The Old West Theater

Written
1995

 Adults went to the West Theater

     in the rowdy West End of town

      and sat downstairs

      to watch the movies.

In the balcony teenagers necked.

They didn't bother each other

      until youthful giggling got too loud.

Then the usher's flash light

     coming down the isle

     led to some quick straightening up.

Saturday was the busy night.

For grown ups it was a

     Depression night on the town

     where, with care, four bits would cover

     the costs of the trip

     away from bleak reality.

Dancing feet of Fred and Ginger,

      champagne and tuxedos made

      the drabness of being poor disappear.

For the high school crowd

     it was the place to be.

It was often very cheap for them

    sneaking in past a friendly usher.

But the price was right because

      they  didn't plan to watch the movie.                        

When the dated girl wanted to watch

      Ginger or just had to sit in the front row

      instead of the back of the balcony

      the lad was in for a dull evening.

It was a house of dreams

     for both ages so

     the theater needed no imaginative name.

Old West Theater was enough. 

But for the little kid's,

     dreams of love

     and silly dancing held little interest.  

They craved action.

And for a dime they could

     go to their theater, Strand. 

Strand on the Picketwire

     at the foot of the crocked brick street.

There played the men of action

      on horses with remembered names.

Too young for love.

Too young for Depression pain.

But old enough to know

     the difference between

     black and white hats.

For them a double feature

      and a candy bar for 15 cents

      entertained until their

       hormonal surge took them

       to the Old West Theater.

A complete cycle of family values

      in our times.

Notes
Published in "Trinidad, Colorado, My Home Town" 1996