The Bee Gees. Black bin bags. Turnips. Freddy Krueger. Pineapples. Masks that cost 50p.
What have they all got in common?
Halloween, that’s what.
No, I didn’t dress up as Maurice Gibb but the Bee Gees had a number one hit with You Win Again in 1987 (now I feel really old!) and the song always reminds me of a great Halloween party where it was played over and over and over again. It was a recording from the radio onto a cassette tape and we took turns rewinding it back to the start.
I can’t
remember what I did dress up as, but I am pretty sure black bin bags were part
of the costume. Weren’t they always back
then?
Who wants to
be a witch? Who wants to be a
wizard? Here, take this em, black bin
bag and knock yourself out. Not like
today when excellent Halloween costumes can be bought for as much or as little
as you want to spend on them. A far cry
from a 50p plastic mask that gave you the sweats.
Pumpkins were
an exotic vegetable (or were they a fruit?) that were the sole reserve of America
and only to be seen on our television screens.
It is only in recent times they have become readily available. Back then we improvised and carved turnips
into Jack O’Lanterns.
I’ll never
forget making them. It was a dangerous
endeavour, worthy of its own health and safety warning. Turnips are hard, solid little yokes and it
was no mean feat taking a large knife to one and attempting to first saw off
the lid and then scoop out the cement like insides without losing a finger or
two. My hands used to be raw!
Then there was the small matter of chiselling
out the face – knife through the palm of your hand opportunity right
there.
Our mother
surely must have noticed the depletion of her turnip stock but she never said
anything. The next conundrum was how to
light it from within. Tea lights hadn’t
been invented yet and birthday candles burnt for all of 9 minutes. What to do?
We hatched a plan. Our hearts
used to be in our mouths. This is what we did.
We stole candles from the church.
There! It’s out.
I’ve come clean after all those years.
My Catholic guilt ran deep. Or
maybe not deep enough. It was terrifying but the need for candles with a decent
burning shelf life took precedence over any burning fires of hell. My nervous bladder almost made a show of me on
these occasions.
You know
those urban myths where burglars defecated during a robbery? Not an urban myth. Nu uh!
Apparently it’s a nervous disposition borne of getting rumbled that
makes them loose the run (ahem) of themselves and not devilment. Fancy.
Halloween two
and a half decades ago was definitely a more innocent time. We had a couple of
bonfires too. We would trek the fields
from September, pulling loose brambles and sticks from the hedges and piling it
high in our back garden. The real lumber
killing was when the farmers came out to trim the hedges. Easy pickings.
One year the
bonfire was so big, our father had to take half of it down to light it. Too dangerous. Because our bonfire was conceived in early
September, born mid-October and its time of death was October 31st,
it never occurred to us that there could have been little hibernating creatures
underneath that mountain of wood.
And you can’t
have burning without mentioning an old favourite Halloween horror movie of
mine: that fright night reject Freddy
Krueger. We used to scare ourselves
silly watching Nightmare on Elm Street
and then walk home in the dark afterwards, singing the song.
And the
pineapple? Believe it or not, that Bee
Gee Halloween was the first time I tasted pineapple. Sure, I’d had the tinned stuff but not a real
life, juice dribbling down my chin after the first bite, spikey pineapple.
I love
Halloween. I think I prefer it to
Christmas. Last year I threw a little
Halloween party for the kids and their cousins. Great fun.
Not a bonfire
in sight. No apples hanging from the
ceiling on a piece of string.
Remember the game
with the pile of flour and a grape perched on top, where you took turns slicing
the flour until someone made the grape fall?
The “loser” would then have their face mashed into the plate of
flour.
They didn’t
do that either.
There was no
ducking for apples or money.
It was all
face painting and very impressive looking, almost professional costumes. We had two large pumpkins carved and lit on
the stairs. Propped up beside a
terracotta one.
The house was
decorated with cobwebs and witches broomsticks took pride of place outside the
front door.
Despite the aesthetic
and commercial differences of almost 25 years later, the main attraction was a
big bale of straw out the back garden.
The kids had pulled it asunder and were having a great time in it.
This year the
big hit was a small bonfire. The kids
went to bed smelling of smoke and had marshmallow and Oreo cookies smeared on
their faces. As a friend pointed out “dirt will be
easily cleaned in the morning but the lifetime of happy memories will remain
for ever!!”
At
the school gate there
was a peacock with incredible feathers.
Dracula’s in their dozens. Plenty
of princesses. Wandering warriors. A ghoul or two. A granny grunt. Some pirates.
Spaced out zombies. Transformers
galore.
But not one
single black bin bag in sight.
Happy
Halloween. Be safe. Be seen.
Let the sugar rushes begin!