs.
Passing the
freezer door and two small tiny toilets, you entered the main café, with the
aisle leading between rows of plain brown vinyl booths ending at window booths.
A turn to the left led to the counter with soda fountain stools, and, at one
time, chrome fences holding the menus. Everyone loved the hand-made milkshakes.
The chrome fences, on the formerly linoleum counter, (later arborite) had vanished
back when the little personal juke boxes had been moved to the wall with the
booths. That was when Ken Fung changed the Chinese red seats to brown.
Formerly with real
vinyl records, now the little boxes hooked up to a machine downstairs. People
loved to flip through the juke menus under glass, using a dial, and maybe write the
numbers they wanted on a napkin—from an upright steel dispenser, of course. While
each juke box had two volume buttons, for quiet or loud, the master volume dial
was kept behind the counter—of course the management kept the sound low during
the mornings, when all the customers preferred quiet. So you chose your songs
and you put in your coins and enjoyed your music, new and old. I often played
Patsy Kline, from my favorite decade; I always finished my set with Video Killed the Radio Star.
Once some ladies
needed to push the window tables together, after more women kept arriving, and after
I had relinquished my window table to them, and moved to a booth. Then the oldest of them, their club president,
leaned over the booth wall to offer me her card: I ended up joining their
toastmasters club—and that led to years of enjoyment.
One day I moved
from a large booth table to a small booth, so an entire aboriginal family could
use fit around the table—that’s when the manager learned my name. Soon he
trusted me to stay on after hours, finishing my coffee as a yard-high piece of
cardboard was placed over the door glass: So we could safely allow some
“members of the family” up from downstairs: two little dogs. No one ever told
the health board.
Sometimes I would
joke, “Don’t tell my mother I eat here so much” but it was a great place to
hang out: family run, the children helping, lots of regulars—it was a family place
where people knew my name. My home away from home. Not too posh. There was an
art college up the hill, a huge Alcoholics Anonymous meeting across the
road—no, we weren’t too posh.
Everyone knew the
Lido. Once a clothing store manager, who had seldom been in the café, and never
when I was around, heard a guitarist asking Sue the waitress, “Has Sean been in
today?” Although her store was miles away, she guessed which Sean it was—and so
they were talking together when I arrived. A homey café where strangers can
talk—that was the Lido.
Sean Crawford
September
Calgary 2016
Footnote:
~Here's a link to the local newspaper with lots of pictures.
~Here's a lot of representative reviews.
~I’m still chuckling over how that clothing store manager, in a mall, had seen me across the big hall chatting in the competition’s store. After I was gone she crossed the hall and her colleague asked her, “Do you know Sean? Isn’t he a hoot?” I was told this the next time I came by. (Probably the same day)
~Here's a link to the local newspaper with lots of pictures.
~Here's a lot of representative reviews.
~I’m still chuckling over how that clothing store manager, in a mall, had seen me across the big hall chatting in the competition’s store. After I was gone she crossed the hall and her colleague asked her, “Do you know Sean? Isn’t he a hoot?” I was told this the next time I came by. (Probably the same day)
mona@mail.postmanllc.net
ReplyDeleteSpekken zee doitch? Eh, what's up Doc?
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