Mr Copacabana: Jericho Mountain Series, #1
By Jim Proser
()
About this ebook
Mr. Copacabana is the outrageous life story of Monte Proser, creator and operator of the famous Copacabana nightclub in New York City in 1940. Monte's story is a sweeping epic of the early 20th century through the eyes of one of the most colorful characters in American history. Because he was the involuntary partner of a series of the most powerful gangsters of the era, Monte's story is also a keyhole view of the struggle between crime and conscience in America. It is a history of America at night.
Jim Proser
Award-winning and bestselling author Jim Proser grew up as the fourth of five sons of nightclub impresario Monte Proser and film actress Jane Ball in New Hope, Bucks County, Pennsylvania. His latest book from St. Martin’s Press, “SAVAGE MESSIAH; How Dr. Jordan Peterson is Saving Western Civilization” is the biography of one of the most controversial figures of our time – Dr. Jordan Peterson. Jim began his professional writing career at age 15 as a city reporter for the Lambertville (NJ) Beacon newspaper and went on as a journalist to write for Investor’s Business Daily and National Review Online. He has written screenplays for 20th Century Fox Television, Showtime Networks and numerous independent producers. His first book, “Mr. Copacabana” is in negotiations as an extended dramatic television series. The book reveals the outrageous life story of Jim’s father, Monte Proser, creator and operator of the iconic nightclub, and his involuntary business partnership with Frank Costello, the infamous “Prime Minister” of the mafia. His second book, “I’m Staying with My Boys; The Heroic Life of Sgt. John Basilone, USMC” was published by St. Martin’s Press and awarded the United States Marine Corps Commandant’s Recommendation in 2011. It was the source material for the subsequent documentary film written and directed by Mr. Proser. The book and documentary have also served as the source material for speaking engagements to the United States Naval Institute in Washington DC, the University of Northern Idaho Writer’s Symposium, Bowdoin College Advanced Literature Studies, the Coeur D’Alene Charter Academy and numberous civic organizations and secondary schools. His third book, “No Better Friend, No Worse Enemy; The Life of General James Mattis” was published by HarperCollins publishers and released on August 7, 2018. The book has achieved the rank of #1 in its category and #17 overall on amazon.com. He has been interviewed about the book on “The Story with Martha MacCallum” and “Fox and Friends” on the Fox News Network. Jim lives in Pennington, New Jersey and spends his days working on his next book and writing inflammatory political posts for his blog at jimproser.com.
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Mr Copacabana - Jim Proser
CONTENTS
CHAPTER 1: COCKTAIL HOUR
CHAPTER 2: MAKIN’ WHOOPEE
CHAPTER 3: FREEPORT
CHAPTER 4: THE 500 MILE DEATH RACE
CHAPTER 5: HOLLYWOOD DREAMS
CHAPTER 6: THE STAR OF TEXAS
CHAPTER 7: THE MAIN STEM
CHAPTER 8: HOLLYWOOD ON THE HUDSON
CHAPTER 9: THE PARTY’S OVER
CHAPTER 10: I OWN THE JOINT
CHAPTER 11: ANARCHY IN ASTORIA
CHAPTER 12: FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT
CHAPTER 13: MR. CAPONE SAYS HELLO
CHAPTER 14: THE HONEYMOON
CHAPTER 15: THAT OLD FEELING
CHAPTER 16: KILL THE DUTCHMAN
CHAPTER 17: MONTE PROSER’S COPACABANA
CHAPTER 18: PARTNER TROUBLE
CHAPTER 19: OPENING NIGHT
CHAPTER 20: BROADWAY’S FAVORITE SON
CHAPTER 21: JANE BALL
CHAPTER 22: THE PARLAY
CHAPTER 23: YOU, I’M GONNA MARRY
CHAPTER 24: DECLARATION OF WAR
CHAPTER 25: SHE LOVES ME
CHAPTER 26: SHE LOVES ME NOT
CHAPTER 27: THE INVISIBLE WEB
CHAPTER 28: NO PEACE
CHAPTER 29: A CHANGING OF THE GUARD
CHAPTER 30: HIGH BUTTON SHOES
CHAPTER 31: A BROKEN HEART FOR EVERY LIGHT ON BROADWAY
CHAPTER 32: SANCTUARY
CHAPTER 33: JULES PODELL’S COPACABANA
CHAPTER 34: A CHANGE OF SEASONS
CHAPTER 35: THE COPA ROOM
CHAPTER 36: FIVE BOYS. IN CHINA WE’D BE RICH.
CHAPTER 37: BROADWAY OF THE WEST
CHAPTER 38: CALLING IT QUITS
CHAPTER 39: THE NEW BREED
CHAPTER 40: RAIN IN THE DESERT
CHAPTER 41: LIGHTS OUT
CHAPTER 42: THE CONCERTINA CLOSES
CHAPTER 43: THE CONCERTINA OPENS AGAIN
EPILOGUE
About the Author
CHAPTER 1
COCKTAIL HOUR
Around Broadway they were starting to say Frank Sinatra was finished, cooked, …couldn’t get arrested.
His records weren’t selling, his Lucky Strike Radio show was faltering, his flamboyant affair with Ava Gardner was losing him fans and draining his strength. One night, as he hung around the circular bar in the Hotel 14 above the Copa, not wanting to show his face downstairs in the main room, Toni Williams, a Copa girl, arrived and sat a few stools away. Sinatra sidled over, struck up a conversation. More than anything, he hated to be alone, especially now, when it looked like he might be returning to Hoboken a 25 year-old has-been. He made a play for Toni just as her date for the evening, handsome, young Tom Corbally, showed up. As the couple was leaving, Corbally turned to Sinatra and kidded him, Next time I see you I’m gonna change the channel.
