Here’s to the losers, bless
them all
I envy people who win. Doesn’t matter if
it’s due to hard work or no effort at all. Winning is winning.
Losing is more my speed. Always has
been. I’ve been losing really important people and things since way back. I don’t
say that in a poor-me-ain’t-I-just-too-pitiful-for-words
kind of way. It’s just a fact.
I lost something just a few days ago.
Not one of those life-altering losses like your dad or best friend or even your
most devoted dog, but a damn tough loss nonetheless.
See, I let Sinatra’s fedora get away
from me. For a lousy couple grand.
Yeah, I know. This hasn’t got a thing to
do with food. (Though the auction house in which Frank’s hat was offered did
provide a spread of cheeses and meats and even boiled shrimp to those attending
the afternoon’s “Celebrity Memorabilia” event.) I’ve got some serious demons to
exorcise here, okay. Come back next week and I promise to cook you up something
real nice.
Two friends accompanied me to the event
in Biddeford, Maine. Marc acted as wingman; he took the drive and sat next to
me as I waited for Lot # 12 to go on the block. X.Ray was back in New Jersey
doing who knows what, but he remained in constant phone contact throughout.
I knew before stepping foot in the
auction house that Frank’s hat would be a pretty close fit. I’d earlier reached
out to the Sinatra family and Frank’s daughter Nancy put her father’s hat size within
a mere 1/8th inch of my own. Others might store away or display such
an item but my plan was to wear it. Proudly.
Marc and I were shocked to discover
Frank’s fedora not behind a glass case or on a shelf shielding its felt from
the public’s reach. Rather, there it was on a plain folding table in the center
of the room next to similarly desirable artifacts: Brando’s bad-ass-black leather
motorcycle jacket, Jack Benny’s stage-used violin, a couple dozen items in all.
Marc tells me that he can’t quite
describe my expression as I approached the brown fedora, a Stetson as it
happens.
“You’ve got it bad, dude,” I heard him
say, or at least I think he did.
The Stetson was perched atop a white
foam mannequin head. Underneath was a red folder containing the item’s
provenance, in this case originating from the collection of one Joe Franklin, a
now-deceased talk-show host in New York with whom I am well familiar having
grown up there. I wanted to inspect the hat to see its size but dared not touch
it. Marc and I discussed asking one of the auction house workers to
investigate. But then a voice was heard loudly and clearly.
“You can try it on if you like.”
It was a woman standing behind a glass
display case that carried, among other things, Babe Ruth’s glove and Roy
Campanella’s face mask.
“Seriously?” I asked. “I only wanted to
see what size it is.”
“Like I said,” the woman offered in a
very pleasant manner, “you’re more than welcome to try it on.”
At this point, Marc would tell me later
that afternoon over fried chicken and drinks, my expression went positively six year’s old on Christmas morning.
I know. It looked a lot better on him.
But what was I gonna do, not show
this to you?
I knew that X.Ray, as big a fan of the
man as I, would be just as insanely thrilled by this new development, and so I
texted the picture to him right away.
“You need that hat brother,” he
responded seconds later. “You must be weak in the knees.”
I responded with a one-word profanity,
the likes of which need not be repeated here.
“If Mr. Sinatra is watching from above,”
X.Ray typed, “I think it is fair to say that he would be proud to have a man
like you own his hat.”
It’s true what they say, you know: Choose your friends wisely.
Moments later Marc and I took our seats.
The auction was about to begin. Frank’s hat would be the twelfth item on the
block. I hadn’t expected to be a player, as earlier I’d been told by the
auctioneer that prices were estimated to be much higher than I’d imagined. But
then the first few items went for a song, just a couple hundred dollars for a
hat belonging to Ray Charles, about as much for those owned by Vincent Price,
Peter Lorre, Red Skelton and Judy Garland. These prices were way below the auctioneer’s estimates.
“How much cash you got on you?” I asked
Marc reaching into my own pocket to do a count.
“I don’t know, a couple hundred,” he said.
“Are you serious? I thought we were just spectators.”
I always carry a lot of cash, way more
than that. Between Marc’s and mine, all of a sudden I was in the game.
When Mr. Sinatra’s Stetson came up for
its turn, the auctioneer sought an opening bid of $20,000. This didn’t rattle
me very much because he had sought similar openings earlier and without
success. The room remained silent. The man tried $15,000 and still nothing,
then $10,000. Finally Frank Sinatra’s fedora opened at $3,000. Still not so good
as I’d reconciled myself to go no higher than $3,500. In an instant the bid
went to $4,000, then $4,500 and then to $5,000, the winning bid and not my own.
Marc and I took our leave. It was
raining and we were hungry—and thirsty.
I texted X.Ray to let him know how
things went down.
“My condolences brother,” he typed. “You
gave it a shot and you actually got to wear the man’s hat. I bet that alone
will make the rest of your day.”
He was right, of course, but that was days ago now.
As Casey Stengel said, "Without losers, where would the winners be?"
2 comments:
That's a nice lookin' hat. I'm sorry you were outbid for something you wanted, but that doesn't mean you're a loser, it means you have your priorities straight. Think of how much good wine, or good-quality Parmigiano, or great mortadella you can enjoy with the 5G you didn't spend on the hat.
Chuck
Good point. Thanks, Chuck.
Post a Comment