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- <text id=91TT2446>
- <title>
- Nov. 04, 1991: Why the Good Times Still Roll
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Nov. 04, 1991 The New Age of Alternative Medicine
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 36
- ELECTIONS
- Why the Good Times Still Roll
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A divided state finds common ground in the relentless pursuit of
- pleasure
- </p>
- <p>By Thomas Sancton/New Orleans
- </p>
- <p> Louisianians are not interested in ideologies or
- principles but in the fundamentals--the whir of slot machines,
- the pounding of horses' hoofs, and the clink of ice in a Sazerac
- cocktail.
- </p>
- <p>-- Historian T. Harry Williams, 1960
- </p>
- <p> Danny Barker knows all about the fundamentals. At 82, the
- jazz banjoist and guitarist has seen a lot of changes in his
- hometown since he went north, played with Louis Armstrong and
- toured with the Cab Calloway orchestra. But the fundamentals
- don't budge. "New Orleans people are unique," he says, sitting
- in his shirt-sleeves on the front porch of his white shotgun
- house. "Somebody goin' to jail? Give him a party. Somebody died?
- Give him a party. They'd throw a party for a dog's birthday.
- Here you have a million people raised with a habit to
- celebrate."
- </p>
- <p> Some 120 miles away in the city of Lafayette, several
- thousand Cajuns are indulging the same habit at the Festival de
- Musique Acadienne. Clad in T-shirts, blue jeans and calico
- dresses, a throng of two-stepping dancers is raising a fine
- cloud of dust under moss-bearded branches. On the stage,
- silhouetted against a red sunset, Johnny Sonnier's Cajun
- Heritage lays down a pulsating chank-chank rhythm punctuated by
- accordion counterpoints, soaring fiddles and a piercing nasal
- vocal: "Jolie fille, jolie fille..."
- </p>
- <p> Jean Richard, 79, a retired watchmaker from nearby Rayne
- ("Frog Capital of the World"), recalls an earlier time, when
- almost everybody in southwest Louisiana played an instrument.
- "My daddy could play harmonica, crow like a rooster and bark
- like a dog all at the same time." He shakes his head sadly.
- "That trait is gone today--nobody practices that anymore."
- </p>
- <p> Backstage, the legendary Cajun fiddler Dewey Balfa, 65,
- waits his turn to go on, a red plastic crawfish dangling from
- the neck of his violin. He speaks of the "great migration"--the expulsion of the French Acadians from Canada in 1755--as
- if it happened yesterday. "What they brought here is still
- alive in our culture and our love for each other," he says. "I'm
- an American, but I don't want to lose my French identity."
- </p>
- <p> The Cajuns are as different from New Orleanians as New
- Orleanians are from Protestants in the rural north. Yet all
- Louisianians share something that sets them apart--at least
- in their own minds--from other Americans. They are bound, in
- the words of Bill Lynch, a former newspaperman who now serves
- as the state's inspector general, "by our unforgiving history."
- It is a paradoxical chronicle of political corruption and
- roguishness, of fabulous oil wealth and red-clay poverty, of
- exile and immigration, cultural blending and racial divides.
- </p>
- <p> The state's citizens--black and white, Creole and Cajun--also share an amazing dedication to the pursuit of good
- times. It is a tradition that goes back to the state's original
- patron, Philippe, Duke of Orleans, the notorious carouser,
- drinker and libertine who ruled France as regent from 1715 to
- 1723 and gave his name to Louisiana's major city. For the duke,
- writes a French historian, "pleasure was the goal and festivity
- the means of expression."
- </p>
- <p> Louisiana pleasures range from the simple to the
- sophisticated: food, music, gambling and sex top the list in the
- Latin-Catholic south; hunting, fishing and sex (remember Jimmy
- Swaggart?) tend to predominate in the Protestant north. Former
- Governor Earl K. Long managed to touch most of those bases: he
- loved nothing better than boar hunting and horse racing, and he
- ended his life in a steamy affair with a New Orleans stripper
- named Blaze Starr. Ex-Governor Edwin Edwards, who revels in his
- image as a womanizer and gambler, once boasted that the only
- thing that could lose him an election was being caught in bed
- "with a dead girl or a live boy." One Governor who definitely
- did not embody the state's hog-stomping, hell-raising ethos was
- Buddy Roemer, with all his dour talk of austerity,
- responsibility and honor--which goes a long way toward
- explaining why the voters just threw him out.
- </p>
- <p> The epicenter of hedonism is New Orleans--and, just for
- the record, no one from there ever called the place the Big
- Easy or pronounced its name "N'Aw lins." The late 19th century
- writer Lafcadio Hearn rhapsodized about the city's sensuality--"her nights of magical moonlight, and her days of dreamy
- languors and perfumes." He was even moved to compare its
- delicious decadence to "a dead bride crowned with orange flowers--a dead face that asked for a kiss." Actually, the place is
- a lot livelier than that. It is a seething agglomeration of jazz
- halls, Zydeco joints, R.-and-B. clubs, great restaurants,
- all-night bars--and, of course, Mardi Gras. Where else would
- a city's business and social leaders don sequined costumes,
- ostrich plumes, masks and fake beards, and climb atop 20-ft.-high
- floats and throw trinkets to the masses?
- </p>
- <p> Nor has a decade-long recession done much to puncture the
- pleasure principle. "Part of our laissez-faire attitude," says
- attorney George Denegre, chairman of the region's Chamber of
- Commerce and a former King of Carnival, "is that, if times get
- tough, you go to the Gulf Coast instead of Paris." Ella Brennan,
- whose family owns several of the city's top restaurants, agrees.
- "This is a restaurant town," she says, sipping Chablis at the
- mahogany bar of Commander's Palace. "In New Orleans, if you're
- about to declare bankruptcy, you go out to dinner the night
- before."
- </p>
- <p> That kind of response to adversity--one last hoot before
- it all hits the fan--is the town's most endearing quality.
- "If you fall ill on the streets of New York, people grumble
- about having to step over you or around you," wrote Walker Percy
- in a cynical moment. "In New Orleans there is still a chance,
- diminishing perhaps, that somebody will drag you into the
- neighborhood bar and pay the innkeeper for a shot of Early
- Times." Now faced with choosing between a twice-indicted rascal
- and an ex-neo-Nazi Klan leader for Governor, the citizens of
- Louisiana could use a shot or two.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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