Sinatra was so low he couldn’t even rise to the joke. Don’t do that,
the demoralized young singer said, Everybody else is doing it.
This was one of the lowest points in the singer’s career and life. Within a few days he would turn to powerful friends for help. The friends made a few calls. One of the first calls went out to the Copacabana.
Monte Proser usually sat at table 4G, just off the dance floor a little to the right of center when he auditioned acts for the Copa. It was the family table, which made him feel a little better. On this typical day at work, which usually started at about 4:30 in the afternoon, Monte wasn’t very upbeat. Last night’s three shows and five or six Dewar’s and soda had left him with a squinting hangover. He turned his attention to the stage where the final bars of Poor Butterfly
wavered from a young hopeful. A pretty young girl from… somewhere, he forgot exactly where. Monte was starting to enjoy the song as Jack Entratter, the towering Copa manager, placed a heavy black telephone on the table with Plaza 8-1060 printed in bold black letters on a white paper medallion in the center of the metal dial.
It’s him.
Entratter handed his boss the receiver. Monte noted the seriousness on his manager’s face. He cleared his head and brought all his concentration to this conversation. He held the receiver slightly away from his tender head, softening the sound, Yeah.
The caller was Frank Costello, the cordial Prime Minister
of the Syndicate, the united mafia families of New York, New Jersey and Chicago. He was concerned about Sinatra, a trivial issue for one of the most powerful men in the world, but Costello was often like that, very protective of people he liked. Costello just wanted to tell Monte of his concern for the singer. Monte listened closely for other concerns but only heard an older, powerful man trying to give a young friend a boost. After a few exchanges, the conversation ended up about where it started.
Frank’s a good kid, good singer.
Monte offered.
Woman trouble. He’s all mixed up,
Costello summarized.
Monte agreed. Yeah, he’s a good kid.
He was upstairs in the 14 the other night. Didn’t want to show his face,
Frank said.
Monte was relieved there wasn’t more on Frank’s mind. Even though the two men had become friendly in the 8 years since Frank bought into the club, the power of life and death that Frank held in his hands meant no conversation was truly casual. Monte held his complaint against Frank’s man in the club, Jules Podell, for another time.
Maybe you could talk to Cohn and your Hollywood people?
Eh…
Monte sighed.
What?
I threw him out last week.
Costello was concerned, You threw Harry Cohn out?
Yeah. He’s a bum,
Monte said, leaving the details of Cohn’s lechery toward his Copa chorus girls drop. Let me see what I can do here,
he added to soften his refusal. In the club, Monte called the shots and Frank C never interfered in his partner’s end of a partnership. Harry Cohn was the powerful and much-feared chief of Columbia Pictures who had been partnered with Al Capone’s Chicago Outfit for many years. Even Costello respected Cohn’s power enough to be troubled by Monte’s action, but Monte was one-of-a-kind
and Costello let it go.
Okay,
Frank said and hung up.
That was it. Frank never liked to spend too much time on the phone, always assuming that the city, state, FBI or an enemy was listening. Eventually Costello found others to help secure the part of Maggio for his young friend in the film From Here to Eternity – an event later dramatized in The Godfather using a severed horse’s head. For Costello, the call was a small favor he felt he owed to a few friends who had an interest in the singer’s career. For Monte, it was confirmation that a fly like himself had taken another turn in the spider’s web spun by Frank Costello, Lucky Luciano and Meyer Lansky.
The talented young singer was now, somehow, more indebted to the Syndicate. Not unusual. Everybody who worked in nightclubs was, but it was never pleasant to be reminded. Particularly since Monte liked Sinatra. The kid was a little hotheaded but he was a stand-up guy, loyal to his friends and had great style.
Two seasons back, in 1946, Phil Silvers was set to perform at the club with comedian Rags Ragland. Two weeks before opening night, Ragland died leaving Silvers emotionally wobbly and stranded as a single. Monte couldn’t replace the act, the show had to go on. Silvers begged Sinatra to stand in for Rags but the singer was booked on a movie It Happened In Brooklyn that was shooting in Hollywood.
Silvers carried the act himself through opening night but knew he couldn’t maintain it. After the first show of the following night, Silvers sat in his dressing room depressed about the other 20 or so shows ahead, when Sinatra knocked and came in. He’d flown from California to help out his pal. Silvers started the next show still as a single and, as if by accident, found a famous face in the audience. He introduced Sinatra who came on stage and did a bit with Silvers and singer Julie Wilson. At the end, Sinatra sat down. When the roaring crowd called him back to take a bow, Silvers suggested they take an extra bow for Ragland. That night made Sinatra into a hero in Monte’s eyes and among show folk in general. Everybody knew the kid had heart.
But a lot can happen in two years. Now Sinatra was on the skids. Monte decided he could help the big-hearted singer from Hoboken. He’d move a few things in the schedule and squeeze him in. The kid deserved it and it would make Frank Costello happy - two good ideas.
As far as publicity, Monte knew the big guns, Walter Winchell and Ed Sullivan, were good for a little ink, a mention of the singer in their newspaper columns. The others, Earl Wilson, Mark Hellinger and Jack O’Brian would probably follow. Dorothy Kilgallen you couldn’t count on. Sinatra was on his own with her.
The manager of the young hopeful on stage munched Sen-Sen like a menthol locomotive and breathed into Monte’s face making his headache worse.
Whaddya think? Isn’t she great!
the manager asked with everything he had on the line. Monte looked at the young girl on the dance floor in front of him, who would make a great singing waitress somewhere, smiling wide enough to dislocate her jaw.
