Party Manners
By Kamal
Sunavala
Last week
I had the rare opportunity to attend
two parties in the space of one evening. It was dead interesting
because of the similarities in two very different settings.
Someone like Freud might have had a hell of a time explaining
and then discarding theories of coded and encoded sexual
manners.
The first party
was a formal do. It was plush with bare backs and rhinestone
belts and we even walked
up to the
entrance upon a red carpet. Once inside, we were enveloped
in the two predatory smells of hunting and perfume. The
latter was to cover up the former. The cream and condensed
milk of Czech society was here and everyone was brushing
the air with kisses. The beautiful people of this city
sadly lost out to their older counterparts in one essential
way. Manners. I may sound like a dinosaur here but what
I saw at that party were a lot of young and beautiful people
with a lot of ugly manners. And this included the President
of the Czech Republic. If there is no article that appears
after this one, you'll know that someone has found me and
killed me. There were the usual lines for food and drink
and every single time, without fail, men were cutting into
lines and serving themselves before the ladies upon their
arms. That alone was enough to make me want to run back
to my country and gulp in deep breaths of manners. If this
is still Europe, the last Knights have certainly vanished
from this city. And yet, contrarily enough, when one man
was in the company of another man whose shoes he aspired
to walk in, he would be the epitome of social graces and
manners, waving his arms gracefully forward for the other
person to pass through first or handing the lady the first
glass of wine or offering to pass the cheese. It was amusing
to see this interplay of convenient social graces which
were born more out of deception and the avarice that was
leaping off their skins like a bad odour than out of real
class.
The president of the Czech Republic passed
us by while we were in line. He wished us good evening.
I was amused
at how polite and almost avuncular he sounded, considering
the reputation he carries around. But as he passed through
to the far end, someone helped him with his coat and left
the lady with him struggling into her own. That's the finishing
school he went to.
We moved on to
another party. It was the Bar and Restaurant at the Square
at Malostranske Namesti.
There was an anniversary
bash with the most amazing father-daughter chanteuse combinations
I have witnessed on the vocal jazz scene in a long time.
That was a party that was not only raging, it was boiling.
Every single person there was trapped into an invisible
chamber of adrenalin and energy. It was the serious business
of having fun. I walked up to the bar to bring back a couple
of glasses to the dance floor and I saw two Dutch girls
who were politely waiting in line for their wine being
rudely shoved aside by two Czech boys who were so drunk
they could barely stand up. So I excused it thinking that
inebriation can make the most genteel man act like a daft
mule. But what surprised me was the bartender's reaction.
Instead of handing the two ladies their drinks first, he
went on to serve the mannerless brutes. When I asked him
why he did that, he didn't reply and handed me the glasses
and turned away. Amid the beautiful sounds of Louis Armstrong
and Gloria Gaynor, there were the occasional loud shrieks
of girls whose behinds were being indiscriminately grabbed.
Apparently all in good humour. And what was even worse
was the fact that their boyfriends were unperturbed and
would not do a thing to deal with the situation. Such chivalry.
But those same boyfriends, particularly an Irish boy and
a Czech boy, when standing at the bar waiting for their
drinks, ever so politely handed the first drink to the
scantily clad stranger in front of them. I'm glad to know
that the tits and ass syndrome is alive, well and consistent
in every corner of the world.
I came home thinking that despite the good time I had
at both places, it was sad that on the continent which
stands for all things graceful and historic, we are no
better than our North American counterparts whom we rebuke
for the same things.
It's time to see My Fair Lady again so that
we can remind ourselves of Henry Higgins' immortal words
to Eliza Doolittle
- The great secret, Eliza, is not having bad manners or
good manners but having the same manner for all human souls.
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