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Thursday, October 1, 2015

The Majestic Ballroom: Guest post by Ellen Kirschmann

Ellen Kirschman, PhD. is the author of I Love a Cop: What Police Families Need to Know; I Love a Firefighter: What the Family Needs to Know and Counseling Cops: What Clinicians Need to Know (with Mark Kamena and Joel Fay). In 2010, she received an award for Outstanding Contribution to Police and Public Safety from the American Psychological Association and in 2013 she received an award for Outstanding Contribution to Psychology from the California Psychological Association. Her two mysteries Burying Ben and The Right Wrong Thing (Available October 2015) were awarded first prize for best unpublished novel by the Public Safety Writers Association. You can contact her at her website www.ellenkirschman.com.

ELLEN KIRSCHMAN:
THE MAJESTIC BALLROOM

I am a police psychologist and the author of three non-fiction books and two mysteries featuring my fictional counterpart, police psychologist, Dr. Dot Meyerhoff. I'm often asked how I got started in police psychology. The answer is far from simple.

I grew up in the 1950’s when my job prospects were limited to teaching and secretarial work. I thought to escape this fate by becoming an actress. I started acting lessons with a teacher well known for playing Macbeth. “Acting is physical,“ he roared. “Think of Macbeth roaming the halls of his drafty castle in a reeking bearskin cape. He didn't wander with furrowed brow in an agony of emotion. He was cold and hungry, his eyes were blurry and his back ached."

My first acting assignment was to observe people at work. But I wanted more. I wanted to be the person I was observing. That's what drew me to the Majestic Ballroom on Times Square. It was the only place I knew where I could get a job the same day I applied for it. Down the stairs I went, following the neon arrows and the aging photographs of buxom women with sullen, pouty faces.

The manager hired me on the spot and introduced me to the supervising dance hostess for training. Her name was Dorene. She looked me over, quickly concluded that I had nothing suitable to wear and handed me a floor-length strapless tube of stretch jersey with a padded bra that catapulted my bosom into a fleshy shelf. I squirmed into it, trying not to think about the health habits of its last occupant.

My training was short and to the point. “Tease the clients. Promise something while promising nothing. The longer you hold a customer’s attention, the more dances, drinks, and cigarettes he’ll buy. String the guy along until closing time, then have the bouncer throw him out on his ass. And don’t forget to turn your chits in at the end of the week for cash.”

I waited with the other hostesses in an oval holding pen separated from the dance floor by a low railing. We were a cast of female archetypes. An avatar of Marilyn Monroe smiled provocatively and shook her pearly blonde wig. Cleopatra assumed a regal pose while clucking disapprovingly at an aging siren with deflated breasts who stood near the door blowing obscene kisses and making juicy smacking sounds to the patrons as they descended the stairs. To one side, a forlorn and disheveled Ophelia talked to no one but herself, her endless babbling an apparent comfort to the steady stream of silent men who paid for her company.

Marissa wore a simple cocktail dress that zipped down the front so that she could run to the dressing room on breaks and nurse her baby under the watchful eye of the child's grandmother. “Don’t sleep with anyone you don’t love, like those putas,” she whispered to me with the saintliness of a Madonna and the sad traces of firsthand experience.

Our clients were a motley bunch. Morose and somber, some were barely able to make small talk or eye contact. Others didn’t speak English. Many seemed caught between loneliness and fear, scared of the human contact they had paid for. No one seemed to be having any fun except for the occasional drunken frat boy who fell through the door on a dare, laughing and shouting obscenities.

Mike was unlike the soggy-faced shufflers who had been stepping on my toes and breathing in my face. He was young and talkative. “I chose you," he said, “because you look different from the other girls.” I was elated to be recognized for what I was, not for what I was pretending to be. I poured out my tale: dedicated-young-actress-embarked-on-a-meaningful-but-dangerous-venture-into-the-skin-trade-for-the-love-of-theater. My confession must have pierced the armor of his anonymity and scared him into thinking I wanted something in return. An eighth note after the music finished, he bolted across the dance floor and made for the stairs. With his hand on the door, he turned and shouted at me: “Hey you. My name’s not Mike.”

At closing time we changed into street clothes. The manager escorted us to the street where a few sleepy security guards watched us drift away. Cleopatra rode off in a Cadillac with a man who looked to be half her age. Marilyn Monroe hailed a taxi. The old siren stuck a cigarette in her nearly toothless mouth and headed for an all night bar. Ophelia skittered off into the darkness. Marissa left with her mother and baby. At the end of the week I tried to transfer my chits to her account, but I was told it was against the rules.

I quit acting soon after realizing that I didn’t have the drive or the talent. It took me years to connect that adventure at the Majestic Ballroom to my career as a police psychologist. Granted, police officers and dime-a-dance hostesses are very different and I hope I’m not insulting either when I suggest they share some similarities. Both need to protect themselves emotionally and psychologically from an ambivalent public that wants them and rejects them in equal measure. The occupational personas they are forced to adopt are tools of the trade; virtual masks that simultaneously crush them and free them to do their jobs. Emotional control is vital to their ability to function in uncertain, potentially explosive circumstances. And social distance is their bulwark against the misery and despair they see everyday.

The Majestic Ballroom no longer exists, probably replaced by on-line porn sites. Cleopatra, Ophelia, Marilyn Monroe, and Marissa have gone on to do other things that are, I imagine, less gratifying than the opportunities and experiences I have had. It makes me sad that they will never know how much they influenced my life and for how long.

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