She’s really something.
Monte said as he shielded his eyes for a moment from the glaring white tablecloth. The manager thought he was contemplating an offer and jumped in.
She’s a humdinger! What dates were you thinking of?
Monte was thinking maybe the day after he died, which might be tomorrow if his hangover got worse, but he didn’t want to be nasty. They looked like nice people.
I’ll call you.
He couldn’t manage more with his head screaming for aspirin, Bromo and maybe a little hair of the dog that bit him. The manager’s smile started to wobble.
I’ll call you.
Monte nailed home as he noticed Irving Lazar, the young music agent, striding across the room toward him. He knew he was in for an earful. Irving was relentless.
The manager knew he was sunk, Sure, sure. Okay. I’ll be hearing from you, yeah.
She’s a terrific singer, really,
Monte said. He was thinking of the girl and wanted to salve the rejection he had to inflict on her.
A humdinger. That’s for sure.
The manager motioned angrily to the girl, faked a final smile and left with his talented burden without looking back.
Monte nursed his tomato juice, which was supposed to help but wasn’t, as Irving sat down, uninvited, and started chewing his ear about Johnny Pineapple. Monte loosened his tie while Irving promoted his discovery
. The truth was that he’d been trying to sell this same band yesterday when it was called the Billy Chesterfield something or other. Now it was Johnny Pineapple, renamed to fit with the Copa’s tropical theme. You had to hand it to Irving, he was fast and had more chutzpah than Eskimos got snow.
Look, Swifty. I’ll take the band, Johnny Pineapple, for a week. Three fifty.
Swifty?
The little agent wasn’t sure if he liked having a nickname, but the calculating was over before the thought was even complete. If Monte Proser wants to call me Swifty, and book my guys into the Copa, okay by me. And there’s expenses…
Monte rubbed his forehead and sighed. Last night’s Dewar’s was pushing against the walls of his skull. Survival instinct quickly lifted Irving Swifty
Lazar out of his seat.
Three fifty’s fine, great. They’ll be here.
The young music agent was out the door before Monte looked up.
Expenses.
Monte said to himself. He was amused by Swifty. He reminded him of himself.
Monte rested his head in his hands. He just hoped the phone wouldn’t ring again as he plotted his way around the lineup. Sinatra, for two weeks, I gotta bump somebody, and they’ll scream. He needed to lie down. He got up, dodged the young Filipino man vacuuming the carpet and padded delicately toward the bar. He passed by massive support columns that had been made over into stout white palm trees. On the walls, large draped plaster swags were painted in wide stripes of rust red and white echoing the seaside cabanas of the real Copacabana beach in Rio de Janiero. Clusters of tropical fruits hung from the swags and art deco blue lights created the moonlit aura over rust red banquets that lined the walls. Every detail of the Copa décor was pure showmanship and escapism.
Monte climbed from floor level up the two elevated tiers that surrounded the 24 by 40 foot stage floor. The stage was narrow to begin with, but on busy nights, as more tables were placed up front for important customers, it got even smaller. Customers and performers were often so close that Copa girls knocked over drinks with the hems of their dresses when they twirled. Beads of sweat from featured performers, particularly dance teams, often sprayed the front row landing in customers’ drinks.
Monte made it to the bar, leaned on it, Joey,
he murmured and nodded ever so slightly to the bartender who slapped down a shot glass and poured a Dewar’s. Tickety boo.
Monte saluted and downed the shot. He exhaled the fiery fumes and placed the glass back on the gleaming wood. Everything was quiet in the club except for the reassuring vacuuming of the carpet and the dull clinking in the kitchen as the Filipino chef Pedro Pujal and the kitchen crew started their preparations. Monte looked back over his creation as the liquor started to ease the pain. Above the stage was a bold relief mural of Copacabana beach under moonlight. It was framed by the massive white palms creating the theatrical illusion of an exotically romantic place a thousand miles away from New York City. Monte tried to lose himself in the scene for a moment, to rest and relieve his aggravation.
Except for his hangover, it might seem like Monte Proser should be grinning from ear to ear. He was 44, rich, famous and married to Jane Ball, one of the most beautiful of his Copa Girls. He and Jane had a healthy one-year old son, Charles, named after Monte’s father, and another one on the way. His name had been on the front of the world’s hottest nightclub for the past eight years and the mention of it would open any door. He had more fun in a week than most people had in a year and had already lost more money at Aqueduct racetrack than most people would make in their lifetimes. His taste, talent and power as a producer were unassailable, yet he could not control his own creation, the Copa. The first class nightclub that he had created, that bore his name, was being turned into a mobster clip joint and it was making him sick with fury.
At the end of the bar, Jack Entratter was finishing his second coffee and smoke of the day - his eye-opener. It was close to five in the afternoon, which was mid-morning for nightclub guys like Jack who never woke up before noon.
He knew a call from Costello didn’t usually help his boss’ state of mind. He saw Monte throw back the shot of booze and could see the storm clouds descending. Monte would be turning the problem over in his mind again, for the ten millionth time. The booze was getting to him. For every moment of relief it gave him, it was putting him deeper in the hole. His afternoon naps were starting to be a regular thing. He was drinking earlier and more. By nine or ten, after the first show, he’d be loaded and his conversations were losing their sparkle, taking on a nasty, cutting humor. Entratter mentioned it and got waved off for his effort. He didn’t want to see Monte drown in a bottle of Scotch, but if he did, well, it wouldn’t be too bad for his own career. Someone would have to fill the gap.
I gotta lie down for a minute. You uh…
Monte motioned up toward the front door.
