Greenwich Village in 1971 |
In the 1970s in New York everyone
slept till noon.
It was a grungy, dangerous,
bankrupt city without normal services most of the time. The garbage piled up
and stank during long strikes of the sanitation workers. A major blackout led
to days and days of looting. We gay guys wore whistles around our necks so we
could summon help from other gay men when we were attacked on the streets by
gangs living in the projects between Greenwich Village and the West Side
leather bars.
The upside was that the city was
inexpensive, and Manhattan, especially the part of it below Fourteenth Street,
was full of young actors-singers-dancers-waiters who made enough money working
their restaurant shifts three nights a week to pay for their acting lessons and
their cheap rents. Unlike our hometowns back in the Midwest, where the sidewalk
was rolled up at six p.m., the delis and coffee shops were open all night and
the bars till four in the morning. That whole army of actor-waiters saw their
restaurant jobs as just another opportunity for “scene study” (“Who am I
tonight? An Austrian aristocrat who’s fallen on bad times? A runaway from an
incestuous family in the Tennessee hills? A Swedish gymnast?”)
No matter how big their tips were,
they managed to drink them away in a bar after the restaurants closed as they
talked excitedly about their art and their loves. Everyone smoked all the time,
and when you French-kissed someone, it was like rubbing one ashtray against
another.
New York seemed either frightening
or risible to the rest of the nation…
Source: “City Boy,” Edmund White’s
memoir
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