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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>