Sure, Boss. I’ll open up.
Entratter said.
Monte moved off toward the manager’s office. He climbed the main stairs toward the lounge and street level, his mind fully clouded with the problem. The Copa was slipping from his control and he was powerless to stop it. The face of the problem, the only part he could get his hands on, was Frank Costello’s watchdog manager, Jules Podell. The bigger problem was the quicksand of corruption that had spread to City Hall, had swallowed entire countries like Cuba and was now engulfing the state of Nevada.
Jules Podell was plundering the Copa like a rum-soaked pirate – padding customer’s checks, shaking down concessionaires and grifting vendors with nickel and dime schemes. His last job had been managing the Kit Kat Club, a late night, hand-job under the table, strip joint on Broadway and 50th. Before that he was a leg breaker for Meyer Lansky. He had several convictions for assault and battery and dodged a murder rap due to jury amnesia. In the first years of the Copa, Podell had been confined to the kitchen, technically off the premises
due to his felony convictions and clear ties with Costello. He had been kept in check by the watchful eye of Mayor LaGuardia’s City Hall. Now that the Syndicate’s man, Bill O’Dwyer, was in the Mayor’s chair at City Hall, Podell was out of his pen and gorging on the Copa like a pig in a flower garden. This was the unsolvable problem that drove Monte to the bottle and then to bed each day. You can’t fight City Hall.
To Monte the Copa was more than just a hot nightclub. He already had a string of successful clubs from Miami to Providence, Rhode Island. It was more than the money, even though he had taken the longest long shot of his career and turned a jinxed white elephant into a $25,000 dollar per night Niagara of cash. The Copa was simply everything Monte had learned in twenty years of hanging around the gin joints and backstages of Broadway. It was his mark, his signature, his unique vision.
He had built his creation into the Mecca of the entertainment industry. It was the well from which Broadway and Hollywood drew their talent. Dozens of performers like Frank Sinatra, Nat King Cole, Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis got the boost that made their careers at the Copa. A shot at the Copa for any performer meant they had made it. Monte didn’t book headliners, he created them. He revived careers of older vaudevillians like Jimmy Durante and gave new performers like Nat King Cole a place in the Copa’s spotlight. This was the special excitement of the Copa – riveting performances by new and rediscovered entertainers. A show at the Copa promised the thrill of discovery.
In the manager’s office, Monte sat down on the brown leather couch and untied his gleaming English broughams – the finest shoes money could buy. Across the room, his desk was covered with newspapers. The floor around the desk was piled with press books filled with newspaper clippings dating back eight years to opening night in 1940. This was how he gauged the Copa’s success, not in money or attendance, but in ink. What were his friends saying in their columns and more importantly, how often were they saying it?
He aligned his splendid shoes neatly, a personal ritual that signaled a time to rest and contemplate. He slumped into the couch and closed his eyes. In a moment, his mind was calm, the annoyances were put aside and he contemplated the sheer granite wall of the problem.
Simply, he was as powerless as a small boy in short pants before his overlord Frank Costello, the ultimate authority. The sting of recognition opened his eyes. The relationship to Costello was similar to the relationship Monte had had with his imperious father. Both men had the power of life and death over Monte. Neither man was someone he had chosen. Both freely imposed their will on him. Neither could be overruled. Both were civilized and discreet. Neither could be hated. Monte faced essentially the same dilemma that tore him from his family over thirty years earlier. He closed his eyes again, falling asleep to let his mind work on the problem.
He was suddenly 12 years old again, wearing the elegant, black velvet suit with short pants his father bought him in England, as he scooted down the steep gangplank of the massive steel ocean liner, Aquitania for his first deep breath and close look at America. He raced ahead of his father, Charles and his two younger sisters, Isabel and Annette. The young family was dressed as if they were meeting royalty. Charles, the patriarch, wore a monocle dangling from the silk waistcoat of his dark suit, the girls wore matching sailor suits. Meyer Marcus Prosser raced to the end of the gangplank ignoring his father’s shouts, pushing past disembarking passengers and luggage, heedless of tearing his expensive clothes. He had to be the first to set foot in America. At the end of the gangplank he stopped. He surveyed the jumble of activity on the dock. Suddenly, he leaped as far as his legs could propel him and landed in America like a swashbuckling musketeer, ready for adventure. He scouted his new home from the fetid docks of Baltimore as he waited for the girls and the old man to catch up. It was the 4th of July, 1916.
That evening, the wild, little Jewish boy saw fireworks for the first time. The terror and beauty of the exploding art tattooed a sense of spectacle and enchantment onto his mind that he would never forget. Charles told him it was created just for them. Monte believed his father just enough to accept this as his personal booming welcome to his new home. The boy leaped with joy at each new explosion as his sisters cowered under their father’s arms. The wonder and enthusiasm that would transform Meyer Marcus Prosser into Monte Proser, was ignited that evening.
CHAPTER 2
MAKIN’ WHOOPEE
The summer of 1919 arrived on a skillet. Daytime temperature reached 108 degrees in the farming village of Flemington, New Jersey about 40 miles south of the Prosser family apartment in Brooklyn Heights, New York. During the day almost nothing moved except the mercury. At twilight, as the black asphalt streets and granite curbstones released the heat of the day into the cooling air, Monte’s secret life began.
