Sunday, October 30, 2022

Ghosts of Halloween Past

 

All my relatives and acquaintances know my love for all things Halloween. My yard has been ghoulishly decorated for almost a month now and yet I'm still tweaking it, changing the mask on a dummy here or moving a coffin there so that it doesn't kill the grass underneath.


It was no surprise then when my daughter-in-law tagged me in a Facebook post to let me know that there would be a special showing of Night of the Living Dead at the vintage theatre in her town. The movie would show late at night and would be preceded by old horror movie trailers, scary cartoons and a video of Screamin' Jay Hawkins performing, “I Put a Spell on You.”


Best of all, you could wear a costume and get in free. How could I not go? My wife who puts up with all my October shenanigans even agreed to come, though sans costume. That was fine. I was sure the vast majority of moviegoers would be dressed appropriately. After all, this IS the iconic zombie movie.


I found an old mask that I nearly threw away a couple years ago but now looked creepy enough. Then I put a couple “props” into my pocket. One was a sound-making device that mimicked screams, howls and cackling laughter. I also had a very realistic disembodied silicone finger. The plan was to show it to the clerk behind the concession stand and to ask her if she had any of these fresh.


We showed up at the venue a half hour before the doors opened. I had visions of lines of zombies snaking around the block. But we saw only a couple people mingling about. When the time came for the doors to open I made my entrance into the old theatre lobby. To my surprise, hardly anybody among the dozen or so people there were in costume. And NOBODY was wearing anything remotely scary, let alone a zombie mask like mine. I got a couple bemused looks and a chuckle from the ticket seller but that was it.


My wife told the ticket seller she was coming as a “senior.” She still had to pay the four bucks to get in. So in a way, my costume was worth the trouble. But I forgot about the props. For all the horror and hype, it was just your average popcorn-munching, movie-watching crowd. I felt about as out of place as a Michigan State fan at a Michigan tailgate party.


Oh, another perk of attending that late night movie was that I missed watching the U/M/MSU football contest. Watching that is far more scarier than any zombie movie I can imagine. I never do.


But being at this movie brought back ghosts of Halloween past. Like the time my mother dressed me in costume for our kindergarten celebration and sent me walking to school. But she got the date wrong. Then there was the time I was dressed like a girl for a Halloween celebration another year at a different elementary school. As I stopped at a corner waiting for traffic to clear, a car stopped and its driver rolled down the window.


“Hey baby, how about a date,” he called out. I didn't answer but felt quite embarrassed.


Like I said, ghosts of Halloweens past.


4 Comments:

Blogger Lee said...

Hahahahahaha! Thanks for the laugh, Dave. This was a good start to my day!

Maybe you should just stick to dressing up as Santa, or the Easter Bunny! lol

Take good care. :)

2:47 PM  
Blogger Big Dave T said...

LEE--I guess as long as people find me entertaining, it's all good. Wonder what my grandkids would think of me though if I dressed up like the Easter Bunny. I might get some "grandpa's losing it" looks.

Thanks for coming by. I always enjoy your comments here.

8:56 AM  
Blogger Carine-what's cooking? said...

😂 I know you think we'd be humbugs. Because of neighbor who is caddy corner to us. Decorates everything around her house complete with a baby of dead dolls hanging from her view fence. No one ever comes to our house! So last year we didn't do Halloween. And of course the pandemic cut off a different one. This year. We did the same as we did last year. We took the girls into the bedroom and shut the door. Turned out the lights and that was the evening. Our own kids after their in-house scavenger Hunt did come because the kids wanted to show us their costumes. They said that it was the emptiest street they've ever seen.

1:41 PM  
Blogger Big Dave T said...

CARINE--It does seem like fewer porch lights are on each Halloween. My yard is quite ghoulish but I try not to go over the top. Dead babies, I don't think so. Both our next door neighbors give out treats so it makes it somewhat worthwhile to visit our neighborhood.

10:28 AM  

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