FRESH
YARN PRESENTS:
The
World's Worst Waiter... Ever
By Jeff Kahn
PAGE
TWO
Desperate,
unemployed and on a powerful acting jones, I decided to hit up my
famous friend, John Cusack. John, not wanting to be outdone by his
fellow tall, limo-left-wing movie star friend, Tim Robbins, who
had an acting company in LA, decided to start his own company in
Chicago. The play he chose to direct, Alakazam, a forerunner
to HBO's, Carnivale, was about a traveling carnival freak
show in the 1940s. John cast me as a "half-man, half-chicken
freak." Finally, I had lines, albeit in between a lot of squawking
and clucking. Of course, I was paid nothing, so I had to go and
get yet another waiting job. This time it was on the top floor of
the windowless Water Tower Shopping Mall, in a Jewish deli "theme"
restaurant called DB Kaplan's. There are over two hundred sandwiches
we were required to memorize at DB Kaplan's, but all I can remember
is: "The Jim McMahon," "The Oprah" and "Mrs.
O'Leary's Cow." We also had to keep and make our own change.
So at the end of the night, when we cashed out, whatever money we
had over the gross amount of the totaled checks, we kept as tips.
Besides being inefficient and easily flustered as a waiter, I also
completely sucked at math. Night after night, the money I had in
pocket was less than the totaled checks. I was, in effect, losing
money by working. In order to keep acting, pay rent and subsidize
my DB Kaplan's job, I took a second part-time job catering parties.
This allowed me the unique opportunity to get fired from several
prominent Chicago catering companies.
One
day, during a particularly frantic lunch at DB Kaplan's, I scalded
my hand ladling a bowl of cheddar cheese soup. One of the chefs,
and by chefs I mean a Mexican guy who makes sandwiches and calls
waiters regardless of their sex, "she," "her"
and "you little girl," sadistically laughed at me as I
held my cheese-scorched hand under cold water... "Did she
get burned? Did the poor little girl burn her little girl
hand?" I lost it... I took a knife and pointed it at him. "And
so what if she did?" I said. "So, what if she did?"
Holding any knife at a large Mexican guy, in this case a plastic
take-out knife, is not a smart thing to do. He immediately grabbed
his much bigger, much sharper kitchen knife and started screaming
threats at me in Spanish. He doesn't back off until the manager
agreed to fire me... Which he did. Interestingly, at the same, short
time I was at DB Kaplan's, Andy Dick was also working there. There
were rumors afloat that Andy was actually a worse waiter than I.
There was his tendency to give away free food to friends in front
of paying customers, hit on under-aged tourists and one time he
told the night manager that he was "an ugly cock face."
Who was a worse waiter is a debate for the ages...
My
character in the play, Alakazam, Lenny Roostman, the half
man, half chicken, wore a chicken suit made out of a pair of long
underwear covered with real chicken feathers. In the stifling heat
of summertime Chicago, my sweat turned the chicken suit into a hardened
shell of stale, dried perspiration that grew stiffer and more malodorous
as the play went on. "What kind of life is this?" I asked
myself as I put the chicken suit on for another evening of acting
in the theater. The truth was, it wasn't waiting tables that was
turning me into a freak, it was acting.
Thankfully,
that was all a long time ago and I'm happy to report I've been "acting
free" for years. Of course I do these funny characters I make
up for my six-year-old son, but only long enough to make him laugh
or scream, "Stop it daddy, you're bothering me!" And every
once in awhile a friend calls and offers me a part in an HBO show.
I've been on The Larry Sander's Show, Curb Your Enthusiasm
and Entourage. But, c'mon, if I don't have to audition
for it, it's not really like I'm still acting. I mean it's not like
I need to act. I just do it for the kicks. You know, to be sociable.
It's no big deal, okay? I can stop at anytime, all right? It's not
like I want some big TV producer reading this on FRESH YARN to say,
"Hey, that Kahn guy could be right for that great part on my
show." Or some hot casting director to make a mental note to
herself to call me in the next time she's looking for someone who's
an odd mix between Roger Daltrey and Gene Wilder
Okay,
fine, so I'm still addicted. Lay off will you? Acting is harder
to quit than heroin. Fortunately, I no longer have to wait tables
to support my habit. I'm a writer. It's a lot more precarious than
waiting on tables, but the benefits are better and I have yet to
burn my hand on a computer keypad.
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