The family had moved to Brooklyn from Baltimore that spring. Father Charles was desperate to escape the decadence of ragtime music that was pouring out of the bawdy houses of Baltimore and tainting his impressionable eldest son. He heard the American slang and smelled the stink of cigarette smoke that Monte was dragging in from the streets. The enraged father soon ran out of out of ideas to curb his son’s waywardness. He couldn’t make the boy study or even take his schoolwork seriously. He couldn’t honestly use religion since he himself wasn’t religious. He could only make rules and enforce them with the tone of his voice which still was commanding and held some waning power over the boy. The breaking point came one afternoon in early spring as school was about to end for the summer, leaving Charles helpless to protect his son against the seductions of a Southern ragtime city. The top-floor apartment was beginning to swelter in the lengthening afternoons. Monte was anxious to get out to the streets after hours of enforced study at school.
Stop,
Charles commanded and Monte suddenly noticed his father as if it was a true surprise, as if this monumental presence could really have been overlooked. In an instant Monte sized up his father and found him unprepared for battle. The old man was exhausted after a day of translating and sorting endless mind-numbing manifests of merchandise. Monte had the advantage of a pressing appointment. He seized it immediately, Hello, Papa. I was just going.
Come.
The old man commanded and Monte approached. The steel rimmed bifocals were adjusted for punctuation. I want you to remember your mother when you’re out and running wild. She would not have you associating with some of the lower type of characters in these places you go to. Do you understand?
Yes, papa.
Do you really? I want you to think. Stand here and think.
Monte was deeply affected by the memory of his mother, Lena. He clung to it with religious devotion and resented his father for using it this way. It was private, and sacred, and not to be trotted out for lessons in obedience. He stiffened as heat poured through him while he fought against seeing her face, but it was hopeless, as Charles knew it would be. Monte saw his mother’s chestnut brown eyes dancing with diamond reflections from the coal fire as she leaned in to kiss him goodnight. He stroked the fine down on her cheeks. Then, just as suddenly, he saw her face as grey and lifeless as the ash in a cold, iron stove.
Lena had died in childbirth delivering her fourth child, a boy, Leo. Monte was 10 years old. The family was living in a drafty tenement house on Swan Street, under the gloom and coal smoke of northern England. The birth had nearly killed little Leo as well. His spine was badly damaged and he was frail, weighing less than five pounds. He was given over to the special care of Lena’s relatives since Charles was unequipped to care for Leo and his three other children now that Lena was gone. For months, Leo lingered between life and death.
Lena’s death had snuffed out the one, tender hope Charles held for the world. All was now lamp-black and the price of coal, ranks of soulless numbers and stacks of grubby 5-pound notes in the landlord’s hand. Life was work and war and what to buy for dinner. How would these children ever grow up and would the Jewish people even survive? His thoughts slowly turned into paving stones, impervious and indestructible. He laid them down methodically, end to end, making a solid, unremarkable road through a filthy world. They were chinked tight permitting no bloom or sprout between them. This is the road his children would follow. To wander from it, even a foot, would bring them only death and horror. Eventually, Charles let the possible funeral arrangements for baby Leo drift from his daily thoughts and turned toward the future. He had three other children to care for and war was about to engulf Europe.
Monte had loved his mother like the sun and she had doted on him, her handsome first-born and prince of her modest kingdom. They had a special language that pretended to treat him as a prince and she as his dutiful Queen. He was born to strike out on adventures and quests of bravery from which she, as a Victorian, a Jew and a woman, had been expressly forbidden. This life chafed like her whalebone corset, yet it seemed these restrictions were the price of love, the one thing above all else that she must have. And so she hid her adventurer’s heart like her corset under layers of womanly frill, burying her dreams to fulfill her family’s expectations. She was a kind, obedient daughter and became a faithful Jewish wife and mother.
Then Monte was born and she saw her horizons expand. She would live through him. Into his quick and receptive mind she poured all her dreams. Monte was her knight errant, a bright and energetic soul who would stand large in the world. Monte was her Lancelot, and she was his wise Queen.
From the moment Monte looked on his mother’s bloodless face and saw the blackened sheets that had soaked up her life, he did not speak for several weeks. The first few days after she was shrouded and carried from the house, he sat silently watching the coal fire in the parlor stove. He didn’t look away from the yellow flames, didn’t speak. He was sent outside but sat on the front steps silent, inert. The world had shifted on its axis and the familiar was foreign to him. People he didn’t recognize said hello and unfamiliar streets drew him in. He avoided the well-known streets to the market and tram stop. On the unknown streets he could walk without seeing her walking beside him. They sheltered him in their shadows. The Queen was dead and the kingdom vanished. The brave knight was a heartbroken little boy wandering mindlessly through a gray world.
Now, the boy and his father stood before each other, captives to the memory of Lena. Without his mother’s protection, Monte was subjected to his father’s strict and autocratic rule. Without Lena’s gentle persuasion, Charles could only bluster with threats of dire discipline. Charles saw the heartbreak and anger crossing Monte’s face and knew he’d stumbled. It was hopeless. The boy could not be reached, at least not right now.
Dissipation,
was the word Charles used to distract them as he peered over his pince-nez eyeglasses. He had reduced his lectures to one word so Monte could focus on the meaning. The boy was commanded to look up the word and present its dictionary definition to his father the following day. This was followed by a brief discussion and forced time of reflection. It was an unpleasant and usually unprofitable exercise since the focus of Monte’s life was set. His son’s true talent was simply unrecognizable to Charles. Monte was really only interested in having fun with people. It had already become his life’s work. Charles wanted to grab his son and shake him but the time had passed for that type of discipline. Monte was taut and ready.
Go,
he said. Monte turned away sharply. He grabbed his roller skates by the door.
Bring me tobacco please.
Monte was obliged to turn back. He took the quarter from his father, glanced quickly at his implacable face and was out the door and into his real life. It was the start of a 30 year struggle between two iron wills.
To escape Baltimore’s corruption, Charles found work at an import company based in the Red Hook terminals on New York harbor. Although he was an exceptional linguist, and had once translated vital documents in five languages for Czar Nicholas of Russia, the lowly clerk position offered the change of location he needed to save his son’s character. Unfortunately for Charles, it was too late. The boy had been seduced by the ragtime anarchy of back alley crap shoots, gin mills and nightlife. The battle for the Prosser family’s future would only intensify.
For two years Charles walked home after work, one mile uphill, from the piers of Red Hook to Brooklyn Heights. He arrived home exhausted, ate a quick dinner and then eased into his easy chair, reading about the progress of the labor movement in The Worker. By seven, his chin drifted down and eventually came to rest on his chest. Deep, sonorous snores trembled the window glass. As if waiting in the wings of a vaudeville house for his cue, 15 year-old Monte stepped from the children’s bedroom in his immaculate evening outfit – his shirt was snow white with subtle vertical striping and expertly pressed. The trousers and jacket were dark, his shoes reflected the soft, gas light.
I’m off,
he whispered. Isabel had her instructions if the Old Man woke up. Monte was just out to Greunwald’s Apothecary for some headache medicine. She was then to turn slowly, as if her head was actually throbbing, go into their bedroom and gently close the door. That was it. No more, no less. They’d rehearsed it to Monte’s satisfaction and she knew it by heart. Monte always kept a tin of headache powder in his pocket on his evenings out in case he was inspected when he returned. Usually the Old Man would sleep in the chair until Annette nudged him awake. It was generally the younger Annette’s job while the ranking senior Isabel finished securing the house and washing up. The youngest child, a little boy, Leo, was too young for a part in the nightly charade. Leo had just joined the family from England. Little Leo always went to bed early. After his difficult birth, Leo spent the first 4 years of his life in an iron machine that attempted to straighten his spine. It was unsuccessful and his small stature was further reduced by several inches by a sharp outward curve of his spine just below the neck.
Many nights Monte had finished his evening business by the time Charles was roused. It was only when business kept him late that the deception might be needed. About 9:30, Annette, in her nightcap and gown, would push the sleeping giant’s shoulder sharply, Poppa, go to bed,
she’d repeat until he roused. He grunted and eventually rose with a great yawn, trundling off with a sleepy Good night
. If he did wake on his own he’d usually wobble with his eyes half-mast to his own room without ever coming fully awake. Occasionally he’d glance in the children’s darkened room before retiring. He never noticed that Monte wasn’t in the room. Annette was unwittingly in on the dodge as well. If asked her brother’s whereabouts, she was instructed to say, Isabel knows, Papa.
Monte timed the closing of the front door to the crescendo of a snore. He stepped gingerly down the first flight of squeaky stairs. Safely out of the Old Man’s earshot, his pace would pick up to a fast walk. Usually he’d be at the counter of Greunwald’s Apothecary just before 8. Gruenwald’s did a brisk liquor business along with patent medicines since the two were often used interchangeably or combined for various effects. Old Lady Gruenwald would have Monte’s orders of two or three pint bottles ready when he arrived. She always cautioned him not to run or he might spill the medicine
the boys needed for their headaches. Monte couldn’t tell whether she thought he was stupid or she just needed to pretend she was doing something truly beneficial.
He’d arrive at the stage door of Hanratty’s Dance Parlor at 8:15. The band would be taking their first break. Musicians and a few local boys from the audience would be taking in the night air, smoking cigarettes, reefer and saying very little. Monte would hand them the slim bottles in their paper bags. Before they paid or spoke, the local boys would bite through the wax, pull the corks with their teeth, and take a long swig like they were dying of thirst. It was nauseating. Monte had sipped the stuff and knew it tasted like kerosene. They seemed like very old men to him but they were just a few years older, in their early twenties. Many of them didn’t seem to care how they looked. Their clothes were generally cheap and carelessly fitted like the old duffers in the park. After the vile liquid was down, they’d blow hard like they were blowing out a lamp with a high wick and shake all over. The musicians would usually laugh and pass the bottle but the local boys who had returned from Ypres, Belleau Wood and Flanders Field, would take on a sickly look like their minds had suddenly become unhinged.
Monte looked in their eyes, as black and watery as lagoons, their hair dank from dancing, their mouths slack and breath caustic with liquor fumes. Suddenly they’d flip a raw hand into the shadowy lamplight showing flaps of pink scar where fingers had been, or tap their walking stick against a wooden calf or just stare at him favoring a milky, dead eye that had been touched by the gas. Sometimes they marveled at their mangled limb for a moment, but always they’d turn back to him for his reaction. Was he frightened of them? Were they too horrible?
As a favor, Monte gave them no reaction, which was the hope they were looking for. He showed up with their booze, didn’t say much and didn’t flinch at the sight of their hideous wounds. They were the boys who crowded in front of the bandstand at Hanratty’s and stared dumbly at the musicians, sometimes exploding into an afflicted sort of dancing. Then they went out back and drank until they fell to the paving stones senseless, in a dreamless sleep. Alone or in pairs they began to wander the streets of Brooklyn Heights, eyes flaming red from liquor, skin crusty with black city filth like the trench mud and gunpowder they wore in the Great War. They were America’s new world travelers. They brought home the real news that wasn’t in the newspapers - of a changed world that was unimaginable in its brutality and horror.
The scenes came to Monte in his dreams and he began to fear sleep. He didn’t speak to Isabel about it, protecting her from it. He could only talk to other night walkers like him on the street corners. He stayed with them, out on the streets, running his business while the daylight world slept.
The first mechanized World War, the war to end all wars, had just sputtered to its shameful end. Through the early fall and Indian Summer the boys came home to families in Brooklyn, Chicago and California in pieces and in pine boxes, with shattered minds and empty souls. 10,000,000 young men of all nations had been slaughtered in four years. The number was mind-numbing. The innovative ways they devised to kill each other caused public revulsion and nausea – poison gas, incendiary bombs, germ warfare. The war had shattered more than individual soldiers, society itself was largely destroyed. European royalty were clearly buffoons, national leaders were cowards and God was a useless myth. What was important now was to forget, to drink and grieve and somehow get on with life. America trudged on, forgetting Europe and all that had ever happened there, looking for a new way, its own way. The Old World was dead.
Summer fled south down the Hudson and East Rivers leaving behind a tapestry of red and yellow. It blew across the harbor and through the Verrazano Narrows sucking the chill down from Canada behind it. The kitchen windows came down and the season
in the city began. The pace on the street quickened as people ready to do business, ready to make their mark, returned from their summer idles rested and bored.
The collapse of the Old World blew through the streets. Anarchy, a world without governments and the corporate bosses that supported them, was the only way humans could hope to live together in peace. This wind of defiance blew into Monte’s sails and set him straining at his moorings. Anarchists stood on the pedestals of war heroes in the park and cursed the tyranny of the states that had led them all into hell. Leaflets declaring freedom for all working people were slapped insolently on private property and public lamp posts. A new society of disrespect and cynicism was being born screaming and bloody. Riots swept up to City Hall and bombs were hurled into the federal building on Adams Street.
Winter fell heavily. The East River froze over and the deep snow of 1919 was dotted with blood. Anarchists and socialists cloistered in coal cellars to plot vengeance on the capitalists who built the war machine and enslaved the workers. On the street corners, the ranks of truants swelled, scouring the gentry in their beaver hats and fox coats with hard eyes while quietly the second rider of the Apocalypse, following on the heels of War, had already arrived from Europe.
A strain of influenza swept out of Spain and hitched a ride on the American boys returning home from battle. Within 7 days of arriving in America, it had spread to all 50 states. It would kill another 20 million Americans who had survived the war. Before it lodged in the lungs, the disease infected susceptible minds. This was surely God’s judgment on all mankind for the wickedness of waging this new kind of war, for promiscuity, for the usury of the Jews, for poor farm practices, for all the real and imagined evils of the human race.
In Brooklyn Heights, the wide-eyed, foam mouthed evangelists vied with the anarchists for street corners to shout from. Hysteria electrified the winter winds. Polite society retreated to their parlors for a sherry in front of the fire, but the talk soon turned dour and strident. They had endured war and now suffered with disease, which rider would appear next, pestilence or famine? The fun had gone out of life and the fearful stayed home. Parties broke up early or were cancelled without excuse. Only the young, the desperate and the fearless refused to stay in. They spit in the devil’s eye and went to Hanratty’s to dance the tango. They went over Niagara Falls in barrels and walked on the wings of barnstorming airplanes. They began a bacchanalia of the doomed and swept into Brooklyn’s dimly lit carpet joints for a couple rolls of the dice, a few shots of untaxed booze and a little whoopee with an enterprising good time girl.
Monte, who was still using his Jewish name Meyer, watched the traffic and followed its flow. There were jobs around for errand boys who kept their mouths shut and their eyes open. You took your chances or you stayed home and waited for the next horseman.
Business was bad through the holidays. The streets were empty, lamp wicks were turned down low to conserve kerosene and coal stoves were banked up early for people who just wanted to get under the covers and forget. A freezing rain had covered the streets in a filthy slush so that simply being on the street became a test of willpower and footwear. Yet Monte endured and continued his clandestine errands to dancehalls and pool rooms where the atmosphere hung in low clouds of tobacco, wet wool and rose water. It seemed people had been stampeded into these overheated rooms. They thrashed about with the same white-eyed fear Monte had seen in the holding pens of the kosher butcher.
These places now shuddered with frantic foxtrots and tangos. The solemn waltz, the stately quadrille and the lighthearted polka were as dead as everything else in Europe. When the band struck up the new ragtime tunes it brought on the energetic one-step and the Maxixe pronounced ma sheesh – a wild, unhinged sort of Brazilian waltz that caused frequent collisions. The young crowds were seething, barely controllable. The few older people who had ventured out stayed pushed up against the walls as if by the centrifugal force of the gyrating youngsters who danced to defy the death and madness they had inherited. Monte soon found himself in the middle of the dance floor sweating like a stevedore, bouncing girls with painted faces around the room, spinning on the balls of his feet, all restraint vanished.
Then the State of New York clamped a lid on this roiling stewpot and screwed it down tight. In January, they finally bowed to religious zealots and joined the other states to ratify the 18th Amendment, the Volstead Act, outlawing the manufacture, storage and consumption of alcoholic beverages. To the young and disaffected of Brooklyn Heights, this was the intolerable act of a discredited, tyrannical government. A wholesale revolt erupted overnight. Respect for the law was thrown onto the bonfire along with the bobble-headed royalty of Europe, the greasy politicians and God himself. The 1920’s began to roar.
At the street corner parties near Hanratty’s, teenage Monte nurtured his reputation as someone who knew where the action was. He made it a point to find out names before he met other young people and a bit about their business. He also learned that being polite and well-mannered got you nowhere.
Hey Gent!
the kids called him Gent for his English manners and natty clothes, Hey Gent! Where’s the party?
Far away from you, my friend,
he’d shoot back. Far away from you.
Nothing was more important to Monte than making new friends, lots of them, all kinds. While the dance halls were sweating through a lot of wholesome activity, a small group of boys would trade a nod and split off from the general crowd. They would gather quietly near a new type of clandestine club that was springing up like mushrooms on every block - speakeasies. These clubs had no bright, inviting windows or festive striped awnings. There was nothing on the outside that announced they were a nightclub. You couldn’t just walk in and get a table. You needed a secret knock, a password or a special business card. If you didn’t look like a government dick, the double-locked door would open.
Inside, it was said, you could get anything you wanted. The back storeroom of Gruenwald’s had become a speak
. The loading door to the alley behind the store now had a slot at eye level where identity was checked. Their liquor business doubled then tripled in the weeks after the new law was decreed. They just moved it from the store shelves to the back room. Monte was no longer allowed to walk out carrying bottles in paper bags, he had to tuck them under his belt and cover them with his coat. He was told which cops were customers and which would be trouble if they caught him.
Monte joined the other boys who waited across the street or down the block from a place where nothing seemed to be happening. They lied and gossiped, chewed tobacco, waiting for patrons to stumble out and walk past them. They got precious shreds of information in exchange for their offer of a cigarette. The ladies would give one of the boys the eye while she leaned on her equally unstable date. The patrons reeked of booze and smoke and sweated perfume. They carried guns and knives and would make a subtle display of them in case the boys were thinking of something other than offering free cigarettes. A tip could be earned for hailing a cab while the clubbers sat on a stoop with the other boys. Pitching pennies gave way to a pair of dice and they soon learned the intricacies of the game and the impulse that named it crap. It was all illegal, it was all fun and it went on all night.
Monte watched and learned. He was an observant private eye in one of his pulp novels. The clue to scram was when the cheap suits showed up. You could always tell a government dick, a fed, by his shoes – down at the heel, no shine. And they always came in pairs because they didn’t even trust each other. If one arrived alone, he always left with booze on his breath and a roll of the club’s cash in his pocket. The local cops sometimes got dragged along on a raid but somehow when they were involved, the place would either be empty or serving root beer when they arrived. After a while the Feds didn’t tell the local cops what they were up to. This was how the game was played. They called it Prohibition.
Just across the East River from Monte’s operation, his future partner, Frank Costello, was making new friends and growing an operation of his own. The fortunes of Frank and Monte rose together on a sea of illegal booze. Frank was ten years older than Monte and had been making money helping friends like Louis Rao in his Upper East Side Manhattan neighborhood manage their gambling operations. Prohibition suddenly made Frank Costello and all of his friends incredibly rich, in cash. The volume of cash soon became a problem and one of Frank’s first business investments was for dozens of waterproof, zinc trunks to hold his money. Soon the money needed trucks and eventually boats to move it. The illegal liquor business started strong and got stronger every month for the next 13 years. It was a spigot of cash that quickly grew to a river. Business was so good that Frank built an ocean-going navy to ship his product from the distilleries of Ireland across the Atlantic to New Brunswick, Canada. One of the first moves that indicated his emergence as an unparalleled black market leader was to secure a distribution terminal on the tiny, rocky island of St. Pierre off of Canada’s east coast. St. Pierre was the sole remaining French outpost in North America and thus immune to the Prohibition treaties Canada enforced for the US. He negotiated to pay the Mayor of St. Pierre two dollars per case of liquor transshipped through the little island. Soon fleets of European ships of all kinds, rusting scows and ancient schooners, arrived at St. Pierre with their intoxicating cargo. From St. Pierre, a sleeker, faster supply fleet sailed south into international waters off of Montauk Point on Long Island and down to the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay.
In another demonstration of Costello’s bold innovation as a criminal mastermind, his ships were provided with security from armed seaplane escorts. At this time, airplanes were an expensive novelty with almost no commercial uses. Rumrunners like Frank were among the pioneers of commercial aviation. Frank ran a tight operation and as people who knew Frank would later say of him, nobody got killed who wasn’t supposed to. Other gangsters, of course, got killed quickly if they tried to rob him. But after a few tries, nobody ever tried to rob Frank again, and business grew smoothly.
Costello restricted his activities to legitimate
businesses meaning liquor and gambling - things that later became legal. He never involved himself in drugs, prostitution or loan sharking. But, as he often said of himself, he was no Bible salesman.
He’d grown up desperately poor in New York’s East Harlem where the newer Italian immigrants were preyed upon by the established Irish clans which included the New York police. When Costello arrived from Naples with his mother, father and brother, the Irish already controlled city politics, the labor unions, the police force and large swaths of real estate – all the social institutions with direct influence on new immigrants. By the age of 15, Costello had served 10 months of a one-year sentence for being caught with a gun and for having the reputation of being a gunman for the emerging Italian gangs. He realized that he’d been convicted only because the gun reinforced the suspicions about him. He vowed never again to carry a gun and in the 40 years of his rise and dominance of the highest echelons of organized crime, he never did.
Miss Creel of Flatbush Avenue, tutor to the Prosser children, smelled faintly of cabbage and camphor and suffered frequent headaches. This gave the children plenty of free study time while Miss Creel lay on the floor in the study with a damp cloth over her eyes.
Two blocks from the apartment on Green Street, a glimpse of Manhattan and New York harbor could be had from the vantage point of a cigar store where Monte established his headquarters free of Miss Creel and her lessons. Travel to the city was forbidden by Charles and was reinforced by a nightly recounting of child kidnappings and murders that were apparently epidemic and printed in the newspaper every day.
At the corner cigar store, Monte read the same newspapers and didn’t find the dire situation that his father described. Charles was lying to maintain his control by fear, and as Monte came to realize this, the crack in